C P ByronBorn in Greensboro, North Carolina, in October 1954, Campbell Paul Byron had scant contact with his parents and was effectively fostered by a series of African American women he cherished throughout his life. Byron eventually attended Guilford Colleg, a small Quaker school in Greensboro, and there found a surprising stability. He studied philosophy, launched himself into modern poetry, and briefly mentored with resident poet Ann Deagon. Byron was also introduced to Buddhism, which played a prime role in his thought and writing. Through Buddhism, he found Chinese and Japanese Haiku, Tanka, and Haibun. In Europe, Byron vaguely modeled his career after those of Wallace Stevens and William Carlos Williams, though in a quite different profession. Byron worked in advertising and rose to become Director of Communications Worldwide for a global conglomerate based in New York and Paris. He composed ceaselessly and Gypsies of the Unattainable presents the bulk of his work. On October 22, 2020, during a short trip to America, Byron vanished from Ocracoke Island. A witness described seeing Byron's beloved, elderly Lab knocked down by waves and dragged offshore. The poet raced to reach the dog but was unable to calm the animal in strong wind and heavy currents. Both disappeared in turbulent seas. The witness described a rainbow-like brume above the froth at just this moment and then dissipating minutes after. The dog's body was found on the beach the next morning, but a search by the Coast Guard never recovered the poet's body. Read More Read Less
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