[14] L. Strümpell, Psychologische Pädagogik, Leipsic, 1880, pp. 359, 360.
[15] Op. cit., p. 357.
[16] Dr. Sikorski, L’évolution physique de l’enfant, Revue Philosophique xix (1885). p. 418.
“The wolves’ eyes burned in their heeds like fire,
But the boy in his folly fled not before the foe;
He went up to one of them and seized it with his hand
Where he saw the glittering eyes glowing in its head.”
I. V. Zingerle, Das Deutsche Kinderspiel, second edition, Innsbruck, 1873. p. 51.
[18] Les trois premières années, etc., p. 46. In regard to the words “sensations agreeable or even indifferent,” I would say that this distinction between pleasure in sensation as such, and pleasure in agreeable sensation, recurs again and again. In the most advanced play, æsthetic enjoyment, it appears as the difference between æsthetic effect and beauty.