Choral laughter, [247], [258], [295]; decline of, [429].

Cibber, Colley, [292] note.

Cicero, [384].

Class, differentiation of, [247], [258], [259]; changes in, as laughable, [287].

Clergy, laughter at the, [109], [262], [267], [294], [346]; laughter of the, [283].

Coleridge, S. T., [364], [374] note.

Collier, Jeremy, [411].

Combat, playful, as origin of laughter of tickling, [179]–181.

Comedy (Chapter XI.), Greek, [264], [291], [346], [353], [361], [389] (see also Aristophanes); of the Restoration, [283], [287], [370]–373, [383]; Roman, [291], [376] (see also Plautus, Terence); conditions of the rise of, [347]; elements of primitive laughter in, [348]–357, [379]; of Incident, [357]; of Manners, [357], [370]–373, [376]; of Character, [357]–370; Elizabethan, [361]; point of view of, [368]–377, [410]; mood addressed by, [370], [373], [375], [377], [412]; attitude of, towards morality, [372]–377, [411]; limits to, [377]; approach to point of view of, in fiction, [378]; satirical element in, [381]; humour in, [387]; corrective function of, [411]–414; Modern, [413].

Comic art, rudiments of, in savage life, [250].