Publisher's Synopsis
Antidotes, an outstanding collection by one of Britain's finest living writers, gathers the best poems C. H. Sisson has written since God Bless Karl Marx! (1987). Antidotes differs from his earlier books. A great many of the new poems are in rhymes quatrains, couplets and other strict forms, as though the seventeenth century, which marked his early work, had re-established its hold. The poems possess a sever explicitness of theme: Sisson considers old age - of a man, of a culture and its institutions - and the difficulty of the incarnate God. 'The price of every poem', he wrote long ago, 'is a twist of the knife'.