In a time gone by there were two Aldwincle Parishes, Aldwincle St Peters and Aldwincle All Saints they were joined together in November 1879.
Aldwincle Village Sign Northamptonshire
To all appearances it is St Peters that is now the center of village life as All Saints sits a world apart opposte Dryden house on the way to Thorpe Waterville across Harper’s Brook and over the Nene river by Brancey Bridge.
All Saints Church Aldwincle Northamptonshire
John Dryden poet, playwright and critic was born in the house that sits in the shadow of church on the 9 August 1631.
Dryden House Aldwincle Northamptonshire
Son of Erasmas Dryden and Mary Pickering of Titchmarsh he was Christened in the Church of All Saints where his grandfather Henry Pickering was Rector were there is a tablet commemorating the event.
Church Commemorative Tablet
All Saints Church is now in the care of The Church Conservation Trust as it is no longer needed for regular worship but remains as consecrated buildings and is of historical importance, it is a delight to walk round and has always been open when ever we have visited.
All Saints Church Striking Interior
All Saints Church Stained Glass Window
Samuel Johnson summed up the general attitude to John Dryden with his remark that
“the veneration with which his name is pronounced by every cultivator of English literature,
is paid to him as he refined the language, improved the sentiments,
and tuned the numbers of English poetry.”
and tuned the numbers of English poetry.”
And T. S. Eliot wrote that he was
‘the ancestor of nearly all that is best in the poetry of the eighteenth century’,
and that ‘we cannot fully enjoy or rightly estimate a hundred years of English poetry
unless we fully enjoy Dryden.’