Here you will find the Long Poem Of Hell And The Estate of Those Who Perish of poet John Bunyan
hus, having show'd you what I see Of heaven, I now will tell You also, after search, what be The damned wights of hell. And O, that they who read my lines Would ponder soberly, And lay to heart such things betimes As touch eternity. The sleepy sinner little thinks What sorrows will abound Within him, when upon the brinks Of Tophet he is found. Hell is beyond all though a state So doubtful[10] and forlorn, So fearful, that none can relate The pangs that there are born. God will exclude them utterly From his most blessed face, And them involve in misery, In shame, and in disgrace. God is the fountain of all bliss, Of life, of light, and peace; They then must needs be comfortless Who are depriv'd of these. Instead of life, a living death Will there in all be found. Dyings will be in every breath, Thus sorrow will abound. No light, but darkness here doth dwell; No peace, but horror strange: The fearful damning wights[11] of hell In all will make this change. To many things the damned's woe Is liked in the word, And that because no one can show The vengeance of the Lord. Unto a dreadful burning lake, All on a fiery flame, Hell is compared, for to make All understand the same. A burning lake, a furnace hot, A burning oven, too, Must be the portion, share, and lot, Of those which evil sow. This plainly shows the burning heat With which it will oppress All hearts, and will like burnings eat Their souls with sore distress. This burning lake, it is God's wrath Incensed by the sin Of those who do reject his path, And wicked ways walk in. Which wrath will so perplex all parts Of body and of soul, As if up to the very hearts In burnings they did roll. Again, to show the stinking state Of this so sad a case, Like burning brimstone God doth make The hidings of his face. And truly as the steam, and smoke, And flames of brimstone smell, To blind the eyes, and stomach choke, So are the pangs of hell. To see a sea of brimstone burn, Who would it not affright? But they whom God to hell doth turn Are in most woful plight. This burning cannot quenched be, No, not with tears of blood; No mournful groans in misery Will here do any good. O damned men! this is your fate, The day of grace is done, Repentance now doth come too late, Mercy is fled and gone. Your groans and cries they sooner should Have sounded in mine ears, If grace you would have had, or would Have me regard your tears. Me you offended with your sin, Instructions you did slight, Your sins against my law hath been, Justice shall have his right. I gave my Son to do you good, I gave you space and time With him to close, which you withstood, And did with hell combine. Justice against you now is set, Which you cannot appease; Eternal justice doth you let From either life or ease. Thus he that to this place doth come May groan, and sigh, and weep; But sin hath made that place his home, And there it will him keep. Wherefore, hell in another place Is call'd a prison too, And all to show the evil case Of all sin doth undo. Which prison, with its locks and bars Of God's lasting decree, Will hold them fast; O how this mars All thought of being free! Out at these brazen bars they may The saints in glory see; But this will not their grief allay, But to them torment be. Thus they in this infernal cave Will now be holden fast From heavenly freedom, though they crave, Of it they may not taste. The chains that darkness on them hangs Still ratt'ling in their ears, Creates within them heavy pangs, And still augments their fears. Thus hopeless of all remedy, They dyingly do sink Into the jaws of misery, And seas of sorrow drink. For being cop'd[12] on every side With helplessness and grief, Headlong into despair they slide Bereft of all relief. Therefore this hell is called a pit, Prepared for those that die The second death, a term most fit To show their misery. A pit that's bottomless is this, A gulf of grief and woe, A dungeon which they cannot miss, That will themselves undo. Thus without stay they always sink, Thus fainting still they fail, Despair they up like water drink, These prisoners have no bail. Here meets them now that worm that gnaws, And plucks their bowels out, The pit, too, on them shuts her jaws; This dreadful is, no doubt. This ghastly worm is guilt for sin, Which on the conscience feeds, With vipers' teeth, both sharp and keen, Whereat it sorely bleeds. This worm is fed by memory, Which strictly br