II
THE DREAM MECHANISM
We are compelled to assume that such transformation of scene has also taken
place in intricate dreams, though we do not know whether it has encountered any
possible desire. The dream instanced at the commencement, which we analyzed
somewhat thoroughly, did give us occasion in two places to suspect something of
the kind. Analysis brought out that my wife was occupied with others at table,
and that I did not like it; in the dream itself exactly the opposite
occurs, for the person who replaces my wife gives me her undivided attention.
But can one wish for anything pleasanter after a disagreeable incident than that
the exact contrary should have occurred, just as the dream has it? The stinging
thought in the analysis, that I have never had anything for nothing, is
similarly connected with the woman's remark in the dream: "You have always had
such beautiful eyes." Some portion of the opposition between the latent and
manifest content of the dream must be therefore derived from the realization of
a wish.
Another manifestation of the dream work which all
incoherent dreams have in common is still more noticeable. Choose any instance,
and compare the number of separate elements in it, or the extent of the dream,
if written down, with the dream thoughts yielded by analysis, and of which but a
trace can be refound in the dream itself. There can be no doubt that the dream
working has resulted in an extraordinary compression or condensation. It
is not at first easy to form an opinion as to the extent of the condensation;
the more deeply you go into the analysis, the more deeply you are impressed by
it. There will be found no factor in the dream whence the chains of associations
do not lead in two or more directions, no scene which has not been pieced
together out of two or more impressions and events. For instance, I once dreamt
about a kind of swimming-bath where the bathers suddenly separated in all
directions; at one place on the edge a person stood bending towards one of the
bathers as if to drag him out. The scene was a composite one, made up out of an
event that occurred at the time of puberty, and of two pictures, one of which I
had seen just shortly before the dream. The two pictures were The Surprise in
the Bath, from Schwind's Cycle of the Melusine (note the bathers suddenly
separating), and The Flood, by an Italian master. The
little incident was that I once witnessed a lady, who had tarried in the
swimming-bath until the men's hour, being helped out of the water by the
swimming-master. The scene in the dream which was selected for analysis led to a
whole group of reminiscences, each one of which had contributed to the dream
content. First of all came the little episode from the time of my courting, of
which I have already spoken; the pressure of a hand under the table gave rise in
the dream to the "under the table," which I had subsequently to find a place for
in my recollection. There was, of course, at the time not a word about
"undivided attention." Analysis taught me that this factor is the realization of
a desire through its contradictory and related to the behavior of my wife at the
table d'hôte. An exactly similar and much more important episode of our
courtship, one which separated us for an entire day, lies hidden behind this
recent recollection. The intimacy, the hand resting upon the knee, refers to a
quite different connection and to quite other persons. This element in the dream
becomes again the starting-point of two distinct series of reminiscences, and so
on.
The stuff of the dream thoughts which has been accumulated for the formation
of the dream scene must be naturally fit for this application. There must be one or more common factors. The dream work proceeds
like Francis Galton with his family photographs. The different elements are put
one on top of the other; what is common to the composite picture stands out
clearly, the opposing details cancel each other. This process of reproduction
partly explains the wavering statements, of a peculiar vagueness, in so many
elements of the dream. For the interpretation of dreams this rule holds good:
When analysis discloses uncertainty, as to either—or read
and, taking each section of the apparent alternatives as a
separate outlet for a series of impressions.
When there is nothing in common between the dream thoughts, the dream work
takes the trouble to create a something, in order to make a common presentation
feasible in the dream. The simplest way to approximate two dream thoughts, which
have as yet nothing in common, consists in making such a change in the actual
expression of one idea as will meet a slight responsive recasting in the form of
the other idea. The process is analogous to that of rhyme, when consonance
supplies the desired common factor. A good deal of the dream work consists in
the creation of those frequently very witty, but often exaggerated, digressions.
These vary from the common presentation in the dream content to dream thoughts which are as varied as are the
causes in form and essence which give rise to them. In the analysis of our
example of a dream, I find a like case of the transformation of a thought in
order that it might agree with another essentially foreign one. In following out
the analysis I struck upon the thought: I should like to have something for
nothing. But this formula is not serviceable to the dream. Hence it is
replaced by another one: "I should like to enjoy something free of cost."1
The word "kost" (taste), with its double meaning, is appropriate to a table
d'hôte; it, moreover, is in place through the special sense in the dream. At
home if there is a dish which the children decline, their mother first tries
gentle persuasion, with a "Just taste it." That the dream work should
unhesitatingly use the double meaning of the word is certainly remarkable; ample
experience has shown, however, that the occurrence is quite usual.
Through condensation of the dream certain constituent parts of its content are explicable which are peculiar to the
dream life alone, and which are not found in the waking state. Such are the
composite and mixed persons, the extraordinary mixed figures, creations
comparable with the fantastic animal compositions of Orientals; a moment's
thought and these are reduced to unity, whilst the fancies of the dream are ever
formed anew in an inexhaustible profusion. Every one knows such images in his
own dreams; manifold are their origins. I can build up a person by borrowing one
feature from one person and one from another, or by giving to the form of one
the name of another in my dream. I can also visualize one person, but place him
in a position which has occurred to another. There is a meaning in all these
cases when different persons are amalgamated into one substitute. Such cases
denote an "and," a "just like," a comparison of the original person from a
certain point of view, a comparison which can be also realized in the dream
itself. As a rule, however, the identity of the blended persons is only
discoverable by analysis, and is only indicated in the dream content by the
formation of the "combined" person.
The same diversity in their ways of formation and the same rules for its
solution hold good also for the innumerable medley of dream contents, examples
of which I need scarcely adduce. Their strangeness quite
disappears when we resolve not to place them on a level with the objects of
perception as known to us when awake, but to remember that they represent the
art of dream condensation by an exclusion of unnecessary detail. Prominence is
given to the common character of the combination. Analysis must also generally
supply the common features. The dream says simply: All these things have an
"x" in common. The decomposition of these mixed images by analysis is often
the quickest way to an interpretation of the dream. Thus I once dreamt that I
was sitting with one of my former university tutors on a bench, which was
undergoing a rapid continuous movement amidst other benches. This was a
combination of lecture-room and moving staircase. I will not pursue the further
result of the thought. Another time I was sitting in a carriage, and on my lap
an object in shape like a top-hat, which, however, was made of transparent
glass. The scene at once brought to my mind the proverb: "He who keeps his hat
in his hand will travel safely through the land." By a slight turn the glass
hat reminded me of Auer's light, and I knew that I was about to
invent something which was to make me as rich and independent as his invention
had made my countryman, Dr. Auer, of Welsbach; then I
should be able to travel instead of remaining in Vienna. In the dream I was
traveling with my invention, with the, it is true, rather awkward glass top-hat.
The dream work is peculiarly adept at representing two contradictory conceptions
by means of the same mixed image. Thus, for instance, a woman dreamt of herself
carrying a tall flower-stalk, as in the picture of the Annunciation
(Chastity-Mary is her own name), but the stalk was bedecked with thick white
blossoms resembling camellias (contrast with chastity: La dame aux
Camelias).
A great deal of what we have called "dream condensation" can be thus
formulated. Each one of the elements of the dream content is
overdetermined by the matter of the dream thoughts; it is not derived
from one element of these thoughts, but from a whole series. These are not
necessarily interconnected in any way, but may belong to the most diverse
spheres of thought. The dream element truly represents all this disparate matter
in the dream content. Analysis, moreover, discloses another side of the
relationship between dream content and dream thoughts. Just as one element of
the dream leads to associations with several dream thoughts, so, as a rule, the
one dream thought represents more than one dream element. The threads of the association do not simply converge from the dream
thoughts to the dream content, but on the way they overlap and interweave in
every way.
Next to the transformation of one thought in the scene (its "dramatization"),
condensation is the most important and most characteristic feature of the dream
work. We have as yet no clue as to the motive calling for such compression of
the content.
In the complicated and intricate dreams with which we are now concerned,
condensation and dramatization do not wholly account for the difference between
dream contents and dream thoughts. There is evidence of a third factor, which
deserves careful consideration.
When I have arrived at an understanding of the dream thoughts by my analysis
I notice, above all, that the matter of the manifest is very different from that
of the latent dream content. That is, I admit, only an apparent difference which
vanishes on closer investigation, for in the end I find the whole dream content
carried out in the dream thoughts, nearly all the dream thoughts again
represented in the dream content. Nevertheless, there does remain a certain
amount of difference.
The essential content which stood out clearly and broadly in the dream must,
after analysis, rest satisfied with a very subordinate rôle
among the dream thoughts. These very dream thoughts which, going by my feelings,
have a claim to the greatest importance are either not present at all in the
dream content, or are represented by some remote allusion in some obscure region
of the dream. I can thus describe these phenomena: During the dream work the
psychical intensity of those thoughts and conceptions to which it properly
pertains flows to others which, in my judgment, have no claim to such
emphasis. There is no other process which contributes so much to concealment
of the dream's meaning and to make the connection between the dream content and
dream ideas irrecognizable. During this process, which I will call the dream
displacement, I notice also the psychical intensity, significance, or
emotional nature of the thoughts become transposed in sensory vividness. What
was clearest in the dream seems to me, without further consideration, the most
important; but often in some obscure element of the dream I can recognize the
most direct offspring of the principal dream thought.
I could only designate this dream displacement as the transvaluation of
psychical values. The phenomena will not have been considered in all its
bearings unless I add that this displacement or transvaluation is shared by different dreams in extremely
varying degrees. There are dreams which take place almost without any
displacement. These have the same time, meaning, and intelligibility as we found
in the dreams which recorded a desire. In other dreams not a bit of the dream
idea has retained its own psychical value, or everything essential in these
dream ideas has been replaced by unessentials, whilst every kind of transition
between these conditions can be found. The more obscure and intricate a dream
is, the greater is the part to be ascribed to the impetus of displacement in its
formation.
The example that we chose for analysis shows, at least, this much of
displacement—that its content has a different center of interest from that of
the dream ideas. In the forefront of the dream content the main scene appears as
if a woman wished to make advances to me; in the dream idea the chief interest
rests on the desire to enjoy disinterested love which shall "cost nothing"; this
idea lies at the back of the talk about the beautiful eyes and the far-fetched
allusion to "spinach."
If we abolish the dream displacement, we attain through analysis quite
certain conclusions regarding two problems of the dream which are most
disputed—as to what provokes a dream at all, and as to the
connection of the dream with our waking life. There are dreams which at once
expose their links with the events of the day; in others no trace of such a
connection can be found. By the aid of analysis it can be shown that every
dream, without any exception, is linked up with our impression of the day, or
perhaps it would be more correct to say of the day previous to the dream. The
impressions which have incited the dream may be so important that we are not
surprised at our being occupied with them whilst awake; in this case we are
right in saying that the dream carries on the chief interest of our waking life.
More usually, however, when the dream contains anything relating to the
impressions of the day, it is so trivial, unimportant, and so deserving of
oblivion, that we can only recall it with an effort. The dream content appears,
then, even when coherent and intelligible, to be concerned with those
indifferent trifles of thought undeserving of our waking interest. The
depreciation of dreams is largely due to the predominance of the indifferent and
the worthless in their content.
Analysis destroys the appearance upon which this derogatory judgment is
based. When the dream content discloses nothing but some indifferent impression
as instigating the dream, analysis ever indicates some significant event, which
has been replaced by something indifferent with which it
has entered into abundant associations. Where the dream is concerned with
uninteresting and unimportant conceptions, analysis reveals the numerous
associative paths which connect the trivial with the momentous in the psychical
estimation of the individual. It is only the action of displacement if what
is indifferent obtains recognition in the dream content instead of those
impressions which are really the stimulus, or instead of the things of real
interest. In answering the question as to what provokes the dream, as to the
connection of the dream, in the daily troubles, we must say, in terms of the
insight given us by replacing the manifest latent dream content: The dream
does never trouble itself about things which are not deserving of our concern
during the day, and trivialities which do not trouble us during the day have no
power to pursue us whilst asleep.
What provoked the dream in the example which we have analyzed? The really
unimportant event, that a friend invited me to a free ride in his cab.
The table d'hôte scene in the dream contains an allusion to this indifferent
motive, for in conversation I had brought the taxi parallel with the table
d'hôte. But I can indicate the important event which has as its substitute the
trivial one. A few days before I had disbursed a large sum
of money for a member of my family who is very dear to me. Small wonder, says
the dream thought, if this person is grateful to me for this—this love is not
cost-free. But love that shall cost nothing is one of the prime thoughts of the
dream. The fact that shortly before this I had had several drives with
the relative in question puts the one drive with my friend in a position to
recall the connection with the other person. The indifferent impression which,
by such ramifications, provokes the dream is subservient to another condition
which is not true of the real source of the dream—the impression must be a
recent one, everything arising from the day of the dream.
I cannot leave the question of dream displacement without the consideration
of a remarkable process in the formation of dreams in which condensation and
displacement work together towards one end. In condensation we have already
considered the case where two conceptions in the dream having something in
common, some point of contact, are replaced in the dream content by a mixed
image, where the distinct germ corresponds to what is common, and the indistinct
secondary modifications to what is distinctive. If displacement is added to
condensation, there is no formation of a mixed image, but a
common mean which bears the same relationship to the individual elements
as does the resultant in the parallelogram of forces to its components. In one
of my dreams, for instance, there is talk of an injection with propyl. On
first analysis I discovered an indifferent but true incident where amyl
played a part as the excitant of the dream. I cannot yet vindicate the exchange
of amyl for propyl. To the round of ideas of the same dream, however, there
belongs the recollection of my first visit to Munich, when the Propylœa
struck me. The attendant circumstances of the analysis render it admissible that
the influence of this second group of conceptions caused the displacement of
amyl to propyl. Propyl is, so to say, the mean idea between amyl
and propylœa; it got into the dream as a kind of compromise by
simultaneous condensation and displacement.
The need of discovering some motive for this bewildering work of the dream is
even more called for in the case of displacement than in condensation.
Although the work of displacement must be held mainly responsible if the
dream thoughts are not refound or recognized in the dream content (unless the
motive of the changes be guessed), it is another and milder kind of
transformation which will be considered with the dream thoughts which leads to
the discovery of a new but readily understood act of the
dream work. The first dream thoughts which are unravelled by analysis frequently
strike one by their unusual wording. They do not appear to be expressed in the
sober form which our thinking prefers; rather are they expressed symbolically by
allegories and metaphors like the figurative language of the poets. It is not
difficult to find the motives for this degree of constraint in the expression of
dream ideas. The dream content consists chiefly of visual scenes; hence the
dream ideas must, in the first place, be prepared to make use of these forms of
presentation. Conceive that a political leader's or a barrister's address had to
be transposed into pantomime, and it will be easy to understand the
transformations to which the dream work is constrained by regard for this
dramatization of the dream content.
Around the psychical stuff of dream thoughts there are ever found
reminiscences of impressions, not infrequently of early childhood—scenes which,
as a rule, have been visually grasped. Whenever possible, this portion of the
dream ideas exercises a definite influence upon the modelling of the dream
content; it works like a center of crystallization, by attracting and
rearranging the stuff of the dream thoughts. The scene of the dream is not
infrequently nothing but a modified repetition, complicated
by interpolations of events that have left such an impression; the dream but
very seldom reproduces accurate and unmixed reproductions of real scenes.
The dream content does not, however, consist exclusively of scenes, but it
also includes scattered fragments of visual images, conversations, and even bits
of unchanged thoughts. It will be perhaps to the point if we instance in the
briefest way the means of dramatization which are at the disposal of the dream
work for the repetition of the dream thoughts in the peculiar language of the
dream.
The dream thoughts which we learn from the analysis exhibit themselves as a
psychical complex of the most complicated superstructure. Their parts stand in
the most diverse relationship to each other; they form backgrounds and
foregrounds, stipulations, digressions, illustrations, demonstrations, and
protestations. It may be said to be almost the rule that one train of thought is
followed by its contradictory. No feature known to our reason whilst awake is
absent. If a dream is to grow out of all this, the psychical matter is submitted
to a pressure which condenses it extremely, to an inner shrinking and
displacement, creating at the same time fresh surfaces, to a selective
interweaving among the constituents best adapted for the
construction of these scenes. Having regard to the origin of this stuff, the
term regression can be fairly applied to this process. The logical chains
which hitherto held the psychical stuff together become lost in this
transformation to the dream content. The dream work takes on, as it were, only
the essential content of the dream thoughts for elaboration. It is left to
analysis to restore the connection which the dream work has destroyed.
The dream's means of expression must therefore be regarded as meager in
comparison with those of our imagination, though the dream does not renounce all
claims to the restitution of logical relation to the dream thoughts. It rather
succeeds with tolerable frequency in replacing these by formal characters of its
own.
By reason of the undoubted connection existing between all the parts of dream
thoughts, the dream is able to embody this matter into a single scene. It
upholds a logical connection as approximation in time and space,
just as the painter, who groups all the poets for his picture of Parnassus who,
though they have never been all together on a mountain peak, yet form ideally a
community. The dream continues this method of presentation in individual dreams,
and often when it displays two elements close together in
the dream content it warrants some special inner connection between what they
represent in the dream thoughts. It should be, moreover, observed that all the
dreams of one night prove on analysis to originate from the same sphere of
thought.
The causal connection between two ideas is either left without presentation,
or replaced by two different long portions of dreams one after the other. This
presentation is frequently a reversed one, the beginning of the dream being the
deduction, and its end the hypothesis. The direct transformation of one
thing into another in the dream seems to serve the relationship of cause
and effect.
The dream never utters the alternative "either-or," but accepts both
as having equal rights in the same connection. When "either-or" is used in the
reproduction of dreams, it is, as I have already mentioned, to be replaced by
"and."
Conceptions which stand in opposition to one another are preferably expressed
in dreams by the same element.2
There seems no "not" in dreams. Opposition between two
ideas, the relation of conversion, is represented in dreams in a very remarkable
way. It is expressed by the reversal of another part of the dream content just
as if by way of appendix. We shall later on deal with another form of expressing
disagreement. The common dream sensation of movement checked serves the
purpose of representing disagreement of impulses—a conflict of the
will.
Only one of the logical relationships—that of similarity, identity,
agreement—is found highly developed in the mechanism of dream formation.
Dream work makes use of these cases as a starting-point for condensation,
drawing together everything which shows such agreement to a fresh
unity.
These short, crude observations naturally do not suffice as an estimate of
the abundance of the dream's formal means of presenting the logical
relationships of the dream thoughts. In this respect, individual dreams are
worked up more nicely or more carelessly, our text will have been followed more
or less closely, auxiliaries of the dream work will have
been taken more or less into consideration. In the latter case they appear
obscure, intricate, incoherent. When the dream appears openly absurd, when it
contains an obvious paradox in its content, it is so of purpose. Through its
apparent disregard of all logical claims, it expresses a part of the
intellectual content of the dream ideas. Absurdity in the dream denotes
disagreement, scorn, disdain in the dream thoughts. As this explanation
is in entire disagreement with the view that the dream owes its origin to
dissociated, uncritical cerebral activity, I will emphasize my view by an
example:
"One of my acquaintances, Mr. M____, has been attacked by no less a person
than Goethe in an essay with, we all maintain, unwarrantable violence. Mr. M____
has naturally been ruined by this attack. He complains very bitterly of this at
a dinner-party, but his respect for Goethe has not diminished through this
personal experience. I now attempt to clear up the chronological relations which
strike me as improbable. Goethe died in 1832. As his attack upon Mr. M____ must,
of course, have taken place before, Mr. M____ must have been then a very young
man. It seems to me plausible that he was eighteen. I am not certain, however,
what year we are actually in, and the whole calculation falls into obscurity. The attack was, moreover, contained in
Goethe's well-known essay on 'Nature.'"
The absurdity of the dream becomes the more glaring when I state that Mr.
M____ is a young business man without any poetical or literary interests. My
analysis of the dream will show what method there is in this madness. The dream
has derived its material from three sources:
1. Mr. M____, to whom I was introduced at a dinner-party, begged me one day
to examine his elder brother, who showed signs of mental trouble. In
conversation with the patient, an unpleasant episode occurred. Without the
slightest occasion he disclosed one of his brother's youthful escapades.
I had asked the patient the year of his birth (year of death in
dream), and led him to various calculations which might show up his want of
memory.
2. A medical journal which displayed my name among others on the cover had
published a ruinous review of a book by my friend F____ of Berlin, from
the pen of a very juvenile reviewer. I communicated with the editor, who,
indeed, expressed his regret, but would not promise any redress. Thereupon I
broke off my connection with the paper; in my letter of resignation I expressed
the hope that our personal relations would not suffer from this. Here is the real source of the dream. The
derogatory reception of my friend's work had made a deep impression upon me. In
my judgment, it contained a fundamental biological discovery which only now,
several years later, commences to find favor among the professors.
3. A little while before, a patient gave me the medical history of her
brother, who, exclaiming "Nature, Nature!" had gone out of his mind. The
doctors considered that the exclamation arose from a study of Goethe's
beautiful essay, and indicated that the patient had been overworking. I
expressed the opinion that it seemed more plausible to me that the
exclamation "Nature!" was to be taken in that sexual meaning known also to the
less educated in our country. It seemed to me that this view had something in
it, because the unfortunate youth afterwards mutilated his genital organs. The
patient was eighteen years old when the attack occurred.
The first person in the dream-thoughts behind the ego was my friend who had
been so scandalously treated. "I now attempted to clear up the chronological
relation." My friend's book deals with the chronological relations of life,
and, amongst other things, correlates Goethe's duration of life with a
number of days in many ways important to biology. The ego
is, however, represented as a general paralytic ("I am not certain what year
we are actually in"). The dream exhibits my friend as behaving like a
general paralytic, and thus riots in absurdity. But the dream thoughts run
ironically. "Of course he is a madman, a fool, and you are the genius who
understands all about it. But shouldn't it be the other way round?" This
inversion obviously took place in the dream when Goethe attacked the young man,
which is absurd, whilst any one, however young, can to-day easily attack the
great Goethe.
I am prepared to maintain that no dream is inspired by other than egoistic
emotions. The ego in the dream does not, indeed, represent only my friend, but
stands for myself also. I identify myself with him because the fate of his
discovery appears to me typical of the acceptance of my own. If I were to
publish my own theory, which gives sexuality predominance in the ætiology of
psychoneurotic disorders (see the allusion to the eighteen-year-old
patient—"Nature, Nature!"), the same criticism would be leveled at me,
and it would even now meet with the same contempt.
When I follow out the dream thoughts closely, I ever find only scorn
and contempt as correlated with the dream's absurdity. It is well
known that the discovery of a cracked sheep's skull on the Lido in Venice gave Goethe the hint for the so-called vertebral theory
of the skull. My friend plumes himself on having as a student raised a hubbub
for the resignation of an aged professor who had done good work (including some
in this very subject of comparative anatomy), but who, on account of
decrepitude, had become quite incapable of teaching. The agitation my
friend inspired was so successful because in the German Universities an age
limit is not demanded for academic work. Age is no protection against
folly. In the hospital here I had for years the honor to serve under a chief
who, long fossilized, was for decades notoriously feebleminded, and was
yet permitted to continue in his responsible office. A trait, after the manner
of the find in the Lido, forces itself upon me here. It was to this man that
some youthful colleagues in the hospital adapted the then popular slang of that
day: "No Goethe has written that," "No Schiller composed that," etc.
We have not exhausted our valuation of the dream work. In addition to
condensation, displacement, and definite arrangement of the psychical matter, we
must ascribe to it yet another activity—one which is, indeed, not shared by
every dream. I shall not treat this position of the dream work exhaustively; I
will only point out that the readiest way to arrive at a
conception of it is to take for granted, probably unfairly, that it only
subsequently influences the dream content which has already been built up.
Its mode of action thus consists in so coördinating the parts of the dream that
these coalesce to a coherent whole, to a dream composition. The dream gets a
kind of façade which, it is true, does not conceal the whole of its content.
There is a sort of preliminary explanation to be strengthened by interpolations
and slight alterations. Such elaboration of the dream content must not be too
pronounced; the misconception of the dream thoughts to which it gives rise is
merely superficial, and our first piece of work in analyzing a dream is to get
rid of these early attempts at interpretation.
The motives for this part of the dream work are easily gauged. This final
elaboration of the dream is due to a regard for intelligibility—a fact at
once betraying the origin of an action which behaves towards the actual dream
content just as our normal psychical action behaves towards some proffered
perception that is to our liking. The dream content is thus secured under the
pretense of certain expectations, is perceptually classified by the supposition
of its intelligibility, thereby risking its falsification, whilst, in fact, the
most extraordinary misconceptions arise if the dream can be
correlated with nothing familiar. Every one is aware that we are unable to look
at any series of unfamiliar signs, or to listen to a discussion of unknown
words, without at once making perpetual changes through our regard for
intelligibility, through our falling back upon what is familiar.
We can call those dreams properly made up which are the result of an
elaboration in every way analogous to the psychical action of our waking life.
In other dreams there is no such action; not even an attempt is made to bring
about order and meaning. We regard the dream as "quite mad," because on awaking
it is with this last-named part of the dream work, the dream elaboration, that
we identify ourselves. So far, however, as our analysis is concerned, the dream,
which resembles a medley of disconnected fragments, is of as much value as the
one with a smooth and beautifully polished surface. In the former case we are
spared, to some extent, the trouble of breaking down the super-elaboration of
the dream content.
All the same, it would be an error to see in the dream façade nothing but the
misunderstood and somewhat arbitrary elaboration of the dream carried out at the
instance of our psychical life. Wishes and phantasies are not infrequently
employed in the erection of this façade, which were already
fashioned in the dream thoughts; they are akin to those of our waking
life—"day-dreams," as they are very properly called. These wishes and
phantasies, which analysis discloses in our dreams at night, often present
themselves as repetitions and refashionings of the scenes of infancy. Thus the
dream façade may show us directly the true core of the dream, distorted through
admixture with other matter.
Beyond these four activities there is nothing else to be discovered in the
dream work. If we keep closely to the definition that dream work denotes the
transference of dream thoughts to dream content, we are compelled to say that
the dream work is not creative; it develops no fancies of its own, it judges
nothing, decides nothing. It does nothing but prepare the matter for
condensation and displacement, and refashions it for dramatization, to which
must be added the inconstant last-named mechanism—that of explanatory
elaboration. It is true that a good deal is found in the dream content which
might be understood as the result of another and more intellectual performance;
but analysis shows conclusively every time that these intellectual operations
were already present in the dream thoughts, and have only been taken over by the dream content. A syllogism in the dream is nothing
other than the repetition of a syllogism in the dream thoughts; it seems
inoffensive if it has been transferred to the dream without alteration; it
becomes absurd if in the dream work it has been transferred to other matter. A
calculation in the dream content simply means that there was a calculation in
the dream thoughts; whilst this is always correct, the calculation in the dream
can furnish the silliest results by the condensation of its factors and the
displacement of the same operations to other things. Even speeches which are
found in the dream content are not new compositions; they prove to be pieced
together out of speeches which have been made or heard or read; the words are
faithfully copied, but the occasion of their utterance is quite overlooked, and
their meaning is most violently changed.
It is, perhaps, not superfluous to support these assertions by examples:
1. A seemingly inoffensive, well-made dream of a patient. She was going to
market with her cook, who carried the basket. The butcher said to her when she
asked him for something: "That is all gone," and wished to give her something
else, remarking; "That's very good." She declines, and goes to the greengrocer,
who wants to sell her a peculiar vegetable which is bound
up in bundles and of a black color. She says: "I don't know that; I won't take
it."
The remark "That is all gone" arose from the treatment. A few days before I
said myself to the patient that the earliest reminiscences of childhood are
all gone as such, but are replaced by transferences and dreams. Thus I am
the butcher.
The second remark, "I don't know that" arose in a very different
connection. The day before she had herself called out in rebuke to the cook
(who, moreover, also appears in the dream): "Behave yourself properly; I
don't know that"—that is, "I don't know this kind of behavior; I won't
have it." The more harmless portion of this speech was arrived at by a
displacement of the dream content; in the dream thoughts only the other portion
of the speech played a part, because the dream work changed an imaginary
situation into utter irrecognizability and complete inoffensiveness (while in a
certain sense I behave in an unseemly way to the lady). The situation resulting
in this phantasy is, however, nothing but a new edition of one that actually
took place.
2. A dream apparently meaningless relates to figures. "She wants to pay
something; her daughter takes three florins sixty-five kreuzers out of her purse; but she says: 'What are you doing? It only cost
twenty-one kreuzers.'"
The dreamer was a stranger who had placed her child at school in Vienna, and
who was able to continue under my treatment so long as her daughter remained at
Vienna. The day before the dream the directress of the school had recommended
her to keep the child another year at school. In this case she would have been
able to prolong her treatment by one year. The figures in the dream become
important if it be remembered that time is money. One year equals 365 days, or,
expressed in kreuzers, 365 kreuzers, which is three florins sixty-five kreuzers.
The twenty-one kreuzers correspond with the three weeks which remained from the
day of the dream to the end of the school term, and thus to the end of the
treatment. It was obviously financial considerations which had moved the lady to
refuse the proposal of the directress, and which were answerable for the
triviality of the amount in the dream.
3. A lady, young, but already ten years married, heard that a friend of hers,
Miss Elise L____, of about the same age, had become engaged. This gave rise to
the following dream:
She was sitting with her husband in the theater; the one side of the
stalls was quite empty. Her husband tells her, Elise L____
and her fiancé had intended coming, but could only get some cheap seats, three
for one florin fifty kreuzers, and these they would not take. In her opinion,
that would not have mattered very much.
The origin of the figures from the matter of the dream thoughts and the
changes the figures underwent are of interest. Whence came the one florin fifty
kreuzers? From a trifling occurrence of the previous day. Her sister-in-law had
received 150 florins as a present from her husband, and had quickly got rid of
it by buying some ornament. Note that 150 florins is one hundred times one
florin fifty kreuzers. For the three concerned with the tickets, the only
link is that Elise L____ is exactly three months younger than the dreamer. The
scene in the dream is the repetition of a little adventure for which she has
often been teased by her husband. She was once in a great hurry to get tickets
in time for a piece, and when she came to the theater one side of the stalls
was almost empty. It was therefore quite unnecessary for her to have been in
such a hurry. Nor must we overlook the absurdity of the dream that two
persons should take three tickets for the theater.
Now for the dream ideas. It was stupid to have married so early; I
need not have been in so great a hurry. Elise
L____'s example shows me that I should have been able to get a husband later;
indeed, one a hundred times better if I had but waited. I could have
bought three such men with the money (dowry).
Footnote
1: "Ich möchte gerne etwas geniessen ohne 'Kosten' zu haben." A a pun upon
the word "kosten," which has two meanings—"taste" and "cost." In "Die
Traumdeutung," third edition, p. 71 footnote, Professor Freud remarks that "the
finest example of dream interpretation left us by the ancients is based upon a
pun" (from "The Interpretation of Dreams," by Artemidorus Daldianus). "Moreover,
dreams are so intimately bound up with language that Ferenczi truly points out
that every tongue has its own language of dreams. A dream is as a rule
untranslatable into other languages."—TRANSLATOR.
Footnote
2: It is worthy of remark that eminent philologists maintain that the oldest
languages used the same word for expressing quite general antitheses. In C.
Abel's essay, "Ueber den Gegensinn der Urworter" (1884, the following examples
of such words in England are given: "gleam—gloom"; "to lock—loch"; "down—The
Downs"; "to step—to stop." In his essay on "The Origin of Language" ("Linguistic
Essays," p. 240), Abel says: "When the Englishman says 'without,' is not his
judgment based upon the comparative juxtaposition of two opposites, 'with' and
'out'; 'with' itself originally meant 'without,' as may still be seen in
'withdraw.' 'Bid' includes the opposite sense of giving and of proffering."
Abel, "The English Verbs of Command," "Linguistic Essays," p. 104; see also
Freud, "Ueber den Gegensinn der Urworte"; Jahrbuch für Psychoanalytische und
Psychopathologische Forschungen, Band II., part i., p.
179).—TRANSLATOR.
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