This Amazing Gift of Being

Why do we have this amazing gift of being?

The ability to experience, to think and to imagine, to care and to love?

I love the words of a little-known writer, Thomas Traherne. He writes about the gift of life in a poem called ‘Salutation’:

1

These little Limbs,

These Eyes and Hands which here I find,

These rosie Cheeks wherewith my Life begins,

Where have ye been? Behind

What Curtain were ye from me hid so long!

Where was? in what Abyss, my Speaking Tongue?

2

When silent I,

So many thousand thousand years,

Beneath the Dust did in a Chaos lie,

How could I Smiles or Tears,

Or Lips or Hands or Eyes or Ears perceiv?

Welcome ye Treasures which I now receive.

3

I that so long

Was Nothing from Eternity,

Did little think such Joys as Ear or Tongue,

To Celebrate or See:

Such Sounds to hear, such Hands to feel, such Feet,

Beneath the Skies, on such a Ground to meet.

4

New Burnished Joys!

Which yellow Gold and Pearl excel!

Such Sacred Treasures are the Limbs in Boys,

In which a Soul doth Dwell;

Their Organized Joints, and Azure veins

More Wealth include, then all the World contains.

5

From Dust I rise,

And out of Nothing now awake,

These Brighter Regions which salute mine Eyes,

A Gift from God I take.

The Earth, the Seas, the Light, the Day, the Skies,

The Sun and Stars are mine; if those I prize.

6

Long time before

I in my Mother’s Womb was born,

A God preparing did this Glorious Store,

The World for me adorn.

Into this Eden so Divine and fair,

So Wide and Bright, I come his Son and Heir.

7

A Stranger here

Strange Things doth meet, strange Glories See;

Strange Treasures lodged in this fair World appear,

Strange all, and New to me.

But that they mine should be, who nothing was,

That Strangest is of all, yet brought to pass.

‘The Salutation’ by Thomas Traherne

He thinks about the gift of his body, of his experience, of having life itself.

He sees life as emerging from nothing – we each have our own personal “Big Bang” as another writer, Richard Rohr, said, and he takes it all as a gift from God.

I find it a beautiful poem. A poem that speaks to me about the beauty of the experience of life.

Life can be good when we are able to be grateful for each day of our existence, and gift our gift of being to others, as well as enjoy life for what it is.

Meditate on Things…

“Sure Man was born to meditate on things,

And to contemplate the eternal springs

Of God and Nature…”

Thomas Traherne, “Dumbness”

Colemere is small, tranquil lake in North Shropshire, which I have posted about before, and this beautiful mute swan lingered near the banks on a recent visit.

Reflection seems to be as natural for us as humans as it is to the surface of water, and it is something that is distinctively human.

Colemere

I saw beauty in these simple, but complex, reflections of light and dark on the surface of the water, just as I did in the simple white beauty of the swan.

And I agreed with Thomas Traherne: “Sure Man was born to meditate on things“.

His lines are from a beautiful, thoughtful poem called “Dumbness” (in the sense of not being able to speak), and you can read the full poem here.

When the world speaks to us in such beautiful, reflective ways, it is good, very good.

I hope these reflections, and Traherne’s poetry, have spoken to you.

Silence and Reflection with Thomas Traherne

“Sure Man was born to meditate on things,  
And to contemplate the eternal springs  
Of God and Nature, glory, bliss, and pleasure;  
That life and love might be his Heavenly treasure;  
And therefore speechless made at first, that He
Might in himself profoundly busied be:”

Reflection is as natural to being human as it is to the surface of water. The image above is of Colemere, a tranquil “mere” (small lake) in North Shropshire, dating back to the Ice Age. As Thomas Traherne says: “Sure Man was born to meditate on things“.

He continues:

This, my dear friends, this was my blessed case;  
For nothing spoke to me but the fair face  
Of Heaven and Earth, before myself could speak...


Then did I dwell within a world of light,  
Distinct and separate from all men’s sight,  
Where I did feel strange thoughts, and such things see  
That were, or seemed, only revealed to me...


“D’ye ask me what? It was with clearer eyes  
To see all creatures full of Deities;
Especially one’s self: And to admire  
The satisfaction of all true desire:  
Twas to be pleased with all that God hath done;  
Twas to enjoy even all beneath the sun:  
Twas with a steady and immediate sense
To feel and measure all the excellence  
Of things... every stone, and every star a tongue,  
And every gale of wind a curious song..."

These lines are from his beautiful poem called “Dumbness” (in the sense of not being able to speak), and you can read the full poem here.

Ironically, Traherne is anything but “dumb” when he writes about his pre-language childhood world. It seems a heavenly state, where the whole world “spoke to me”.

When the world speaks to us in such beautiful ways, it is good, very good.

These reflections on Colemere did just that.

I hope that they, and Traherne’s poetry, speak to you.

Colemere, Shropshire (UK), March 2021