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The Other Land

Episodic/sequential/recurring dreams, c.1880-84, by Walter de la Mare

When I was a boy, between the ages of seven or eight and of eleven, I had a series of very curious dreams. I say a series, for, though the same dream never occurred twice, the same scenes and people did occur in all. Some features of these dreams were very strange, and to this day I can think of no 'orthodox' explanation of them.

In these dreams I was not a boy, but a grown man; I spoke and thought a language which was neither English, French nor German, the only languages I knew, but some tongue I have never been able to identify--though I have the strong suspicion that I have identified its script, utterly unknown to me at any time. In the dreams I knew not one word of English.

Further, I had no knowledge of any person, place or event with which I was actually acquainted in 'real' life. I had different parents and different friends--all, like myself, of dark complexion and dressed in un-European clothes.

The locus of the dreams was always the same region, but by no means the same part of that region. It was a country of very high, sharp, and almost snowless mountains, of terribly desolate, stony valleys, of elevated and wind-swept plateaux. Somewhere in the midst of these mountains was a city, towards which I was frequently journeying on foot, but which I never remembered to have reached. The landscape was absolutely consistent, and as fixed and material as the landscape of the Lake District: it had none of the blurred edges or suddenly shifting outlines so common to dream landscapes.

At the time of my experiments with Cannabis (twenty-six to twenty-eight years of age) [1899-1901] these dreams had faded into mere nothings; but, on one occasion, when I was under the influence of the drug, the whole series came back to me with intense vividness--with many other recollected incidents belonging to the same life but not belonging to any of the dreams.

I did not recall these things as things I had dreamed, but as places and persons whom I had known. I remembered having been the dream-person, not having dreamed about him. It was then that the peculiar script of the dream-language came clearly again before me and that I recognized it. It is a genuine human script and no mere dream-invention; but it is a script and a language of which neither I nor anyone with whom I have ever spoken has the faintest knowledge. When I saw it again under the drug it had become to me also a foreign and unknown tongue, though in the dream-series it had been my mother tongue.

If I believed in reincarnation, and at times I am more than tempted to, I could hazard an explanation; as it is I cannot even guess at it--not even with the help of Freud and his kind.

EDITOR'S COMMENTS

--Chris Wayan

SOURCE: Desert Islands and Robinson Crusoe by Walter de la Mare, 1930: dream p.97; cannabis notes, 93-4 & 99. I added title to aid searches.



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