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Irby was not a student at Black Mountain, but he has had contacts with Black Mountain poets throughout his career. This direction in
American writing connects to experimental forms now loosely called “Language” poetry. Ed Dorn, a former visiting professor at the University of Kansas, was a student of Olson and close friend of Irby.
In this elegy, written at Dorn’s death, Irby displaces his emotional grief with an image of farm animals in a bare pasture. The title’s season is near solstice, the darkest, most mysterious time of year, and also a time when losses are most sharply seen. [For Ed Dorn –2 Apr 1929 – 10 Dec 1999]
in the far back pasture animals have lined up in lament dog goat pony horse and beyond them a cow in its astronomical agility a real dog and pony show giving tribute back on their hind legs musicians at the window lacking the cock his call the show of the world
along the fence rows in with the hedge apples the night winter cray bushes are in bloom. the cray? what are they? that is their rhyme
Education: Kenneth Irby, born in Bowie, Texas, was raised in Ft.
Scott, Kansas. He received an A.M. from Harvard University and M.L.S. from the University of California-Berkeley. Career: Irby is an English professor at the University of Kansas. He has been a Visiting Professor at the University of Copenhagen. He has awards from the Fund for Poetry and the Gertrude Stein Awards in Innovative American Poetry. His books include: Studies (First Intensity Press 2001), Ridge to Ridge (Other Wind Press 2001), Call Steps (Station Hill Press 1992), A Set (Tansy 1983), Orexis (Station Hill Press 1981), Catalpa (Tansy 1972), To Max Douglas (Tansy 1971).
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