What he will not suppose is that the earliest small and timid steps were not unaided by such objects as the fetichist treasures--stones, shells, and so forth, which suggest no idea of infinity.
The talisman is made of all the quaint odds and ends that the Fetichist treasures: swan's feathers, flocks of wool, and so on.
His reason is, that he does not see how the scraps of the fetichist can appeal to the feeling of the Infinite, which feeling is, in his theory, the basis of religion.
The talisman is made of all the quaint odds and ends that the Fetichist treasures, swan's feathers, flocks of wool, and so on.
It is to the extreme individualization involved by the developments of erotic symbolism that the fetichist owes his morbid and perilous isolation.
The fetichist now follows an impersonal and abstract symbol withersoever it may lead him.
That is to say that the fetichist may show a tendency to cultivate his fetich in his own person.
Thus, the homosexual tells us of a peculiar impulse he felt in childhood to kiss his tutor; we learn from the hair-fetichist that when still a child he loved to play with girls' hair; and so on.
The true fetichist is a very pathological being, whose entire sexual appetite, often with all its irradiations in the higher sphere of love, if we can speak of love in such cases, is limited to certain objects connected with woman.
The above list will hopefully give you a few useful examples demonstrating the appropriate usage of "fetichist" in a variety of sentences. We hope that you will now be able to make sentences using this word.