Gerald Burns is a leading practitioner of long-lined, thickly textured
verse. These / long lines are long life to us, go back to Kenneth Irby's
'A Set' I saw first in / a flyer from Lawrence, KS where Burroughs chats
with Cage whose spitbubbles / may remind us with Zukofsky the heart of
the bluebonnet's black. Anyone can learn from anything, he writes, and
as these lines from For J. R. Here indicate, Burns has learned much: his
long dragnet lines display a lifetime of wide reading and close
observation from an astonishing range of subjects.