Poet Laureate Simon Armitage pens poem of lockdown from his Huddersfield home

Poet Laureate Simon Armitage has been compelled to pen a poem of the coronavirus and ensuing lockdown from his home in Huddersfield.
Simon Armitage says he felt a duty to write about coronavirus and the ensuing lockdown.Simon Armitage says he felt a duty to write about coronavirus and the ensuing lockdown.
Simon Armitage says he felt a duty to write about coronavirus and the ensuing lockdown.

The 56-year-old, from Marsden, says he felt a duty to write Lockdown, which begins with being unable to "escape the waking dream of infected fleas".

Speaking on Desert Island Discs, he said: "I felt some kind of duty to write to the moment, to say something about now.

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"And that wasn't too difficult. The images and language were queuing up to be written about.

Simon Armitage says he felt a duty to write about coronavirus and the ensuing lockdown. Victoria Jones/PA WireSimon Armitage says he felt a duty to write about coronavirus and the ensuing lockdown. Victoria Jones/PA Wire
Simon Armitage says he felt a duty to write about coronavirus and the ensuing lockdown. Victoria Jones/PA Wire

"To have not have written about it, I would have felt as if I hadn't really stepped up and met the challenge".

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Before the pandemic, he has written about the moon landings, celebrated the Cumbrian countryside and paid homage to John Keats.

And despite describing himself as a pessimist, Mr Armitage said he feels optimistic about the future.

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"Unless we see hope and some kind of enlightenment at the end of this, that we've learnt something, then we are just going to be wallowing in a very difficult situation," he tells the show's host Lauren Laverne.

"The weather has helped - the fact that trees are greening and flowers are opening in front of our eyes is helpful and has pointed towards a future."

Speaking from his home, he also shares on the BBC Radio 4 show his relief that he did not get the Poet Laureate post 10 years earlier when he was first mooted for the job.

"William Hill (the bookmakers), I think, had odds on me. My dad lost a little bit of money," he said. "But it wouldn't have been the right time."

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