[64]. See his History of European Morals, vol. ii., p. 369.
[65]. Perez, The First Three Years of Childhood, p. 66.
[66]. Mind, new series, vol. iv., p. 365.
[67]. A Week on the Concord and Merrimack Rivers, pp. 303, 328.
[68]. See his essay on the Journal of the Brothers Goncourt.
[69]. See his Life and Letters, vol. ii., p. 192.
[70]. Compare Professor Simon N. Patten’s Theory of Social Forces, p. 135.
[71]. Thoreau, A Week, etc., p. 304.
[72]. Compare G. Stanley Hall’s study of Fear in the American Journal of Psychology, viii., p. 147.
[73]. The terrors of our dreams are caused largely by social imaginations. Thus Stevenson, in one of his letters, speaks of “my usual dreams of social miseries and misunderstandings and all sorts of crucifixions of the spirit.”—Letters of Robert Louis Stevenson, i., p. 79.