For Freud, the literary work is like a dream, a burst of the psyche of its author. Plunged into literary work, he discovers the internal knots concerning the author's past. He discovers in the afterlife of the second self the author who appears in the work, his true self that touches life in flesh and blood. Bachelardian psychoanalysis is linked not with unconsciousness but with the awakening, consciousness and psychic coherence of the dreamer who creates the work. Reverie gives the dreamer the possibility of producing the image in the moment. Thus, contrary to the petrified image of Freud represented in the dream, the Bachelardian image is dynamic, spontaneous, and cut off from the past. Since the images of reverie appear at the moment as ...