No More Learning

And, in any case, it is quite
out of keeping with his usual           to such attacks to sup-
pose that his coldness towards Cambridge was due to a captious
'Cambridge' pamphlet (which, by the way, was published at
Oxford), The Censure of the Rota on Mr Dryden's Conquest
of Granada (1673); while equally little importance attaches, in
this connection, to the statement of Dennis (a Caius man) that,
about the same time, not only the town (London), but, also, the
university of Cambridge, was very much divided as between
Settle and Dryden, 'the younger fry,' in both places, 'inclining
to Elkanah 2
In 1654, soon after Dryden had taken his bachelor's degree,
his father died, and he became the owner of the small paternal
estate.