By 1663, 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 1668, he was appointed to succeed William Davenant as Poet Laureate, a post which he would lose when King James II was deposed twenty years later. He continued to lead the way in Restoration comedy, his best known work being All for Love[?] (1678). He was also made a fellow of the Royal Society in 1663 and in 1668 he was made Poet laureate (until 1689). From the 1680s Dryden concentrated on poetry where his use of the rhymed couplet is considered brilliant, although he continued to write plays and composed several librettoes. In 1686 he converted to Catholicism. He also made some popular translations of Virgil's Aeneid and works by Horace, Ovid and Homer. He is buried in Westminster Abbey.
Noted works include: Astraea Redux (1660), The Indian Emperor (1665), Annus Mirabilis (1667), An Essay of Dramatic Poesy (1668), Tyrannick Love (1669), Marriage A-la-Mode (1672), The Conquest of Granada (1670), All for Love (1677), Absalom and Achitophel (1681), The Hind and the Panther (1687), Amphitryon (1690), Don Sebastian (1690).
His eldest son, Charles Dryden, became chamberlain to Pope Innocent XII.
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