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Rh Anne ?, Westminster, and in 17CO was admitted a gentleman extraordinary of the Chapel Royal. In 1707 he was appointed joint-organist .with Blow ; and upon the death of the latter in 1708 he became sole organist, and also master of the children and composer of the Chapel Royal, besides being made organist of Westminster Abbey. In 1715 he obtained his degree of doctor of music in the university of Oxford. In 1724 he published an edition of his choral music, in 2 vols. folio, under the name of Musica Sacra, or Select Anthems in score, for two, three, four, five, six, seven, and eight voices, to which is added the Burial Service, as it is occasionally performed in Westminster Abbey. This handsome work was the first of the kind exe cuted on pewter plates and in score. John Page, in his Harmonia Sacra, published in 1800 in 3 vols. folio, gives seven of Croft s anthems. Of instrumental music, Croft published six sets of airs for two violins and a bass, six sonatas for two flutes, six solos for a flute and bass. He died iu August 1727, and was buried in the north aisle of West minster Abbey, where a monument was erected to his memory by his friend and admirer Humphrey Wyrley Birch. Buruey in his History of Music devotes several pages of his third volume (pp. 603-612) to Dr Croft s life, and criticisms of some of his anthems.  CROKER, (1780-1857), statesman and author, was born in Gal way on tho 20th December 1780. He belonged to a respectable family of English origin that had been settled in Ireland for several generations, being the only son of John Croker, well known and popular as the surveyor-general of Ireland. He was educated at Trinity College, Dublin, where he graduated in 1800. Immediately afterwards he was entered as a student of Lincoln s Inn, and in 1802 he was called to the Irish bar. In 1803 he published anonymously Familiar Epistles to J. F. Jones, Esquire,, on the State of the Irish Stage, a series of wit Vy and caustic criticisms in verse on the leading dramatists of the day, which passed through several editions in a short time. Equally successful was the Intercepted Letter from China (1805), also anonymous, a satire on Dublin society. In 1807 he published a pamphlet on The State of Ireland, Past and Present, in which he advocated Catholic emancipation. In the following year he entered Parliament as member for Downpatrick, obtaining the seat on petition, though he had been unsuccessful at the poll. The notorious case of the duke of York furnished him with an opportunity of obtaining patronage and place of which he skilfully availed himself. The speech which he delivered on the 14th March 1809, in answer to the charges of Colonel Wardle, was generally regarded as the most able and ingenious defence of the duke that was made in the debate ; and to the gratitude of the latter for this service was probably due Croker s appointment in the close of the year to the office of secretary to the Admiralty, which he held without interruption under various administrations for more than twenty years. In 1827 he became the re presentative of the university of Dublin, having previously sat successively for the boroughs of Athlone, Yarmouth, and Bodmin. He was a determined opponent of the Reform Bill, and vowed that he would never sit in a reformed Parliament ; his parliamentary career accordingly terminated I in 1832. Two years earlier he had retired from his post at the Admiralty on a pension of 1500 a year. Many of his political speeches were published in a pamphlet form, and they show him to have been a vigorous and effective, though somewhat unscrupulous and often virulently per sonal, party debater. The same character attaches to him in his capacity as a political writer. He was one of the founders of the Quarterly Review, and for many years was one of its leading contributors on political and historical subjects. The rancorous spirit in which many of his articles were written did much to embitter party feeling, and to cause men on both sides of greater eminence than himself to stoop to unworthy controversy. It also reacted unfavourably on Croker s reputation as a worker in the department of pure literature by bringing political animosities into literary criticism. No reply is possible to the majority of the criticisms which Macaulay in his unsparing review brings against Croker s magnum opus, his edition of Bos well s Life of Johnson (1831), but with all these defects the work had merits which Macaulay was of course not concerned to point out. It certainly possessed whatever evidence of excellence is afforded by the fact of a very extensive circulation. Its success in this respect led the publisher to propose to Croker the preparation of an annotated edition of Pope s works, on which he was occupied for several years. It was left unfinished at the time of his death, but it has since been completed by Peter Cunningham and the Rev. W. Elwin, and published. A list of Croker s other chief works is given below. Special mention, however, may be made of his Stories fr&quot;m the History of England for Children, not only because it had a very large circula tion, but because it was taken by Scott as the model for his Tales of a Grandfather. In an amusing letter to Croker accompanying a presentation copy of the latter work, Sir Walter speaks of it as &quot; a sample of the sivag.&quot; Croker did good service to the cause of literature and art by other means besides his pen. He was one of the founders of the Athena3um Club. In his place in Parlia ment he advocated the claims of the fine arts upon state recognition and aid at a time when these claims had fewer supporters than they have now. In his later years his house at West Molesey nsar Hampton Court was the resort of many eminent literary men, chiefly of his own party. He died at St Albans Bank, Hampton, on the 10th August 1857.

1em  CROKER, (1798-1854), an antiquary and humourist, was born in Cork in 1798. He was apprenticed to a merchant, but in 1819, through the interest of John Wilson Croker, who had been a friend of his father, he became a junior clerk in the Admiralty, where he afterwards obtained one of the first clerkships. In 1825 he produced his most popular book, the Fairy Legends of the South of Ireland (reprinted in 1834), which he followed up by the publication of his Legends of the Lakes, his Adventures of Barney Malioney, and an edition of the Popular Songs of Ireland. In 1827 he was made a member of the Irish Academy; and in 1839 and 1840 he helped to found the Camden and Percy Societies, for the former of which he published (1841) an edition of certain Narratives Illustrative of the Contests in Ireland in 1641 and 1690, and for the latter his Revolution in Ireland in 1688, and several other works. He was also a member of the Hakluyt, Archa3ological, and Antiquarian Societies. He died in London, August 8, 1854.  CROLY, (1785-1860), a distinguished literary divine of the Church of England, was born in Dublin about 1785, and received his education at Trinity College there. Croly, although a staunch unbending Tory, owed to Lord Brougham his promotion to the living of St Stephen s, Walbrook, London. The appointment conferred honour on Brougham, as the presentee was a keen partisan, and had zealously served his political friends with his pen. He was 