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Introduction to the Compleat Angler by Andrew Lang
page 20 of 39 (51%)
'More observations of this nature, and inferences from them, might be
made to gain the relation a firmer belief; but I forbear: lest I, that
intended to be but a relator, may be thought to be an engaged person
for the proving what was related to me, . . . by one who had it from
Dr. Donne.'

Walpole was no Boswell; worthy Boswell would have cross-examined Dr.
Donne himself.

Of dreams he writes:--

'Common dreams are but a senseless paraphrase on our waking thoughts,
or of the business of the day past, or are the result of our over
engaged affections when we betake ourselves to rest.' . . . Yet
'Almighty God (though the causes of dreams be often unknown) hath even
in these latter times also, by a certain illumination of the soul in
sleep, discovered many things that human wisdom could not foresee.'

Walton is often charged with superstition, and the enlightened editor of
the eighteenth century excised all the scene of Mrs. Donne's wraith as
too absurd. But Walton is a very fair witness. Donne, a man of
imagination, was, he tells us, in a perturbed anxiety about Mrs. Donne.
The event was after dinner. The story is, by Walton's admission, at
second hand. Thus, in the language of the learned in such matters, the
tale is 'not evidential.' Walton explains it, if true, as a result of
'sympathy of souls'--what is now called telepathy. But he is content
that every man should have his own opinion. In the same way he writes of
the seers in the Wotton family: 'God did seem to speak to many of this
family' (the Wottons) 'in dreams,' and Thomas Wotton's dreams 'did
usually prove true, both in foretelling things to come, and discovering
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