James Laughlin

In the God’s Dreams

Am I a character in the dreams
of the god Hermes the messenger?  
Certainly many of my dreams  
have nothing to do with the  
common life around me. There  
are never any automobiles or  
airplanes in them. These  
dreams belong to an age in  
the distant past, to a time  
perhaps when nothing was  
written down, to the
time of memory.
 
I chose Hermes not out of  
vanity but because from what  
I’ve read about him he had a  
pretty good time, was not  
just a drunkard on Olympus.  
In his traipsings delivering  
divine messages he must have  
met some pretty girls who  
gave him pleasure. We know  
that he invented the lyre  
for the benefit of poets,  
and Lucian relates in his  
Dialogues of the Dead that  
he was the god of sleep
and dreams.
 
My dreams are not frightening,  
they are not nightmares. But  
their irrationality puzzles
me. What is Hermes trying to
tell me? Is he playing a game  
with me? Last Monday night  
I dreamt about a school for  
young children who had heads  
but no bodies. Last night it  
was a cow that was galloping  
in our meadow like a horse.  
Another night, and this one  
was a bit scary, I swam across  
the lake with my head under  
water, I didn’t have to breathe air.
 
What is the message of these  
dreams? Into what kind of world  
is Hermes leading me? It’s not  
the world described daily in the  
New York Times. A world of  
shadows? A kind of levitation?
 
How can I pray to Hermes to lay  
off these senseless fantasies,
tell him that I want real dreams  
such as my shrink can explicate.
 
I’ve looked up lustration in
the dictionary. Its definition
is not encouraging: “a prefatory  
ceremony, performed as a preliminary  
to entering a holy place.” That’s
too impersonal. I want a man-to-man  
talk with Hermes, telling him to  
stop infesting my nights with
his nonsense.
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