2 In his Commonplace Book (Bodl. MS. Eng. poet. c. 42, s.v. “Cohaesion,” “Deitie,” and “Omnipresence,” foil. 26v.2, 33.2-33v.2, and 71v.2-72.1) Traherne copied from More's Divine Dialogues (London, 1668), Dialogue 1, pp. 32, 66-67, 88-90, 93, 104-108, 112, 119, 132-133, and 157-160. On the basis of a quotation by Gladys Wade in her Thomas Traherne, Frances L. Colby divined that “Cohaesion” (fol. 26v.2) was from the Dialogues, but she did not have access to Traherne's MS and did not know the extent of the borrowing (“Thomas Traherne and Henry More,” MLN, lxii, 1947, 490–492). On the Commonplace Book, cited hereafter as CB, see Carol L. Marks, “Thomas Traherne's Commonplace Book,” PBSA lviii (1964), 458-465.