April is Poetry month in America. What a lovely concept. There are all sorts of ways to celebrate it, including signing up to get a “Poem A Day” emailed to you for the entire month (go here to sign up).

There is also a sweet idea called “Poem in Your Pocket Day” which is on April 30 when people all over the country will carry a favorite poem in their pocket to share with friends, co-workers, students, etc. during the day.

Here are some of the ways you could participate:

  • Start a “poems for pockets” give-a-way in your school or workplace
  • Urge local businesses to offer discounts for those carrying poems
  • Post pocket-sized verses in public places
  • Handwrite some lines on the back of your business cards
  • Start a street team to pass out poems in your community
  • Distribute bookmarks with your favorite immortal lines
  • Add a poem to your email footer
  • Post a poem on your blog or social networking page
  • Project a poem on a wall, inside or out
  • Text a poem to friends
    And here’s the first poem I got:

    Yellow Bowl
    by Rachel Contreni Flynn

    If light pours like water
    into the kitchen where I sway
    with my tired children,

    if the rug beneath us
    is woven with tough flowers,
    and the yellow bowl on the table

    rests with the sweet heft
    of fruit, the sun-warmed plums,
    if my body curves over the babies,

    and if I am singing,
    then loneliness has lost its shape,
    and this quiet is only quiet.

    And here’s one of my all-time favorites, by Seamus Heaney:

    The Skylight

    You were the one for skylights. I opposed
    Cutting into the seasoned tongue-and-groove
    Of pitch pine. I liked it low and closed,
    Its claustrophobic, nest-up-in-the-roof
    Effect. I liked the snuff-dry feeling,
    The perfect, trunk-lid fit of the old ceiling.
    Under there, it was all hutch and hatch.
    The blue slates kept the heat like midnight thatch.

    But when the slates came off, extravagant
    Sky entered and held surprise wide open.
    For days I felt like an inhabitant
    Of that house where the man sick of the palsy
    Was lowered through the roof, had his sins forgiven,
    Was healed, took up his bed and walked away.

  • Showing 2 comments
    • Nicola
      Reply

      What a wonderful idea! And for two amazing poems in the middle of a rather trying day: thank you.

    • vibha
      Reply

      Sitting in Heathrow airport I think of Yeats. Here’s what I can remember

      He wishes for the Clothes of Heaven

      Had I the heavens embroidered clothes
      Enwrought with gold and silver light
      The dark the dim and the light clothes
      Of night, light and half light
      I would spread them under your feet
      But I being poor have only my dreams
      I have spread my dreams under your feet
      Tread softly because you tread on my dreams

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