I am often excited when my house turns out to have an extra wing, a terrace, or an additional floor, that I did not know about. I am super-excited when I discover that it contains a secret library. I am talking, of course, about my dream house, which is often a composite of houses where I have lived in ordinary reality.
I can’t say that finding a secret library in my dream house is truly a new discovery, since there are versions that I have been using for decades. Nonetheless when I enter a secret library in a dream, I am frequently surprised that I left it unvisited for quite a while. Sometimes access requires me to roll back a whole wall of books (like the one in my living room photo, complete with library dog); sometimes I pass through a door that is not immediately obvious in the outer room.
Here’s my report of my visit
to a secret library in my dream house last night. If the history part seems a
little dry, a theme that is opened here is of compelling interest to me: the
possibility that we are living parallel lives in parallel worlds, and that
dreams show us how.
Dream
Marlborough and a Secret Library
I want everything on Marlborough to complete writing something
important I must deliver the next day. I open the door to my secret library, a
door I have not opened in a long time. There is an air of hushed expectancy
throughout the house. As I walk the passage behind the door and approach the
thousands of books on the shelves, I expect to smell dust or – horrors - mold. However,
everything seems clean and dry. I find the heavy hardback biographies of Marlborough
without difficulty. I have quite a reading assignment ahead of me, but I
can do it if I stay up all night. This should not be a problem. I have done it
many times before.
Feelings: intrigued
Reality check: I know this secret library in my dream house. I
have gone there in many dreams over decades. The books in this dream library (I have others) are mostly history. I do pull overnight binges of reading and research.
In my physical house I have a 4 volume paperback version of Winston Churchill's biography of his ancestor John Churchill, the first Duke of Marlborough. Marlborough was
Captain-General of the English forces in the wars in the Low Countries in the
early 18th century. The huge biography became a bestseller and the earnings kept Churchill
afloat in dodgy times. I was impressed, dipping into these volumes, by the vividness of Churchill's historical imagination. He was able to
transport himself right inside the living field of another time, putting
himself inside a scene in which the outcome among the many possible event
tracks in the many worlds was not yet determined.
Why am I researching Marlborough in my dream? Well, I dipped into Churchill’s biography when I was writing about his historical imagination in The Secret History of Dreaming. I wrote elsewhere, in my historical novel The Interpreter, about the visit of the “Four Indian Kings” to London in 1710, when Marlborough and his wife Sarah – the on-again, of-again favorite of Queen Anne – were at the pinnacle of power.
I am aware that there are many
parallel Roberts, on parallel event tracks, who are also writers but have chosen
different themes and genres. Maybe I stepped into the life of Robert the Historical
Novelist or Robert the History Professor. Or into a future project I have not yet recognized, let alone decided on, in regular life.
Dreams set us research assignments. Naturally, my dream drove me to reopen my book The Secret History of Dreaming to my chapter titled "Churchill's Time Machines", where I read this:
Imagination and History
In his valedictory lecture at
Another English historian, J.H.Plumb, observed that for Churchill history was not a subject; it was “a part of his temperament” that “permeated everything that he touched, and it was the mainspring of his politics and the secret of his immense mastery.” Isaiah Berlin, studying Churchill in his “finest hour”, concluded that “Churchill’s dominant category, the single, central organizing principle of his moral and intellectual universe, is a historical imagination so strong, so comprehensive, as to encase the whole of the present and the whole of the future in a framework of a rich and multicolored past.”
Churchill was a time traveler, at least in imagination, and his ability to read the tides of human events and the workings of character across the ages enabled him to see the patterns of the present - through the fog of war and the incredible proliferation of pressure and detail - and to grasp the history of the future.
In his time travels into the past, Churchill
may have gained most from his ability to enter - fully - into the mind and
situation of his great ancestor John Churchill, Duke of Marlborough, who led
the (uneasily) allied armies of the Grand Alliance to victory against the
French in the early 18th century. His four-volume biography of
He learned from
Churchill concluded from
Churchill was able to roam the past without being lost in it. Churchill’s command of history helped him to see the broad lines of a situation; he was able to swim through details without drowning in them.
Churchill’s works of history were participatory. He wrote about events in which he or ancestors with whom he felt close affinity had taken part, and about causes he had espoused. There is no pretense of standing at the margins of the action as an impartial scholar. He said that his method was borrowed from Defoe’s Memoirs of a Cavalier, in which the author “hangs the chronicle” of great evens “upon the thread of the personal experiences of an individual.”
"Imagination and History": text adapted from The Secret History of Dreaming by Robert Moss. Published by New World Library.
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