Monumenta, of Balan, on Clement VII., 427
Morality, relativity of, to the age denied,
Morals, effect of, on society limited to individuals (Buckle), 306 Mordaunt, on Charles II. 's change of faith, 88-9 Moreau, 409 More, Hannah, early influence of, on George Eliot, 277 More, 436 Sir Thomas, 21, 436 on the Lutherans, 30 his theory and practice of persecution, , 64 private and public views of, on Henry's Divorce, 30-31 Mosaic laws on marriage, learning of, on Henry VII. 's Divorce, 32 Moscow, retreat to, attempts to dis- cover projector of, 366 Mosheim, 332 Mozley, J. L. , historical style of, esti- mated by Creighton, 436 Miiller, Johannes, suggestions given by, to Bain, 287 Introduction to the Science of Mytho- logy* by, 352 Munich, home of Giesebrecht, 499 Murder, Buckle's fallacious notions re- garding statistics of, 316 difficulty of distinguishing from kill- ing, 191 invaluable as basis of historical measurement, 494-95 as justified by unenlightened con- science of the sixteenth century, 64 political, occasional expediency of, Morse Stephen's view of, 494 Musetola, 42 Musset, Alfred de, poem of, on Dante,
Myers, tribute to George Eliot's power, 3°3 Names of those believing in the justice of Henry VIII. 's Divorce, 18, 28-9 Naples, the blockade of, by Lautrec, 39 crown of, offered to Pescara, 12 Napoleon I., 371, 442-58 admitted practice by, of diplomatic douceurs, 398 boyhood of, Prokesch on, 446 character of, 454-58 Seeley's estimate of, 445-6 ; pas- sionate temper of, 412 ; Talley- rand's explanation of, 404-5 correspondence of, forgery in, 363 defect in his generalship, 444 definition by, of history, 455 divorce of, and second marriage, 445 ; Egyptian expedition, Monge on, S fall of, 393, 412 and the invasion of England, 451-2 military genius of, Talleyrand's ap- preciation of, 410 miscalculation by, of English navy,
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motive power of, 444 records of, difficult to get, 442 revealed by Talleyrand's Memoirs,
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Spanish policy of, Talleyrand's objec- tion to, 399 urged by hopeless destiny, 443 wars of, in Austria, 440-45, 452 ; in Russia, 448-9, 457 ; in Spain, . 457 and Mass6na, end of revolutionary war hindered by, 483 Napoleon III. and his Austrian alliance, 209 et seq. and Cavour, 181, 182 the Orsini bomb, 190 ; and its political consequences, 194-7 and the Franco- Prussian War, reasons of, for opposing Prince Leopold, 231 ; and his own candidate for Spanish crown, 230 ; forces com- manded by, result of their un- readiness, 240 ; disposition of, end of July, and during the war, 241 et seq. ; at Metz, 243 ; sur- renders the command to Bazaine, and ceases to count in the war, 243 ; his surrender, at Sedan, 246 ; not the cause of the war of 1870, according to Sybel, 205, but see 213-25, 227; the incon- venient moment of the war, 217 ; on the solution of the war problem — pro tem., 221 ; position of, as affected by publication of the treaty as to Belgium, 239 his illness and its historical conse- quences, 207, 212-13, 227 and Mexico, recall of his army, reasons for, 205 ; rejects the Doblado Convention, and sends troops to Mexico, 151 ; his scheme for regenerating the Latin world its first step, 15 1-3 ; his support to Maximilian, 154 ; suggested quid pro quo refused, 157 ; other terms accepted, id. ; the promised French alliance, id. ;