John Dryden: Literary Critic Poet Laureate
John Dryden: Literary Critic Poet Laureate
JOHN DRYDEN
(1631-1700)
“ He was the lock by which the waters of the English poetry were
let down from the mountains of Shakespeare and Milton to the
plains of Pope.”
His life was a long one. It was in addition, an exceedingly fruitful one.
For forty years, he continued to produce an abundance of literary works
of every kind—poems, plays, and prose works. The quality was almost
unfailingly good, and at the end of his life, his poetry was as fresh and
vivacious at it had been in the prime of his manhood.
• Satiric Power
Dryden is one of the greatest English satirists. He is the first practitioner
of classical satire which after him was to remain in vogue for about one
hundred and fifty years. From the very beginning of his literary career
Dryden evinced a sharp satiric bent. He translated some of the satires of
the Roman writer Persius when he was only a pupil at Westminster.
Further, in his comedies he produced numerous passages of sparkling
satire. He keenly studied the satirical traditions of Rome and France and
whatever satire England had to offer.
Dryden himself was aware of it when he said that the satirist should
make a man “die sweetly,” call him a fool or a rogue without using these
“opprobrious terms.” He distinguished between the “slovenly butchering”
done by a bad satirist and the dexterous stroke which severs the head
but leaves it standing. Seldom does Dryden indulge in open
denunciation or invective, but he often uses such indirect techniques as
irony, sarcasm, and above all his exuberant wit. It is what primarily
distinguishes him from his predecessors who were always open and
direct in their attacks. His satire is indirect and, therefore, smooth,
urbane, and without angularities or harshness. The same-is the case
with his versification. He found a good satiric vehicle in the heroic
couplet and chiselled and planed it to brilliance. His versification avoids
the harshness deliberately cultivated by his young friend Oldham who
also employed the heroic couplet. Observes Hugh Walker: “It is this
combination-smoothness of verse, lucidity of style, urbanity of manner-
which makes Dryden’s satire so strikingly original. In English there had
hitherto been nothing comparable to it.”
‘Absalom and Achitophel’ and ‘Mac Flecknoe’ reveal him at his best as a
satirist.
•His Craftsmanship
He was master of select and polished words. His facility of placing
words, both, in poetry and prose is wonderful.
Dr. Jonson wrote;
“ Dryden found out English brick and left it a marble”
Dryden is also credited to have perfected the heroic couplet. His use of
couplet proved its capability and assured it success. He invented
nothing but perfected the crude inventions of other men.
•Dryden’s Limitations
He was a poet of reasons and good sense. His poetry was prosaic in
character. What Dryden achieved in his poetry was neither the
emotional excitement of the early nineteenth-century romantics nor the
intellectual complexities of the metaphysicals. His subject matter was
often factual, and he aimed at expressing his thoughts in the most
precise and concentrated manner. Although he uses formal structures
such as heroic couplets, he tried to recreate the natural rhythm of
speech, and he knew that different subjects need different kinds of
verse. In his preface to Religio Laici he says
“The expressions of a poem designed purely for instruction ought to
be plain and natural, yet majestic... The florid, elevated and figurative
way is for the passions; for (these) are begotten in the soul by showing
the objects out of their true proportion.... A man is to be cheated into
passion, but to be reasoned into truth.”
John Dryden was a major essayist of the English literary tradition. His
works are so praiseworthy that Samuel Johnson, a contemporary of
Dryden and himself a major critic, called him ‘the father of English
criticism” along with commenting that English prose starts with
Dryden’s 'Essay on Dramatic Poesy.’
He was the first to teach the English people to determine the merit of
composition upon principles. With Dryden, a new era of criticism began.
Before, Dryden, there were only occasional utterances on the critical art.
(E.g. Ben Jonson and Philip Sidney) Though Dryden’s criticism was of
scattered nature; he paid attention to almost all literary forms and
expressed his views on them.
Dryden carried out his critical thoughts effectively, stating his own ideas
but leaving some room for difference of opinion. When his
contemporaries were all praised for ben Jonson and Fletcher, and when
Thomas Rymer was busy hunting faults in Shakespeare’s plays, Dryden
showed remarkable courage of conviction an boldly asserted :
“ I admire Ben Jonson but I love Shakespeare”
Dryden is also the first English poet to practise Descriptive Criticism. His
comments on individual poets and writers were similarly descriptive.