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The mysterious nature of sleep is manifested during the process and
awakening from sleep. Here is how the French writer Marcel Proust
(1871-1922) has described it:
«But for
me it was enough if, in my own bed, my sleep was so heavy as completely
to relax my consciousness; for then I lost all sense of the place in which
I had gone to sleep, and when I awoke at midnight, not knowing where
I was, I could not be sure at first of who I was; I had only the most rudimentary
sense of existence, such as may lurk and flicker in the depths of an animal's
consciousness; I was more destitute of human qualities than the cave-dweller;
but then the memory, not yet of the place in which I was, but of various
other places where I had lived, and might now very possibly be, would come
like a rope let down from heaven to draw me up out of the abyss of not-being,
from which I could never have escaped by myself: in a flash I would traverse
and surmount centuries of civilisation, and out of a half-visualised succession
of oil-lamps, followed by shirts with turned-down collars, would put together
by degrees the component parts of my ego.»
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