Simon essentially answered the question already, but I will expand some of the parts that may not be clear to the experts. Sketches of an elephant is a good reference for everything I am going to say. I will take a bit of a different narrative to Simon's, implicitly assuming a good understanding of classifying topoi, blurring the distinction between a topos and the geometric theory it classifies, $$\mathcal{E} \simeq \text{Set}[\mathbb{T}] .$$
Def (Prebounds). Let $\mathcal{E}$ be a topos. A prebound $e \in \mathcal{E}$ is an object such that the subobjects of its finite powers $m: a \to e^n$ are a generator for the topos. Such an object always exist and can be obtained by manipulating a generator (or a site).
Construction (From prebounds to localic geometric morphisms). Given a couple $(\mathcal{E},e)$ where $\mathcal{E}$ is a topos and $e$ is a prebound, we can construct a localic geometric morphism $$f_e: \mathcal{E} \to \text{Set}[\mathbb{O}]. $$ Of course, this is the same of a cocontinuous left exact functor $f_e^*: \text{Set}[\mathbb{O}] \to \mathcal{E}$, which is the same of a lex functor $\text{Fin}^\circ \to \mathcal{E}$,
$$\text{Topoi}(\mathcal{E}, \text{Set}[\mathbb{O}]) \simeq \text{Cocontlex}( \text{Set}[\mathbb{O}], \mathcal{E}) \simeq \text{Cocontlex}( \text{Set}^{\text{Fin}}, \mathcal{E})\simeq \text{Lex}(\text{Fin}^\circ, \mathcal{E}). $$
The latter, is given by sending $n \mapsto e^n$. The geometric morphism obtained in this way is localic by definition of prebound. This construction appeared for the first time in Freyd's All topoi are localic.
Remark. If you think about it, I am just spelling out in categorical terms what Simon suggested in somewhat mystical language.
Remark (Morita-like phenomena). Notice that each prebound (and we can construct a prebound from any site) gives a different localic morphism, thus we have many localic representation for the same topos!
Theorem (Internal locales are localic geometric morphisms). There is a biequivalence of categories between the $2$-category of internal locales in $\text{Loc}(\text{Set}[\mathbb{O}])$ and the $2$-category of localic geometric morphisms over $\text{Set}[\mathbb{O}]$, $$\text{Loc}(\text{Set}[\mathbb{O}]) \leftrightarrows \text{Topoi}_{\text{loc} / \text{Set}[\mathbb{O}]}. $$
Proof. Lemma 1.2 in Johnstone, Factorization theorems for geometric morphisms. Cahiers, 22, no1 (1981)
Remark (On the emergence of Lawvere-like doctrines). When one spells out what a locale internal to $ \text{Set}[\mathbb{O}]$ is, one discovers that it is nothing but a functor $$\mathbb{P}: \text{Fin} \to \text{Heyt}$$ verifying the Beck-Chevalley condition and Frobenius reciprocity (see Lemma C.1.6.9 and Cor. C.1.6.10 in Sketches of an Elephant). Suddenly we see how doctrine-like objects emerge in the representation of theories! That's beautiful in my opinion. $\text{Fin}$ acts as a fact as a set of variables, while $\mathbb{P}(n)$ gives us the set of formulas on those $n$-variables.
Def (Well presented topoi). The $2$-category WTopoi of well presented topoi has objects $(\mathcal{E},e)$ where $\mathcal{E}$ is a topos and $e$ is a prebound and morphism geometric morphisms whose left adjoint preserve the prebuound.
Remark. This notion does not appear in the literature (to my knowledge), I just need it as an intermediate notion. A good intuition for it is that the topos is specified together with a precise language generator of the geometric theory it classifies. WTopoi is really much more a $2$-category of sites, together with a relational notion of morphism of sites, rather than a $2$-category of topoi.
Remark (Every topos can be well presented). Of course, the WTopoi is not the same of Topoi but the forgetful functor $$\mathsf{U}: \text{WTopoi} \to \text{Topoi} $$ is essentially surjective on objects, and on morphisms (!).
Theorem (Internal locales are well presented topoi and vice versa). There is a biequivalence of categories $$\text{Loc}(\text{Set}[\mathbb{O}]) \leftrightarrows \text{Topoi}_{\text{loc} / \text{Set}[\mathbb{O}]} \leftrightarrows \text{WTopoi}.$$