[44]. Life and Letters of Charles Darwin, by F. Darwin, p. 27.
[45]. This sort of thing is very familiar to observers of children. See, for instance, Miss Shinn’s Notes on the Development of a Child, p. 153.
[46]. John Addington Symonds, by H. F. Brown, vol. 1, p. 63.
[47]. P. 70.
[48]. P. 74.
[49]. P. 120.
[50]. P. 125.
[51]. P. 348.
[52]. Attributed to Mme. de Staël.
[53]. I do not attempt to distinguish between these words, though there is a difference, ill defined however, in their meanings. As ordinarily used both designate a phase of self-assertion regarded as censurable, and this is all I mean by either.