John Dryden (August 19, 1631 – May 12, 1700) was an influential English poet, literary critic, and playwright.
He was born in a village rectory near Oundle in Northamptonshire and educated at Westminster School and Trinity College, Cambridge. He was a professional writer throughout his life. His early plays, often heroic tragedy, met with highly variable success but served to promote his name and his Royalist sentiments. Arriving in London during the Protectorate, he attempted to capitalise on the Parliamentarian sympathies of his family (his cousin was a judge during the trial of Charles I, but failed to make much impact until the Restoration of King Charles II. His poem, Astrea Redux, in honour of this event, made him a name.
By 1663, the year he was made a fellow of the Royal Society, he was prominent enough to be accepted as a suitable husband for Lady Elizabeth Howard, but his reputation was not really made until Annus Mirabilis, a celebration of the events of 1666 in pentameter quatrains. In 1668, he was appointed to succeed William Davenant as Poet Laureate, a post which he lost when King James II was deposed twenty years later. For the next ten years, his output was mainly for the stage. He led the way in Restoration comedy, his best known work being Marriage A-la-Mode, (1672), as well as heroic tragedy and regular tragedy, in which his greatest success was All For Love (1677). Dryden was a master of the verse prologue and epilogue, and often contributed prologues and epilogues to other playwrights' plays. His other works of major importance from this period are his prefaces and essays on drama, of which the Essay of Dramatick Poesie (1668) is the longest and arguably the best. In these essays, Dryden expressed his belief that the Elizabethan dramatists had surpassed those of Greece; argued for the use of rhymed verse in the drama; and examined and compared the works of Shakespeare, Ben Jonson and John Fletcher.
From the 1680s Dryden concentrated on poetry, in which his use of the rhymed couplet is considered brilliant, although he continued to write plays and composed several librettoes. His greatest achievements were in satiric verse: the mock-heroic MacFlecknoe, an attack on the playwright Thomas Shadwell, and Absalom and Achitophel, a political satire against the Whigs. His other major works from this period are the religious poems Religio Laici (1682) and The Hind and the Panther (1687). The first of these was written before, the second shortly after, Dryden's conversion to Catholicism. After the Glorious Revolution of 1688, Dryden's politics left him out of favour at court, and he was forced to write plays and translate poetry from Latin and Greek for a living. Dryden translated works by Horace, Juvenal, Ovid, Lucretius, and Theocritus, in addition to his two major efforts, the complete works of Virgil in 1697 and Fables, Ancient and Modern (1700), a collection of translations of Homer, Ovid, and Boccaccio, as well as modernised adaptations from Geoffrey Chaucer. The Preface to Fables is considered to be both a major work of criticism and one of the finest essays in English.
Dryden is buried in Westminster Abbey. His eldest son, Charles Dryden, became chamberlain to Pope Innocent XII.