"John Dyer" was a painter and Welsh poet turned clergyman of the Church of England who maintained an interest in his Welsh ancestry. He was most recognized for Wordsworth’s sonnet, To The Poet, John Dyer, addressed to him, and for Grongar Hill, one of Dyer’s six early poems featured in Richard Savage’s Miscellaneous Poems and Translations by Several Hands (February 1726), a collection of works featuring ‘Hillarian’ circle verse. His unsuccessful works include Ruins of Rome, The Fleece, Country Walk, An Epistle To A Friend In Town, To Aurelia and The Enquiry.

Although Dyer’s popularity was short lived after Grongar Hill, William Wordsworth and John Gray (poet)/John Gray praised John Dyer’s imagination and style as having, “more of poetry in his imagination than almost any of our number, but rough and injudicious.”

More John Dyer on Wikipedia.

This is perhaps the best win of the season. Best of the program, really.

Street by street, we are getting them all in, ... Now they will just see the light is turning red.

You try to make the best of everything, and then you just break down and you cry. Tonight, we're gonna be OK. And we're gonna be OK. Everyone's gonna be OK, it's just going to be a process.

It's a terrible thing wishing that it can be someone else's tragedy.

We'll definitely face them in the post-season. We'll see them again this season for sure.

A little rule, a little sway, / A sunbeam in a winter's day, / Is all the proud and mighty have / Between the cradle and the grave.

We haven't beaten them in my three seasons. We were 0-7 against them, so this is special.

For me, personally, it's almost unbearable. He and I had a lot of plans for what he wanted to do when he got out. We had planned to visit Washington together, for one.

And he that will this health deny, / Down among the dead men let him lie.