There are a number of stories associated with Dyer, particularly regarding his myopia and his eccentricities. These stories were told by his friends
Leigh Hunt and
Charles Lamb. Lamb in his
Elia essay "Amicus Redivivus" relates an incident in which Dyer, after a visit to the Lamb household in
Islington, walked the wrong way on the pathway and went right into the New River, nearly drowning himself in the process. Leigh Hunt tells a similar story regarding Dyer, in which after spending the evening at the Hunts' for dinner, he inadvertently left with only one shoe. Apparently Dyer's missing shoe went unnoticed by him until he arrived home and he returned to the Hunt household after midnight, awakening everyone, to retrieve his missing shoe which was finally located under a table. In his rooms, Dyer had a disreputable armchair with a number of holes in the upholstery. Two of his female friends, trying to do him a favour, sowed up the gaping holes. To their dismay, they later discovered Dyer kept a book in each hole. Another incident relating to Dyer concerns a preface which he wrote for his
Poems published in 1802. On rereading one of the first prints of his book, Dyer claimed that there was a significant error in reasoning contained on the first page of the preface. He rushed to the printer and had a number of prints redone at considerable expense. In about 1825, he married the widow of a solicitor, a Mrs Mather. He died in his rooms at
Clifford’s Inn on 2 March 1841. ==Assessment==