The Interpretation of Dreams by Sigmund Freud
VII. THE PSYCHOLOGY OF
THE DREAM PROCESSES
AMONG the dreams which have been
communicated to me by others, there is one which is at this point
especially worthy of our attention. It was told me by a female patient
who had heard it related in a lecture on dreams. Its original source is
unknown to me. This dream evidently made a deep impression upon the
lady, since she went so far as to imitate it, i.e., to repeat the
elements of this dream in a dream of her own; in order, by this
transference, to express her agreement with a certain point in the
dream.
The preliminary conditions of this
typical dream were as follows: A father had been watching day and night
beside the sick-bed of his child. After the child died, he retired to
rest in an adjoining room, but left the door ajar so that he could look
from his room into the next, where the child's body lay surrounded by
tall candles. An old man, who had been installed as a watcher, sat
beside the body, murmuring prayers. After sleeping for a few hours the
father dreamed that the child was standing by his bed, clasping his arm
and crying reproachfully: "Father, don't you see that I am burning?" The
father woke up and noticed a bright light coming from the adjoining
room. Rushing in, he found that the old man had fallen asleep, and the
sheets and one arm of the beloved body were burnt by a fallen candle.
The meaning of this affecting dream is
simple enough, and the explanation given by the lecturer, as my patient
reported it, was correct. The bright light shining through the open door
on to the sleeper's eyes gave him the impression which he would have
received had he been awake: namely, that a fire had been started near
the corpse by a falling candle. It is quite possible that he had taken
into his sleep his anxiety lest the aged watcher should not be equal to
his task.
We can find nothing to change in this
interpretation; we can only add that the content of the dream must be
overdetermined, and that the speech of the child must have consisted of
phrases which it had uttered while still alive, and which were
associated with important events for the father. Perhaps the complaint,
"I am burning," was associated with the fever from which the child died,
and "Father, don't you see?" to some other affective occurrence unknown
to us.
Now, when we have come to recognize that
the dream has meaning, and can be fitted into the context of psychic
events, it may be surprising that a dream should have occurred in
circumstances which called for such an immediate waking. We shall then
note that even this dream is not lacking in a wish-fulfilment. The dead
child behaves as though alive; he warns his father himself; he comes to
his father's bed and clasps his arm, as he probably did in the
recollection from which the dream obtained the first part of the child's
speech. It was for the sake of this wish- fulfilment that the father
slept a moment longer. The dream was given precedence over waking
reflection because it was able to show the child still living. If the
father had waked first, and had then drawn the conclusion which led him
into the adjoining room, he would have shortened the child's life by
this one moment.
There can be no doubt about the peculiar
features in this brief dream which engage our particular interest. So
far, we have endeavoured mainly to ascertain wherein the secret meaning
of the dream consists, how it is to be discovered, and what means the
dream-work uses to conceal it. In other words, our greatest interest has
hitherto been centered on the problems of interpretation. Now, however,
we encounter a dream which is easily explained, and the meaning of which
is without disguise; we note that nevertheless this dream preserves the
essential characteristics which conspicuously differentiate a dream from
our waking thoughts, and this difference demands an explanation. It is
only when we have disposed of all the problems of interpretation that we
feel how incomplete is our psychology of dreams.
But before we turn our attention to this
new path of investigation, let us stop and look back, and consider
whether we have not overlooked something important on our way hither.
For we must understand that the easy and comfortable part of our journey
lies behind us. Hitherto, all the paths that we have followed have led,
if I mistake not, to light, to explanation, and to full understanding;
but from the moment when we seek to penetrate more deeply into the
psychic processes in dreaming, all paths lead into darkness. It is quite
impossible to explain the dream as a psychic process, for to explain
means to trace back to the known, and as yet we have no psychological
knowledge to which we can refer such explanatory fundamentals as may be
inferred from the psychological investigation of dreams. On the
contrary, we shall be compelled to advance a number of new assumptions,
which do little more than conjecture the structure of the psychic
apparatus and the play of the energies active in it; and we shall have
to be careful not to go too far beyond the simplest logical
construction, since otherwise its value will be doubtful. And even if we
should be unerring in our inferences, and take cognizance of all the
logical possibilities, we should still be in danger of arriving at a
completely mistaken result, owing to the probable incompleteness of the
preliminary statement of our elementary data. We shall not he able to
arrive at any conclusions as to the structure and function of the
psychic instrument from even the most careful investigation of dreams,
or of any other isolated activity; or, at all events, we shall not be
able to confirm our conclusions. To do this we shall have to collate
such phenomena as the comparative study of a whole series of psychic
activities proves to be reliably constant. So that the psychological
assumptions which we base on the analysis of the dream-processes will
have to mark time, as it were, until they can join up with the results
of other investigations which, proceeding from another starting-point,
will seek to penetrate to the heart of the same problem.
Table of
Contents
THE PSYCHOLOGY OF THE DREAM PROCESSES
The Forgetting of Dreams
Regression
The Wish-Fulfilment
Waking Caused by Dreams -- The Function of
Dreams -- The Anxiety Dream
The Primary and Secondary Processes. Repression
The Unconscious
and Consciousness. Reality