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Harlem Renaissance Writer Eric D. Walrond a poet in the Harlem Renaissance, led a career in not only poetry and journalism but worked in various jobs. In order to make money in New York, after moving from place to place, like Barbados and Panama; Walrond shifted from unrelated work to in the end publishing his own work in high end companies and contributing his work in relation to the Harlem Renaissance.

Early Life and Education Due to his childhood traumas in the Caribbean, Walrond will later write poetry that work with his emotions. His work will make big impacts with racial discrimination and will be awarded for his exemplary writing.

Later Life in England Eric Derwent Walrond published his first short story called, “The Palm Porch” this poem goes into description about a Brothel in the Canal Zone, where a merciless plot to take over the land takes place.[3]

In the Royal Court Theatre, Walrond produces a literary work in "Masks of Arcady". A man named Robert Bone speaks more into detail of this production in his CLA Journal.

References: "'Tropic Death' Presents Life's Horrors In Beautiful Prose". NPR.org. Retrieved 22 May 2019.

Charras, Françoise (1 June 2017), Julien, Claude (ed.), "Writing on the External Frontiers of the Caribbean: Eric Walrond and Vernon Anderson", Regards croisés sur les Afro-Américains : Mélange en l'honneur de Michel Fabre, GRAAT, Presses universitaires François-Rabelais, pp. 245–266, ISBN 9782869064690, retrieved 22 May 2019

Further reading: Farrison, W. Edward. CLA Journal, vol. 20, no. 1, 1976, pp. 135–140. JSTOR, www.jstor.org/stable/44329234.