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473
MacDonald'3 Gaelic vocabulary, iv.
7S.
MaoDonald, John (Iain Lom), iv. 35,
166, 203.
MacDonald, John, tinker, i. 174 ; iv.
•279.
MacDonald, Mr. Hugh, iv. 82.
MacDonald of Staffa, his MS. collec-
tiou iu Advocates' Library, iv. 102,
412.
MacDonald, Ranald, his printed col-
lection of Gaelic ballads, iv. 410.
MacDougall, Allan, a modem bard,
iv, 1S4, 185.
MacDuu'alds, clan of, iu. 107.
Ma.;.'., wans, the, of Tongland, il 59.
Mi n, _ :, .T.iii.-s, Dean of Lismore,
i , : :■.-. 19. See Lismore.
M 1 !■ h, ii. 328-340; other
Matliitvie, Donald M. M., i. sxx.,
xxxiii., hi.; ii. 24;iv. 218.
Macintyre, Duncan, the Breadalbane
bard, iv. 31, 189-196.
Macintj-re, Flora, iv. 35.
Mackay, John, the BUnd Piper, his
poems, iv. 200.
Maekav, Robert, amodem Gaelic poet,
iv. 196.
Mackenzie, Henry, iv. 107.
Mackenzie, John, one of the narrators,
i. 38 ; iv. 285.
Mai-kenzie, John, his " Beauties of
Gaelic Poetry," ii. 881 ; iv. 35, 107.
Mackenzie, Osgood, ii. 68, 100 ; iv. 129.
MacKeuzie, Sir Kenneth, i. xxv. ; iii.
152 ; iv. 131.
MacKinnon, Angus, iii. 286.
MacKinnon, Lachlan, his Gaelic songs,
iv. 202.
MacKinon, Alexander, iv. 180.
MacLacldan, Eamonn, his collection
of poems, iv. 74.
MacLachlan, Eiven, ii. 83 ; iv. 143, 181.
MacLauclilan, Rev. Thomas, i. xxv.,
xcii. , cxxxiv. ; iL 229, 257, 261 ; iiL
145, 295 ; iv. 62, 129.
MaoLean, Hector, his account of tale-
reciting among the Highland pea-
santiy, i. xii.-xiv., xxv., cxiii. ; iii.
3S9, aim, 394 ; iv. 128; on the Gaelic
..: • . 1' 'Ì-, iv. 160, etseq.
31 ! !lM-h, iv. 129.
31 : I liuncan, iv. 218.
M::.. !.■ ■.:,-, '/>',', iv, 13.
JlacLeod, Dr., i. xx. ; iv. 227.
MacLeod, Mary, her Gaelic verses, iv.
203.
MacLeod, Sir Norman, iv. 74.
MaeXicol, Rev. Donald, iv. 96-99,
258.
MacPhail, Ewan, iv. 71.
MacPherson, editor of Ossiau, l xxxv.-
xxxix. ; ii. 106 ; iii. 303, 346 ; iv.
passim.
MacPherson, Mr. Ewen, iv. 82.
MacPherson, Mr. Lachlan, of Strath-
mashie, iv. 83, 87, 196.
MacPhie, Donald, i. xxix., xxx., Ixi.,
MacQuae, Captain, ii. 370.
MacQueen, Rory, iv. 219.
MacTavish, Mrs., i. xxv., xciii. ; ii. 51-
53, 133, 350, 365, 370, 473 ; iii. 50 ;
iv. 321.
MacTavish, Rev. Mr., i. 277.
Maghach Colgar, ii. 168-179 ; remarks
on similar stories, 186-188. See i. ■
Ixxi. ; ui. 402.
Magical combs, i. Isxvii.-lxxxi. ;
swords, lxxii.-lxxiv. ; apples, IxxxL-
Ixxxiv. ; horns, 191 ; boxes, ii. 303.
Magnus (Manns), the Lay of, see Lay
of Magnus.
MakCoul, iv. 27, 28, 52.
Manain (Man), island of, iv. 70.
Man, Isle of, peculiarly Celtic, i. L, U.;
ineffectual attempts to extract
stories. Mi. ; similarity between
Manks customs and those of Western
Isles, liii. ; stories gleaned during a
trip of five days, liii. -Iv. See iv. 299 ;
the " Legs of Man," iv. 386, 387.
Manks, the, a branch of the Celtic
clan, i. cxi. ; their fairy creed, ii.69,
70 ; iv. 385.
Manners, as exhibited in the popular
tales, i. Ixviii.-lxx.
Manus, illustration of, with descrip-
tive notes, iii. 348, 349.
Manuscripts belonging to Highland
Society, ii 472. See Advocates'
Library.
Maol a Chliobain, i 251-256; other
versions, 259-265 ; similar stories,
265, 266.
Martin, i. ix., xix. ; ii. 134 ; iv. 15.
Martin, a Lewes doctor, iv. 77.
Martin, Henri, i. cxi.
Mary, Queen of Scots, amusements of
her court, ii. 238.
Mary's WeU, ii. 134.
Master, The, and his Man, iii. 288-
290.
May-day, the night foUomng, a busy
season with fairies and witches, ii.
53 ; iv. 402.
Mediaeval romances, iv. 259-269.

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