This content is a poem titled "At The Clubhouse." It uses vivid imagery and metaphor to depict the speaker's experience and feelings.
The poem starts by setting the scene of a rainy day at a clubhouse. The speaker feels like an outsider, disconnected from the "blue-eye circles" and "predictable squares" of the people around them. The rain is personified, and the speaker uses similes to compare themselves to "clone-stagnant, loose skin and slow water."
As the rain stops, a "famous" man enters, described as having a life that "rests at a great distance." The speaker, in contrast, feels unsteady and insecure, offering "minutest electrical resistance" to the world. The encounter with the man, brief and insignificant, leaves the speaker feeling even more invisible and insignificant. The poem ends with the speaker's fear of writer's block after drinking beer, further emphasizing their anxiety and inability to connect with the world around them.
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by Roman Newell às medium.com 11-10-2024
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