The Dramatic Works of John Dryden, Volume 1 - With a Life of the Author by Sir Walter Scott
page 54 of 427 (12%)
page 54 of 427 (12%)
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And you had been expelled, had you not fled."
[28] He received this degree by dispensation from the Archbishop of Canterbury. [29] Prologue to the University of Oxford. [30] Jonathan Dryden, elected a scholar from Westminster into Trinity College, Cambridge, in 1656, of which he became fellow in 1662, was author of some verses in the Cambridge Collections in 1661, on the death of the Duke of Gloucester, and the marriage of the Princess of Orange; and in 1662, on the marriage of Charles II., which have been imputed to our author. An order, quoted by Mr. Malone, for abatement of the commencement-money paid at taking the Bachelor's degree, on account of poverty, applies to Jonathan, not to John Dryden.--MALONE, vol. i. p.17, note. [31] [This letter will be found in its proper place. It is the sole personal utterance in prose, and almost the only biographical fact of importance that we have for the first thirty years of Dryden's life. Upon it, an entirely baseless romance has been built of disappointed love and parental unkindness. There is absolutely no evidence that Dryden ever seriously pretended to his cousin's hand, or that he was rejected, or that this rejection was due to his uncle's influence.--ED.] [32] Elegy on Lady Haddington, in Corbet's Poems, p. 121. Gilchrist's edition. [33] Sir John Pickering, father of Sir Gilbert, married Susan, the sister of Erasmus Dryden, the poet's father. But Mary Pickering, the |
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