How To Use John dryden In A Sentence

  • The sooner you treat your son as a man, the sooner he will be one. John Dryden 
  • The sooner you treat your son as a man, the sooner he will be one. John Dryden 
  • The sooner you treat your son as a man, the sooner he will be one. John Dryden 
  • The English poet John Dryden, who died in 1700, complained that the language was becoming unruly and disordered - ‘how barbarously we yet write and speak’, he said.
  • Dancing is the poetry of the foot. John Dryden 
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  • The sooner you treat your son as a man, the sooner he will be one. John Dryden 
  • Love is love's reward. John Dryden 
  • Secret guilt is by silence revealed. John Dryden 
  • It was the family home of the Dryden family and was visited by the poet John Dryden.
  • The sooner you treat your son as a man, the sooner he will be one. John Dryden 
  • The sooner you treat your son as a man, the sooner he will be one. John Dryden 
  • Genius must be born, and never can be taught. John Dryden 
  • Jealousy is the jaundice of the soul. John Dryden 
  • The sooner you treat your son as a man, the sooner he will be one. John Dryden 
  • John Dryden prescribed paraphrase, but later advocated a point between paraphrase and metaphrase.
  • Love reckons hours for months, and days for years; and every little absence is an age. John Dryden 
  • ATTRIBUTION: JOHN DRYDEN, “Horace, the Twenty-Ninth Ode of the Third Book, ” stanza 9, The Poetical Works of Dryden, new ed.rev. and enl., ed. George R. Noyes, p. 200 (1950). John Dryden (1631-1700)
  • Dancing is the poetry of the foot. John Dryden 
  • The sooner you treat your son as a man, the sooner he will be one. John Dryden 
  • Secret guilt is by silence revealed. John Dryden 
  • Love is not in our choice but in our fate. John Dryden 
  • The sooner you treat your son as a man, the sooner he will be one. John Dryden 
  • Secret guilt is by silence revealed. John Dryden 
  • ATTRIBUTION: JOHN DRYDEN, Absalom and Achitophel, part 2, lines 268–69, p. 9 (1682, reprinted 1970). John Dryden (1631-1700)
  • The sooner you treat your son as a man, the sooner he will be one. John Dryden 
  • It is almost impossible to translate verbally and well at the same time. John Dryden 
  • Happy the man, and happy he alone, he who can call today his own; he who, secure within, can say, tomorrow do thy worst, for I have lived today. John Dryden 
  • The sooner you treat your son as a man, the sooner he will be one. John Dryden 
  • ‘So easy still it proves in factious times, with public zeal to cancel private crimes’, wrote John Dryden.
  • Boldness is a mask for fear, however great. John Dryden 

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