The Book of Dreams and Ghosts by Andrew Lang
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page 17 of 279 (06%)
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black with innumerable bees, and Wilburd, the gardener, came up and
advised Mr. and Mrs. Herbert not to go nearer. Next morning the pair went to the garden. The air round the mignonette was dark with _wasps_. Mrs. Herbert now first remembered and told her dream, adding, "but in the dream they were _bees_". Wilburd now came up and advised them not to go nearer, as a wasps' nest had been injured and the wasps were on the warpath. Here accidental coincidence is probable enough. {10} There is another class of dreams very useful, and apparently not so very uncommon, that are veracious and communicate correct information, which the dreamer did not know that he knew and was very anxious to know. These are rare enough to be rather difficult to believe. Thus:-- THE LOST CHEQUE Mr. A., a barrister, sat up one night to write letters, and about half-past twelve went out to put them in the post. On undressing he missed a cheque for a large sum, which he had received during the day. He hunted everywhere in vain, went to bed, slept, and dreamed that he saw the cheque curled round an area railing not far from his own door. He woke, got up, dressed, walked down the street and found his cheque in the place he had dreamed of. In his opinion he had noticed it fall from his pocket as he walked to the letter-box, without consciously remarking it, and his deeper memory awoke in slumber. {11a} THE DUCKS' EGGS A little girl of the author's family kept ducks and was anxious to sell the eggs to her mother. But the eggs could not be found by eager |
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