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prehensiveness of our thought; whether we are asleep or

awake; no doubt depends largely upon our idiosyncrasies; constitution;

habits; and mental capacity。 But whatever may be the nature of our

dreams; the mental processes that characterize them are analogous to

those which go on when the mind is not held to attention by the will。

A WAKING DREAM

XV

A WAKING DREAM

I HAVE sat for hours in a sort of reverie; letting my mind have its way

without inhibition and direction; and idly noted down the incessant beat

of thought upon thought; image upon image。 I have observed that my

thoughts make all kinds of connections; wind in and out; trace

concentric circles; and break up in eddies of fantasy; just as in

dreams。 One day I had a literary frolic with a certain set of thoughts

which dropped in for an afternoon call。 I wrote for three or four hours

as they arrived; and the resulting record is much like a dream。 I found

that the most disconnected; dissimilar thoughts came in arm…in…arm……I

dreamed a wide…awake dream。 The difference is that in waking dreams I

can look back upon the endless succession of thoughts; while in the

dreams of sleep I can recall but few ideas and images。 I catch broken

threads from the warp and woof of a pattern I cannot see; or glowing

leaves which have floated on a slumber…wind from a tree that I cannot

identify。 In this reverie I held the key to the pany of ideas。 I give

my record of them to show what analogies exist between thoughts when

they are not directed and the behaviour of real dream…thinking。

I had an essay to write。 I wanted my mind fresh and obedient; and all

its ha