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xx. 849-example of natural sympathy afforded by him, xxii. 726-remarks on him as a subject for biography, xxiii. 364-his powers, &c. as a satirist, 838-remarks on his hymns, xxiv. 929 -W. L. Bowles on his Task, xxvii. 286-poetical portrait of him, 633relations of his poetry to nature, 834 -description of winter, &c. from his Task, xxix. 294-his description of the Russian ice palace, 304-specimens of his Homer, and criticisms on it, 670 et seq. passim-parallel between his Task and the Excursion of Wordsworth, 695-extracts from his Iliad compared with Chapman's, Sotheby's, &c., xxix. 832 et seq., xxx. 100 et seq., 852, 857, xxxi. 146 et seq.-is his Task a great poem? xxx. 483-the first speech of Telemachus, from his translation of the Odyssey, xxxv. 9-the eagle scene, from the Odyssey by him, 12-the flight of Hermes to Ogygia, from his Odyssey, 157-on him as the poet of the poor, 817-influence of his religious creed on his poetry, xxxvii. 677-on his lines to his mother's picture, xxxviii. 146-translations from the Odyssey by him, xliii. 262-his Happy man compared with Young's, xliv. 589, 590-picture of Hope by him, xlvi. 147-examples of personification from him, xlvii. 811, 813-impersonations of the stars by him, xlix. 778. Cowper's Grave, by Miss Barrett, xliv. 283.

Cowslip, lines on the, xxviii. 270.

Cowslip Green, a sonnet, by H. T., xli. 444.

Cowthally, visit of James III. to, i. 163 -and of James V., 164.

Cowthrope oak, the, xi. 294.
Coxcombry, North on, xxv. 373.
Crab Island, statistics of, xxxiv. 617.
Crabs, Irish, xliv. 647.

CRABBE'S TALES OF THE HALL, review of, v. 469.

Crabbe, George, Hazlitt on the poetry of, ii. 683-religious character of his poetry, xxi. 678-characteristics of it as compared with that of Wordsworth, &c., xxii. 538-the Edinburgh Review's estimation of him, 547-dramatic poem founded on his Confidant, xxiv. 765-poetical portrait of him, xxvii. 633 remarks on his poetry, xxx. 475-his death, and remarks on his works, xxxii. 410-Burke's early patronage of him, xxxiv. 39-on him as the poet of the poor, xxxv. 817-general characteristics of his poetry, and two unpublished poems ascribed to him, xli. 464.

Crabstick, the, xvi. 600.

Cracow, description of the city of, xi.

652-settlement of the republic of, by the congress of Vienna, xxxix. 657. Cradle song of the elves, the, xxvii. 769. Cradock, Sir John, in Portugal, xxvi.

919.

CRAIG, SIR THOMAS, OF RICCARTON, LIFE OF, ii. 383.

Craigleith quarries, importance of, to Edinburgh, xl. 237.

Crambambulee, with music, xviii. 762.
Crammont, the ascent of the, and its
scenery, xxxix. 346-the view of Mont
Blanc from it, 347.

Cramps for curling on, xxx. 972.
CRANES OF IBYCUS, THE, from Schiller,
Xxxviii. 302.

CRANIAD, THE, review of, i. 288. CRANIOLOGICAL CONTROVERSY, THE, i. 35, 365.

CRANIOLOGIST'S REVIEW, THE, No. I., the head of Napoleon, iii. 146-No. II., Greek heads, 298-No. III., the head of Oliver Cromwell, 300-No. IV., that of Franklin, ib.-No. V., that of Voltaire, ib.

CRANIOSCOPY, CRANIOLOGY, PHRENOLOGY, &c. essays on, chap. I., x. 73-chap. II., 77, chap. III., 81.

Cranmer, enmity of Carranza to, xx. 335 -proceedings of, as a Reformer, xxvi. 89-on the object of cathedral establishments, xxxiv. 684.

Cranmere, rise of the Dart at, xxxiii. 702.

Cranstoun, lord, Dr Morris's description of, iv. 750.

CRANSTOUN, H., ESQ., LETTER FROM, on Captain Basil Hall's Schloss Hainfield, xl. 842-reply of Captain Hall to him, xli. 31.

Craon, view from the, xl. 80.

Crashaw's Suspicion of Herod, extracts from, i. 140.

Crassian law at Rome, the, xxiii. 582. Crassus, the overthrow of Spartacus by, xl. 382.

Crates the cynic, Human Life from, Xxxviii. 403.

Craufurd, general, during the campaign of Corunna, xxvii. 526-death of, at the storming of Ciudad Rodrigo, xxiii. 734, 735, xlviii. 80.

CRAVEN, a legend of, xxv. 1.
CRAVEN HEART, THE, XXXiii. 264.
Crawford, Mr, secretary of the Treasury
in the United States, sketch of, xv. 510.
Crawford, general, evidence of, regarding
Ireland, xxxiii. 352.

Crawford, Mr, on wages and corn laws,
XXXV. 798, 799.

Crawfurd, J., circular of, to the Marylebone electors, xxxv. 545.

Crawfurd, Mrs, the actress, xxxvi. 160. Crawfurd's History of Renfrewshire, criticism on, iii. 438.

Crawley, Ward's fight with, xxi. 779. Creag-agheoidh, Loch Awe, xxxiii. 990. Creation, Chateaubriand on the various myths of, xxxii. 226.

CREATION OF PEERS, A, xxxi. 386. Crebillon, the French dramatist, xlvi. 4, 5.

Credit, project in aid of, xiv. 516-evils of the system of, xxvii. 934. Credit, danger to, from the publication of the investigation into the affairs of the Bank, xxxii. 672.

Creditors, effects of the suspension of cash payments on, xxvii. 59-effects of their resumption, 62 influence of the successive changes in the currency system on them, xxxv. 533.

Credule, A. D., on the Unicorn, xii. 660. Credulity, illustration of, in Halifax, xlii. 63.

Creeling the Bridegroom, a Highland custom, xiii. 705.

Creepers and vermin in cottages, xix.

242.

Creoles, the, of Spanish America, xl. 657. Creran, glen, xxviii. 585.

Crescent, capture of the Reunion by the, xxi. 742.

Crescentius, Miss Landon's, xvi. 193. Cresembini, character of Cintio by, xxi. 727.

Cressy, the battle of, xlix. 660.

Creswick, T., the painter, The Bye-road by, xlviii. 381-The Rocky Stream by, 1. 347.

Cretan tumblers, the, 1. 426.

Crete, correspondence of life in, with
Homeric representations, 1. 424.
Crettom, village of, xxxix. 654.
Crevant, defeat of the Scots in France
at, xlix. 665.

Crib the pugilist, xii. 463.

CRICHTON, THE ADMIRABLE, Tytler's life of, reviewed, v. 393.

Cries of animals, Chateaubriand on the, xxxii. 229.

Cries of Edinburgh, the, ix. 399. Criesis, a Hydriot leader, xliii. 479. CRIME, THE FIRST AND LAST, xxv. 303. Crime, whether it is palliated or aggravated by drunkenness, xxiii. 493theory of the punishment of it, xxvii. 865-increase of it, xxxiv. 193-its increase as compared with that of population, &c., xxxv. 238-statistics of its increase, xlviii. 69-its increase under the Whig government, 1. 9alleged fostering of it by the modern system of education, xxxv. 232-statistics of it from 1812 to 1832, and its relations to education, 235-the relations of education to it, xxxviii. 393— the relations of knowledge and ignorance to it, as shown by the characters of criminals, xl. 585-how promoted by

merely secular education, xli. 87—the relations of education to it in various countries, xlv. 277-increase of it during the Reform agitation, xxxi. 403— certainty of it as a result of strikes among the labouring classes, xxxv. 350-illustration of this from the strike of the Glasgow cotton-spinners, xliii. 290comparison of it in the United States and Great Britain, xvi. 479-relations of it to education in France, xxxix. 101 note increase of it with the spread of education in France, xli. 85 -and in England, 86-statistics connected with it in France, xlii. 148increase of it in Glasgow from 1824 to 1837, xliii. 301-statistics regarding it in Glasgow, 1. 665-general progress of it in Great Britain, xlv. 805-increase of it in India, xviii. 406-support given by superstition to it in Ireland, xx. 531-comparative amounts of it in Ireland and elsewhere, xxii. 25-statistics of it in Ireland, xxxiii. 357, 569-statistics of it there showing the effects of Whig administration on it, xliii. 798-statistics of it in Ireland in connection with education, xxxv. 236-tables of its increase, its details, &c. there, xliii. 123, xliv. 796, xlv. 213-effects of the conciliation system in causing its increase there, xxxiv. 784-increase of it there since Catholic emancipation, xxxvi. 756, xxxviii. 254-state of it there in 1837, xlii. 432-Christopher on that of London, xxiii. 813-increase of it in the manufacturing districts, xlvii. 427 -statistics of it in Paris, xx. 184-the peculiar season of it in Rome, xxv. 713-rapid progress of it in Scotland, xlv. 277-its relations to education there, 278-statistics of its increase there, xlviii. 837-its prevalence in Sierra Leone, xxiii. 65.

CRIMES, HINTS TO SPECULATORS ON THE INCREASE OF, iii. 176.

Crimes, what classes of them are justly punishable with death, xxvii. 867peculiar, of which law takes no cognisance, xlii. 67.

Crimea, capabilities of the, xxxix. 153— mode of its acquisition by Russia, 314, xlii. 748-the invasion of it by her, xlvi. 358-her jealousy with regard to it, 345-introduction of slavery into it, 346.

Criminal, religion the only power to influence the, xlii. 154. Criminals, proportion of educated to uneducated, in Great Britain, xxxviii. 393, 394-mode of classifying them in France, xlii. 145-confusion of different grades, &c. of them there, 146— proportions of rural and urban there,

INDEX-VOLS. I. TO NIVERSITY

149-their so-called self-respect, what it really is, 150 note-the proportion of recommitments among them in France, 151-proportion of male and female in France and Great Britain, 156 the treatment of young, in France, ib.

Criminal classes in Great Britain, the, xxvii. 875.

Criminal justice in Scotland, on the proposed changes in the administration of, xvii. 121-Cornwallis's system for the administration of it in India, xviii. 310.

Criminal law, Mr Kennedy's bill for amelioration of, xi. 73-system of, adopted by the British in India, xviii. 408-the Scottish system of it, xxx. 776, xxxvi. 664-the results of Sir Samuel Romilly's reforms in it, xlviii. 68.

Criminal procedure in Scotland, on, xv. 515.

Criminal punishment, objects of, xlii. 153.

Crinagoras, epigram from, xxxiv. 422— Winter Roses, &c. from, xxxviii. 193 -Cæsar's Kid from, 644-on a statue of Cupid manacled from, xxxix. 795on a small island from, 796-on Eunicidas, from, xl. 275-to Cæsar, from, 276.

Cringle, see Tom Cringle.

CRISIS OF MODERN SPECULATION, the, 1. 527.

Crisis, approaching political, xxvi. 413. Critic, Sheridan's comedy of the, remarks on it, ix. 284, xix. 129-origin of it, xx. 35-its first production, xlv. 396.

Critics of England, Lauerwinkel on the, ii. 670.

Critics and criticism, on, viii. 138. Critics, why poets make indifferent, x. 180-reception of Sir Walter Scott's poems by the, xxii. 548. Critics, great and small, xxxix. 672. CRITICAL, HINTS TO AUTHORS ON THE, The Accurate, xxxix. 607-The Gossiping, 612. CRITICISM, Xiii. 686.

CRITICISM OF POETRY, remarks connected

with the, xvii. 74.

Criticism, modern, characteristics of, iv. 696, xi. 344-letter from a gentleman of the press on, xii. 56-new character of it originated with the Magazine, xix. Preface, xxii.-Lessing the founder of it in Germany, xx. 728-improved state of it, xxii. 531-influence of it on the drama, xxiii. 34-characteristics of ancient and modern, xxv. 537 remarks on it, and its Scotch professors, xxx. 93, 94-the Scottish school of it, xxxvii. 699-state of it in France during the eighteenth century,

OF

xlvi. 1, 826-dangos and evils orie, 1.

143.

Critik der reinen Vernunft, Kant's publication of the, xxi. 134.

Crixus the colleague of Spartacus, notices of, xl. 379 et seq. passim-his defeat and death, 381.

Croaker, an American writer, xvi. 565.
Crockern Tor, xxxiii. 701.

Crockford, Mr, at Epsom, 1826, xx. 17.
Crockford house, a satire, xxi. 486.
Crocodile, flesh of the, vii. 105.
CROCODILE ISLAND, Xxxiii. 105.
Crocus, the, xxxv. 812.

Crocus's soliloquy, the, xxxv. 811. Crohoore of the Bill-hook, tale of, xxiv. 471.

Croix de Morai, chapel of the, xxxix.

142.

CROKER'S (CROFTON) FAIRY LEGENDS AND

TRADITIONS, review of, xviii. 55. CROKER'S RESEARCHES IN THE SOUTH OF IRELAND, review of, xv. 551. Croker's Fairy Legends, remarks on,

xxiii. 10-The Christmas Box, edited by him, reviewed, xxiv. 675. Croker, J. Wilson, letter from, to O'Meara on his St Helena Memoirs, xii. 704-his speech on the bringing in of the Reform Bill, xxix. 664-speech by him against Reform, 731-attack on Lord Jeffrey by, 878-efforts of, against the Reform Bill, xxx. 292and the Lord Advocate, 399-character of his oratory, and his attack on Lord Jeffrey, 412-his edition of Boswell's Johnson, 829.

CROLY'S (REV. GEORGE) ANGEL OF THE WORLD, review of, viii. 2.

CROLY'S GEMS FROM THE ANTIQUE, review of, xii. 478.

CROLY'S CATILINE, review of, xi. 698Philomag and North on the review of it, xii. 51.

CROLY'S PRIDE SHALL HAVE A FALL, re

view of, xv. 343-remarks on it, 362. Croly's Paris, remarks on, viii. 20speech by him regarding monument to George III. xi. 469-the Edinburgh Review on him, xiii. 602-remarks on a pamphlet by him on Popery, xvii. 740-the Island of Atlantis by him, xix. 87-the Enchanted Castle by him, xx. 900-remarks on his exposition of the Apocalypse, xxii. 133.

Croly, Rev. Mr, P. P., on the system of the Catholic priesthood in Ireland, xxxvi. 758.

Crombie's Etymology and Syntax, xlv.

458.

CROMEK'S RELICS OF NITHSDALE AND GALLOWAY SONG, vi. 314-remarks on it, and Allan Cunningham's contributions to it, xxxi. 987.

Cromek, Mr, the suggestor of Stothard's

Canterbury Pilgrims, xxxix. 753-it partly engraved by him, 756. CROMLIX OR DUNBLANE MINERAL SPRING, i. 485. Crommelin, D., at the Dublin Protestant

Meeting, xxxi. 86, 89. Crompton, Samuel, the inventor of the spinning-mill, xxxix. 407. Cromwell, Oliver, craniological review of the head of, iii. 300-suspension of the East India Company under him, xx. 692-reduction of the legal rate of interest by him, xxiv. 70-state of the Irish Church under him, xxv. 619his proceedings in Ireland, and their effects on the state of the country, xxvi.158-supposed site of the reinterment of his remains, xxxi. 357-the increase of London discouraged by him, 358-his rule in Ireland, and its results, xxxiii. 70-increase of revenue under him, xxxiv. 181-Burke on him, 752-constitution of Parliament under him, xxxv. 529-effects of his severities in Ireland, xxxvi. 747-contrast between his rule and that of Napoleon, xxxviii. 170-contrast between him and Napoleon by Heine, 385-Hume's picture of his despotism, 583-his despotism a natural result of the Great Rebellion, xli. 77-as an example of presence of mind, 165-witticisms regarding his skull, 731— sketch of him by Bossuet, xliii. 44the Protective system and the Navigation Laws originated by him, xliv. 317-policy and proceedings of the Jesuits under him, 736.

Cronenberg Castle, description of, x. 176.

Cronstadt, the Russian navy at, xlii. 757.

Crook Inn, the, xix. 387 et seq.-Christopher at the, xxxii. 187.

Crook's cotton factory, Baltimore, xxiv. 634.

CROOKSTON CASTLE, LINES TO, ii. 515. Croom, ejectment case at, xxvii. 752. Crops, rotation of, Mirbel on, xxxix. 308.

Crosby, arrest of, by the Parliament, xxxiv. 208.

CROSS, DR, ON THE FOOT AND LEG, V. 532.

Cross, Sir John, on the Local Courts' Bill, xxxv. 578.

Cross of Malta coffee-house, the, at Madrid, xxxii. 336.

Crosse, Mr, his Voltaic experiments, xlii. 692.

Crossley, James, stanzas on Robert Shaw by, vii. 72.

Crow, song of the, translations of the,

xxxiv. 138.

Crow Indians, sketches of the, xlii. 65.

Crowe, Mr, passage from Purchas versified by, iv. 344.

Crowe's To-day in Ireland, on, xviii. 238. Crowe's Lewesdon hill, on, xxvii. 287. Crown, position of the, regarding the

change of ministry in 1827, xxi. 747hostility of the Whigs toward it, xxiii. 176-position of it in 1830, xxvii. 378 -attacks of the Whigs on it, xxviii. 91-practical subservience of it to the House of Commons, 289-functions of it, 531, 532-limited power of it in Poland before the partition, xxx. 233 -threatened encroachments of the people upon it, 298-fallen position of it, 705-danger of its being made subordinate to the House of Commons, 709-necessity for the independence of it, 711-on its right with regard to the creation of Peers, xxxi. 392-early contests between it and the barons, 575-Satan to the Whigs on it, 667power of it in Spain as defined by the Cortes in 1812, xxxii. 330-patronage &c. possessed by it in France, xxxiv. 642-influence of the effects of Whig policy on it, xxxv. 537-efforts of Mirabeau on behalf of it in France, 629-Dundas on its prerogatives with regard to the choice of ministers in Great Britain, xxxvii. 562. Crown Jewels of England, history, &c. of the, 1. 809.

Crown lands of Poland, management of

the, xx. 362--demands of the Radicals with regard to them in Great Britain, xxxii. 843-sales of them in France under Louis Philippe, xxxiv. 655. Crown reserves, disposal of the, in Canada, xx. 475.

Crown and Anchor Tavern, anti-corn-law meeting held at the, xxxv. 792-inflammatory meeting at the, 1836, xl. 227.

CROWN OF THORNS, the, by C. M., xxxiv.

609.

Crowning, the, a coronation sonnet, xliv.

402.

Cruachan, Ben, xxviii. 584-description of it by Christopher, xxxiii. 984-a thunder-storm on it, xxxviii. 160. Cruelty to animals, Sommerville's sermon on, xxi. 479-Mr Martin's bill for the prevention of it, xvii. 600-on it and Martin's bill, xviii. 379-and his attempts to enforce it, 497-on the attempts to legislate against it, xix. 503. Cruger, Mr, Burke's colleague in the representation of Bristol, xxxiii. 609,

610.

Cruickshanks, Charles, during the Moray floods, xxviii. 174.

CRUICKSHANKS, GEORGE, xiv. 18. CRUICKSHANKS ON TIME, Xxi. 777. Cruickshanks, on the works of, xv. 220

on his Points of Humour, xiv. 21-his political caricatures, xvi. 239 — his Phrenological Illustrations, xx. 781his Illustrations of the Life of Napoleon, xxv. 799-on his capabilities for caricature, xliv. 780. CRUISE OF THE MIDGE, the, chap. I. xxxv. 311-chap. II. 459-chap. III. 587chap. IV. 899-chap. V. xxxvi. 29— chap. VI. 190-chap. VII. 300-chap. VIII. 471-chap. IX. 642-chap. X. Where is the Ballahoo? 812-chap. XI. The Devil's Galley, xxxvii. 319-chap. XII. My Uncle, 447-chap. XIII. The Suicide, 579-chap. XIV. The Moonbeam, 767-chap. XV. The Breaking Wave, 777-chap. XVI. The End of the Yarn, 893.

CRUISE OF THE WAVE, the, from Tom Cringle, xxxiii. 170.

Crummock water, angling in the, xxxv. 790.

Crusade, the, Warton's ode called, xliv. 559. CRUSADES, SCHLEGEL ON THE, iv. 303. Crusades, introduction of indulgences

in connection with the, xxv. 30-their influence on Europe, xxxi. 575, xxxiii. 895, 896-the era of them, and its characteristics, xxx. 281-illustration given in them of the power of religious enthusiasm, xxxviii. 249-banks originated in connection with them, xxxix. 328-their influence on chivalry, xlvii.

282.

Crusaders, ignorance of the, regarding Persia, xlix. 283.

CRUSTACEOUS TOUR, A, by the Irish Oyster-eater, xliv. 637.

Crusty, Timothy, desultory remembrances of Miss O'Neill by, xxvii. 47— on the decay of the Picturesque, 254. Cruz, Don Pedro, a Spanish commissary, xl. 397.

Crypts, Roman, xxxv. 963 note.

Crystal dagger, tale called the, xx. 855. CRYSTALS FROM A CAVERN, by Archæus, xlii. 39, xliii. 354.

Cuare, settlement of, disbanded Africans established at, and their state, xxxiv. 626.

CUBA, SCENES IN, from Tom Cringle, xxxiii. 26.

CUBA, SKETCHES IN, &c., by a French gentleman, xl. 322. Cuba, produce, exports, &c. of, 1829, xxxiv. 611-the corn trade of, xxxix. 75-capabilities of it as a market for British cotton, xxxix. 422-former neglect of it by the Spaniards, xl. 324its present value to them, 325-increased produce of sugar, &c. by it, xxxiv. 256, xlvi. 89-importation of slaves into it, xlv. 803.

CUBA FISHERMEN, from Tom Cringle, xxxii. 145.

Cuchullin, the Irish hero, xxxiii. 915.
Cuckoo, the, xxxv. 864.
Cucuzza, earthquake phenomena at, xxvi.
888.

Cudworth's Intellectual system, prohibited by the Romish church, xxiv. 815. Cuerpo, J., on the dress of the Elizabethan age, iii. 534.

Cuerpos Francos, the, in Spain, xlviii. 740. Cuesta, general, his conduct at the battle of Talavera, xxii. 231–xxiii. 729— curious interview between him and Wellington, 730.

Cueva, one of the conspirators against
Venice, xli. 644.

Cuirassiers, the Polish, xxx. 237.
Cul de Sac, the, Hayti, xxvii. 240, 241.
Culdees, charter to the, i. 65.

Cull, a fisherman, case of, xxxi. 915. Culpepper, Sir Thomas, on the usury laws, xxiv. 69.

Cultivation, progression of, xxi. 75— effects of the free trade system on that of light lands, xix. 297-the system of it in Ireland, xxiv. 752-the degree to which extended since the termination of the war, xxx. 434—its influence on beauty of scenery, xxxv. 176. Cultivators, the law of Scotland regarding, xxxvi. 666-their depressed condition, &c. in Poland, xx. 362. CUME, &C. A RAMBLE TO, xvii. 405. Cumberland, the duke of, the patron of

Broughton the pugilist, v. 596. Cumberland, the present duke of, xxvi. 140, 141-discussion on the grant to him, xviii. 226-letter regarding his son, 227-libels of the Times newspaper on him, 715-attacks on him, xl. 447-libels, &c., against him, xliii. 115-his conduct in Hanover, 116. Cumberland the dramatist and Sheridan, anecdote of, xix. 129-the song of Harmodius from Callistratus by, xxxiii. 884-on the character of Lady Macbeth, xxxvi. 360—and on that of Falstaff, xxxix. 712-the prologue of Laberius by, xliii. 554-anecdote of him, xlv. 242-Sheridan's Critic, a satire on him, xlv. 396. Cumberland, the grandson of Dr Bentley, xxviii. 441.

Cumberland, Mr, plan by, for the formation of a gallery of sculpture, xli. 355. Cumberland, lead mines in, i. 303-the system of wrestling in, xx. 142-the disappearance of wood from, xxvii. 263-a mountain town in, xxviii. 437. Cumberland, sonnets written among the mountain scenery of, xlii. 550. Cumbræ isles, lighthouse on the, xxxiv. 359. Cumming, James, Esq., services of, regarding India, xx. 704.

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