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LIFE OF DRYDEN.

JOHN DRYDEN,* the son of Erasmus Dryden, of Titchmersh, was born at the parsonage house of Oldwinkle, near Oundale, on the 9th of August, 1631. He is said to have inherited the Anabaptist religion, and an estate of two hundred† a year. He was one of the king's scholars at the Westminster institution; became a member of Trinity college, Cambridge, in May, 1650; was suspended a fortnight, for disobedience and contumacy, in July, 1652; and received his bachelor's degree, in January, 1653. He returned to the university, in 1656; and afterwards became a clerk to his kinsman, Sir Gilbert Pickering,-a furious puritan, who undertook to be a reformer, and became a regicide. In 1658, the Heroic Stanzas on Cromwell first introduced Dryden to public attention; and the same author, who could thus eulogize the late lord protector, found no difficulty in writing, soon after, ASTREA REDUX; a poem on the happy Restoration of his most sacred Majesty King Charles the Second.

Our poet came to London in a coarse drugget

*The old orthography was Driden. Our poet's grandfather is said to have been a schoolmaster, and a friend of Erasmus; who stood godfather to one of his sons. Scott's Dryden, vol. i. p. 22: Mr. Scott claims him as of partly Scotch descent. Ib.

+ Only sixty, according to Mr. Scott, vol. i. p. 30.

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coat; and is said to have lodged with one Heringham, a bookseller, in the New-Exchange; for whom he wrote prefaces, and other occasional pieces. At length Sir Robert Howard rescued him from his degradation; and, not only exerted himself to promote his reputation, but to preserve his fortune. Dryden was always attached to experimental philosophy; and his election to a membership of the Royal Society, Nov. 26, 1662, was the means of still farther enlarging the circle of his fame and of his acquaintances. In 1663, he took the stage; and, for many years, fought manfully to keep possession. His first dramatic production was the comedy of the Wild Gallant, the second, a rhyming tragedy, called the Rival Ladies, which appeared in 1664. The Indian Queen, another tragedy in rhyme, was written jointly by Dryden and Sir Robert Howard; and the Indian Emperor, written by Dryden alone, and published in 1667, was, as its title imports, a mere supplement to the Indian Queen. Our poet was, at first, a steady defender, both in theory and in practice, of dramatic rhyme; but a writer, whose avowed object is to please, cannot long maintain a contest against common sense; and, in spite of his patron, Lord Orrery, Dryden was, at last, content to suit the taste of the public, with plays in the ordinary style.

His dramatic labours were, for a short time, interrupted by the composition of the Annus Mirabilis,-the most elaborate, and, perhaps on that very account, one of the least successful, of his performances. We are particularly offended with the string of puerile conceits, by which he has contrived to destroy the sublimity of the great fire in London. First, the scattering seeds of fire are blown about,' 'big' with future flames. Next, we find it 'creeping along in a close pent room, and feeding in silence.' Now, the infant monster exalts his head upright and walks boldly' forth. In the next stanza,

it is some 'rich or mighty murderer,' who 'breaks his prison with gold,' and 'escapes through small outlets.' The winds, like crafty courtezans,' increase its violence by faintly' holding it in; but it soon leaps up,' takes a wide survey' of the neighbours,' and stalks along, nodding at every house.' The inhabitants 'run stumbling' through the streets after him; but, aided by a Belgian wind, he soon leaves his foes behind. The wondering fish in shining waters gaze:' and Father Thames, after raising up his reverend head,' bethinks him of Simois' fate, and 'shrinks back to his sedgy bed.' The fire, in the mean time, wades the streets;' and, opening his wings,' and extending his hands, 'reaches across from one side to t'other.' Now, he sends forth, colonies' to take possession of some adjacent squares; and, then, dividing into 'squadrons,' one detachment, attracted by the powerful charms of gold and silver,' advances against Lombard street and the Exchange; another falls backward' upon the Tower; while the main body,' with the most vindictive republicanism, marches against the imperial palace.”

The Essay upon dramatic poetry was published in the same year with the Annus Mirabilis. Secret Love, a tragi-comedy, appeared in 1668; the comedy of Sir Martin Morrall, in the same year; and the Tempest, an alteration from Shakspeare, in 1670. About this time, Elkanah Settle crossed his path, with the Empress of Morocco,-a rhyming tragedy, which was acted with much applause on the theatre; was afterwards published with sculptures, and a swaggering preface; and, to fill the cup of indignities, was performed by the court ladies, at Whitehall. This was enough to make Dryden think Settle, an animal of a most deplored understanding;' and, in order to make other people think as much, he deemed it his duty to write a most scurrilous pamphlet against the poor author. His poetry is por

ridge, 'tis a receipt, 'tis a pig with a pudding in his 'belly, 'tis I know not what: for, certainly, never any one that pretended to write sense had the impudence before to put such stuff as this into the mouths of those that were to speak it before an audience, whom he did not take to be fools; and then to print it too.' And with sculptures and a preface ! That was the unkindest cut of all.

The comedy of An Evening's Love appeared in 1671; and, in the following year, the rhyming tragedy of Tyrannic Love, with the two parts of the Conquest of Grenada;-a tragedy written in open defiance of all probability and good taste. The theatrical critics now had their turn. One Martin Clifford addressed to the author a series of Letters; in the first of which he says, 'you do live in as much ignorance and darkness as you did in the womb; your writings are like a jack-of-all-trade's shop; they have a variety, but nothing of value; and if thou art not the dullest plant-animal that ever the earth produced, all that I have conversed with are strangely mistaken in thee.' In the second, after asserting, that Almanzor is more like Pistol than Achilles, he proceeds to say, that he is strangely mistaken if he had not this very Almanzor in some disguise about this town, and passing under another name. Pr'ythee tell me true, was not this Huffcap once the Indian Emperor? and, at another time, did he not call himself Maximin? Was not Lyndaraxa once called Almenia? I mean under Montezuma, the Indian Emperor. I protest and vow they are either the same, or so alike, that I cannot, for my heart, distinguish one from the other. You are therefore a strange unconscionable thief; thou art not content to steal from others, but dost rob thy poor wretched self too.' With so worthy an auxiliary, Settle had nothing to fear; and he accordingly took the field, with a quarto pamphlet of ninety-five pages. After abusing Dryden in detail, he at last reverts to the

old accusation of plagiarism;-an accusation, which Dryden did not pretend to deny; but would always affect to turn it off with a saying of the King: 'He only desired that they, who accuse me of thefts, would steal him plays like mine.'

He is said to have contracted to write four* plays a year; and, though he never failed to tell his readers how much pains and trouble they cost him, what he actually performed renders it sufficiently evident, that, in making the bargain, he did not overrate his own fertility. The comedies of Marriagea-la-mode, and Love in a Nunnery, together with the two non-descript plays of Abayana and The Virgin Martyr, were all produced in 1673;-the State of Innocence and Fall of Man, a rhyming tragedy, in 1675;-Arung Zebe, a tragedy, in 1676;—All for Love, a tragedy, in 1678;-Oedipus, ditto, in 1679; Troilus and Cressida, altered from Shakspeare, in the same year:-The Hind Keeper, a comedy, hissed off the stage, in 1680 ;—The Spanish Fryer, a tragicomedy, in 1681 :-The Duke of Guise, a tragedy, in 1683;-Albion and Albanus, a musical drama, written, like the Duke of Guise, against the republicans, in 1685;—Don Sebastian, a tragi-comedy, in 1690;-Amphytrion, a comedy, in the same year;— King Arthur, an opera, in 1691;-Cleomines, a tragedy, in 1692;-and Love Triumphant, a tragi-comedy, in 1694.†

These productions, though they increased the reputation of the author, neither augmented his

*Mr. Malone, in his Life of Dryden, has produced an original memorial of the King's Company on the subject of one of his plays. The preamble is as follows:-Whereas, upon Mr. Dryden's binding himself to write three plays a yeare, he, the said Mr. Dryden, was admitted and continued as a sharer, in the King's Play-house for divers years, and received for his share and a quarter, three or four hundred pounds, communibus annis; but though he received the moneys, we received not the plays, not one in a yeare." 'The memorial goes on to state, that he had a third day for his All for Love.

This arrangement is taken from Dr. Johnson. We have subjoined to this article the copy of a more correct schedule from Mr. Scott's Life, vol. i. p. 367.

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