How Thomas Carlyle’s “Today” Solves Modern Digital Burnout
Every morning, we wake up to a finite masterpiece—yet we usually spend it scrolling through someone else’s.

Today
Thomas Caryle
So here hath been dawning
Another blue Day:
Think wilt thou let it
Slip useless away.
Out of Eternity
This new Day is born;
Into Eternity,
At night, will return.
Behold it aforetime
No eye ever did:
So soon it forever
From all eyes is hid.
Here hath been dawning
Another blue Day:
Think wilt thou let it
Slip useless away.
Reflection
Thomas Carlyle’s “Today” serves as a striking wake-up call for our hyper-connected, modern lives. Written long before the dawn of smartphones and relentless notification pings, the poem tackles a timeless human struggle: the tragic ease with which we let time slip through our fingers. Carlyle reminds us that each day is a unique, unrepeatable gift “out of Eternity born.” It has never existed before, and once the sun sets, it vanishes forever into the rearview mirror of history.
In contemporary society, we are constantly plagued by the illusion of infinite time, buried under the weight of passive consumption and endless digital noise. We treat our days as resources to be managed or, worse, background noise to be ignored. Carlyle’s repetition of the central question—Think wilt thou let it / Slip useless away—acts as a gentle yet firm intervention. It demands that we pause, look up from our screens, and actively reclaim our attention. The “blue Day” isn’t just twenty-four hours to survive; it is a pristine canvas. Applying Carlyle’s wisdom today means choosing presence over distraction, intention over apathy, and recognizing that how we spend our hours is, ultimately, how we spend our lives.
As you read this poem, ask yourself:
In a world that constantly demands your attention, what is one deliberate choice you can make today to ensure this unique gift of a day doesn’t slip uselessly away?