BYPltntctlSuacrslPono
| |aveyouevercounted?wouldthinkl-l",rouwoulonever count,outI amuptoforty-four.Forty-fourchairs.Thisdoesnotcountstoolsor benchesoranythingoutside.I havesaid beforethatI mayhave somethingof a chairproblem.Aquartetof choirswithstgle.From theback'An earlgtgth-centurgEnglishPegencgide chairromJoeqO'ConnoriConsignmentShop;o Eiedermeier-stglearmchairfromtheouthor'sown collection;a 79th-centurgFrenchpoinfed ormchoirfromPearTreeDesign& Antiques;of95osNormonChernerswivelchairromtheouthortowncollection.PhotogrophedottheKonsosCitg Museum.
Youmight thinka chairproblemis arather afeproblemohave;*nyusbandmightnot agree.'m notpromiscuous;l'm a chairover.Theydonot comeandgo.Onceheyareherecanarelyeleasethem.Chairsareenchanting.hairsarecharming.Chairsanbefurnitureandfunctional,r chairsanbe nothingmorethaneye andy.love hairs.FnovCratnToErenxtrvYou mightnothaveconsideredhis,butchairshavenot beenaroundfor-everunlessyouconsiderockschairs.Chairs,f we definehembyegs, seatanda back,haveonly existedor he lastfour thousandyearsgiveor take.Okay,granted,t'sagoodlittlebit oftime,but stillthefirst chairswerehrones.AregularJoanikeme wouldnothavehadchairsn say2500BC. Or450BC. No,chairswereor kingsandpharaohsndbigshots.Whilefewwood chairsfromancientGreecehave survived,we haveimagesof theirexistenceand designfrommurals andpottery.In addition,somehronesmadeofmarble ndotherstoneromthis eraarestill around.
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