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WILDE, OSCAR Fairy Tales. Putnam.
WILSON, RICHARD The Indian Story Book. Macmillan.
WRATISLAW, A. H.
Sixty Folk Tales from Exclusively Slavonic Sources. Stock.
FOOTNOTES.
1. I venture to hope (at this long distance of years) that my language in telling the story was more simple than appears from this account.
2. This difference of spelling in the same essay will be much appreciated by those who know how gladly children offer an orthographical alternative, in hopes that one if not the other may satisfy the exigency of the situation.
3. See "List of Stories."
4. At the Congressional Library in Was.h.i.+ngton.
5. Letters of T. E. Brown, page 55.
6. Page 55.
7. In further ill.u.s.tration of this point see "When Burbage Played," Austen Dobson, and "In the Nursery," Hans Andersen.
8. "Les jeux des enfants," page 16.
9. A noted Greek gymnast struck his pupil, though he was applauded by the whole a.s.sembly. "You did it clumsily, and not as you ought, for these people would never have praised you for anything really artistic."
10. For further details on the question of preparation of the story, see chapter on "Questions Asked by Teachers."
11. Sully says that children love exact repet.i.tion because of the intense enjoyment bound up with the process of imaginative realization.
12. At the Summer School at Chautauqua, New York, and at Lincoln Park, Chicago.
13. There must be no more emphasis in the second manner than the first.
14. From "Education of an Orator," Book II, Chapter 3.
15. One child's favorite book bore the exciting t.i.tle of "Birth, Life and Death of Crazy Jane."
16. This does not imply that the child would not appreciate in the right context the thrilling and romantic story in connection with the finding of the Elgin marbles.
17. One is almost inclined to prefer Marjorie Fleming's little innocent oaths.
"But she was more than usual calm, She did not give a single dam."
18. Published by John Loder, bookseller, Woodbridge, in 1829.
19. From "Literary Values."
20. A story is told of Confucius, who, having attended a funeral, presented his horse to the chief mourner. When asked why he bestowed this gift, he replied: "I wept with the man, so I felt I ought to _do_ something for him."
21. This experiment cannot be made with a group of children for obvious reasons.
22. From an address on "The Cultivation of the Imagination."
23. "The House in the Wood" (Grimm), is another instance of triumph for the youngest child.
24. See list of stories under this heading.
25. To be found in Andrew Lang's "The Violet Fairy Book."
26. To be found in Jacob's "More English Fairy Tales."
27. From the "Thabagata."
28. For selection of suitable stories among legends of the Saints, see list of stories under the heading, "Stories from the Lives of the Saints."
29. These words have been set most effectively to music by Miss Margaret Ruthven Lang.
30. From "The Use of Fairy Tales," in "Moral Instruction of Children".
31. See Chapter on Questions asked by Teachers.
32. From "Talks to Teachers," page 93.
33. An excellent account of this is to be found in "The Song of Roland,"
by Arthur Way and Frederic Spender.
34. Njal's Burning, from "The Red Book of Romance," by Andrew Lang.
35. From "Studies of Childhood."
36. England.
37. From "The Lockerbie Book," by James Whitcomb Riley, copyright, 1911.
Used by special permission of the publishers, The Bobbs-Merril Company.
38. From "Virginibus Puerisque."
39. See "Long Bow Story;" "John and the Pig."
40. Published by George Allen & Co.
41. This is even a higher spirit than that shown in the advice given in the "Agamemnon" (speaking of the victor's att.i.tude after the taking of Troy):