When, early in 1685, Charles II died, Dryden honoured his memory with a Pindaric ode, Threnodia Augustalis, to which the poet gave a semi-official character by describing himself as servant to his late Majesty and to the present King. The ode, which has some fine turns, without altogether escaping bathos, treats a not very promising subject (which baffled Otway 94 ) with Drydens usual skill in the selection of qualities warranting praise; the inequalities of the metre, on which Scott wittily dwells, are less violent than those to be found in the far more celebrated Alexanders Feast. Drydens other effort as poet laureate, Britannia Rediviva: a Poem on the Prince born on the 10th of June, 1688, is written in the couplet of which he was master; but the occasionfor surely never was the news of a royal birth received as was that of the prince to be known in later years as the Old Pretendercould not be met without artificiality of tone. |
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