but it’s still a chair, reads the sign taped to one of the blue ones
at the poetry center, the message a poem itself, though maybe more a koan,
which I doubt someone meant it to be, though you never know—
poetry found everywhere, after all, especially during April
(Oh, to be in England Now that April’s there), a month dedicated
to the art form, two lines of observation taped to a most ordinary
blue chair atop four sturdy, or not-so-sturdy, legs in chrome—
and oh, look what just appeared— another poem.
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With thanks to Patrick Grizzell and the board members of the Sacramento Poetry Center for their devotion to the art form and for hosting so many marvelous events during National Poetry Month. SPC supports all kinds of writers around the greater Sacramento region. Donations are always welcome by scrolling to the bottom of the events page and clicking on the “donations” button.
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The lines “Oh, to be in England / Now that April’s there” are by the English poet Robert Browning, the opening to “Home-Thoughts From Abroad,” written in 1845 while he was in Italy, shortly before his marriage to Elizabeth Barrett, herself a fine poet (and nowadays better known than her husband). It is a gem of a poem about spring, which you can read here.
A poem (author unknown) at the Sacramento Poetry Center / Photo: Jan Haag