You raised an important point and Jung also praised that book. Unless I'm mistaken, Freud's book on dreams book a radically different approach than Jung book. Jung wrote about archetypes found in dreams and in myths, both of which Freud, to some degree, rejected because he considered dreams to have an underlying sexual basis, whereas Jung saw dreams and the meaning as being cross-cultural and timeless.
Much as Jacobs dream of fighting God beside the river at night. I might just have to do another story about the shadow self and ancient prophets who displayed signs of epileptic seizures when they revealed their prophiesized.