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No. LIV.*-WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 18th, 1820.

OF DREAMS.

THE materialists and psychologists are at issue upon the subject of dreams. The latter hold them to be one among the many proofs of the existence of a soul: the former endeavour to account for them upon principles altogether corporeal. We must own, that the effects of their respective arguments, as is usual with us on these occasions, is not so much to satisfy us with either, as to dissatisfy us with both. The psychologist, with all his struggles, never appears to be able to get rid of his body; and the materialist leaves something extrémely deficient in the vivacity of his proofs, by his ignorance of that Primum Mobile, which is the soul of every thing. In the mean time, while they go on with their laudable enquiries (for which we have a very sincere respect), it is our business to go on recommending a taste for results as well as causes, and turning every thing to account in this beautiful star of ours, the earth, whether body or soul. There is no reason why the most learned investigator of the most subtle mysteries should not enjoy his existence, and have his earthly dreams made as pleasant as possible: and for our parts we see nothing at present, either in body or soul, but a medium for a world of perceptions, the very unpleasantest of whose dreams are but warnings to us how we depart from the health and natural piety of the pleasant ones.

What seems incontrovertible in the case of dreams is, that they are most apt to take place when the body is most affected. They seem to turn most upon us, when the suspension of the will has been reduced

* The last INDICATOR was by mistake numbered I. It should have been LIII., according to the venerable continuous principle, in these cases made and provided. The reader will be good enough to alter it with his pen.

VOL. II.

to its most helpless state by indulgence. The door of the fancy is left without its keeper; and forth issue, pell mell, the whole rout of ideas or images, which had been previously stored within the brain and kept to their respective duties. They are like a school let loose, or the winds in Virgil, or Lord Anson's drunken sailors at Panama, who dressed themselves up in all sorts of ridiculous apparel; only they are far more wild, winged, and fantastic.

We were about to say, that being writers, we are of necessity dreamers; for thinking disposes the bodily faculties to be more than usually affected by the causes that generally produce dreaming. But extremes appear to meet on this as on other occasions; at least as far as the meditative power is concerned; for there is an excellent reasoner, now living, who telling another that he was not fond of the wilder parts of the Arabian Nights, was answered, with great felicity, "Then you never dream :"-which, it turned out, was actually the case. Here the link is totally lost, that connects a tendency to indigestion with thinking on the one hand, and dreaming on the other. If we are to believe Herodotus, the Atlantes, an African people, never dreamt; which Montaigne is willing to attribute to their never having eaten any thing that died of itself. It is to be presumed that he looked upon their temperance as a matter of course. The same philosopher, who was a deep thinker, and of a delicate constitution, informs us that he himself dreamt but sparingly; but then when he did, his dreams were fantastic though chearful. This is the very triumph of the animal spirits, to unite the strangeness of sick dreams with the chearfulness of healthy ones. To these exceptions against the usual theories, we may add, that dreams, when they occur, are by no means modified. of necessity by what the mind has been occupied with in the course of the day, or even of months; for during our two years' confinement imprison, we have a strong recollection that we did not dream more than twice of our chief, subjects of reflection, the prison itself not exoppted. 1. The two dreams were both about the latter, and both the same. We fancied that we had shipped out of jail, and gone to the theatre, where we were much horrified by seeing the faces of the whole audience unexpectedly turned upon us,

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molt is certain enough however that dreams in general proceed from indigestion ; and it appears nearly as much so, that they are more or lass strange according to the waking fancy of the dreamer.

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All dreams, as in old Galen I have read,
Are from repletion and complexion bred,

most disqe from rising fumes of indigested food,

And noxious humours that infect the blood. D

Sis youll 3n+ When choler overflows, then dreams are brad
Of flames, and all the family of red,

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Choler adust congeals the blood with fear, dig our old begubor nechen black bulls toss us, and black devils tear.

In sanguine airy dreams aloft we bound, ..!!nged ovWith rheums oppressed we sink, in rivers drowned.

DRYDEN's Cock and the Fox from Chaucer.

Again, in another passage which is worth quoting instead of the origi nal, and affords a good terse specimen of the author's versification

Dreams are but interludes which Fancy makes;
When monarch Reason sleeps, this mimic wakes:

·Compounds a medley of disjointed things,
*

To A mob of coblers and a court of kings a
Light fumes are merry, grosser fumes are sad :
Both are the reasonable soul run mað;
And many monstrous forms in sleep we see,
That neither were, nor are, nor e'er can be.
Sometimes forgotten things long cast behind
Rush forward in the brain, and come to mind.
The nurse's legends are for truths receiv'd,
And the man dreams but what the boy believ'd;
Sometimes we but rehearse a former play,
The night restores our actions done by day; l
As hounds in sleep will open for their prey.
In short the farce of dreams is of a piece,
Chimeras all; and more absurd or less.

It is probable, at the same time, that a trivial degree of indigestion will give rise to very fantastic dreams in a fanciful mind; while on the other hand a good orthodox repletion is necessary towards a fanciful creation in a dull one. It shall make an epicure, of any vivacity, act as many parts in his sleep, as a tragedian" for that night only." The inspirations of veal in particular are accounted extremely Delphic: Italian pickles partake of the spirit of Dante; and a butter-boat shall contain as many ghosts as Charon's.

There is a passage in Lucian, which would have made a good subject for those who painted the temptations of the saints. It is a description of the City of Dreams, very lively and crowded. We quote after Natalis Comes, not having the True History by us. The city, we are told, stands in an immense plain, surrounded by a thick forest of tall poppy trees, and enormous mandragoras. The plain is also full of all sorts of somniculous plants, and the trees are haunted with multitudes of owls and bats, but no o other bird. The city is washed by the river Lethe, called by others the Night-bringer, whose course is inau. dible and like the flowing of oil. (Spenser's follower Browne has been here; romigos bun viol

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Where consort none other fowl Ya Save the bat and sullen owl; don prador egoissy Where flows Lethe without coil,

Softly, like a stream of oil.

Il Glasur way Inner Temple Mask.)gadro'

There are two gates to the city; one of horn, in which almost every thing that can happen in sleep is represented, as in a transparency; the other of ivory, in which the dreams are but dimly shadowed. The principal temple is that of Night; and there are others, dedicated to Truth and Falsehood, who have oracles. The population consists of Dreams, who are of an infinite variety of shape. Some are small and

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slender; others distorted, humped, and monstrous; others very proper and tall, with blooming, good-tempered faces. Others again have terrible countenances, are winged, and seem eternally threatening the city with some calamity; while others walk about in the pomp and garniture of kings. If any mortal comes into the place, there is a multitude of domestic Dreams, who meet him with offers of service and who are followed by some of the others, that bring him good or bad news, generally false; for the inhabitants of that city are for the most part a lying and crafty generation, speaking one thing, and thinking another.This is having a new advantage over us. Only think of the mental reservation of a Dream!

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If Lucian had divided his city into ranks and denominations, he might possibly have classed them under the general heads of Dreams Lofty, Dreams Ludicrous, Dreams Pathetic, Dreams Horrible, Dreams Bodily Painful or Pleasant, Dreams of Common Life, Dreams of New Aspects of Humanity, Dreams Mixed, Fantastic, and utterly Confused. He speaks of winged ones; which is judicious, for they are very common; but unless Natalis Comes, who is not a very bright person, misrepresents him, he makes them of the melancholy class, which in general they are not.

In airy sanguine dreams aloft we bound.

66

Nothing is more common, or usually more pleasant, than to dream of flying. It is one of the best specimens of the race; for besides being agreeable, it is made up of the dreams of ordinary life, and those of surprising combination. Thus the dreamer sometimes thinks he is flying in unknown regions, sometimes skimming only a few inches above the ground, and wondering he never did it before. He will even dream that he is dreaming about it; and yet is so fully convinced· of its feasibility, and so astonished at his never having hit upon so des lightful a truism, that he is resolved to practise it the moment he wakes. "One has only," says he, just to give a little spring with one's foot-so-and-oh its the easiest and most obvious thing in the world. I'll always skim hereafter." We once dreamt that a woman set up some Flying Rooms, as a person does a tavern. We went to try them; and nothing could be more satisfactory and common-place on all sides. The landlady welcomed us with a courtesy, hoped for friends and favours, &c. and then shewed us into a spacious room, not round, as might be expected, but long, and after the usual dining fashion. Perhaps, Sir," said she, "you would like to try the room;' upon which we made no more ado, but sprung up and made two or three genteel circuits, now taking the height of it like a house-lark, and then cutting the angles like a swallow. " Very pretty flying indeed," said we, "and very moderate,"

A house for the purpose of taking flights in, when the open air was to be had for nothing, is fantastic enough; but what shall we say to those confoundings of all time, place, and substance, which are constantly happening to persons of any creativeness of diaphragm? Thus you shall meet a friend in a gateway, who besides being your friend

shall be your enemy; and besides being Jones or Tomkins, shall be a bull; and besides asking you in, shall oppose your entrance. Nevertheless you are not at all surprised; or if surprised, are only so at something not at all surprising. To be Tomkins and a bull at once, is the most ordinary of common-places; but that, being a bull, he should have horns, is what astonishes you; and you are also amazed at his not being in Holborn or the Strand, where he never lived. To be in two places at once is not uncommon to a dreamer. He will also be young and old at the same time, a school-boy and a man; will live many years in a few minutes, like the Sultan who dipped his head in the tub of water; will be full of zeal and dialogue upon some matter of indifference; go to the opera with a dish under his arm, to be in the fashion; talk faster in verse than prose; and ask a set of horses to a musical party, telling them that he knows they will be pleased, because blue is the general wear, and Mozart has gone down to Gloucestershire to fit up a house for Epaminondas.

It is a curious proof of the concern which body has in these vagaries, that when you dream of any particular limb being in pain, you shall often have gone to sleep in a posture that affects it. A weight on the feet will produce dreams in which you are rooted to the ground, or caught by a goblin out of the earth. A cramped hand or leg shall get you tortured in the Inquisition; and a head too much thrown back, give you the sense of an interminable visitation of stifling. The night-mare, the heaviest punisher of repletion, will visit some persons, merely for lying on their backs; which shews how much it is concerned in a particular condition of the frame. Sometimes it lies upon the chest like a vital lump. Sometimes it comes in the guise of a horrid dwarf, or malignant little hag, who grins in your teeth and will not let you rise. Its most common enormity is to pin you to the ground with excess of fear, while something dreadful is coming up, a goblin or a mad bull. Sometimes the horror is of a very ate description, a mysterious and shocking possessor. He is a gigantic deformity, and will pass presently through the room in which you are sitting. He comes, not a giant, but a dwarf, of the most strange and odious description, hairy, spider-like, and chuckling. His mere passage is unbearable. The agony rises at every step. You would protest against so malignant a sublimation of the shocking, but are unable to move or speak. At length, you give loud and long-drawn groans, and start up with a præternatural effort, awake.

such as being spell-bound in an old house, which ha

ture.

Mr. Coleridge, whose sleeping imagination seems proportioned to his waking, has described a fearful dream of mental and bodily torAs the beautiful poems of Christabel, &c. which accompany it, seem to have been too imaginative to be understood by the critics, and consequently have wanted the general attention which the town are pleased to give or otherwise according to the injunctions of those gentlemen, we shall indulge ourselves in extracting the whole of it. It is entitled the Pains of Sleep.

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