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they the first to begin these, 575, 592, xlii. 685, xlix. 544. Christison on poisons, on, xxviii. 372. Christmas in Edinburgh, x. 691-the old observance of, xxii. 595 brances of, xxiii. 3-the bachelor's, 14-Hogg, &c., on, 122, 123. Christmas Box for 1829, the, xxiv. 675. CHRISTMAS CAROL, a, by Hogg, xvi. 680. Christmas carol, a, in honour of Maga, xxix. 11.

CHRISTMAS CHIT-CHAT, X. 493.

Christmas day, Heber's Hymn for, xxii. 628.

CHRISTMAS DREAMS, Xxiii. 1.
CHRISTMAS GIFTS, xix. 80.
Christmas Hymn, a, xli. 444.
CHRISTMAS PRESENTS, 1826, xx. 893.
CHRISTMAS PRESENTS, 1828, xxiii. 7.
Christmas scene, a, by the Sketcher,
xxxix. 351.

CHRISTOPHE, KING OF HAYTI, character of, ix. 267-letter from him, 268. CHRISTOPHE, EMPEROR OF HAYTI, sketches of, x. 545.

CHRISTOPHER NORTH, hymn to, ix. 59. CHRISTOPHER, LETTER TO, on the political changes, xxviii. 984.

CHRISTOPHER NORTH, letter from a liberal Whig to, on Reform, xxix. 593. CHRISTOPHER in Edinburgh, and ChrisTOPHER IN LONDON, Xxiii. 803. CHRISTOPHER IN HIS SPORTING JACKET, Fytte first, xxiv. 273-Fytte second, 288-Fytte third, 300.

CHRISTOPHER AT THE LAKES, Flight first

xxxi. 857-Flight second, xxxii. 121– Flight third, 177.

CHRISTOPHER ON COLONSAY, Fytte first, XXXV. 1002-Fytte second, xxxvi. 1verses on, 138.

CHRISTOPHER IN HIS CAVE, xliv. 268. CHRISTOPHER AMONG THE MOUNTAINS, xliv. 285.

CHRISTOPHER IN HIS ALCOVE, xlv. 538.
Christopher Agonistes, x. 409.
Christopher and Nero the Lion, simili-
tude between, xxiv. 43.
Christopher North, see further North.
CHROMATE OF IRON, discovery of, in
Shetland, iii. 463.

CHRONICLE OF DALMAILING, review of, ix. 203.

CHRONICLE OF ENGLAND, a, by Archæus,

xlvii. 253.

CHRONICLES OF THE CANONGATE, preface to a review of, xxii. 531. CHRONICLES OF THE CANONGATE, review of, xxii. 556.

Chronicon Speciosum, the, xlvi. 463. Chronology of the Hindus, remarks on the, xxxiv. 715.

Chrysostom on Pelagius, xxv. 332 - the name of, 1. 422. Chryto and Thespis, xli. 437.

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Church, Omai's account of the King at, xii. 303-importance of the, in national government, xvii. 259 various characters of sleepers in, xix. 746recognition of it as a part of the constitution, xxiv. 8-necessity of the subordination of it to the state, 417sketch of an American, 633-a country, in Scotland, 662-importance of the character of its dignitaries to a, xxvii. 703-necessity of taking the patronage from the civil government, xxviii. 805 -necessity of general government to, 809-picture of one at the lakes, xxxii. 184-provision for it among the Jews, xxxiii. 731-support of it in the West Indies, xxxiv. 242, 243-always the first object of revolutionary attack, XXXV. 732-state, &c., of the Austrian, xxxvi. 532-on one to be erected, by Wordsworth, xxxvii. 707-effects of its want of separate property in Asia, Xxxviii. 388-influence of it on the development of freedom, 390-comparative influences of persecution and ease upon it, xxxix. 425-its state in Canada, xliii. 225-proceedings regarding it in New South Wales, xliv. 630— position, influence, &c. of it during the dark ages, xlvii. 73-influence, &c. of it on German literature, l. 159. Church accommodation, deficiency of, in London, xxix. 93-proportion of, to be provided by the Establishment, xlii. 378-statistics of it in Glasgow, and its deficiency there, xl. 799, xlii. 381, 1. 668-deficiency of it in Edinburgh, xlii. 382.

Church bell, the, xxxiii. 996.
CHURCH BILL, the Irish, letter to the
King on, xxxiii. 723.

Church, book of the, Southey's, defence of, xxvii. 465.

Church Cess, proposed, in Ireland, xxxiii. 576-proposed abolition of it there,

651.

Church confiscation, principle of, avowed by the Whig ministry, xxxvi. 91. Church councils, origin of parliaments with the, xxxiii. 894.

Church courts, powers, &c., of the, in Scotland, xlvi. 575.

Church establishment, necessity of a,

xvii. 263--Paley on the principle, &c. of, xxx. 719-gratuitous nature of the

instruction afforded by, xxxii. 829Burke on the necessity for a, xxxv. 36 -fallacies regarding it, 956-danger to it from the Dissenters, xxxvi. 93language of the Radicals regarding it, Xxxvii. 799-a liberal Whig on it, xxxix. 837.

CHURCH EXTENSION, Monypenny on, xlii.
376.

Church extension, discouragement given
to it, by the Whigs, xlii. 243.
Church Extension Society, operations of
the, in Glasgow, xl. 799.
CHURCH HISTORY, letter to C. K. Sharpe

on his mode of editing, ii. 305.
Church Missionary Society, the, in con-
nection with the case of Smith, xv.
684-its operations in New Zealand,
xlii. 785.

CHURCH MUSIC, v. 169.

CHURCH MUSIC and other Parochials, in
a letter to Eusebius, xli. 479.
Church music, necessity for attention to,
xvi. 411 aucient, Finlay Dun on,

xlv. 12.

Church property, general confiscation of, at the Reformation, xvii. 173-confiscation of it by the States-General in France, xxix. 429-Lord King on it, 529-policy of Henry VIII. in the spoliation of it, xxx. 26-danger of the confiscation of it, xxxi. 181-declaration of the Grey ministry regarding it, 302-confiscation of it in Spain, xxxii. 335-proposed confiscation of it in Great Britain, 828-its total value there, xxxiii. 361-threatened spoliation of it, 1833, 573-Whig scheme for the appropriation of it, 653-spoliation of it by the Irish Church Bill, 725— nature of its tenure, 732-in Turkey, 937-its confiscation in France, and the effects of this, 904, xxxiv. 96Burke on it, 745-Burke on its inalienability, xxxv. 37 - unjustifiableness of its plunder in England, 41— Burke on confiscation of it, 274, 275— declaration of Lord John Russell regarding it, 544-distribution of it in Scotland, xxxvi. 663-confiscation of it in Ireland, 762-its inviolability, Xxxvii. 383-the Edinburgh Review on the appropriation of it, 943-the confiscation of it in France, and its fruitlessness, xxxviii. 53, 57-invasions of it in Great Britain, 358-its true nature, tenure, &c., xl. 789-confiscations of it in Spain, xli. 597-confiscation of it in Ireland, and effects of this, xlii. 203.

Church Rate question, on the, xli. 682

et seq. Church Rates, claims of Dissenters to exemption from, xxxvii. 375, 376. Church Rates bill, conduct of the Mel

bourne ministry with regard to the,

xlii. 307-patronage created by it, 611. Church Reform, designs of the Radicals regarding, xxxii. 348-the advocacy of it by the Whigs, 827-the necessity of it, xxxvii. 145-considerations on it in connection with the Dissenters, 375prospects of it from the Whigs, 938. Church Reform Bill, the Irish, 1833, xxxiii. 573.

CHURCH ROBBERY, XXXviii. 248.
Church spoliation, Ireland, xxxiii. 563—
uniform punishment which has fol-
lowed it, 728-the dangers of it, xxxiv.
699-resistance of William IV. to it,
xxxvii. 35-and of Sir Robert Peel,
798-the Morning Herald on it, 804-
dangers of it in Great Britain, 965.
CHURCH OF ENGLAND AND THE DIS-
SENTERS, the, xvi. 395.

CHURCH OF ENGLAND, letters by R. G. on

the, No. I., xvi. 548-No. II., xvii. 167. CHURCH OF ENGLAND, the, xix. 36. CHURCH OF ENGLAND, influence of the, on society, xxvii. 695.

CHURCH OF ENGLAND, the property and
government of the, xxviii. 794.
CHURCH OF ENGLAND, to the, xli. 341.
Church of England, state and policy of

the, 1824, xv. 50-effects of the want
of consistency and firmness in it, xvii.
20-hatred of the Liberals to it, 619-
denunciations of it during the Roman
Catholic agitation, xviii. 19-Southey
on its missions, 133--danger to which
exposed from Catholic emancipation,
xx. 532, xxv. 520, xxvi. 859-hostility
of the Whigs to it, xxiii. 176, xxviii.
91-Lord King's attacks on it, xxiv. 4
-recognised as a part of the Constitu-
tion, 8-system proposed to Welling-
ton regarding it, xxv. 278-its duties,
&c., xxvi. 868-its condition in 1830,
xxvii. 380-its revenues, xxviii. 273
-its declining state, 794-title by
which it holds its property, 796-
denunciation of it by the spirit of
the age, 906 - its conduct toward
the people, 918-danger to it from
the Reform Bill, xxx. 305 - certainty
of attack on it by the Reformed Par-
liament, 326-probability of attack on
it after repeal of the Corn Laws, 440,
441-dialogue between Lord Anglesea
and his leg on it, 718-danger to all
classes from the spoliation of it, xxxii.
266-North on the danger to which it
is exposed, 710- demands of the
Radicals regarding it, 843-confidence
of the Radicals as to its overthrow,
844-danger to the middle classes
from the subversion of it, xxxiii. 118

--

-the coalition against it, 224-- speech of Mr M'Neil on it, 272-threatened assault on it, and its results, 360-its

value, 724-effects of the spoliations of Henry VIII. upon it, 727-prospects of talent in it, xxxiv. 432-its own prospects, 433 nature of the mob clamour against it, 496-reform of it, 677-Burke's defence of it, 758-effects of the Whig policy on it, xxxv. 538-views of the Radicals on it, 543declaration of Mr J. Crawfurd against it, 545-advantages of inequalities in it, 741-great divines produced by it, 735-amount of danger from the Dissenters to it, 955-the classes inimical to it, xxxvi. 89-its influence in arresting the progress of revolution, xxxvii. 33, xxxviii. 51-objects of the destructives with regard to it, xxxvii. 430, 436 - its literary claims, 684 - the bulwark of Protestantism, xxxviii. 249 -alliance between Popery and Dissent against it, 250-assaults on it in Great Britain, 358-the rejection of Paine's Rights of Man by it, 361-its progressive growth, and enemies which have successively assailed it, xxxix. 425unceasing hostility of Popery to it, 426-perils of it, and its position, 432, 433 - danger to it from modern Liberalism, xl. 225-successive measures of the Whigs against it, 438hostility of the Commons to it, 787the party opposed to it, xlii. 241dispensal of Whig patronage in it, 612 -Fowell Buxton on it,xliii. 367-South on it, ib. et seq.-conduct of the Melbourne ministry regarding it, xliv. 600 -Sunday school belonging to it at Manchester, xlv. 491-necessity for the establishment of it in India, xlvi. 275-expense of education, &c., for it, xlix. 418.

Church of France, the, its state before the Revolution, xxii. 187-alienation of it in France by the Revolution of 1830, xxviii. 713-its corruption, xxxii. 219 confiscation of its property by the Revolution, 345 - its patronage vested in the crown, xxxiv. 642-its overthrow by the National Assembly, 743-commencement of the Revolution with attack on it, xxxv. 34-its advantages and defects under the old system, 509-degraded state of it at present, 737-contempt for it in the country, xxxviii. 45-its fall, and the motives for its overthrow, 53, 56— great names by which adorned under Louis XIV., xlvi. 325-its state during the seventeenth century, xlviii. 263. CHURCH OF IRELAND, THE, AND SPRING RICE, &c., xxv. 616.

Church of Ireland, state, &c. of the, xv.

275, xxvii. 173-conduct of its dignitaries with regard to education, xxiii. 361-its present duty, xxix. 479-pro

ceedings of the Education Commissioners with regard to it, xxxi. 292danger of it from the Whig measures, 301-its moderation, xxxiii. 73-its position, &c., 362 - actual present state of it, 733-proposed spoliation of it, xxxviii. 251-persecuting spirit of Popery as shown toward it, 253. Church of Normandy, liberties of the, vii. 144.

CHURCH OF ROME, SUPREMACY OF THE, not acknowledged in Great Britain till the ninth century, xxv. 331. Church of Rome, see Catholic, Popery, Rome, &c.

CHURCH OF SCOTLAND, on the present position of the, part I., xlvi. 573— part II., 799.

Church of Scotland, influence of the, in the country, xii. 256-its condition, &c. subsequent to the Reformation, xvii. 174-education under it, xxvii. 1 - hostility of the reformed town councils to it, xxxvii. 968-the Nonintrusion question in it, xlviii. 835, 1. 127-claims advanced for it by the Non-intrusionists, 131.

Church, the Spanish, wealth of it, xxiii. 622-its decline, 1. 288.

Church, state of the, in the United States, iv. 644, xxxiv. 299.

CHURCH IN NORTH WALES, a, by Mrs Hemans, xxxv. 634.

Churches and chapels, Cameronian ballad against, vii. 485. Churches of Venice, the, xii. 728-Cobbett on, xiv. 327-those of Lisbon, xv. 163-their state in Sierra Leone, xxiii. 73 - number of them in the West Indies, xxxiv. 637-condition of those of France, 916 - proportion of, to population, in Edinburgh and Glasgow, xxxvii. 969 character of the modern ones in England, xli. 357. Churches, New, by Wordsworth, xxxvii. 707.

Churchill, Lord John, job proposed by, xliii. 366.

Churchill as a satirist, on, xxiii. 837on his prophecy of famine, xxiv. 462 -on Hogarth, xxx. 662-the death, &c. of, 1. 24.

Churching of Women, Keble's hymn for, xxvii. 846.

Churchmen, hostility of Wellesley toward, in Ireland, xx. 534. Churchwardens, sketches of, xli. 765. CHURCHYARD, SONNET IN A, by X. Y.,

xi. 183.

CHURCHYARD, WRITTEN IN A, by C. M.,

xviii. 750.

Churchyard, the country, xxvii. 804intimations of the state of the parish from it, xli. 768-a town and country, xliv. 473.

M

CHURCHYARD DREAM, a, iv. 455. CHURCHYARD ECLOGUE, a, by T. Aird, xxxvi. 615.

CHURCHYARD ECLOGUE, a, by T. Aird, 1. 760.

CHURCHYARD SCENE, a, vi. 679.

Churchyards, chapters on, see Chapters. Churchyards of Edinburgh, the, ix. 332 -London, xlviii. 829.

Churut Singh, a Sikh leader, 1. 169. CIBBER'S LIFE, review of, xiii. 294. Cibber's autobiography, remarks on, xxi. 912, xxvi. 439-on his comedies, ix. 282, xix. 121.

Cibber, Mrs, the actress, xxxvi. 158. Cicada, Greek odes, &c. to the, xxxiv. 281.

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CICALA PASHA, a chapter of Turkish history, xlviii. 18. Cicala or Cigala, the vicomte de, xlviii. 19. on his treatise Cicero, remarks Divination, iv. 266-an illustration of the facility of obtaining divorce at Rome, xxvi. 759-on domestic policy, xxvi. 769-contributions of Bentley to edition of, xxviii. 648-on the religion of Rome, xxix. 616 on the causes of the progress of Rome, xxxi. 3-on the actual existence of Orpheus, xxxii. 166-comparison between him and Cæsar as orators, 611-his enmity to Marc Antony, 950-the epitaph on Leonidas translated by him, xxxiv. 970-Shakspeare's delineation of him in Julius Cæsar, xxxvii. 756-historical coincidences from his De Republica, xliv. 598-on his style, xlviii. 508-on the speeches in Thucydides, xlix. 119. Cicero Princeps, the, of Bellenden, xxix. 769.

Cid, Corneille's drama of the, xviii. 680. Cid, the Spanish romance of the, xli. 617.

Cid's Excommunication, xi. 664.
Cid's Horse, the-Bavieca, xlvi. 175.
CID'S SPECTRE HOST, the, by Delta, xviii. 5.
"Cigar," the, xxii. 122.

Cigars, first introduction to, xx. 155.
See also Segars.

Cilicia, the conquest of, by the Mamlukes, xlix. 41.

Cimon, the conduct of Athens toward, xlii. 50.

Cimon's Naval Victory, on, from Simonides, xxxiii. 871.

Cincinnati, Mrs Trollope's account of, xxxi. 837.

Cincinnatus, the American order of, xxx. 736.

CINDERELLA, a dramatic tale, by Christian Grabbe, xli. 668.

CINQ-MARS, M. DE, account of the death of, vi. 494.

CINTIO, L'ARBECHE by, xxi. 727.
Cintra, sketches in, xvii. 402.

Cintra, the Convention of, xxii. 229, xxiii. 721, xxvii. 517, 518, xxxix. 443 -the Duke of Wellington's views regarding it, xlii. 663 et seq. CIRCASSIA, xlii. 637-part II., 747. CIRCASSIA, xlviii. 84.

Circassia, importance of the possession of, to Russia, xlii. 750-groundlessness of her claim to it, 752.

Circassian Bride, opera of the, xlv. 406. Circassian captives, the engraving from Allan's painting of the, xi. 439. Circassian Mamlukes, the, xlix. 36, CIRCASSIAN WAR-SONG, xlviii. 675. Circassians, beauty of the, v. 566-or

ganisation, government, &c. of the, xlii. 639-sketches of the, xlviii. 622. Circe of Homer, on the, xxxvii. 610. Circle, squaring of the, on the, xxviii. 264. Circuit courts, the Scottish, xxxvi. 668. Circuit judges, Napoleon's proposed, xli.

541.

Circulating Libraries, the system of, xxx.

535-statistics of, showing the kind of books most read, &c., xlv. 282. Circulating Medium, opinions of the Political Economists on a, xvi. 34various views entertained regarding the increase of, xvi. 205-distinction between it and capital, xxv. 139. Circulation, amount of the, in Great Britain, 1837, xli. 160.

Circus, modern games of the, in Italy,

xiv. 259-influence of the sports of the, on the Roman character, xxxiii. 56. Cirencester, the case of, xxxi. 130. Cirie, town of, xxxix. 144.

Citadel Henry at Hayti, x. 549. Citharadi, the, and the Homeric poems, 1. 417.

Cities, the Sketcher on, xxxv. 175-necessity for preserving the public health in, xlvi. 212.

CITIZEN, EXCERPTS FROM THE DIARY OF A, xix. 272.

CITIZEN KINGS, xxx. 705.

Citizenship, limited, among the ancient republics, xxix. 749.

Citoyenne Française and Iris, the engage

ment between the, xxi. 740.

CITY, AN OLD HOUSE IN THE, xxxvii. 860. City, emotions produced by the first

sight of a large, xix. 267-a November
mist in a, xxviii. 882.

City and country life, on, xlix. 488 et seq.
City coffee houses, the, xv. 642.
CITY MATCH, the, a comedy, xi. 195.
CITY VISITOR, the, xlix. 488.

City of Edinburgh Steamer, the, xviii.

542.

Ciudad Rodrigo, the capture of, by Massena, xxii. 232-the capture of it by Wellington, 234, xlviii. 80—Londonderry's account of the storming of it, xxiii. 733.

CIVIL CAUSES, TRIAL BY JURY IN, xxvii. 736.

Civil and ecclesiastical courts, can colli

sion ensue between the? xlvi. 574 et seq. Civil government, influence of various kinds of, on national independence, xx. 574.

Civil justice, Cornwallis' system for the administration of, in India, xviii. 306. Civil law, Miller's inquiry into, re

viewed, xviii. 213-principles of it with regard to divorce, xxvi. 759. Civil liberty, Popery irreconcilable with the possession, &c. of, xx. 528, 529form of religion favourable to the development of it, xxxvii. 759-its influence on the superior morality of Great Britain, xlvii. 261.

Civil List, the, for 1830, xxviii. 967- -as proposed by Wellington, and its reception, 986-the Whig scheme for it, 1831, xxix. 527-that of Queen Victoria, xliii. 516.

Civil war, prospects of, in Great Britain, xxxi. 590-atrocities perpetuated during the, in Spain, xlix. 544. CIVILISATION,

PRESENT STATE OF, in

Greece, iv. 513. Civilisation, influence of Christianity on, xxxv. 731-influence of hereditary nobility, &c. on it, xxxviii. 388-its influence as a check on population, xl. 499-influence of intercourse on it, xlviii. 774.

CIVILISATION OF AFRICA, the, by James Macqueen, Letter I., xx. 872-Letter II., Sierra Leone, xxi. 315-Letter III., Sierra Leone, 596.

Civilised and savage man, contrast between, xvii. 256, 260.

Civita Castellana, town of, xiii. 435. Civita Vecchia, ancient breakwater of, iv. 562.

Clackmannan, skeleton of a whale found at, v. 737.

Clackmannanshire, state of parties in, 1832, xxxii. 835.

Cladich inn, xxxiii. 987.

Claim of Right, the Scottish, xlvi. 192.
Clairée, the Col de, xxxix. 643.
Clairvault prison, number of criminals
in, xlii. 151.
Clairvoyance, case of, ii. 219.
Clandestine Marriage, the, a comedy, 1.

24.

Clandestine marriages, facilities afforded

by the Marriage Bill for, xxxix. 603. CLANEBOY, THE RETURN OF, xxxiv. 929. Clanricarde, the marquis of, motion by, on Portugal, xxviii. 50.

CLANSHIP, A HORRIBLE INSTANCE OF THE EFFECTS OF, xxviii, 680. Clanship in the Highlands, on the, xi. 390-consequences of the feeling of, in Ireland, xxv. 73.

Clapham Common, proposed enclosure of, xxiii. 196. Clapperton's African journal, review of, xix. 692-his African discoveries, xxx. 130, 131-on the course of the Niger, xxxi. 208-his discoveries regarding that river, 214-notices of him as a curler, xxx. 981.

Clarac, the count de, on the Venus Victorieuse, xi. 342.

Clare, lord, the Lord Chancellor of Ireland, reminiscences of, xix. 271-his proceedings against the Irish Rebellion, xxx. 642-sketch of his career, character, &c., xxxiv. 590-attack on him by Lord Aldborough, xxxv. 210. CLARE'S RURAL MUSE, Xxxviii. 231. Clare, John, the Northampton peasantpoet, vii. 322, xii. 111.

Clare, county of, on the occupation of land in, xvii. 688-its state in 1831, xxix. 928-outrages in, xxxiii. 347state of the peasantry in, xl. 503. CLARE ELECTION, the, xxiv. 219. Clare island, outrages on Protestant missionaries in, xliii. 808.

Clarence, the duke of (William IV.) during the last illness of the duke of York, xxi. 636, 637-his appointment to office in 1827, 760-on the Addington administration, xlii. 14-on the peace of Amiens, 15-anecdote of him,

xlii. 310.

Clarence, duke of, his defeat and death at Beaugé in France, xlix. 664. Clarendon's History, comparison of, with Mrs Macaulay's, xxxviii. 611. Clarendon, Grattan on, xlvi. 402. Clarendon, Lord, on parliamentary privilege, xliii. 369.

Clarendon, the constitutions of, xlvii. 76. Clarens, village, &c. of, xii. 433. Claret, superseding of, by port in England, xvi. 11-Henderson on it, 15Odoherty on the decanting of, 336and strawberries, Odoherty on, 347— employment of it in Ireland, xxxiv. 583. Claret-drinking, Odoherty on, xvi. 337. CLARK ON CLIMATE, XXviii. 372.

Clark, George, a convict, account of the interior of Australia by, xliv. 693. Clark, Sir Alured, government of Canada by, xxxvii. 911.

Clarke, Dr, account of a meteor by, ii. 516. Clarke, Dr, on the causes of the agricultural distress, xii. 633.

Clarke, Dr, travels of bishop Heber with, xxii. 620-his plans of the Russian territory, xlvi. 345.

Clarke, Dr, and Beau Nash, anecdote of, xlviii. 791.

Clarke, George, evidence of, regarding
Sierra Leone, xxix. 209.
Clarke, Sir S., purchases for the National

Gallery from his collection, xlviii. 481.

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