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46. Letters (p. 266).
47. Letters (p. 263). 48. S. Freud & Jung (1974, p. 87). 49. McGuire (Ed.), in S. Freud & Jung (1974, pp. 87-88). 50. S. Freud & Jung (1974, p. 88). 51. McGuire (Ed.), in S. Freud & Jung (1974, p. 88, note 5). 52. S. Freud & Jung (1974, pp. 22, 23, 33, 83, 104, 218, 281 [two times], 282, 413, 415 [Freud]; pp. 24, 97, 111, 205, 215, 217, 280 [Jung]). 53. For example, see S. Freud & Jung (1974, p. 205, note 3). 54. S. Freud & Jung (1974, p. 140). 55. S. Freud & Jung (1974, pp. 20, 117). 56. S. Freud & Jung (1974, pp. 317, 508 [Freud]; p. 319 [Jung]). 57. S. Freud & Jung (1974, p. 59). 58. S. Freud & Abraham (1965). 59. S. Freud & Abraham (1965, p. 39). 60. S. Freud & Abraham (1965, p. 177). 61. S. Freud & Abraham (1965, p. 272). 62. S. Freud & Abraham (1965, p. 306). 63. S. Freud & Abraham (1965, p. 353). 64. S. Freud & Abraham (1965, p. 308). 65. S. Freud & Abraham (1965, p. 335). 66. S. Freud & Abraham (1965, p. 239). 67. The information about Heine’s Lazarus is taken from the poetry and the notes in Heine (1975). Additional information and help in translation were provided by Professor Doris Guilloton. 68. Jones (1953, pp. 100-101). 69. Luke 16:19-31. 70. John 11. 71. In 1923, Heinele, a grandson of Freud, died. The boy had become very dear to Freud, and while the boy was dying Freud wrote to friends that he was not aware of ever having loved anyone so much, especially a child. He went on to say he never had experienced grief as intense as he had at this loss (Letters, p. 344). Jones (1967, p. 92) reports that this was the only time Freud was known to have shed tears. It is not hard to see that Heinele’s death at the age of four and a half redintegrated Freud’s own psychological loss of his nanny and of Freiberg when he had been a child. Heinele’s name was closely connected with Heine, one of the heroes Freud identified with; the boy died at about the same age as Freud had been when his early loss took place. His expression of intense grief was written on June 11, about the same time of year as the dismissal of the nanny and the departure from Freiberg are hypothesized to have happened—that is, around Pentecost, June 12, in 1859. In 1923, Pentecost was on May 20. In the letter Freud notes that the boy had fallen seriously ill some two weeks earlier and that afterwards he realized that the child was lost. Freud’s mourning for Heinele was thus going on around Pentecost time in 1923. Freud’s sorrow was further reinforced by the fact that it was in the spring of 1923 that he first became aware of his cancer and its probable fatal consequences for him (Jones, 1957, pp. 89- |