Christopher Corbell started writing poems when he was a teenager. He published a chapbook and worked on a literary journal in the 1990s, but largely drifted away from the medium during the next several decades to focus on his music career, professional responsibilities and other interests.
The Washougal resident said that he has “circled back” to poetry in the last several years, however.
“I’m spending more time on it lately,” said Corbell, a songwriter, composer, musician, and cofounder of the Washougal Songcraft Festival (WSF) nonprofit organization.
“I think the poetic way of seeing the world has always been important to me. Even if I wasn’t writing poetry, if I was writing songs or just reading, I’ve always read poetry, even when I’m not writing it. There’s something about the way that it can bring together our intuition and our longings and other areas of our emotions and our ideas (that) doesn’t really happen in any other art form. It’s really magical to me.”
Corbell’s poem, “A Present from Apollo,” has been selected for the 14th season of Poetry Moves, a program that displays poems by local poets in C-TRAN buses. The program is coordinated by Artstra, a Vancouver-based nonprofit organization that advocates for the arts in Clark County and Southwest Washington.