Lowell, J. R., on present-day life, [21]; on Carlyle, [39]; on college training, [102]; on Darwin, [145]; on Grant’s cabinet, [186]; on The Nation, [268], [271], [278]; on importance of Godkin to it, [275].

Macaulay, Lord, on Shakespeare as historian, [2]; on Herodotus, [5]; prolixity, [11], [16], [36]; on Thucydides, [19], [61]; lack of reflection and digestion, [37]; enthusiasm, [38]; as partisan, [41]; and popularity, [44]; on Greek and Latin, [51]; style, [55]; on mathematics, [56]; importance in training of historian, [62]; biography, [64]; as reader, [69]; on Gibbon, [115]; on Wentworth and Laud, [149]; Gladstone on, [155]; on Cromwell, [318]; on character of Puritans, [318]; on Cromwell’s army, [319]; Auckland on agreeing with, [323].

McCrary, G. W., in Hayes’s cabinet, [247].

McKim, J. M., and foundation of The Nation, [273], [274].

McKinley, William, as leader of House, [227]; tariff bill, [227]; as President, [229][234]; change in tariff views, [229][231]; and gold standard, [231]; and public opinion, Spanish War and Philippines, [231][234]; diplomacy, [234]; influence on Congress, [234]; as speaker, [241]; attitude of Godkin, [286].

Mackintosh, Sir James, on irreligion of Gibbon’s time, [132].

Madison, James, as President, [207].

Mahaffy, J. P., on Herodotus, [5]; on Thucydides, [8].

Mahan, A. T., anticipation of theory, [127].

Maine, Sir Henry, on Federal Constitution, [203], [206].