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Arc of the Poet, Part 2: Tour de Force

Arc of the Poet
Part 1: Life Poetry
Part 2: Tour de Force
Part 3: True Love
Part 4: Spinning Out
Part 5: Wake-Up Call
Part 6: Serious Dreams
Part 7: Home Stretch
Part 8: Feedback
Part 9: Dear Departures
Part 10: Good Poetry
Part 11: Rewrites
Part 12: Resistance
Part 13: Fame and Fortune
Part 14: Ramblings
Part 15: Being

Between 1978 and 1989, I went from 12 to 23 … from wondering about being a man to being one.

I have a short stack of decent poetic writings from those days, and as you’d expect, they are about things like love, friends, and life’s big events, positive and otherwise. I moved each year of high school … from Greenville my freshman year (Scott’s sensational senior one) to Chattanooga, Tennessee, then Ft. Lauderdale, Florida. When her second marriage ended, Mom and I moved to Orlando for what was to be my senior year, and her career phase next.

With so much moving, a lot of my writing was about what I believe T.S. Eliot called “melancholy.” As my studies continued, I gained some new influences. A. E. Housman is still a favorite, discovered during the Advanced Placement English class I lucked into that year, where I learned so much about things I care about, courtesy of Mrs. Alice Wright and great writers like Ernest Hemingway, John Steinbeck, Aldous Huxley, George Orwell, Ralph Waldo Emerson, Thomas Hardy, and so many others.

I moved out right after I turned 18, and began making my own way in Orlando. I joined the U.S. Air Force Reserve and was in boot camp in San Antonio for my 19th birthday on May 5, 1985. That summer, I returned to Orlando and started college, and by the time I graduated in December, 1990, my six-year Air Force enlistment was done.

My experiences in the military were important in my writing, and another recurring subject over time has been my bro. As we grew up, we came to appreciate each other even more, while also regularly butting heads. I think we both had some rough edges when it came to interpersonal relationships, so it’s good we’ve had each other for study material.
Here’s a poem I wrote for Scott back in 1989.

Brother

Having tried, in times before,
to embellish our folklore
and to capture once in words
things our brotherhood incurs

we have somehow fallen short.
Yet, we gather our support
from the confidence we share
simply knowing other’s there.

That’s enough. It does us fine.
We both walk our separate line.
But, at least, we’ve had our fun,
and we’ll have more ‘fore we’re done.

Take good care along your walks.
Though you’re there, you’re here in thoughts
giving strength through every wake.
We are one as breath we take.

I also wanted to share one other piece of my creative writing here, written in close proximity to that one. Along with many other writings I’m very proud of, the poem above ultimately wound up in a collection I pulled together in 1990 entitled “Just.” The poem below is the second-to-last in that manuscript. Also written in 1989, six years later it provided my greatest opportunity to-date in the literary world, and my biggest challenge. At one time I had much higher hopes for this, but anyway, here is its unceremonious world premiere. I hope you enjoy it.

The Gondoliers Sing Love Songs

Hand in hand, my fiancee and I walk the streets of Venice.
The gondoliers sing love songs, and we reminisce–
Rejoicing in growing together … despairing in growing apart.

Hand in hand, my lover and I stroll the streets of Venice.
The gondoliers sing love songs, and we search the silence–
As two silent rivers run beneath the surficial choir.

Hand in hand, my first love and I survey the streets of Venice.
The gondoliers sing love songs, and we are children again–
Unable to move in fear of breaking the virginal, sacred vows.

Hand in hand, my prospect and I serenade the streets of Venice.
The gondoliers sing love songs, and we are their chivalrous companions.
Awkward in our hand clasp, we spy upon the other couples.

Pen in hand, my imagination and I wander the streets of Venice.
The gondoliers sing love songs, but I cannot hear them.
Wherein does love become an everlasting aspect of life?

Hand in hand, I stand alone on the edge of the world.
The gondoliers of Venice are far away; so, too, are their love songs.
And I know I can write love–and sing it–but can I keep it?

Author, communications consultant, publisher, and career guide Roger Darnell is principal of creative-industry PR firm, The Darnell Works Agency.

13 Comments on “Arc of the Poet, Part 2: Tour de Force

  1. Found your site on google today and really liked it.. i bookmarked it and will be back to check it out some more later …

    1. I suggest wrtniig something new that may not be as personal or meaningful. Something that you won’t mind sharing with others. Maybe something generalized that doesn’t have to do with necessarily you but others. Poetry can be a deep and meaningful thing, But it can also be simple and meant to be shared with others. Something beautiful as that should be shared with others. Good luck on finding the confidence and courage to share what you have written.

  2. I think I need some kind of Idiot’s Guide to Poetry because the issue for me is I rllaey don’t understand what’s going on. I need a guide to step me through what’s so good about a piece because I can’t see it usually. Really, I know nothing about poetry, although I do understand that I should.

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