Part 35 (1/2)

WILDE, OSCAR Fairy Tales Putnam

WILSON, RICHARD The Indian Story Book Macmillan

WRATISLAW, A H

Sixty Folk Tales from Exclusively Slavonic Sources Stock

FOOTNOTES

1 I venture to hope (at this long distance of years) thatthe story was more simple than appears fro in the saladly children offer an orthographical alternative, in hopes that one if not the other ency of the situation

3 See ”List of Stories”

4 At the Congressional Library in Washi+ngton

5 Letters of T E Brown, page 55

6 Page 55

7 In further illustration of this point see ”When Burbage Played,” Austen Dobson, and ”In the Nursery,” Hans Andersen

8 ”Les jeux des enfants,” page 16

9 A noted Greek gyh he was applauded by the whole asseht, for these people would never have praised you for anything really artistic”

10 For further details on the question of preparation of the story, see chapter on ”Questions Asked by Teachers”

11 Sully says that children love exact repetition because of the intense enjoyinative realization

12 At the Summer School at Chautauqua, New York, and at Lincoln Park, Chicago

13 There must be no more emphasis in the second manner than the first

14 From ”Education of an Orator,” Book II, Chapter 3

15 One child's favorite book bore the exciting title of ”Birth, Life and Death of Crazy Jane”

16 This does not iht context the thrilling and roin marbles

17 One is al's little innocent oaths

”But she was le dae, in 1829