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Blossomise and Dwell

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Blossomise and Dwell

By: Simon Armitage
Narrated by: Simon Armitage
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About this listen

An age-old subject is given new perspectives in Blossomise, a collection with change at its heart. Blossomise celebrates the ecstatic arrival of spring blossom just as it acknowledges, too, its melancholic disappearance. Full of energetic leaps of imagination and language, the twenty-one poems hopscotch between intense momentary haikus that honour the Japanese traditions of the blossom festival and stand-alone lyrical pieces that take in the stylistic tones of ballads, hymns, songs, prayers and nursery rhymes. From a crashed Ford Capri wrapped around the immovable trunk of a cherry tree, to saplings flourishing among skyscrapers and urban sprawl, the fizz and froth of the annual blossom display is explored here both as an exuberant emblem of the natural world and a nervous marker of our vulnerable climate. Commissioned by the National Trust and published in collaboration as part of their annual Blossom programme and campaign.

Simon Armitage was inspired to write the poems in Dwell by the Lost Gardens of Heligan in Cornwall, an ambitious restoration project where history and mystery coexist. The reawakened landscape with its woods, meadows and 'jungle' offers a bustling, fertile realm for all sorts of creatures to inhabit. Armitage uses elements of riddle and folklore to animate a series of dwellings: the 'twig-and-leaf crow's-nest squat' of a squirrel's drey, a beaver lodge's 'spillikin stave church' and a hive's 'reactor core'. Distinctions between human and animal, natural and cultivated, are blurred, emphasising commonality and creating a vibrant account of 'non-stop stop-motion life'.

Dwell warns of the fragility of these spaces and their dwellers, exposed to relentless and sadly familiar environmental threats. Just as a garden provides refuge for wildlife, so do these intricate poems offer lasting homes to those who dwell within their lines.

'These are poems full of a winning, pleasurable charm.' Guardian Best Recent Poetry, about Dwell

'Armitage is that rare beast: a poet whose work is ambitious, accomplished and complex as well as popular.' Sunday Telegraph

'Armitage looks outwards not inwards, which is probably key to his well-deserved popularity.' Daily Mail

©2025 Simon Armitage (P)2025 Faber & Faber
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If only Simon Armitage was more productive. It’s not that he’s in any sense unproductive, it’s just that one gets to the end of these works and wants to move on to another one but one finds that they’re all played already and several or many timer over at that.
I will replay this collection doubtless more times to come and given the fair number of times I have already done so I expect I won’t over tire of it. If only he would write a few more works though. One a month would be about right..

I want to squat in his shed

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I went to Japan this Spring. I could have stayed in bed and listened to this poetic trumpeting of blossom’s arrival. Blossomise is a gorgeous show-and-tell of the spectacle, the thrill of the annual awakening, the fancy dress festival that happens right on our doorstep.,. in city and country. Hearing the author read is a treat. Love the mix of poems and haikus. (Listen to The Poet Laureate
Has Gone To His Shed for more haikuing.) Get the book too - it’s a delicious artefact. Keep it handy for daily dipping.

Lush landscapes

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