Part V: 1685
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For the poet who had risen to prominence as the major panegyrist of restored Stuart power, King Charles II's death inevitably prompted reflections on the origins of the dynasty and on its future. The longest verse panegyric written by John Dryden, Threnodia Augustalis, dwells mostly on Charles's death and legacy. King James II held his first meeting with the Privy Council, one day after Charles's death. He addressed all the members, assuring them that, contrary to popular opinion, he would protect the Church of England. In 1685 two poems by Quaker leader William Penn, were printed, one on the death of Charles II and the other on the coronation of James and Mary of Modena. In 1685 Aphra Behn wrote poems on Charles II's death and James's coronation.

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