This study focuses on describing John Dryden’s unstable psychological life which always take sides and defends the winning parties. The explication of his works that shows his allegiance to the winning sides is also included here. The objectives of the study are aimed at: (1) explaining how John Dryden wins fame, especially in the literature so that he converted his faith from Protestant or as a puritanist to Catholics; and (2) investigating why John Dryden always defends to the winning sides which lead him to have obscure enemies in the Restoration Period. The method of the study is the library research. The primary sources used in this study stem from some texts books. The secondary sources are obtained from the internet. The analysis sho...
Over a decade after the execution of his father, Charles II of England was invited back to his thron...
Over a decade after the execution of his father, Charles II of England was invited back to his thron...
The Restoration of Charles II Stuart in 1660 was reckoned in post-revolutionary England both in term...
Poetry and politics were important to Dryden throughout his career. They are no less important to Fa...
Poetry and politics were important to Dryden throughout his career. They are no less important to Fa...
John Dryden\u27s satiric prowess developed as he reacted to political, literary, and religious confl...
Poetry and politics were important to Dryden throughout his career. They are no less important to Fa...
This study examines ways in which supporters of William III and his opponents used literature to but...
This book explores the paradoxical place of enthusiasm in Dryden's writing and the role he conceived...
John Dryden (1631-1700) needs no introduction as one of the finest English translators of poetry in ...
Includes bibliographical references.For more than two hundred and fifty years a critical attle about...
This study has one major purpose: to discover the formation of Dryden’s dramatic theory in the “Ess...
This study has one major purpose: to discover the formation of Dryden’s dramatic theory in the “Ess...
The purpose of this study is to provide a corrective to some predominant misconceptions about Dryden...
This study examines ways in which supporters of William III and his opponents used literature to but...
Over a decade after the execution of his father, Charles II of England was invited back to his thron...
Over a decade after the execution of his father, Charles II of England was invited back to his thron...
The Restoration of Charles II Stuart in 1660 was reckoned in post-revolutionary England both in term...
Poetry and politics were important to Dryden throughout his career. They are no less important to Fa...
Poetry and politics were important to Dryden throughout his career. They are no less important to Fa...
John Dryden\u27s satiric prowess developed as he reacted to political, literary, and religious confl...
Poetry and politics were important to Dryden throughout his career. They are no less important to Fa...
This study examines ways in which supporters of William III and his opponents used literature to but...
This book explores the paradoxical place of enthusiasm in Dryden's writing and the role he conceived...
John Dryden (1631-1700) needs no introduction as one of the finest English translators of poetry in ...
Includes bibliographical references.For more than two hundred and fifty years a critical attle about...
This study has one major purpose: to discover the formation of Dryden’s dramatic theory in the “Ess...
This study has one major purpose: to discover the formation of Dryden’s dramatic theory in the “Ess...
The purpose of this study is to provide a corrective to some predominant misconceptions about Dryden...
This study examines ways in which supporters of William III and his opponents used literature to but...
Over a decade after the execution of his father, Charles II of England was invited back to his thron...
Over a decade after the execution of his father, Charles II of England was invited back to his thron...
The Restoration of Charles II Stuart in 1660 was reckoned in post-revolutionary England both in term...