The Dreams

The Dreams by Naguib Mahfouz Page A

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Authors: Naguib Mahfouz
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former place until the housing crisis eases.
    But after only one day I see it’s simply not suitable for life in modern times.

Dream 142

    T his empty plot of land is my sole inheritance. I call it “the ruin,” because it has been neglected for so long.
    After making a bit of money, I thought of building on it. Yet I made no progress, due to what I knew about the prevalence of fraud and financial corruption.
    Finally, I asked a wise woman who lived next to me, “Is there an honest person left in the world?”
    She answered that he existed indeed—but endless courage and resolve were needed in the ceaseless quest to find him.

Dream 143

    H earing an unfamiliar voice, I hurried over to the stairwell to find a strange man who aroused my suspicion.
    I called to the doorman to take a look at the stranger. He calmly informed me that this person was a civil servant carrying out his official duty.
    That was, he explained, to take individuals out of overcrowded buildings and to transfer them to places which have more room. I objected—for this, I said, was to tear people away from their own families, only to put them somewhere they would not be welcome.
    But the doorman insisted that such was the law, and one could only obey and comply.

Dream 144

    P eering into the shadowy past, I saw my sweetheart’s luminous face, though she’d been dead for fifty years. I asked her about the letter I’d sent her a week ago.
    She said that she found it filled with affection. But she noted that the script of the person who’d written it revealed he was struck with the fear of life—especially of love and marriage.
    “I was afflicted with the same fear,” she added, “and changed my mind about going to you.
    “To save myself,” she concluded, “I decided to flee instead.”

Dream 145

    S uch a grand festival—all the top people from the government were there. The festival’s head summoned me and presented me with a ball, which he said was the event’s official prize.
    The ball was made of solid gold. Congratulations rained down on me, and when I had recovered, I announced my desire to donate the gift to charity. So some men came with a saw and began cutting the ball up in order to divide it.
    But when the saw bit into the ball’s core, the place went up in a huge, earth-shaking explosion, as bits of humans, animals, plants, and inanimate things flew everywhere through the air.

Dream 146

    T he enemy was triumphant. Yet before he’d cease fighting, he demanded that the golden statue of the nation’s reawakening, kept in the storehouse of historic treasures, be surrendered forthwith.
    So a group of us went to fetch the storehouse key from the strongbox. But when we removed the box’s lid, a terrifying serpent rose up before us, threatening anyone who drew near with death.
    As we hastily retreated, I concealed my joy—praying for the snake’s safety, and his success in guarding the key.

Dream 147

    I was called to an important meeting of the building’s residents, where they drew my attention to a decision issued against me, that I must vacate my flat.
    I appealed to their sense of justice and of mercy until the building’s owner said to me that the meeting hadn’t been held to seek justice and mercy. Rather it was to insure that the decision was applied as the law decrees.

Dream 148

    T he competition between trains to Alexandria and autos on the Agricultural Road grew more and more intense.
    Finally, the directors of the railroad met and decided to create a special car for uproar, with women and complete liberty of behavior. There would also be a salon in every wagon dedicated to drinking, singing, and dancing.
    So I kept on drinking, singing, and dancing, waiting for the chance to slip away to the rumpus room of delights.

Dream 149

    R evolution gripped the city and the king was slain while defending his capital. Immediately there was a banquet held in honor of the revolution’s commanders.
    The queen invited

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