[119] See p. 63.
[120] Flournoy, l.c., p. 378.
[121] For a case of this kind see Krafft Ebing, "Lehrbuch," 4th edition, p. 578.
[122] The limitation of the associative processes and the concentration of attention upon a definite sphere of presentation can also lead to the development of new ideas, which no effort of will in the waking state would have been able to accomplish (Loewenfeld, "Hypnotismus," p. 289).
[123] Zschokke, "Eine Selbstschau," III., Aufl. Aarau, 1843, p. 227 ff.
[124] Gilles de la Tourette says, "We have seen somnambulic girls, poor, uneducated, quite stupid in the waking state, whose whole appearance altered so soon as they were sent to sleep. Whilst previously they were boring, now they are lively, alert, sometimes even witty" (Cf. Loewenfeld, l.c., p. 132).
[125] Lectures delivered at the celebration of the twentieth anniversary of the opening of Clark University, September, 1909; translated from the German by Dr. A. A. Brill, of New York. Reprinted by kind permission of Dr. Stanley Hall.
[126] The selection of these stimulus words was naturally made for the German language only, and would probably have to be considerably changed for the English language.
[127] Denotes misunderstanding.
[128] Denotes repetition of the stimulus words.