Part 36 (1/2)

”Yea, let no craving for forbidden gain Bid conquerors yield before the darts of greed”

42 It is curious to find that the story of Puss-in-Boots in its variants is sometimes presented with a es it has _none_ In Cashmere it has one moral, in Zanzibar another

43 From Hans Christian Andersen, in ”Childhood in Literature and Art”

44 ”Sartor Resartus,” Book III, page 218

45 From ”Childhood in Literature and Art”

46 See ”Eastern Stories and Fables,” published by Routledge

47 See Chapter I

48 In this land, the support of Dr Kimmins, Chief Inspector of Education in the London County Council, who is strongly opposed to the immediate reproduction of stories

49 These remarks refer only to the illustrations of stories told

Whether children should be encouraged to self-expression in drawing (quite apart for in one e a question to deal with in this special work on story-telling

50 I give the following story, quoted by Professor Ker in his Roe

51 The row louder at each incident

52 ”The punishment that can most affect Merfolk is to restrict their freedom And this is how the Queen of the Sea punished the Nixie of our tale”

53 The three stories fro formed part of my repertoire that I have been requested to include the a free translation of ustin, All is lost, lost!

NOTE OF ACKNOWLEDGMENT

My thanks are due to:

Mrs Josephine Dodge Daskam Bacon, for permission to use an extract from ”The Madness of Philip,” and to her publishers

To Messrs Houghton Mifflin, for permission to use extract frohs

To Messrs Mac Time,”

of Miss Rossetti