[271]. Sympathetically excited emotions (instincts).

[272]. The division into periods follows that given in the second account by B.

[273]. Journal Abnormal Psychology, Vol. III, No. 5, p. 311.

[274]. Lecture IX.

[275]. Prince: Jour. Abnormal Psychology. Vol. I, No. 1, 1906. Also, The Dissociation of a Personality, 2nd ed., Chap. XXI. James: Varieties of Religious Experiences.

[276]. I. e., “Tried not to think of it”; “put it out of her mind as a disagreeable fact.”

[277]. Instinct of repulsion (McDougall).

[278]. Nor were they the reaction to or the expression of a previously repressed sexual wish as any such wish would have met no conscious resistance. It is easy to see in the light of all the facts that, given a certain change in the conditions, or point of view, there would have been no shock and no rebellion.

[279]. Lecture X; also, “The Meaning of Ideas as Determined by Unconscious Settings,” Journal Abnormal Psychology, Oct.-Nov., 1912.

[280]. I use the present tense as more convenient although I am speaking of a past condition.