This is based on a well known hymn, but also what Chesterton said of God in his wonderful book "Orthodoxy", about God never tiring of the act of creation. There is also a touch of autobiography there.
At First Light
I woke before the alarm, though I couldn’t have said why. Something in the air felt different, lighter, expectant, as though the world were holding itself open for me alone. I lay still for a moment, listening. No cars yet, no footsteps on the lane. Only the soft, deliberate call of a blackbird somewhere beyond the garden wall.
I rose quietly and pushed the window open. Cool morning air drifted in, carrying the faint sweetness of wet earth. Rain had passed through in the night, washing everything clean. The garden below glistened as though it had been remade while I slept.
I stepped outside barefoot. The grass was cold, but not unkind. Dew clung to my skin, waking me more gently than any alarm ever could. I breathed deeply, letting the freshness settle inside me.
It reminded me of childhood and those early mornings when I would slip out before anyone else stirred, convinced I was the first person ever to see the sun rise. Back then, dawn felt like a secret shared only with me. I realise now that the feeling hasn’t entirely left.
I walked slowly along the garden path, touching petals as I passed. The roses bowed under the weight of dew, fragile yet determined. The air smelled of promise. Renewal. A quiet assurance that life, however bruised or tangled, always found a way to begin again.
At the far end of the garden stood the old wooden bench. I sat, letting the sunlight warm my face. The blackbird’s song rose again, so clear, confident and unhurried. It wasn’t performing. It was simply being.
I closed my eyes.
For a moment I imagined the world at its first dawn, a myth yes, but a myth is a dream alive. It was untouched, unspoiled, shimmering with possibility. Light falling on grass that had never known a footprint. Water glistening on leaves that had never been shaken by wind. A garden waiting for its first visitor. It was like Narnia before Aslan sang the world into being.
I breathed in slowly, letting the thought settle.
Every morning is a small echo of that first one. A reminder that no matter what has been lost, no matter what sorrow has taken root, the day ahead is unclaimed. Unwritten. A gift.
When I opened my eyes again, the sun had climbed a little higher, turning the dew into scattered sparks. The blackbird hopped along the wall, head tilted, as if checking that I was paying attention.
“I am,” I whispered.
I stood, steadier now, and walked back toward the house. The day would bring its tasks, its challenges, its ordinary burdens. But it would also bring light. And song. And the quiet, persistent truth that creation is not a single moment long ago, but something renewed with every dawn.
A new day had broken. And I was ready to step into it.