He was a professor of English at Georgetown University from 1968-1997 and received several university awards for his teaching.[2] During his tenure at Georgetown, Flint received MacDowell (formerly MacDowell Colony)[3] residency awards in 1976, 1983, and 1985. While at MacDowell, he befriended fellow awardee American composer and printer Paul W. Whear, who hand typeset, and letterpress printed "The Honey and Other Poems for Rosalind" for its publication. Whear's work for solo violin and orchestra "A Poem of Roland" was inspired by one of Flint's poems.[4]
Flint is the subject of the eponymous poem "Roland Flint," an excerpt from which was published in The Brooklyn Review in 2016 and which appeared in its entirety in The Revenant Quarterly in 2023.[5][6]
Flint had a phenomenal memory for poetry and could recite thousands of poems he knew "by heart". He was Poet Laureate of Maryland from 1995-2000, when he resigned due to poor health.[7] He died of pancreatic cancer in 2001 at the age of 66. His papers are held at the University of Maryland.[8]
Selected bibliography
Poetry
Easy (Louisiana State University, 1999)
Pigeon (North Carolina Wesleyan, 1991)
Hearing Voices, with William Stafford, (Willamette University, 1991)
Stubborn (University of illinois1990)
Sicily (North Carolina Wesleyan, 1987)
Resuming Green (The Dial Press, 1982)
Say It (Dryad Press, 1979)
The Honeyand Other Poems for Rosalind (Unicorn Publications, Limited, 1976)