Now I saw in my dream that, in obedience to the 
    injunctions of the Keeper of the gate, Pilgrim continued his 
    journey. Lofty trees spread their foliage over his head, brooks of water 
    flowed at his side, and, here and there, flowers, said to be transplanted 
    from the gardens of the Celestial City by the Lord of the Way, 
    filled the air with their fragrance.
    As he proceeded, however, the aspect of the road began to 
    change; the path he had hitherto been following became less defined. 
    Sometimes it lay through a narrow ravine, sometimes through marshy ground, 
    or intersected with torrents of water; sometimes it led up steep places, in 
    the ascent of which, had it not been for the sandals with which Free 
    Grace had provided him, he would frequently have slipped. He was even, 
    at times, tempted to forget the strict directions he had received, not to 
    deviate from the straight road on account of its ruggedness; but whenever he 
    did so, he had abundant reason for regret. I saw, indeed, on one occasion, 
    in following a forbidden path, that he stumbled, and lost one of his 
    sandals. The shock made him fall with violence to the ground. His shield, 
    too, rolled into the mud. But he forthwith opened his box of polish 
    to restore its brightness. This he did on his bended knees, confessing that 
    "he stumbled, being disobedient;" entreating that the Lord of the Way 
    would show him the path wherein he should walk, and "lead him in the way 
    everlasting."
    I observed that, after advancing a considerable way, he 
    was walking, at nightfall, through a retired valley. As he paused, for a 
    moment, to enjoy the quiet scene, his ear was arrested with plaintive cries, 
    at no great distance from the path. They were accents of deep distress. He 
    listened again, and heard the moanings as if of a dying man, accompanied 
    with bitter lamentations. Pilgrim, being possessed of a feeling 
    heart, forthwith proceeded to the spot whence the melancholy sounds were 
    heard. He had not advanced many steps before perceiving an individual whose 
    similarity of dress revealed him to be a fellow-traveler. He lay covered 
    with dust, blood trickled from a wound in his side, his sword was flung away 
    from him, and he was uttering doleful shrieks and cries. Pilgrim 
    could only gather up, in the interval between his sobs, the burden of his 
    lamentations; and the man seemed, for a long time, unconscious of his 
    presence. "O!" exclaimed the melancholy sufferer, as he wrung his hands in 
    agony, and then beat his breast; "O, that it were with me as in months past, 
    when his candle shined upon my head, and when, by his light, I walked 
    through darkness!"
    "Alas! poor man," said Pilgrim, coming up and 
    trying to comfort him, "what is the cause of your deep dejection?"
    The stranger made no reply, but continued to groan more 
    bitterly, and cry more loudly: "The Lord has forgotten to be gracious, and 
    his tender mercies are clean gone forever.
    "What is your name?" again asked Pilgrim, the tear 
    of heartfelt sympathy rolling down his own cheek.
    "My name," said the other, startled by the unexpected 
    feeling manifested by a stranger--"my name is Backslider; and rightly 
    have I been so called."
    "How came you," said Pilgrim, "to be here in this 
    bed of dust? Where is your shield?"
    "I have thrown it away," replied the other, "because it 
    is of no more use to me. You will find it yonder," continued he, pointing to 
    a place covered with mud, a few yards from his side.
    
    Pilgrim lifted up a plate of rusted metal, which he 
    never could have recognized to be a shield, once as brilliant and shining as 
    that which he had in his own hand. The promises inscribed on it were either 
    entirely effaced, or so covered with rust as to be illegible.
    "How came you," said he, as he returned it to its firmer 
    owner, "thus to throw away a weapon so indispensable to your safety, and 
    suffer it to be thus corroded with rust? Did not Free Grace supply 
    you at the Narrow Gate with Prayer-polish, to keep bright your 
    whole coat of armor?"
    "He did! he did!" replied the agonized man--the 
    recollection of the fact extracting a deeper sigh from his bosom; "but last 
    night, after I had climbed the steep rock you must have a little ago 
    ascended, I felt so fatigued that I lay down to sleep, omitting to polish my 
    armor; when I awoke in the morning, not only had the rust begun to cover it, 
    but, lo! on examining my bag, I found that, during the night, the box of 
    polish had dropped out, and had rolled down to the bottom of the 
    precipice."
    "But did you not return to recover it?" inquired 
    Pilgrim.
    
    "No," said Backslider. "I felt greatly disinclined 
    again to descend the rock. Besides, there is here close by me a bed of sand, 
    with which I tried to remove the rust; and it seemed to answer the purpose 
    so well, that I thought I could manage to dispense with my lost polish."
    
    "Foolish traveler!" said Pilgrim, "to forget so 
    soon the injunctions of the Porter at the gate. But how is it that 
    you do not turn and recover it without delay?"
    "Alas!" replied he, in a tone of deep despondency, "I 
    cannot. I am so weak from the loss of blood, that I am utterly unable to 
    rise."
    "How came you to receive that wound?" inquired 
    Pilgrim.
    
    "In an unguarded moment," said the other, "when I 
    ventured to lay my armor aside, an adversary, called 'Besetting Sin,' 
    took a deadly aim--a poisoned arrow sped from his bow, and pierced my heart. 
    For many hours I have been lying here, stretched on this couch of tears and 
    blood, listening to nothing but the echo of my own piteous cries, unable to 
    go even the length of that little brook to moisten my parched tongue. Had 
    the King of the road," continued he, "been intending to save me, he would, 
    long before now, have given me support; but 'my way is surely hid from the 
    Lord, and my judgment is passed over from my God.' He is justly weary of me, 
    and leaves me to perish."
    "No, no, poor sufferer!" replied Pilgrim, "Have 
    you not known, have you not heard, that the everlasting God, the Lord, the 
    Creator of the ends of the earth, faints not, neither is weary? Even the 
    youths shall faint and be weary, and the young men shall utterly fall; but 
    those who wait upon the Lord shall renew their strength.' 'Wait on the Lord, 
    then; be of good courage, and he shall strengthen your heart. Wait, I say, 
    on the Lord.'"
    Now I saw that Pilgrim ran and filled the silver 
    drinking-cup which had been given him at the gate with the water of the 
    adjoining brook. He put it to the man's pallid lips. He had no sooner tasted 
    the refreshing draught than a glow of new life suffused his countenance. His 
    sunken eye revived, and was lighted up with returning animation.
    "Whoever," said the sufferer, as for the first time he 
    spoke in a tone of calm composure, (the tear, not of sorrow, but of 
    gratitude starting to his eye)--"whoever gives a cup of cold water to a 
    fainting disciple, shall not lose his reward."
    
    Pilgrim bathed his brow with the cooling draught, 
    washed his wound, and stanched it by applying some fresh linen, which had 
    been given him by the Keeper of the Gate. He opened also his Bag, and 
    shared, with the reviving man, a part of the Bread of Life. Producing his 
    box of polish, they united together in endeavoring to restore the 
    corroded shield to its former brightness. Having assisted him in buckling on 
    his armor, and shaken off the remaining dust which adhered to it, he 
    conducted him once more to the Narrow path from which he had 
    wandered. Here they separated--Backslider to return to recover his 
    lost polish; Pilgrim to prosecute, without delay, his journey 
    Zionward.