Lount, Samuel, his execution, [30].

Lower Canada, racial feeling in, [22]; the Rebellion, [3], [4], [25], [28-30]; Durham's amnesty and ordinance, [14-19]; Durham's Report, [21-3]; political state before Union, [50]; the Registry Act, [56]; the opposition to Union, [57], [62], [68], [93]; amnesty to all political offenders, [103]; the Rebellion Losses Bill, [112-14], [116-17]; Seigneurial Tenure, [140-1]. See Quebec and Special Council.

Macaulay, Lord, quoted, [20], [79], [83], [96].

Macdonald, John A., his entry into politics, [93], [101]; 'a British subject I will die,' [135]; attorney-general, [157]; his Liberal-Conservative administration, [158], [144].

Macdonald, J. S., his studied insult, [156], [157].

Mackenzie, W. L., incites anti-British feeling in the States, [12], [26]; granted amnesty and returns to Canada, [118-19], [120], [142].

MacNab, Sir Allan, leader of the Conservative Opposition, [86], [101]; Speaker, [94]; gives 'the lie with circumstance,' [119-20], [125]; his tribute to Baldwin, [142]; prime minister, [157].

Marcy, W. L., and reciprocity with Canada, [151].

Melbourne, Lord, and Durham, [17].

Metcalfe, Sir Charles, his early career, [82-3]; his arrival at Kingston, [81]; upholds the prerogative of the Crown, [84-6], [87]; refuses to surrender right of appointment, [90-1]; triumphs over the Reformers, [92-4]; his peerage and death, [95-6].