Page:A Study of Fairy Tales.djvu/329

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INDEX

Accumulative or clock story, 205–11.
Action, 20–21.
Adaptation of fairy tales, 117–19.
Adventure, 19–20.
Adventures of Chanticleer and Partlet, 81–82.
American fairy tales, 195–99.
Andersen, Hans C.: tales by, tested as literary form, 69; Steadfast Tin Soldier, 46, 49, 135–38; Fir Tree, 151–53; list of tales by, 248; editions, 256–57.
Animal tale: class, 211–17; evolution of, 211–13; types of, 213–17, 272–75, 287–90.
Animals: an interest, 24; tale of strange, 33–34.
Appendix, 265–90: Little Two-Eyes, 265–66; Snow White, 266–67; The Little Lamb and the Little Fish, 267–70; How the Birds came to Have Different Nests, 270–72; The Good-Natured Bear, 272–75; Puss-in-Boots and Lord Peter, 275–78; Tom Thumb and Little Thumb, 278–82; Snow White and Rose Red, 282–86; and The Elephant's Child, 287–90.
Arabian Nights, Thousand and One Nights, 176–78, 190, 196.
Art: of teaching, 119–20; in teaching, good, 120; in teaching, great, 120–21; in literature, good, 39–40; in literature, fine, 39–40; of story-telling, 90–91, 93–94; ancient, of story-telling, 91–93.
Artistic expression, instinct of, 130–54.
Aulnoy, Comtesse d', tales of, 181–82.
 
Basile, 178–79.
Beaumont, Madam de, 182.
Beautiful, the, 18–19.
Beauty and the Beast, dramatization of, 140–41; editions of, 189, 198.
Bibliography of fairy tales, 253–54.
Bird and the Trees, 148–51.
Books, main standard fairy tale, a list, 256–58. See Sources of material.
Breathing, exercises in, 104–05.
Briar Rose, 77. See also Sleeping Beauty.
 
Capture, tales of, 34–35.
Celtic fairy tales, 183–84.
Chap-books, 185–87, 188, 196, 198.
Characters, 71–73.
Child: his part in story-telling, 121–25; interests, 13–37; instincts, 125–54; growth: in observation, 6, 47–48; in reason, 6–7, 53–54; in language, 10; in emotion, 44–45; in imagination, 45–53; in experience, 54; in intellect, 53–54; in self-activity, 121–22; in consciousness, 122–23; in initiative, 122; in purpose, 123–25; in creative return possible to him, 123–54; in self-expression, 124–54; in organization of ideas, 153.
Child's Own Book, The, 190.
Cinderella, a chap-book, 187, 188, 198; a romantic type, 228–31.