This section is from the book "The Fabric Of Dreams: Dream Lore And Dream Interpretation, Ancient And Modern", by Katherine Taylor Craig. Also available from Amazon: The Fabric Of Dreams: Dream Lore And Dream Interpretation, Ancient And Modern.
Sudden journeyings or changes from place to place (Gypsy).
Concealed, domestic enemy (Gypsy).
Filled it denotes abundance; empty, misery.
To dream of walking in a pleasant valley denotes sickness (Raphael). An interpretation in conformity with the modern theory of physical stimuli, and attributing hills, valleys, mountains, etc., to sensations in various parts of the body.
A dream warning against thieves and other insidious persons (Gypsy).
Labor is signified by this dream (Raphael).
To dream of eating them denotes sickness (Raphael).
A dream of modesty (Gypsy). Symbol of hidden things (Tarot). Symbol also of the submission of woman to man.
A dream of trouble and of sorrows (Gypsy).
Honor and riches (Artemidorus).
A dream denoting sickness (Gypsy). A typical dream in alcohol addicts.
To see them denotes idleness; to eat, sickness (Gypsy).
Over opponents a dream of success (Raphael).
See City.
A dream denoting gayety, absence of care (Gypsy).
To dream of drinking it signifies sickness (Artemidorus). Obviously due to sensory stimuli, acidity, etc.
To walk under or to pick their fruit is a dream of abundance, wealth, fecundity (Gypsy). The spiritual symbol of fruitfulness.
To dream of violence from one from whom you had a right to expect kindness denotes success, promotion (Raphael).
In season a dream of success; out of season, lawsuits; double violets, extreme happiness or pain (Gypsy).
A dream of social pleasures (Gypsy).
Enemies who strive to injure you, an unfaithful partner (Gypsy). See fable of the man who nourished a viper.
To see a person in a vision or dream denotes the death of that person; see places, etc, denotes disappointment, illusion (Gypsy).
A dream of merry voices connotes distress and weeping; wailing voices, joy and merriment (Gypsy).
Family jars, disturbances, fights (Gypsy).
If broken, the dream denotes misfortune; fulfilled, success (Gypsy).
An evil dream of persons seeking to destroy your reputation, malevolent rivalry, revenge (Gypsy). Here the symbolism of the Scriptures is obvious; ancient Hebrews held the vulture in abhorrence, while in Egypt it was the symbol of maternity and of the protection of Isis.
 
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