Sleep Fictions: A Digital Companion

II.XIII.3 Mirth

In an 1872 Popular Science Monthly* article, "Perfect sleep" is described as "the possession, as a rule, of childhood only. The healthy child, worn out with its day of active life, suddenly sinks to rest, sleeps its ten or twelve hours, and wakes, believing, feeling, that it has merely closed its eyes and opened them again; so deep is its twinkle of oblivion. The sleep in this case is the nearest of approaches to actual death, and at the same time presents a natural paradox, for it is the evidence of strongest life."

*Permalink: https://en.wikisource.org/w/index.php?title=Popular_Science_Monthly/Volume_1/August_1872/The_Physiology_of_Sleep&oldid=8852795

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