Wrenching the giant pine, which, in its fall,
Crashing sweeps down its neighbouring trunks end boughs,
While with the hollow noise the hills resound.”
Miss Swanwick’s translation.
[564] Gedanken zu einer Aesthetik auf entwickelungsgeschichtlicher Grundlage. Zeitschr. f. Psych. u. Phys. d. Sinnesorgane, vol. xiv (1897).
[565] Hall and Allin, Psychology of Tickling, Laughing, etc., pp. 15–17.
[566] Miss Shinn reports a kind of animal dance by a child in its third year (op. cit., p. 127).
[567] Among the varied decorations which the natives of British New Guinea wear at their holiday dances is the bushy tail, which is placed quite as high as on the antique fauns. See A. C. Haddon, Intern. Arch. f. Ethnogr., vol. xi (1893).
[568] Hall and Allin, Psychology of Tickling, Laughing, etc., pp. 15–17.
[569] Livingstone’s last Journals from Central Africa.