It happens every few months. I pull aside a screen, or open a curtain, or reach into an obscure corner of a room, and open the door to a library wing of my house that is not so much secret as forgotten. This library is immense, with bookcases that rise to the ceiling, suffused with light that seems natural, though I see no windows. The nearest bookshelves at my left hand are filled with European history. I recall that last time I was here, I dipped into some books about John Churchill, the first Duke of Marlborough.
In the early hours this morning, I step into the
library room again. It is as I remember it. However, the room from which I enter
is different. With its deep green wallpaper, I think it belongs to my next
residence, which we are currently renovating, rather than my present house.
Lucid inside the dream, it strikes me that I have not gone to the far end of
the library wing and should explore what is there. I am surprised to find
several people working at a large table.
When one of them turns, I see he is my favorite dead
professor. I had many encounters with him over the years since his death, often
in a very special research institution. I am skeptical about whether he is
really here now, in this time and place. He laughs and peels off a mask. As the
goatee and bald pate and glinting spectacles are removed, I see that my helper
has been wearing a familiar face. I’m not sure, but I suspect he is the young historian
inside my own psyche. A large, comfy lady at the table seems quite solid. In
her shapeless print dress, she’s not putting on any façade. Her name is
Maureen, and she is available for research assignments. The third figure, male,
is not introduced.
“What are you working on?”
“Parallel lives.”
Of course. A perennial theme. When I met my dead professor
at a research institute twenty years ago, he showed me this was his main work. Not
simply Parallel Lives as Plutarch wrote them, coupling biographies of prominent
Greeks and Romans, but a branch of Metahistory: the study of how the dramas or people
living in different times and places can turn on each other, shifting each
other’s lives. Back them, my dead professor was studying the interaction between
the lives of Lenin and an ancient tyrant. Dionysius of Syracuse. I wonder who will
most reward my study now? Maybe Maureen can tell me.
- Unedited journal report, June 8, 2022
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