Mantegazza, Paolo,ii:277.Marche, Antoine Alfred, his Afrique Occidentale,i:354.Marcus Aurelius,ii:446.Margot, ——,i:91,94,95.Marie Galante, island,i:413.Marimba, musical instrument,i:411.Marion, ——,i:88,89,90,92.Marriage,ii:98,99;deity of,8;Japanese law regarding marriage with a foreigner,44,64;Occidental views of,120;the educated woman and, in Japan,416–422.Martinique,i:97;costume colours of,98;doll dressed as woman of,410,411;action in, after fall of Second Empire,418,419;physicians of,441.Masayoshi, Kumagoe,ii:116,130.Massachusetts, application of Spencer’s educational theories in,ii:275.Mates, Rodolfo,i:97,263,371,380,395,445.Mathematicians, indifference of, to poetry,i:461,462.Matsue, Japan,ii:154,155,330,331;Hearn’s appointment at,i:110–113,137;situation and character of,110,111,114,115;Hearn’s first residence in,113;his departure from,124,125;ascendency of Shintō in,ii:13,15;climate of,23,25;geisha at,95;Hearn’s desire to return to,298.Matsushima, Japanese flag-ship,ii:258.Maupassant, Guy de,i:72,361;ii:348,392.Mazois, Charles François,i:213.Medical novels,i:399,437,441.Medicine, study of,ii:289,290.Medusa, legend of,i:185.Megara, choral dance of Greek women in, I; 385.Meiji Maru. Japanese ship,ii:304.Mélusine, periodical,i:170,284;death of,189.Memory, transmutation of inherited,ii:338.Memphis, Tenn.,i:66.Mephistopheles, Goethe’s,ii:435.Meredith, Owen.SeeBulwer-Lytton.Mérimée, Prosper,i:205;his Carmen,200,201.Métairie, the, New Orleans,i:205.Mexico, music of,i:231;African influence on,380.Michelet, Jules,i:227,256;his L’Amour,ii:277.Middle Ages, musical instruments of,i:165–167;literary renascence in,342.Miko, Shintō priestesses,ii:21,22,31,268,297,468.Miko-kagura, Japanese dance,ii:38,42.Miller, Ed.,i:221.Millet, Jean François,i:6.Milton, John, his Paradise Lost used as a reading-book in Tōkyō,ii:283,328.Mionoseki, Japan,ii:6;deity of,7,8,37,97.Missionaries, Hearn’s attitude toward,ii:44,45,68,109,110,311;unmarried women as, in Japan,441,442.Mississippi River, dangers to swimmers in,i:176,177.Mocking-bird, of Guiana,i:357,358.Mohammed,i:280,281.Mombushō Readers,ii:105.Money, power of,i:348.Mongolians, similarities between faces of Irish and,i:190.Moon-of-Autumn.SeeAkizuki.Moral development, immorality a force in,ii:136,137.Moral sense, nature of,i:434–436.Morris, William, his Wood beyond the World,ii:196.Morrow, William C.,ii:363,364.Mothers,ii:190,191.Motoori,ii:7.Mountains, sadness produced by sight of,ii:151.Mud-dauber,i:89.Muir, John,i:388.Müller, Friedrich Max, his Sacred Books of the East,i:327.Muezzin, call of the.SeeAzan.Mukden, Manchuria,i:106.Mulock, Dinah, her John Halifax used as a reading-book in Kumamoto,ii:79.Murderer, Hearn’s description of a,i:322,323.Murger, Henri, philosophy of his Bohemianism,i:242.Murray, John, guide-book published by,ii:37,43.Music, infinity of,i:179;demands of,180;opportunities for studying,182;antique,211,213;in the Talmud,287;Spencer’s essay of musical origination,325;mathematics of,385.See alsoBrittany,Creoles,Cuba,Eskimo,Finland,Griots,Havana,Japan,Mexico,Negro,Scandinavia,Timbuctoo,Wales,West Indies.Musical instruments,i:165–167,211–213,311,353.See alsoBagpipe,Chalumeau,Egypt,Flute,Greece,Harps,Judæa,Marimba,Negro,Sistrum,Syrinx.Musset, Alfred de,i:254,255.Mystic number, Japanese,ii:80.Nakamura, Mr.,ii:68.Nala, story of,i:402.Names, of Japanese women, Hearn’s article on,ii:445,446,447.Nanji-umi,ii:30.Naples, museum of,i:213.Napoleon I,ii:160,173.Natural selection, only one factor of evolution,ii:235.Naturalism, in art and literature,i:228.Nature, in Japan,ii:3;attitudes toward, in East and West,123–125,131,425,426;immorality of,189.Negro, vocal chords of,i:313,339,356;West Coast races and,332;their talent for improvisation,353;temperature of blood of,356;music of the American,358;musical instruments played by, in West Indies,411.Neith, Egyptian divinity,i:315.Neptune, festival of,i:386.Nerval, Gérard de, pseud.SeeLabrunie, Gérard.Nervous system, weight of,ii:245.New Orleans, La., Hearn removes to,i:65,66,67;conditions in, after the war,68,69;yellow fever in,69,185,186,195;Hearn leaves,97;description of an old Creole house in,172–174;a Chinese restaurant in,203,204;maladministration in,215; Hearn’s disappointment in,224,225.See alsoMétairie.New York City, Hearn goes to,i:39,40,101,102;his dislike of,288,405,425,443,444;ii:182,476,484.Newts, tradition regarding, at Sakusa, Japan,ii:26.Nichiren, followers of,ii:27;prevalence of, at Yabase,47;temple of, at Yabase,55.Nidānakathā,i:287.Nietzsche, Friedrich Wilhelm,ii:325,514.Nishida, Sentarō,i:116,122;ii:9,23,33;letters from Hearn to,ii:18,19,54,55,65–69,72–76,95–98,101–106,118,119,141–145,153–160,165–167,180–182,191–193,274–276,278–280,291,292,296–299,303–305,327–332;his knowledge of English,101;his ballad of Shuntoku-maru,130.Nishinomiya, Japan,ii:8.Noguchi, Yone,i:159.Nordau, Max, false theories of,ii:277;his Degeneration,456.North, stimulus to literary production in,i:194;conceptions of beauty in,211;intellectual vigour of,423;struggle for life in,424.Nude, the, in art,i:30,31.Numi, a Japanese friend of Hearn,ii:465.Occident, possible future domination of, by Orient,ii:29;indifference in, to stories of the real life of the Orient,362,363.Ochiai, T.SeeInomata, Teizaburō.O’Connor, William D., Hearn’s letters to,i:73;his first acquaintance with,80;text of the letters,268–275,290–292,315–320,326–329,340,341,348–351,364–367,380–384;Hearn’s advice regarding an illness,365–367;his death,ii:432.Odd, Hearn’s pursuit of the,i:290,291,294,328,329.Odin, the Hávamál of,ii:428.Œdipus,ii:168.Offenbach, Jacques,i:222.Oho-kuni-nushi-no-Kami, Japanese deity identified with Daikoku, in Matsue,ii:13.Ohokuni, legend of the son of,ii:6.Ōiso, Japan,ii:6.Oki, Japan,ii:96,187.Okuma, Count, university founded by,i:156;ii:514.Ō-Kuni, story of,ii:42,43.Olcott, Henry Steel, his Buddhist Catechism,i:265.Old Semicolon, nickname given to Hearn,i:50.Omar, Caliph,i:281.Omiki dokkuri no kuchi-sashi, form of,ii:80.Ōnamuji-no-Mikoto, Japanese deity,ii:9.Opposition, value of,ii:406.O’Rell, Max, pseud.SeeBlouët.Organization, tyranny of,ii:169,170.Organs, wind, adopted by Christians from Byzantium,i:166;one described by St. Jerome,167.Orient, intellectual barriers between Occident and,i:104,105;possible future domination of the Occident by,ii:29.Ormuzd, the Persian God of Light,ii:118,126.Ōsaka, Japan,ii:297,298.Osgood, James R.,i:320,321.Ōtani, Masanobu,i:113,118;ii:68;Hearn’s aid to,i:137,138;his notes on Hearn,137,138;letters from Hearn to,ii:69–72,79,80,162–165,342–346,414,415,461–464;advice to, regarding study of philology,162,164;Japanese poems collected by,343,415;a gift to Hearn from,414,415.Ōtsu, flood in,ii:307.Ōtsuka, Japan, Hearn’s treatment in,ii:52,53,54,55.Ouadây, Africa,i:277.Overbeck, Johannes Adolf, his Pompeii,i:213.Overwork, penalties of,i:241,242; results of,367,383.Oxford, University of, plan for Hearn to lecture at,i:156.Ōzawa, a teacher at Kumamoto,ii:66.Pain, infliction of,ii:111;results of,136;moral,168;a factor in evolution,243;results of, on Hearn’s work,272,273,393.Paine, Thomas,i:345.Palmer, Edward Henry, his translation of the Koran,i:351.Parvati, Indian divinity,i:210.Patate-cry,i:360.Pater, Walter,ii:215.Patti, Adelina,i:240,405.Pearson, Charles Henry, his National Character,ii:137.Pelée, Mt.,i:98.Perron, Dr. A., his Femmes Arabes,i:277,315,468.Personality, invisible,i:447;multiple,474,475.Peterson Brothers,i:250.Petronius Arbiter,i:256.Phelps, Elizabeth Stuart.SeeWard.Philadelphia, Pa., Hearn’s liking for,i:449,452,469,470.Philistine, The, periodical,ii:369.Philostratus,i:321.Photograph, scientific test of,ii:83.Physicians, Hearn’s regard for the career of,i:436;women as, in France,441;of Martinique,441.Physiology, effect of, upon the history of nations,i:330.Pickpockets, an adventure with,ii:391.Pipes, ancient Samurai,ii:48;modern Japanese,48–51.Plato,ii:173.Pleasure, changes in Hearn’s ideas of,ii:194,195.Plympton, ——,i:360,361.Poetry, translations of,i:245;value of form in,271,272,294;indifference of mathematicians to,461;vulgar,ii:343,344;translation the test of,344,523,526,527,528;three forms of,519,520;true literary signification of,520;best medium of,521.Politeness.SeeCourtesy.Politics, public schools and,ii:166.Pompeii, musical instruments discovered in,i:213.Pontchartrain, Lake,i:169,176.Poole, Captain,ii:304.Pope, Alexander,ii:520,528,529.Port of Spain, Trinidad, a silversmith at,i:416.Poseidon, festival of,i:386.Pott, Mrs. Henry,i:364.Prayer, the dilemma of the gods,ii:394.Pre-Raphaelites,i:211.Professions, Hearn’s estimate of,i:398.Proof, printer’s, relation between copy and,ii:407.Proof-reader, Hearn’s terror of the,i:387.Prose, poetical,ii:529;Hearn’s ambition regarding,i:364,374,379,383,393.Protestantism,ii:311,312.Provençal literature and song, Hueffer’s treatment of,i:361.Public schools, politics in,ii:166.Publishers, Hearn’s opposition to the views of,ii:479,480;their attitude toward authors,484,485.Punctuation, Hearn’s efforts to reform,i:50.Quacks, success of,i:180,181.Quatrefages de Bréau, Jean Louis Armand de,i:235,236.Rabyah, operatic possibilities of,i:388.Race expansion, intellectual, cost of,ii:98.Ramayana, translations of,i:402.Raphael,i:211.Ravine-les-Cannes,i:191.Rawlinson, Sir Henry Creswicke,i:213.Regeneration, Hearn’s use of the word,ii:509.Rein, Johannes Justus, his work on Japan,ii:36.Religion, the conservator of romanticism,ii:208,209;Norse,228;sects and,131;characteristics common to all religions,146,147;science and,148.Rembrandt,i:211.Remsen, Ira, president of Johns Hopkins University,ii:504.Renan, Ernest,ii:514.Rengaji, Buddhist temple at Kizuki,ii:42.Rhys-Davids, Thomas William,ii:380,488.Riess, Ludwig, professor at the University of Tōkyō,ii:312,316.Rights and duties,ii:115.Rink, Henry John,i:330.Robert Clarke Company, Cincinnati,i:50.Robinson, ——,i:187.Roche, Louise,i:357.Roget, Peter Mark, his Thesaurus,i:374.Roland, Song of,i:190,246.Rollins, Alice Wellington,i:389;ii:299,300.Roman Catholic Church, Hearn’s bitterness against,i:33,34.Romanes, George John,i:292,439.Romans, musical instruments adopted by,i:165,166.Romanticism, religion the conservator of,i:208,209;Baudelaire on,211.Romanticists, pantheism of,i:255.Romany descent, mark of,i:5.Rossetti, Dante Gabriel,i:211;ii:221.Rouquette, Adrien, Indian missionary,i:169,188,191,206,212.Routine, merits of,i:326.Roy, Protap Chunder,i:335.Rufz de Lavison, Etienne,i:442;ii:248,347.Ruskin, John, his comment on the Medicean Venus,i:31.Russia, feeling against, in Japan,ii:258,262;war between Japan and,515,516,517.Rydberg, Viktor,i:227.Ryūkyū,ii:219.Saadi.SeeGulistan.Sacher-Masoch, Leopold Ritter von, his Mother of God,i:233.Sadness, certain causes of,ii:150–152.St. Augustine, Florida,i:70.St. Peter’s Cathedral, Cincinnati, Hearn’s description of a view from the spire of,i:51.St. Pierre, Martinique,i:97;ii:347,484;Hearn’s record of,i:98,100,101,412,413,415.Sainte-Beuve, Charles Augustin,i:396;ii:222.Saintsbury, George,ii:371.Saionji,ii:279.Sakai, Japan,ii:297,304.Sake,ii:57,82,92,93.Sakuma, his knowledge of literary English,ii:66.Sakuntala, operatic possibilities of,i:308.Sakurai, headmaster at Kumamoto,ii:66.Sakusa, Japan, Shintō shrine at,ii:15,25,26.Sakusa-no-Mikoto, Shintō deity,ii:25.Sale, George, his translation of the Koran,i:327.Samurai,i:116.