One of my favorite books on dreams is Andrew Lang’s The Book of Dreams and Ghosts, first
published in 1897. The prolific and popular author of the “color” series of
fairytales affected a cool skepticism towards this subject material, which
allowed him to slide us right into the deep end, recounting cases of
timefolding and interdimensional travel in dreams.
As a consummate
storyteller, Lang was always alert for the story value of his material. His
main question of dreams is which dreams make the best stories. He concludes
that the dreams that make the best stories are those that reveal the “unknown
past”, “the unknown present” and the “unknown future”.
Dreams only form subjects of good
dream-stories when the vision coincides with and adequately represents an unknown event in the past, the present
or the future…If we dreamed of being present at an unchronicled scene in Queen
Mary’s life, and if, after the dream
was recorded, a document proving its accuracy should be for the first time
recovered, then there is matter for a good dream-story.
His references to his own dream life, though modest and
brief, suggest he had experiential insight into his subject: “In dreams…we see the events of the past (I have been
at Culloden fight and at the siege of Troy)”.
He collects
examples of shared dreams (and uses
that term for them):
-
Five members of the Ogilvie family, in different
locations dream that a family dog – a poodle called Fanti – goes mad.
Subsequently, the poodle lives on, sane and harmless, for the rest of his
natural life. However, Lang does not comment on the fact that an action was taken in one of the dreams,
in which the family threw the dog into the fire.
-
Three members of the Swithinbanks family (father and
two sons) dream the mother’s death on the same night and discover in the
morning that indeed she died that night,
Lang also gives several examples of dream tracking (my turn)
in which dreams reveal the location of
lost objects, making allowance for the possibility that the dreaming mind
may simply be making better sense of details half-observed in waking life:
-
a lawyer dreams that a check he has lost is curled
around a street railing (he dropped it when he went out to post letters)
-
a girl in Lang’s family dreamed that the missing ducks’
eggs were at a place in a certain field, where they proved to be
-
an Irish lady dreamed a lost key was lying at the root
of a certain tree
Lang’s story collection includes one of my all-time favorite
accounts of dream precognition, which I discuss in Conscious Dreaming as The Case of the Bishop’s Pig. Here is Lang’s
original version:
THE PIG IN THE DINING-ROOM.
Mrs. Atlay, wife of a late Bishop
of Hereford, dreamed one night that there was a pig in the dining-room of the
palace. She came downstairs, and in the hall told her governess and children of
the dream, before family prayers. When these were over, nobody who was told the
story having left the hall in the interval, she went into the dining-room and
there was the pig. It was proved to have escaped from the sty after Mrs. Atlay
got up.
“Millions of such things are dreamed”, Lang comments. At
first sight, the dream is of “the common grotesque type” – except that it
proved to be a quite literalistic preview of an incident that was played out in
ordinary life. The Case of the Bishop’s Pig reminds us that we don’t want to
skip asking whether elements of a dream could be played out in the future, even
when the dream content seems “weird” or “grotesque”.
Art: Prize Pig, Cardiff by Richard Whitford (1872)
I came about this intresting story.
ReplyDeletea pig named Lulu saved her owner’s life while the woman was having a heart attack. The pig heard the cries of pain, forced her way out of the yard, ran into the road and ‘played dead’ to stop the traffic. A driver stopped, the pig led him to the trailer, he heard the woman and called 911.
Heres a picture of the pig.
http://unbelievablefactsblog.com/post/146010621638/a-pig-named-lulu-saved-her-owners-life-while-the-woman