Concerning Dreams
De Insomniis
Preface
It is an old tradition, I think, and quite in the manner of Plato, to conceal the profound thoughts of philosophy behind the mask of some lighter treatment, that thereby whatsoever has been acquired with difficulty shall not be again lost to men, nor shall such matters be contaminated by lying exposed to the approach of the profane. The end accordingly has been most zealously pursued in the present work, and whether it attains this end, and whether in other respects it is wrought with distinction after the manner of the ancients, let those decide who shall approach it in a spirit of loving labour.
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1. If dreams are prophets, and if the visions seen in dreams are riddles of their future fortunes to anxious men, they would in that case be full of wisdom, though certainly not clear. In sooth their lack of clearness is their wisdom.
`For the gods keep man's life concealed.' (Hesoid, Works and Days 42)
To obtain the greatest things without labour is a divine prerogative, whereas for men, not merely 'in front of virtue' but of all fair things,
'The gods have set sweat.' (ibid)
Now divination must be the greatest of all good things, for it is in knowledge and, in a word, in the cognitional part of his faculties that God differs from man, as does man from the brute. But whereas the nature of God is sufficient unto Himself for knowledge, man through divination attains to much more than belongs to our human nature. For the mass of mankind can know only the present. Concerning that which has never been, it can only guess; and Calchas was the only one in the whole Greek assembly who understood
'The things which are, the things which shall be, and the things which have been.' (Iliad i, 70).
And according to Homer, the affairs of the gods are dependent on the judgement of Zeus, for this reason, that
'he came into being before them and has the more knowledge,' (Iliad xiii, 355).
by the very fact, I suppose, that he is older. For I think that the reference to age in these verses point to the conclusions that to know more comes through time, and knowledge was, it seems, the most precious thing. But if any one is persuaded on the authority of the other passages that the rule of Zeus rests in the strong hand, as in the text
'he was superior in force,' (Odyssey XVIII.234)
that man's acquaintance with poetry is that of the vulgar, and he has never heard of the philosophy therein, which affirms that the gods are nothing else but minds. It is in this sense that to the words 'he was superior in prowess', he has fastened the words 'e is more ancient in days', meaning that Zeus is an elder-born intelligence; for what else is strength of mind but intelligent thought? Whosoever, being a god, is deemed worthy to rule over the gods, rules in that he is mind by the superior force of wisdom. Therefore the phrase,
'he was superior in force,'
comes back to the same thing for us as
'he has greater knowledge,'
and means this. For this reason also is the wise man akin to God, because he strives to approach Him in knowledge, and occupies himself with thought, in the which the divine essence has its being.
2. Let the foregoing be proof that divinations are amongst the best
vocations of man; and if all things are signs appearing through all things, inasmuch as
they are brothers in a single living creature, the cosmos, so also they are written in
characters of every kind, just as those in a book some are Phoenician, some Egyptian, and
others Assyrian.
The scholar reads these, and he is a scholar who learns by his natural
bent. One reads some of them and another reads others, one reads more and another less. In
the same way one reads them by syllables, another reads the complete phrase, another the
whole story. In like manner do the learned see the future, some understanding stars, and
of these, one the fixed stars, another those flames which shoot across the sky. Again,
there are those who read it from the entrails, and from the cries of birds, and from their
perches and flights. To others also what are termed omens are manifest, written
indications these of things to be, and again voices and encounters otherwise intended, for
all things have their significance for every one. In the same way, if birds had had
wisdom, they would have compiled an art of divining the future from men, just as we have
from them; for we are to them, just as they are to us, alike young and old, very old and
very fortunate. In must needs be, I think, the parts of this great whole, since it all
shares one feeling and one breath, belong to each other. They are, in fact, limbs of one
entire body, and may not the spells of the magicians be even such as these? Obviously, for
charms are cast from one part of it to another, as signals are given, and he is a sage who
understands the relationship of the parts of the universe. One thing he attracts to
himself through the agency of another thing, for he has present with him pledges of things
which are for the most part far away, to wit, voices, substances, figures. And as when the
bowel is in pain, another part suffers also with it, so a pain in the finger settles in
the groin (Plato Republic 462 C), although there be many organs between these parts which
feel nothing.
This is because they are both portions of one living organism, and
there is that which binds them one to the other more than to other things. Even to some
god, of those who dwell within the universe, a stone from hence and a herb is a befitting
offering; for in sympathizing with these he is yielding to nature and is bewitched. Thus
the harp-player who has sounded the highest note does not sound the sesquioctavus next,
but rather strikes the epitrite and the nete, a heritage to-day from a more ancient state
of harmony. But there is in the cosmos, even as in human relationship, a certain discord
also; for the universe is not one homogeneous thing but a unity formed of many. There are
parts of it which agree and yet battle with other parts, and the struggle of these only
contributes to a harmonious unity of the whole, just as the lyre is a system of responsive
and harmonious notes (Plato, Timaeus 36 A, B). The unity resulting from the opposites is
the harmony of both the lyre and the cosmos. Archimedes the Sicilian asked for a point of
support outside of the earth wherefrom he might prop himself against the whole earth, for
he said that as long as he was himself upon the earth he had no power over it. But the
man, howso great his knowledge of the nature of the universe may be, once placed outside
of it, could no longer make any use of his wisdom. He uses the universe against itself;
accordingly his touch with it once lost, he will watch it in vain, and the lifeless
symbols only would then be recorded. And small wonder, for whatever of the divine elements
is outside the cosmos can in no wise be moved by sorcery.
'He sits apart and careth not
Nor taketh any thought thereof.' (Iliad xv. 106)
It is the nature of pure reason not to be deflected; it is only the emotional element which may be cajoled. Wherefore the multitude of things in the universe and their relationship furnish the bulk of the subject-matter in the initiations and prophecies. There is a multitude of the discordant elements, but a relationship is the unity of things existing. Now, as to initiations, let not our law-abiding discourse noise them abroad; there is no offence, however, in explaining divination.
3. The whole of this art has already been praised as much as is
possible, but not it is time to appropriate the best part that is in it, and to linger
over its speculative side. We must regard a characteristic of obscurity as common to all
its forms, nor must we consider as disproof any one of them what is observed in the whole
cycle of nature. Our words attempted to show that this element of obscurity is sacred,
just as in the initiations the unutterable is sacred. In like manner oracles are uttered
as not to be intelligible to all men, and for this was the oracle at Ptyho called Loxias
(the ambiguous). Thus, when the god gave out that a wooden wall (Herodotus, vii, 141, 143)
would be the salvation of the Athenians, the people meeting in assembly would have heard
the oracle in vain, had not Themisocles read its meaning. Not for this reason, therefore,
should divination by dreams be dismissed, for it shares obscurity with oracles as with
other phenomena. We ought to seek this branch of knowledge before all else; for it comes
from us, is within us, and is the special possession of the soul of each one of us. 'Mind
holds the shape of things that be,' says the ancient philosophy, and we might add that
those which come into being also have a soul, since mind is to soul as real being is to
becoming. No, taking the first term with the third, and the second with the fourth, and
stating them in this inverse order, we shall no less arrive at the truth, following the
definitions of science.
In this way that what we postulated will be demonstrated, namely that
the soul holds the forms of things that come into being. It holds, indeed, all, but it
produces only what is befitting, and it reflects as in a mirror the image, by means of
which the living beings grasps those things that remain there. Therefore, as we do not
understand the activities of the mind before the controlling force has announced them to
the multitude, and whatever has not come to that controlling force is hidden from the
living being; so then we shall not have a perception even of the forms in the first soul,
before the impress of them comes to the imagination. And this very imagination seems to be
a sort of life in itself, a little lower down in the scale, and having its basis in a
peculiar property of nature. It has even its own sense-perceptions, for we see colours and
we hear sounds, and we have an overpowering sense of touch, at times when the organic
parts of the body are at rest. Perhaps this form of the sense-perception is the more
hallowed. In this way we constantly enter into relationship with gods who give us counsel
and answer us in oracles, and take care of us in other ways. So then, if any one, in his
dreams, receives the present of a treasure, I shall not be at all surprised; or if a man
quite uncultured should fall asleep and, meeting the Muses in his dream and exchanging
question and answer with them, should become a cunning bard. This has happened in our own
time and does not seem to me very astounding. I pass over the plots I have been revealed,
and the number of people whom the dream in the guise of a physician has cured of illness.
But whenever a dream open up to the soul a path conducting it to the most perfect points
from which to view existing things, a soul that has never yet aspired, nor has given its
mind to the assent (Plato Republic 517B), it would be indeed the climax of the occult
force in existing things that this dream should override nature and unite to the realm of
the mind the man who has wandered so far from it that he knows not whence he has come.
And if any one deems the way upward a great undertaking, but
disbelieves in the imagination, for that even by its means the happy union may ne'er be
gained, let him listen to the sacred oracles which tell of the diverging paths, after
hearing, of course, the whole list of the available resources for the ascent, in virtue of
which it is possible to make the seed within us grow:
'To some', it is written, 'he gave the revelation of the light to be
a lesson,
Others even in their dreams, He made fruitful with His courage.'
Do you see? He makes a distinction between the happy possession of knowledge and its acquirement. One man learns, he means, while awake, another while asleep. But in the waking state man is the teacher, whereas it is God who makes the dreamer fruitful with His own courage, so that learning and attaining are one and the same. Now to make fruitful is even more than to teach.
4. Let this be taken as presenting the worthiness of the imaginative life, even in small maters, as against those who despair of it. It is not to be wondered at that they understand it in this way, owing to the exceptional nature of their knowledge, since they adhere to what has been abjured by the oracles, for the oracle says,
'I reck not of sacrifices or of entails,
These be all baubles,'
and exhorts us to flee from them. But these men, as though they were above the common
herd, attempt to practice arts whose province relates to the future, some taking up one,
some another; they despise dreams as being too obvious, and as matters in which it honours
come equally to the ignorant and to the wise. But is not a man wise, precisely because he
gains a greater share out of a possession common to all? Surely the other good things,
nay, even the greatest are set before us as the most open to all. Amongst things visible
there is nothing more august in splendour than the sun, and at the same time nothing more
universal. And if to look upon a god with one's own eye is a happy thing, the approach to
Him by the imagination comes of a gaze more magnificent still. For this is the perception
of perceptions, inasmuch as the imaginative pneuma is the most widely shared organ
of sensation, and the first body of the soul. There it lurks in its fastness, and directs
the government of the living being as from a citadel, for about it nature has constructed
all the functions of the brain. Hearing and sight are not senses, but only subservient
organs of the common sense-perception, like doorkeepers of the living being who announce
to their mistress the things perceived outside, and from which things these external
organs of sense receive knocks at the door. And this is the perfect sense-perception in
all its parts, for it hears and sees with its whole pneuma and has power over all
the remaining senses. It divides its powers, assigning one to one place and another to
another. These powers stretch out from the living being, each one separately, and, like
straight lines radiating from a centre, return to meet in the centre again, all of them
one in their common root though many in their outgoings. Most animals in character,
therefore, is perception through the organs projected without, nor is it sense-perception
at all before it comes in contact with the chief perception (i.e., imagination). But the
more divine which cleaves to the soul is the direct perception.
Now if we hold our bodily senses in esteem by reason of our
understanding, and because we know best what we have actually seen, and spurn imagination
as more faithless than sense-perception, we seem to resemble those who forget that even
the eye does not reveal all things truthfully. One eye reveals nothing, and another
falsifies, both in a way contrary to the nature of the things seen, and because of the
medium through which they are seen. For according to the distance of the observer, objects
seem greater or less. Those under the water appear larger, and an oar blade once immersed
strikes the eye as broken. And the eye, through its own lack of power produces this
effect, for when bleared it represents everything in confusion and indistinctness, nor may
a man who is diseased in his imaginative pneuma expect to have clear or
well-defined images. What his disease is, by what things the imagination becomes bleared
and dulled, and by what things it is purged and purified, so as to return to its natural
condition, all this you must learn of the cryptic philosophy, through which the
imagination becomes inspired when once purified by the initiations.
The extraneous bodies which have entered in, must make their way out
again before the god brings in the imagination. Whoever keeps this purified by a life in
accordance with nature has an instrument ready to his hand, and one that is thus again
common to all, for this pneuma comprehends our spiritual disposition and is,
therefore, not without sympathy for it, like our oyster-shell which after all, is opposed
to the better part of the soul's organization. But its first special vehicle becomes light
and ethereal when the soul is exalted, whereas when that is debased, it becomes heavy and
falls to the earth. Now this is, in a word, the borderland between unreason and reason,
between the bodiless and the body, and is a boundary common to both, and through this the
divine elements are brought into contact with those furthest removed from them. For this
reason it is difficult for philosophy to apprehend its nature, for it borrows anything
that is suitable to its purpose, taking it from either of the extremes, as it were from
neighbours, and so images in one nature things that dwell far apart.
5. Nature has poured the richness of the imaginative essence into
many parts of existing things; it descends even to the animals which have as yet no
understanding, and is no longer the vehicle of the more divine soul, but itself rests upon
the forces beneath, being itself the reason of the animal; and many things this creature
things and does befittingly through its agency. Thus a cleansing takes place even in
creatures without reason, with the result that a better force enters in. Whole races of
demons also have their existence in such a life as this. For whereas these throughout all
their being are phantasmic, making their appearance as images in things that are coming
into being, in the case of man most things come by imagination and that alone, though in
truth a good many in company with another, for we do not form thought-concepts without
imagination, unless it so be that some man in a rare moment of time grasps even an
immaterial form.
To go beyond the imaginative would be no less difficult than happy to
achieve. 'For', the master (cf. Plato Phileb 21D-E) says, 'happy the man to whom
understanding and prudence come even in old age,' speaking of prudence bereft of
imagination. But the life in question (i.e. dream life) is founded on imagination or on
that intellect which makes use of imagination. This envelope of soul-matter which the
happy have called the enveloping soul, is in turn god, demon of every sort, and phantom,
and in it the soul pays its penalties, for the oracles are agreed about this, to wit, the
similarity of the soul's way of life in another world to the imaginings of the dream
condition; and philosophy concludes that our first lives are but the preparation for
second lives, and that the best conduct in the case of souls lightens it ( i.e. the pneuma),
whereas the worst imparts a stain to them. Through the attractive forces of nature,
therefore, the soul is drawn upwards by reason of its own warmth and dryness. This is the
winged flight of the soul, and we shall find that the expression of Heraclitus, 'The wise
soul is dry,' signifies naught else than this. On the other hand, when it becomes thick
and moist, it sinks into the hollows of the earth by its downward momentum, lucks in
holes, and is finally pushed into the regions below the earth' for this spot is the most
suitable to the spirits clogged with moisture, and there the life is ill-starred and full
of vengeance. But it is possible through labour and time and other lives that it may
become purified and rise to the surface, for becoming a thing of dual nature, it runs in a
double channel of life and partly consorts with the worst, partly with the better. Now
descending from the spheres, the first soul takes a lease of this other one, embarking in
it as in a boat, and so associates with the world of body.
It enters upon this struggle, either to conduct that soul above with
it, or at least not to remain with it below. Difficult indeed is this, and possibly it may
leave the other behind, as incapable of accompanying it, a thing scarcely permitted us to
believe in view of the revealed mysteries, for the ascent would be shameful for souls who
do not return property their own, but leave upon earth that they have borrowed from above.
And this might happen to one or two people as a gift of initiation and of God's grace, but
it is in the course of nature that the soul which has one become engrafted thereon, either
band to the oar with the other or draws it away, or is drawn away by it, but in any case
remains with it until the soul's ascent to the regions whence it came; or weighed down by
reason of its evil, it drags below with it the soul which has already permitted it to grow
too heavy. And it is this with which the oracles menace the seed of mind within us saying,
'Bend thou not down far below to the world mid obscurity gleaming,
Alway spread out are its depths, a treacherous region where Hades
Lurks in the gloom and deleighteth in phantoms, never in reason.'
How can a life unstable and unintelligent be a thing of beauty to the mind? To the
phantom, indeed, because of the nature of its pneuma at that moment, the region
below is befitting; for like rejoices in like. But if one comes into existence from the
conjunction of both, the mind also would be swamped with sensual pleasures. Yet it would
be the very last of evils, not even to perceive an evil that is present; for this is the
way of those who seek not to rise above evil. And just as a hardened tumour, by reason of
its no more paining us, fails to remind us to cure ourselves, so reptentance is an
uplifting force. A man finding his situation intolerable, plans flight, and the will is
the most important part of purification; for thus his words and deeds alike stretch out
hands towards the goal. But when will is lacking, every purificatory initiation is
lifeless, severed as it is from the greatest covenant. And for this reason here and there,
the minglings (of good and evil) furnish the greatest and the best service to the order of
the universe, when, for a change, they bring grief to man and so purify his soul from
frivolous enjoyment. Even things unjustly called misfortunes contribute greatly in
loosening the hold that we keep on the lower elements. The first providence is revealed to
those who have intellect by the same principles which cause distrust in it to those who
lack intellect. Nor is it possible that the soul should ever be turned away from matter,
if it does not fall foul of any misfortune in this world.
Therefore we must suppose that the much talked-of-good fortunes are an
invention of the lords of the underworld for the ambush of souls. Consequently, what
Lethaean potion there may be to the souls that have departed this life, let another tell
us, but to a soul entering life such a potion is certainly offered in that which is sweet
and cloying here on earth. For, descending into the first life voluntarily as a maid of
service, this soul, instead of serving, becomes enslaved. Its mission was to fulfill a
service to the constitution of the universe, for the laws of Adrastea impost this upon it;
but, bewitched by the gifts of matter, it undergoes an experience very like that of free
men who have entered into a contract of service for an agreed-upon period, but who,
captivated by the beauty of some handmaiden, desire to remain in their employment at the
price of slavery to the master of the beloved. We too, when at any time from the depths of
our hearts we take delight in what is of the body and lies at its portals, deeming it
good, seem to confess to the nature of the matter, that it is fair. Now matter receives
our assent as a secret contract, and even if we plan to depart as free men, affirms that
we are fugitive slaves. She tries to bring us back and arrests us as runaways, reading
over to us the while our contract. Then, indeed, have we most of all need of strength and
the help of God for our souls, for it entails no light struggle to take exception to, and
perchance to violate, one's own contract. Then, indeed, are the penalties of matter
stirred up even beyond that which was predestined against those who have rebelled against
her laws. This is really the meaning of the so-called labours which sacred legends tell us
that Heracles endured, and in general any other man who has attempted to gain his freedom
by force, until the day when they have transported the spirit to the realm to which the
hands of nature cannot attain.
But if the leap ends within the confines of matter, there is a fall,
and more severe contests become necessary, for matter then treats souls mercilessly as
aliens, and even if they renounce the upward path, she exacts punishment for the attempt
itself, and keeps pouring out lives, but no longer from both those jars which Homer darkly
shadows forth as being two portions of matter. According to that passage of his poem, Zeus
is the god ruling over matter, and the dispenser of the ambiguity of destiny, and the good
that comes from his has never been unmixed, though ere now it has happened to a man to
partake of the more evil portion unalloyed. No, all lives go in an erring course, one
which has not risen after the first fall. But observe in how great an interval of space
this pneuma dwells. The argument said that, when the soul fell below, it was
weighed down and sank until it encountered the murky darkly-gleaming spot, but that when
the soul rises the pneuma accompanies it as far as it is able; and it is able to
follow until it has come to the farthest opposite point. Listen to the oracles as they
speak of this also:
'Refuse it will not consign to the chasm abysmal of matter;
Leave but a part in the clear-shining space given o'er to the image.'
This place is the opposite of the one encircled in gloom. And yet one might be more
sharp-sighted in this case. It does not seem to bring up to the spheres the nature that
has come from thence unaccompanied, but to bring with it what it snatched from the
extremes of fire and air, when it come down to its phantom condition here below, before
donning its earthly shell, and this, according to the oracle, it conducts above together
with the strongest part, for the divine body could not be the off-scourings of matter. It
would be logical that those things which have a common nature and are contributory to one
end should not be altogether ungovernable, particularly when their domains are those of
neighbours, just as fire is next to the surrounding body, and is not, like earth, the
farthest from it all.
But if the better elements yield place to the worse and rejoice in
community with them, and if an uncontaminated body has been contributory to the slime, as
if appropriated by the element to the stronger of the conjunction of the two, possibly the
inferior ones also, not struggling against the soul's energy, but docile and reasonable,
meeting it themselves half-way, and keeping the medial nature undistracted, would, under
the leadership of the first nature, become etherearlized, and then would be borne aloft
with it so as to traverse, if not the whole of the way, at least the summit of the
elements, and so taste of the world of light. 'For it has a certain portion in it,' the
oracles say: in a word, it takes its place in some one division of the orb of the world.
6. Let what has been said suffice concerning the destiny which the
elements play. It is open to you to believe it or to disbelieve. But as to the corporeal
essence which has come from thence, there is nothing to prevent it, when the soul ascends
according to the law of nature, from rising out of its fallen state, from ascending with
it and becoming linked with the spheres, that is to say, being carried up as if to its own
natural state of being. There are, then, these two extreme lots, the one encircled by the
darkness and the other encircled by the light, which occupy the limits of good and evil
fortune. But in the hollow gulf of the universe how many intermediate places do you think
there are, partly obscure and partly luminous, in all of which the soul has its
habitation, together with this spirit envelope (pneuma), changing with its ideas
and morals and life? When it hastens aloft to its native nobility, it is a store-house of
truth, for it is pure, brightly shining, and unmixed, being a goddess and, if it so
desires, a prophetess; but when it falls, it becomes befogged, it lacks definiteness, it
speaks falsely, for then the misty element of the spirit envelope (pneuma) does not
comprise the vitality of existing things.
And being in a medial position it would miss some truth although it
might reach others. You might thus discern to what rank the demoniac nature belongs. To
state the truth either entirely or almost entirely, it is divine, or near to the divine.
Error in predictions of the future is a never-ending experience; passion and ambition
belong to those who wallow in matter. It is in this way that the new-boiled wine puts on
the guise both of a god and a superior demon and leaps in and takes possession of the
country reserved for the greater nature. Now since man has a soul, we might from that
source discover what his position may be. Of a man's imaginative pneuma is pure and
well-defined, and whether he is waking or sleeping receives true impressions of things, it
promises him a better lot, so far as the soul's formation is concerned. Then again it is
not least by the visions which it emits and around which it lives, when undisturbed by
another outside force, that we investigate what is the state of the spiritual pneuma, and
philosophy, the while, furnishes us with tests to this end, so that we must of necessity
cherish it and together see it to that we do not at any time wander. Now the best nurture
for us is that we should become active by the for of application, anticipating the onsets
of weird and headlong visions, and that the emanation of life should be, as far as
possible, once for all intellectual: for this is to be turned towards the best and
delivered from the worst, and to hold intercourse with (material) things only as necessity
entails. Intellectual application is the most incisive weapon against those things which
combine to injure the pneuma, for this mysteriously refines it and raises it
towards God; and when it has become adapted to it., draws the divine spirit-envelope (pneuma)
by its kindred nature to association with the soul. In like manner, whenever it becomes
compressed by reason of its density and grows too small to fill the places assigned to it
by the providence which has moulded man, to wit, the cavities of the brain; then since
nature abhors a vacuum in existing things, an evil spirit-envelope (pneuma) enters
in; and what suffering for the soul with such an ill-omened guest at its board!
For as to those places which have come to exist for this very purpose
of belonging to the pneuma, it is their nature to be occupied by a worse or by a
better one. In the one case there is a penalty for the godless who have defiled the divine
part in them, in the other there is the goal of piety or whatsoever is near to that goal.
7. We, therefore, have set ourselves to speak of divination through
dreams, that men should not despise it, but rather cultivate it, seeing that it fulfills a
service to life; and it is to this end that we have so much occupied ourselves with the
imaginative nature. The immediate need for it here below has been perhaps clearly shown by
our discourse, but a better fruit of a sane spirit is the uplifting of the soul, a really
sacred gain; so that it becomes a sort of cult of piety to endeavour that this form of
divination should be ours. Nay, some men already through some such motive, enticed by
their passion for knowledge of the future, have had set before them, instead of a groaning
board a sacred and modest one, and have hailed the joys of a couch pure and undefiled. For
as to the man who would consult his bed as he does the tripod of the Pythian deity, far be
it from him to make the night spent in it witnesses of unbridled passion. Rather does he
bow before God and pray to Him. What is collected little by little becomes much in the
end, and that which happens through quite another cause terminates in a greater one. Thus
those who did not set out at first with this object have come, in their advance, to love
God and one day to be united to Him. We must not therefore disregard a prophetic art which
journeys to divine things, and has, dependent on it, the most precious of all things which
are in the power of man. Nor indeed has the soul that is united with God less need here
because of the fact that it has been deemed worthy to handle better things. Nor is it
heedless of the animal in us.
Nay, from its vantage ground it has a steady and much more distinct
view of things below than when it is with them and is mingled with the inferior elements.
Remaining unmoved, it will give to the animal in us the appearance of things that come
into existence. This is, according to the proverb, 'to descend without descending,' where
the better takes unchallenged mastery of the worse. This art of divination I resolve to
possess for myself and to bequeath to my children. In order to enter upon this no man need
pack up for a long journey or voyage beyond the frontiers, as to Pytho or to Hammon. It is
enough to wash one's hands, to keep a holy silence, and to sleep.
'Then did she make all ablutions and dressing in purified raiment
Prayed she long time to Athene...' (Odyssey, iv.750, 752, (759, 761).
8. We shall pray for a dream, even as Homer, perchance, prayed. And if you are worthy, the god far away is present with you. Nay, even what time the god sets little store on these matters, he comes to your side if only you are asleep; and this is the whole system of the initiation. In it no one has ever yet lamented his poverty, on the grand that thus he had less possession than the rich. On the other hand, some of the ceremonies which deal with foreknowledge choose their priests from the most heavily assessed as the Athenians choose their trierarchs. And great expense there must needs be, and, no less, happy opportunity, if we are to obtain a Cretan herb, an Egyptian feather, an Iberian bone, and, by Zeus, some prodigy begotten and nourished in a hidden corner of earth and sea,
'Where that the sun god sinks neath the earth and where he arises.' (Odyssey i.24).
For surely this and much like it is said of those who practice external divination, and
what ordinary person would be right enough for this out of his own resources? But the
dream is visible to the man who is worth five hundred medimni, and equally to the
possessor of three hundred, to the teamster no less than to the peasant who tills the
boundary land for a livelihood, to the galleyslave and the common labourer alike, to the
exempted and to the payer of taxes.
It makes no difference to the god whether a man is an eteoboutades or
a newly-bought slave. And this accessibility to all makes divination very humane; for its
simple and artless character is worthy of a philosopher, and its freedom from violence
gives it sanctity. That it is present everywhere and does not employ water or rock or a
chasm in the earth, is its most divine quality, and that through divination of this sort
we do not become occupied with one matter only, or lose opportunities through it, this
also is the first thing worthy to say of it. For surely no one every left any important
matter he might have in hand, to go home to sleep, to meet a dream by appointment. Time,
however, which the living being must spend of his nature, inasmuch as our being in the
waking state is insufficient to the support of its energy, time, I say, has come to convey
to men, as the proverb has it, 'the by-work which is greater than the work,' for it links
the desirable with the inevitable and well-being with being itself. As to these forms of
foreknowledge, on the other hand, which come to us through all manner of instruments, we
must be content if, having occupied the greater part of life, they make some concession to
its remaining needs and activities. If you were to give yourself up to any of these
things, you would scarcely find divination of use to you for your purpose, for it is not
every place or every season in which one can receive the equipment for the initiation, nor
is there every facility for carrying about with you the necessary implements. To speak
nothing else but those things which the prisons were lately congested, they are loads for
a wagon or a ship's hold. Combined with this there were other elements in the initiation,
namely registrars and witnesses. For this would be a more accurate statement, since our
time has made many denunciations through those who serve the laws, by whom once betrayed,
such initiations become matters for the gaze and the hearing of an unholy mob.
Thus, in addition to the baseness of stooping to such practices, it is,
I am persuaded, a course hateful to the god. For not to await voluntarily any one's
coming, but to set him moving by pressure and leverage, this is like the employment of
force, a thing which even when it has happened among men, the legislator has not allowed
to pass unpunished. In addition to all these points, difficult enough to those who seek
after the future in this way, there is also the chance of interruption of their activity,
and to those who go abroad, the abandonment of the art; for it is no small matter, when
moving everywhere, to pack and convey the properties necessary for its practice.
Of divination by dreams, each one of us is perforce his own instrument,
so much so that it is not possible to desert our oracle there even if we so desired. Nay,
even if we remain at home, she dwells with us; if we go abroad she accompanies us; she is
with us on the field of battle, she is at our side in the life of the city; she labours
with us in the fields and barters with us in the market place. The laws of a malicious
government do not forbid her, nor would they have the power to do so, even if they wished,
for they have no proof against those who invoke her. For how then? Should we be violating
the law by sleeping? A tyrant could never enjoin us not to gaze into dreams, at least not
unless he actually banished sleep from his kingdom; and it would be the act of a fool to
wish for that which is impossible of fulfillment, and of an impious man to make laws which
should be contrary to nature and to God. To her then we must go, woman and man of us,
young and old, poor and rich alike, the artisan and the orator. She repudiates neither
race, nor age, nor condition, nor calling. She is present to every one, everywhere, this
zealous prophetess, this wise counselor, who holdeth her peace. She herself is alike
initiator and initiated, to announce to us good tidings; in such wise as to prolong our
pleasure by seizing joy beforehand; to inform against the worst so as to guard against and
repel it beforehand.
For whatsoever things of use and of sweetness those hopes, which
nourish the race of men, hold out to him, and as many things as fear controls, things
ominous and withal gainful, all these things are found in dreams, nor by any other thing
are we so enticed towards hope. And the element of hope is so abundant and so salutary in
its nature, that, as acute thinkers maintain, men would not even be willing to continue
life, if it were only to be such as they had at the beginning. For they would foreswear
life by reason of the terrible misfortunes abounding therein, had not Prometheus injected
hopes into their nature, that drug of constancy, under the influence of which they esteem
the anticipated to be more worthy of trust than that which is before their eyes. And these
hopes have such force that he who is bound in fetters, whenever he permits the will of his
heart to hope, is straightway unbound. He enters the army, straightway becomes a
lieutenant, after a little, a captain. He then becomes a general, makes conquests, and
sacrifices to the gods; his head crowned with garlands, he gives a banquet, a Sicilian or
a Median, as he pleases; and in truth he is forgetful of his feet as long as he dreams of
being a general.
Now all of this is the waking state of the dreamer, or the sleeping
state of the awakened, for both are concentrated upon the same underlying state, to wit
the imaginative nature, and whenever we wish to convert this into images, this one benefit
is always at hand; good cheer anoints our life and, flattering our soul with illusive
hopes, lifts it aloft from the perception of things ill to be borne. And when it
spontaneously presents hope to us, as happens in our sleeping state, then we have in the
promise of our dreams a pledge from the divinity. Thus any one who has prepared his mind
to enjoy those greater things which the dream state held out to him, has twice profited,
for the first thing he had delighted in the things beforehand, and that secondly he is in
a position to use them wisely, when they have come his way, because of his previous
examination of them, as things which befit his life.
Thus Pindar praised hope in song, when he said concerning a happy man
that 'with him liveth sweet hope, the nurse of youth, the fosterer of his heart, hope who
chiefly ruleth the changeful mind of man.' One would say that no allusion is made here to
the false hope which in a waking state we mould for ourselves, but all the words of Pindar
in this passage are praises of only a small part of dreams. Now the divination of dreams
which follows up the phenomenon with scientific methods gives us a stronger hope, and from
this it seems not to belong to the slighter class. And so the Penelope of Homer assumes
that there are two gates of dreams, and makes half of them deceptive dreams, only because
she was not instructed in the matter. For if she had been versed in their science, she
would have made them all pass out through the gate of horn. As it is, she has been
represented guilty of ignorance about her very sight, for she distrusted it without
reason.
'The geese are the wooers, and I that bird, the eagle
'I am Odysseus.' (Odyssey, xix. 548)
He was under the same roof as she, and it was to him that she was babbling in the vision. I seem, therefore, to hear Homer say in such words as these, that it is not right to despair of dreams, and that we should not confuse the weakness of the interpreter with the nature of the visions themselves, nor is Agamemnon in the right when he beings a charge of deception against dreams, for he erroneously interprets the prophecy concerning the victory:
'Bade thee call them up to arms the flowing-haired, the Achaeans,
Summoning all their force: thou mayst capture the wide-wayed city.' (Il
ii, 11)
He advances indeed to take the city without striking a blow, because he has
misinterpreted the phrase, 'with all their forces, ' which means that he might take it, if
he armed all the Greeks, even to the last man, whereas Achilles and the Myrmidon phalanx
were out of the fighting, and they were the bravest of the army.
Let this suffice for my encomium on divination, and let us dismiss the
subject.
9. Yet I have narrowly missed incurring a charge of ingratitude; for
while I explained just now that it (i.e., divination by dreams) is a good thing wherewith
to journey or stay at home, to trade or command troops, and that it helps all men and all
things, yet I have never made public what it has done for me personally. Certainly no
other thing is so well calculated to join in man's pursuit of wisdom; and many of the
things which present difficulties to us awake, some of these it makes completely clear
while we are asleep, and others it helps us to explain. And something of this sort
happens. At one moment one seems like a man asking questions, at another the same man
discovering in process of thought. It has frequently helped me to write books, for it has
prepared the mind and made the diction appropriate to the thought. Here it cuts out
something, there it brings in new matter instead. It has befallen me already to be
admonished by it also in respect of the whole style of my language, when it runs riot and
flames up with novel forms of diction, in emulation of the archaic Attic, which is foreign
to us, and this by agency of a god who, at one moment tells me something, and again what
something means, and at another show me how to smooth down the excrescences growing out of
my language. Thus it has restored my diction to a state of sobriety, and has castigated my
inflated style. Moreover when I am engaged in the chase, it has suggested to me stratagems
of the hunter's art against those wild beasts who show skill alike in running and hiding;
and when in weariness I have been on the point of abandoning the quest, the dream has
enjoined upon me a blockade of the quarry, and has promised me fortune on an appointed
day, so that we have slept in the open more happily with confidence. And when the day
appointed has come and fortune is with us at last, it has shown us swarms of netted game
of wild beasts that have fallen to our spears.
My life has been one of books and of the chase, except what time I
spent as an ambassador. Would that I had not been compelled to see three unspeakable years
lost to my life! But even in them I derived the greatest profit from divination, and that
on many occasions. For plots directed against me it made ineffective, plots of
ghost-raising sorcerers. It exposed these to me, saved me from them all, and helped me in
the management of public office in the best interest of the cities, and it finally placed
me, more undaunted than was ever any Greek, on terms of intimacy with the emperor.
One man may prefer one, another man another (system of divination), but
dream divination is present to all, the good genius to every man, and one that contrives
something for the minds of the awakened also. In this way is a soul a wise possession,
that it is free from a whole flood of vulgar sensations which attract to it extraneous
matter of every sort. Whatever ideas it has, and however many things it receives from the
mind, all these, when left to itself, it makes over to those who are inclined towards that
which is within, and it ferries across to them whatsoe'er comes from the godhead. For as
it is itself of such a character, a cosmic god is also associated with it, from the fact
that its nature comes from the same source.
10. Such categories of dreams, then, are more divine, and are either
quite clear and obvious, or nearly so, and in no wise stand in need of the diviner's
science. But they may come to the help only of such men as live according to virtue,
whether that be acquired by wisdom or engrained by habit, and if at a given moment they
should come to any other, it would be with difficulty, though they might so come.
It is not for some trifling purpose that a dream of this higher order
will come to the chance recipient. Further, a frequent and a very widely shared class will
be the enigmatic. To this the science of divination must be applied, for its genesis was,
so to speak, strange and portentous, and as it has sprung from such sources, its
development is most obscure. Now its character is as follows. From all that nature
possesses, all things that are, that have come into being and that shall be (since this
too is a phase of existence), from all these things, I say, images flow and rebound from
their substance. For if each perceptible thing is form coupled with matter, and if we
discover an escape of matter in the combination, reasoning shows that the nature of the
images is also canalized, so that in both cases perceptible things renounce the dignity of
real being. Now the imaginative pneuma is a powerful reflecting mirror of all the
images that flow off in this way. For, wandering in vain and slipping from their base, on
account of the indefiniteness of their nature, and because they are recognized by no being
of real existence, whenever these fall in which psychical pneumata, the which are
images indeed, and have a seat fixed in nature, then they lean upon them and take their
rest as though at their own hearthstone. Of those things, therefore, which have come into
being, inasmuch as they have already passed into the activity of existence, the images
sent forth are distinct, until in the fullness of time they become faint and evanescent.
Of existing things, inasmuch as they are still standing, the images are more tenacious of
life and more distinct, but those of future events are more indefinite and
indistinguishable. For they are the advanced waves of things not yet present,
efflorescences of the unfulfilled nature, as it were, riddles of closely stored seeds,
skipping away and darting out.
Thus also art is needed with a view to coming events, for the images
which proceed from them are only shadowed, and the symbols are not as clear as in the case
of already existing things. Nevertheless they are of a wonderful nature, even as they
stand, wonderful in that they have come into existence from things that have not yet
existed.
11. But it is high time that we should say of this art how it may
help us. The best way is to prepare the divine pneuma in such wise that it may be
worthy of the direction of mind and of God, and not be a recipient of obscure energies.
And the best culture is the one leading through philosophy, which brings a calm from
passions, for when once disturbed by these the pneuma is occupied, as it were a
territory; and through a wise and temperate life, one that least maddens the animal nature
and that has least tendency to bring it into the last body. For turmoil would reach even
to the first body, but this ought to be kept unperturbed and unmoved. But since this is an
easy prayer for every one to join in, but is of all things the most difficult to
co-operate in attaining, then as we wish sleep to be unprofitable to none, come now, let
us seek a definition even for indefinable things; in a word, let us put together an art of
divining dream-images. Now it is something in this wise. When mariners sailing the sea
come suddenly upon a rock, and presently disembarking see a city of men, as often as they
see the same rock, they will take it as a sign of the city. And just as when, in the case
of generals, we know from the scouts that they themselves will appear, though we do not
see them (for that from the same indication they have always in the past appeared on the
scene); so on each occasion we obtain from the dream-imagines a signal of the activity of
coming events.
For these are forerunners of those same things, and like things are
forerunners of like. Therefore it is the skippers fault if, when the same rock becomes
visible, he fails to recognize it, or is unstable to say what land the ship moving; and as
such a man sails without a chart, in the same way the man who has often seen the same
sight, if he fails to observe of what experience or fortune or event it is prophetic, such
a man makes as foolish a use of his life as does the skipper in question of his ship. Thus
we predict storms in a time of perfect atmospheric peace, the moment we see haloes about
the moon, because on many occasions when we have observed this appearance a tempest has
followed.
'When that a halo is single, then mayst thou foretell calm and
windstorms;
Broken the hallo, then know that 'tis wind; when it fadeth, calm
weather.
Once that the moon is surrounded by haloes twain a storm cometh,
And should that ring grow to triple encirclement, storms rage the
greater;
And even greater, if darkened; yet greater, if broken the halo'
(Aratus, Phaenom., 812).
Aristotle and reason assert that in every case sense-perception create memory, memory
experience, experience to turn science. So let us treat the path to dreams. To this end
many books have already been collected by certain men, devoted to such observation. But
for my part, I laugh at all these books and think them of little use. For not like the
last body, which is a combination of associated elements, can it (divination) accept a
(system of) art and logic altogether comfortable to its nature, inasmuch as the body
generally experiences the same results from the same causes, because the difference
between bodies of like nature is small, and that amongst them which is contrary to nature
is not diseased without our knowledge, nor do we adopt such a standard as this.
This is not the case with the imaginary pneuma. In the first
nature also things differ from another, because one thing belongs appropriately to one
sphere, another to another, in proportion to the extent of the mingling.
'Happy are they of a truth, nay happiest are they of all those
Souls whosoever are poured adown upon the earth from high heaven;
And they are happy, they also, although no renown be their portion,
So many as thyself, Oh Sovran, who shinest resplendent,
Spring into life e'evn from Zeus and from might Necessity's spindle.'
Now this is what Timaeus set forth darkly, when he assigned to each soul its proper
star; but those souls which left their proper nature, by loving to dwell in the region of
matter, one of them more, another less, each of these, for as much as it has been
unfortunate in its inclination, has sullied its pneuma, whose life is passed in
error, and in a disease of the pneuma, a disease unnatural to the latter on account
of its nobility, although natural to the animal being (for that itself was animated
through a pneuma of this sort) unless it be that its nature is the grade in which
it is enrolled of its own choice, through its practice of good and evil; for nothing is so
versatile as the pneuma.
How then in the case of things dissimilar by nature, law, and
experience, could the same things be revealed by the same images? This is impossible; it
could not be. How could troubled and limpid waters, stagnant and moving water be alike
affected by the same shape? And if the difference of colour, and the movements show
themselves in various configurations, in this way alone would it be one in character,
namely in always diverging from the clear-cut image. Now if such a difference exists, if
accordingly some Phemonoe, or somebody's Melampus, or any individual you please, pretends
to make some general definition and arrangement concerning such phenomena, let us
ascertain from such men whether it is natural that the plane mirror, the distorted, and
that made from dissimilar materials, should reflect a like image of the thing shown. Such
men as these have not even done, I think, any philosophical thinking at all on the nature
of the pneuma, although that which is proper to it, in whatsoever state it may be,
they consider to be a rule and standard for everything. Now for my own part, I do not deny
there is an element of likeness in dissimilar things; but I affirm that the obscure
becomes all the more obscure by dispersion. The image of the thing which leaped out
prematurely was, I presume, even in the beginning difficult to find out. It is even more
difficult in an individual character to capture that which is like a general image.
12. For this reason we must dismiss the idea that all men are under
the same laws; rather must each man hold himself as material for the art. Let him inscribe
on his memory the affairs in which he has been involved, and the nature of the visions
which have preceded them.
Mastery in the art is acquired without difficulty where necessity is
involved in the practice. The need reminds one of the practice, and especially on every
occasion that it is well off for material. For what could be more abundant than dreams,
and what more fascinating? These induce even fools to pay heed to them. It would therefore
be shameful for those who have lived ten years beyond adolescence to stand in need of any
other diviner, shameful that they should not have accumulated an abundant store of
technical principles. It should be a wise proceeding even to publish our waking and
sleeping visions and their attendant circumstances; the things to do, I say, unless the
culture of the city is like to be too rustic for so novel an enterprise. We shall
therefore see fit to add to what are called 'day books' what we term 'night books', so as
to have records to remind us of the character of each of the two lives concerned; for our
argument already laid it down that certain life exists in imagination, at one moment
better, at another worse than the intermediate, according to the relation of the pneuma
to health and disease. If in this way, therefore, we make profitable the observation
by which the art is developed, and if nothing slips our memory, in other respects also the
result will be a refined pastime; it will be paying oneself the compliment of a history of
one's waking and sleeping moments.
And to those who occupy themselves with public speaking, I do not know
any other foundation to replace this as a comprehensive basis for exercise in the power of
speech; for if the sophist of Lemnos says that the day books are good teachers of
effective oratory on every subject, for that they do not overlook matters of lesser
importance, but compel one to go through the trivial and the serious alike, is it not
worth while to value night books as a subject for oratory?
Any one can see how great the work is, on attempting to fit language to
visions, visions of which those things which are united in nature are separated, and
things separated in nature are united, and he is obliged to show in speech what has not
been revealed. It is no mean achievement to pass on to another something of a strange
nature that has stirred in one's own soul, for whenever by this phantasy (of dreaming)
things which are expelled form the order of being, and things which never in any possible
way existed, are brought into being-- nay, even things which have not a nature capable of
existence, what contrivance is there for presenting a nameless nature to things which are per
se inconceivable? Again, it (the phantasy) neither makes these forms appear numerous
and all present at the same moment, nor yet does it present them after an interval, but
exactly as the dream itself might have them and pass them on to us; for we believe
whatever it wills us to believe. To survive at all and without cutting a sorry figure
amidst all this, would be proof of a masterly rhetoric. It conducts itself wantonly even
against our understanding itself, becoming the cause of something more than thought. For
we are not indeed insensible to the visions; rather our approbations and partialities
strong, and not least our detestations. And the many trickeries that are bound up with
this, attack us in our sleep. Pleasure is at that moment most of all a thing full of
charm, such as to impart to our souls loves or hatreds even in the waking state. If any
one were to utter no lifeless words, but rather to accomplish that for the sake of which
the discource was seriously undertaken, he would need stirring language to put his auditor
into the same condition and amidst the same thoughts as himself.
Now in dreams one conquers, walks, or flies simultaneously, and the
imagination has room for it all; but how shall mere speech find room for it? So a man
sleeps and dreams; he sees a dream, and arises from it still sleeping, as he thinks, and
shakes off his dream while still recumbent. He philosophizes a little on the vision that
has appeared to him, according to his knowledge; and this is a dream, but the other is a
double dream. Accordingly he believes it not, and thinks now he is awake and that what
appears to him is really alive. Forthwith a fierce struggle ensues, and a man dreams that
an attack is made on himself, then he has left all behind and he is waking up, again that
he has made trial of himself and has discovered the deception. In such a way must the sons
of Aloeus be suffering the punishment for piling up the mountains of Thessaly against the
gods. But there is no law of Adrastea in the way of the sleeper, to forbid him from rising
from earth more happily than Icarus, from soaring above the eagles, or reaching a point
above the loftiest spheres themselves. So one looks steadily upon the earth from afar, and
discovers a land not visible even to the moon. It is also in his power to hold converse
with the stars and to meet the unseen gods of the universe. That which is difficult to
describe takes place easily, namely that the gods are visibly manifest, nor do the gods
even feel even a particle of jealousy. The dreamer has not even descended to the earth
after a short interval; he is already there. Nothing is so characteristic of dreams as to
steal space and to create without time. The sleeper then converses with sheep and fancies
their bleating to be speech, and he understand their talk. So new and so extensive a
wealth of subjects is there for one who has the courage to let loose his language upon
them.
13. I even think that myths take their authority from dreams, as
those in which peacock, fox, and sea hold converse. But these are small things compared
with the independence of dreams. And although myths are a very small part of dreams,
nevertheless they were approved by the sophists as a preparation for the work of
eloquence. And for these men to whom myth is the beginning of their art, the dream ought
to be its appropriate end. And there is this in addition, that one has not worked the
tongue in vain, as in the case of myths, but that he has become wiser in judgement. Let
every many, then, with leisure and ease proceed to write a narrative of whatsoe'e'r
happens in his waking and sleeping states. Let him spend some of his time on this. Of the
time so spent the greatest help will be found in his knowledge of letters. Let him put
together the art of divination which we have extolled, than which nothing could be of more
varied service to him. Above all we must not discard even the style, which follows in the
wake of subject-matter, for the philosopher this would be mere child's-play, in which the
tension of the string would be relaxed, even as the Scythians deal with their bows. And
let us recommend it to the orator as the summit of his eloquence. Of a truth they do not
seem to me to employ their powers opportunely upon Miltiades and Cimon, and also on
certain nameless persons; again, on rich and poor opposed to one another in politics, on
which matters I have seen even old men disputing with their colleagues in the
lecture-room. True, the two sat there with all the high seriousness of philosophy, and
each tugged at his beard, that as far as one could guess weighed a talent. All this
dignity did not prevent them from indulging in abuse and anger, or from tossing their
hands about wildly, the while they delivered interminable speeches on behalf of men, their
intimate friends, they had not even any existence in nature. What state could anywhere
exists of such a sort as to accord to a chief the privilege of killing a political enemy,
and if at ninety years of age one is engaged in fighting a phantom, to what season does
one postpone truth of speech? In fact these men do not seem to me to understand even the
word 'practice' because it professes to work with another end in view, but consider the
training to be an end in itself, and they are delighted with the road, as if it were the
goal to which they were proceeding, for they have made the training a contest. It is just
as if any one who had sparred in the palaestra could demand that (his practice) be
heralded abroad as the pancration at Olympia.
So complete a drought of thought and such a deluge of words have
possessed these men that some of them who are able to speak, have nothing worth saying;
they must needs take delight in themselves, like Archilochus and Alcaeus, each whom spent
his eloquence on his own private life. Yet the course of time preserves the memory of both
of their sorrows and their joys, for they have not produced words hanging in the void on
artificial themes, like this young and wise generation. Nor have they accord their own
proper virtue to others, as did Homer and Steichorus, who made the heroic race more
glorious by their poems (and we have profited by their zeal for virtue), but have been
some completely neglected in themselves that we are unable to say anything about them
except that they were great poets. Whosoever therefore aspires to be spoken of man in the
future, and is conscious of the power to create immortal works on the tablets, let him
courageously follow our lawless style of composition. Then let him commend himself to
time: it is a noble guardian whenever anything divine is entrusted to it.