- Home
- Books
- Lactantius
- On The Workmanship Of God
- Chap. XVIII. -Of The Soul And The Mind, And Their Affections.
Chap. XVIII.--Of the Soul and the Mind, and Their Affections.
But when the mind is transferred from its application to the contemplation of images, then at length the whole body is resolved into rest. But the mind is transferred from dark thought, when, under the influence of darkness, it has begun to be alone with itself. While it is intent upon those things concerning which it is reflecting, sleep suddenly creeps on, and the thought itself imperceptibly turns aside to the nearest appearances: [1932] thus it begins also to see those things which it had placed before its eyes. Then it proceeds further, and finds diversions [1933] for itself, that it may not interrupt the most healthy repose of the body. For as the mind is diverted in the day by true sights, so that it does not sleep; so is it diverted in the night by false sights, so that it is not aroused. For if it perceives no images, it will follow of necessity either that it is awake, or that it is asleep in perpetual death. Therefore the system of dreaming has been given by God for the sake of sleeping; and, indeed, it has been given to all animals in common; but this especially to man, that when God gave this system on account of rest, He left to Himself the power of teaching man future events by means of the dream. [1934] For narratives often testify that there have been dreams which have had an immediate and a remarkable accomplishment, [1935] and the answers of our prophets have been after the character of a dream. [1936] On which account they are not always true, nor always false, as Virgil testified, [1937] who supposed that there were two gates for the passage of dreams. But those which are false are seen for the sake of sleeping; those which are true are sent by God, that by this revelation we may learn impending goods or evils.