work of the Constabulary Guard, [58];
scenes on the Luneta, [60];
nipa huts of natives, [61-62];
fondness of people for music, [62];
American gramophones in native huts, [62]
Nana Sahib, the evil genius of the Indian mutiny, who broke faith with prisoners at Cawnpore, shot the men, and ordered 125 women and children butchered and cast into a well, [109]
Nara, seat of oldest temples in Japan, [26-27];
tame deer in park, [26]
Nicholson, John, Brigadier-General, the ablest man the Indian mutiny produced, [121];
he led the British march on Delhi and fell at the storming of the Lahore gate, [122]