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DREAMS OF DEATH.

One night in mid-ocean, Captain Marryat awakened suddenly with the idea that someone was. in his cabin, and, glancing towards the door, he saw his brother, whom he believed to be at home in England, just passing out. So deeply did the incident impress him that he rose and made a date of its occurrence. On returning home he learned that at that exact hour his brother had died. Mr. • Andrew Lang has pointed out how easy it' is. to make too much of tho fulfilled dream of death. "As it is very common to dream of deaths, some such dreams must occasionally hit the target." He tells, for instance, how during the Pen/insular War three brothers quartered at the Dover camp, dreamt on the same night that their mother, living at Bradford, was dead ; and it proved to be true. But Mr. Lang balances this with a case oi a shared but untrue dream, and the writer can add another. Cn a walking tour in Inland, he and Lis brothor, who shared a bed, both dreamt vividly that their sister was dead. Neither told the other in the morn'ing, both worried about it next day, and in the evening they unburdened themselves. That was 20 years ago., and all three, who were then quite well, are still alive.—"Chronicle"

Permanent link to this item
Hononga pūmau ki tēnei tūemi

https://paperspast.natlib.govt.nz/newspapers/KCC19140620.2.43

Bibliographic details
Ngā taipitopito pukapuka

King Country Chronicle, Volume VIII, Issue 679, 20 June 1914, Page 7

Word count
Tapeke kupu
222

DREAMS OF DEATH. King Country Chronicle, Volume VIII, Issue 679, 20 June 1914, Page 7

DREAMS OF DEATH. King Country Chronicle, Volume VIII, Issue 679, 20 June 1914, Page 7

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