Although these three poems were written fifty years ago (1960s), their contemporary immediacy makes them as vitally relevant and striking now as when they first appeared. The message throughout is clear - cataclysm, destruction and human suffering cannot be avoided, and there is only one path to paradise, through a catharsis of hell and purgatory.
The poems move through nuclear destruction (Hiroshima - Hell) towards a thorough cleansing of the world; through the trauma (Person - Purgatory) of suffering and self-discovery, and through a maelstrom of condemnation and rejection to physical and moral regeneration (Ichor - Paradise) as the ichor of fleshly wounds is restored to its original essence - the divine fluid flowing in the veins of the gods.
"And we can be the gods that tread the ways that never end."