Page:The Folk-Lore Journal Volume 1 1883.djvu/401

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PUBLICATIONS IN ENGLISH.
393

M.A., F.S.A.; with a memoir of the author by his son, T. F. Dillon Croker, F.S.A. London: [1862J. 8vo. pp. xxx. 366.

Contents: The same as above without the notes and appendix.

Croker (T[homas] Crofton). The same. London: [no date]. 8vo. xxxiv. 486.
Croker (T. P. Dillon). Legends and memorials of the Wye. Journ. Arch. Ass. vol. xxvii. pp. 246-254.
————————— Cotswold and its popular customs. Journ. Arch. Ass. vol. xxvii. pp. 113-119.
Crowther (Rev. Samuel). A vocabulary of the Yoruba language, compiled by the Rev. Samuel Crowther, native missionary, together with introductory remarks by the Rev. O. E. Vidal. London, 1852. 8vo. pp. V. 329.
Cuming (H. Syer). Charms employed in cattle disease. Journ. Arch. Ass. vol. xxi. pp. 323-329.
———————— On the hand-amulet. Journ. Arch. Ass. vol. xxii.
———————— On horse shoes. Journ. Arch. Ass. vol. vi. pp. pp. 291-295. 406-418.
———————— On the polycephalic amulets of the Gnostics, Journ. Arch. Ass. vol. viii. pp. 1-6.
———————— A glance at the saints of Staffordshire. Journ. Arch. Ass. vol. xxix. pp. 337-341.
———————— The early saints of Worcester. Journ. Arch. Ass. vol. xxxii. pp. 321-329.
Cumming (Rev. J. G.) The great Stanley: or James, viith Earl of Derby, and his noble countess Charlotte de la Tremouille, in their land of Man: a narrative of the xviith century, interspersed with notices of Manx manners, customs, laws, legends and fairy tales. London, 1867. 8vo. pp. viii. 279.

[Written in the form of fiction.]

Cunningham (Allan). Traditional tales of the English and Scottish peasantry. London, 1822. 12mo. 2 vols. pp. x. 322; 357.

Vol. i. Ezra Peden—The Selbys of Cumberland—Placing a Scottish minister—The king of the peak—The mother's dream—Allan-a-Maut.

Vol. ii. Miles Colvine, the Cumberland mariner—Honest man John Ochiltree—Elphin Irving, the fairies' cupbearer—Richard Faulder, mariner—The last lord of Helvellyn—Judith Macrone, the prophetess — The ghost with the golden casket—The haunted ships—Death of the laird of Warlsworm—The seven foresters of Chatsworth, an ancient Derbyshire ballad.