The
day is young that is waking at the first with thoughts as they occur from out
of dreams and into the vision of shapes again, familiar with the light. Many
another has learned through time to give thanks at waking for the light itself
and every existing being and thing that breathing permits them to enjoy,
further. Such understanding comes voluntarily to the awakened one, never mind
their level of lucidity or vagueness, cheeriness or grumpiness, refreshment or
hangover. Waking at first is for many another the hour of least affected
thought. The time before breakfast is when thought alone is sorting itself out,
observing its mood, sitting quietly with an assembly of early morning ideas,
making out some liveable form from which to proceed. It is the hour prior to conversation
with the world, the trial and error of social media, the holdfast position in
preparation for daily news updates, the hour before opening a book. This book
by Thomas Traherne, for example. “He thought it a Vain Thing to see Glorious
Principles lie Buried in Books, unless he did remove them into his
Understanding; and a vain thing to remov them unless he did revive them, and
rais them up by continual exercise.” This is paragraph 2 of Book IV of ‘Centuries
of Meditations’. The editor has kept the seventeenth century spelling and
capitalisation, which give the sentences all manner of pitches and tones and
emphases, as if playing an organ. The author is not saying books are vain, but
vain if they are not being used for the purpose intended. For him understanding
grows, the conversation goes on regardless, in a day where books will lend to
the conversation. He removes the contents of the book, by which he means transfers
the thoughts to his own mind, the place where they may live again. The
sentences of his book are the beginning of the day of their thought, general
statements and fundamental truths and primary assumptions that he calls principles,
which is why he finishes this paragraph with these words. “Let this therfore be
the first Principle of your soul. That to have no Principles, or to liv beside
them, is equaly Miserable. And that Philosophers are not those that Speak, but
Do great Things.” Thomas Traherne, in his own book, would have us become alive
to our own thoughts and more awake to our own principles. Actively to consider
thoughts and consciously to think them through with others will fill the day
with gladness and felicity. Not to do so will make for personal misery. A great
thing spoken, or found in a book, is but one thing. Thought enlivens the day
once it is raised up by continual exercise, he is saying from sometime in the
seventeenth century, and for this author that is the purpose of a book. Our
principles are resurrected, if in a book, and removed to where they can live.
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