The Reformational tale of Bunyon's Christian is about to be repeated for secular audiences |
The Pilgrim Great journeys must be imagined first and so trenchant in their intent to slake the deepest kind of thirst, it grasps imaginers by the throat and tells them bluntly: only through travail and trial, by purging fire and hammer blows be smote can their spirit be reforged and history's child be sired. This ordeal can either temper or destroy according to its whim, or perhaps the pilgrims’ strength within. Courage can surmount faint hearts, but how can faith presume that having gambled all, there is a way to save us in the end? There are no roads upon the other side, except the ones we make, every step perhaps at stake our lives, every view through soldiers’ eyes. And so we wile away our days beside brooding familiarities that will not speak to us for fear that it is not the sun that brightens all that we hold dear, but the bonfire of our vanities; that the deepening darkening shade it castes is not shadow, but decaying sanity. We look for hopeful signs, but at midnight, the clock rings its hands and says in anguished tones, “Ladies and Gentlemen, it’s time.” |