structed"here on earth. After all, what priests here construed to be sinful in David's lust was precisely what earlier warmed the very heart of Heaven. With good reason Ruth Salvaggio (in her Dryden's Dualities ) has seen in these witty lines an inspired doubletalk.
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To be sure, at the end of his poem Dryden has his sovereign assert his authority with a magically victorious raising of his arm, as if the royal gesture were itself a political act. As he threatens to unleash "the fury of a patient man," Charles/David raises his arm, the insurrection ends, the Almighty nods in consent, thunder rolls, a new series of Time begins, and "willing Nations [know] their Lawfull Lord." But, of course, Charles prevailed by power and policy, not by magic; the raising of the arm that ends the poem is only his entirely legal proroguing of Parliament in 1682, and the "Series of New Time" it initiated was abruptly curtailed six years later when James II fled for France to engender a line of "pretenders" to the throne.
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Dryden's penchant for the magical and mythological certification of his political preferences, the deep connection between those modes of imagining and his conservative preference for king and cavalierthese are obvious. But accompanying these habits, subjecting them to a contemplative irony, enriching them into thought, are the brave invitations to free speculation that Dryden issues to his ideal audience. For the most part, this audience does not yet wear its old devotions merely as the masks that cover smiles of contempt (as Gibbon quipped about the philosophical sophisticates of the late Republic), but among Dryden's readers were those who possessed the libertine awareness that a set of masks might be all we have to defend, and that in their defense we discover, construct, and scrutinize our beings. Dryden is not uninterested in pleasing such readers.
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Dryden gave to his other great poem on political and religious controversy the title Religio Laici an adequate translation of which, in the light of what the poem actually does, would be "the character of a pious Christian, born into the Anglican communion, educated in classical philosophy, grounded in Christian theology and in Church history, alert to and free-minded about contemporary theological controversy, but holding decided opinions on the political implications of one's religious choices." All readers of this poem notice its extraordinary tonal sweep, its corresponding range of feeling, and the continuo of reasoning upon which its rhetorical and affective structure is founded.
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