poem, 7; termination of his apprenticeship 8; his first visit to London, 9; he sets up for himself at Aldborough, 10; failure of his plans there, 12; he gives up business, and proceeds to London as a literary adven- turer, 12; his difficulties and distresses in London, 14; he publishes 'The Candidate,' 15; his unsuccessful applications to Lord North, Lord Shelburne, &c., 16; his 'Jour- nal to Mira,' 16; his letter to Burke, and its consequences, 25; publishes The Library,' 27; he is domesticated at Beaconsfield, 27; takes orders, 28; is appointed curate at Ald- borough, 29; appointed domestic chaplain to the Duke of Rutland, 31; removes to Belvoir Castle, 32; publishes 'The Village,' 33; marries Miss Elmy, 36; he resides suc- cessively at Belvoir Castle and Stathern, 36; increase of his family, 36; publishes "The Newspaper,' 37; his mode of life, oc- cupations, and amusements, 37; becomes rector of Muston, 38; visits and journeys, 39; his residence at Parham, 42-at Glem- ham, 44-and at Rendham, 47; his second residence at Muston, 50; publishes The Parish Register,' 51; appearance of The Borough,' 55; publishes the Tales in Verse,' 56; death of Mrs. Crabbe, 59; removal from Leicestershire, 59; inducted to Trowbridge church, 60; his residence and habits of life at Trowbridge, 60; his correspondence with Mary Leadbeater, 64; his journal during a visit to London, 67; publishes 'Tales of the Hall,' 73; his visit to Edinburgh, 76; closing years of his life, 80; annual excursions, 80; domestic habits, 80; visits to Pucklechurch, 85; his last tour to Clifton, Bristol, &c., 87; his illness and death, 88; his funeral, 90. Crabbe, Mrs. (the poet's wife), 36, 43, 45, 56, 59, 60.
Croker, Right Hon. J. W., 49.
Crowfoot, Dr., 63.
Cunning described, 156.
'Curate, The,' 184.
Lackington, James, bookseller, 355, 360. 'Lad's Love,' 559.
'Ladies of the Lake,' 260.
'Lady Barbara; or, the Ghost,' 466.
Lady of the Manor, 149.
Lake School of Poetry, 48.
Lamb, Lady Caroline, 70.
Lansdowne, Marquis of, 68, 69.
'Laughton,' 222.
Law, 108, 196, 198.
'Lay of the Last Minstrel,' 48.
Leadbeater, Mrs., 64, 65, 72, 76, 79, 80, 82. 'Leah Cousins, the parish midwife,' 152. 'Learned Boy, The,' 364.
Ledyard, Mr., 100, 170.
'Let me not have this gloomy view,' 420. Levett, William Springhall, 6. 'LIBRARY, THE,' 101.
LINES in Laura's Album, 264.
written at Warwick, 264.
on a drawing of the elm tree under which the Duke of Wellington stood during the battle of Waterloo, 265.
―on receiving from a lady a present of a ring, 266.
to a Lady with some poetical extracts, 266. to a Lady who desired some verses at parting, 267.
on revisiting Glemham after the death of Mrs. Crabbe, 60.
Liston, John, comedian, 58.
Literary Fund, 54, 185.
Literary life, good of, 258.
Literature, consolations of, 112.
Litigation, spirit of, how stirred up, 197.
London, 70, 71.
Loneliness, 258.
'Lover's Journey, The,' 316.
Lockhart, J. G., Esq., 76, 77-79.
'Love, Natural Death of,' 458.
'Love! I have seen a tiger on his prey,' 411.
Love that survives marriage, 459; that dies in consequence, 459.
'Lucy Collins,' 144.
Luther, 105.
Luxury, 108.
Kerrison, Dr., 81.;
King, Mr., 44.
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