[515] We may compare, too, our watch charms. They, like the trophies and tribal symbols of savages, show much more the desire for ownership than the principle of self-exhibition.

[516] The examples of decoration by animals apply to their dwellings rather than to their persons.

[517] Grosse, p. 233.

[518] In an article on Sex and Art, Scott has developed similar ideas, and has rightly connected the vagaries of fetichism with the abnormal sexual excitement produced by special materials, such as fur, velvet, etc.

[519] The Play of Animals, p. 211.

[520] Page 76.

[521] A. Stöckl, Lehrbuch der Aesthetik, second edition, Mainz, 1889, p. 229.

[522] Wagner and Liszt are especially strong in such effects.

[523] Vischer, Aesthetic, sec. 189. Hall and Allin, op. cit., p. 31.

[524] R. J. Dodge, Modern Indians of the Far West, pp. 146, 164.