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 *ing boy and girl life, stories of great men and women.

Some teachers find it hard to see any educational value in play-stories like "The Three Bears," nonsense stories like "Chicken-Licken," and drolls, or farce "funny" stories like "Lazy Jack." They do not get the child's point of view. They are disturbed by the apparently idle pleasure or extravagance of them. "Chicken-Licken" appears to be nothing but driveling nonsense. The writer has no desire to attempt to turn it into sense nor to press unduly the claim of this particular type of story. But why not let it in as a nonsense tale, an opportunity for giving the mind a frolic? This is advanced by some students of the tale as its possible origin. It may be thought of as a reflection in literature of the naïveté of childhood; it catches capitally its guilelessness in motive, social intercourse, and deed. Its form also is childlike. The child ekes out invention in the manner of the tale, by the open artifice of cumulation and repetition. Or the story may be dignified into literary introduction to that type of classic which records the very common human situation, "much ado about nothing."

The same teachers are disturbed also by the ethical code of many of the folk tales; they find it