Sainte-Beuve, C. A., [314], [377], [382].

Salutary effects of laughter. See Value.

Sarasin, F., [222] note, [232], [245].

Satire, playful element in, [153], [383], [384]; among savages, [244]; function of, [282], [380]; political, [292]; social, [323], [413]; point of view of, [380], [410]; laughter in, [380], [382], [383]; mood of, [381]; in comedy, [381]; in fiction, [382]; allegory in, [382]; wit in, [383]; ironical inversion in, [383], [384].

Savages, laughter of (Chapter VIII.), [220]; difficulty of understanding, [220]; self-restraint of, [221]; amount of laughter of, [222]–226; nature of laughter of, [227], [252]; primitive forms of laughter of, [228]–285; teasing and practical jokes of, [229]–233; brutal elements in laughter of, [231]–233; dislike of laughter among, [232], [233]; appreciation of the laughable by, [235] ff.; laughter of, at the foreigner, [238]–244; intra-tribal laughter of, [244] ff.; humour of, [246], [251]; organisation of laughter among, [247]–251; use of laughter by, in expiation of {440} crimes, [250]; more thoughtful laughter of, [251].

Scherer, Edmond, on humour, [312], [403] note.

Schopenhauer, A., his theory of the ludicrous, [6], [13], [130]–133; referred to, [135], [285], [288].

Schütze, J. St., [19].

Scott, Sir W., [388].

Self-advertisement, the humour of, [334].