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Three of the leading contenders to be Britain's first female poet laureate have ruled themselves out of contention for the post.
The ancient role, currently held by Andrew Motion and remunerated by 630 bottles of Spanish sherry, is due to be reappointed next year.
But hopes that the 10-year tenure, whose previous incumbents have included Ted Hughes and John Betjeman, could go to a woman look set to be dashed.
Almost none of Britain's leading female poets are interested in the position. Wendy Cope, who had previously been a favourite for the role, has poured scorn on it, saying that she "never wanted" to be laureate. "Personally I feel it is an archaic post and means nothing. It's simply not important," she said.
"It comes from the media, this idea of writing royal poems," added Cope, who has attracted an ardent female fan base for her down-to-earth outpourings on relationships and men.
Cope is not alone in her distaste for the high-profile post, which will become available when Motion's 10 years in the seat come to a close next year.
Award-winning poets Fleur Adcock and Ruth Padel, who have both been tipped for the role, agree that writing for the Queen was probably more trouble than it was worth. Adcock says that quite apart from the extra work it involves, the role continues to command a very meagre salary.
"It's terribly hard work for very little pay," she says. "The poet laureate is fine as an institution, as long as I don't have to do it."
The fee for taking on the grand title is still just £5000 ($13,000) a year, and that, plus the Spanish sherry - no matter how fine - is not enough of an incentive to abandon literary integrity and solitude, says Adcock, whose work has earned her an OBE and the Queen's Medal for Poetry.
"There's no way I'd do it, I like a quiet life. I like to be in the garden or visiting my children," she says. "When I started poetry it was something you did in private, not in public."
Ruth Padel, the chair of the UK Poetry Society, says she thinks most talented writers would give the post a wide berth.
"I think every good poet would have the same answer: you'd be wary about your work," she says. "My impulse would be to turn it down." She adds that wider factors might affect her decision. "There are other things to consider, such as what it would mean for a woman to do it, and what it could do for poetry in the community to make it more loved, but you'd be worried you wouldn't be able to write what you wanted to."
Ledbury Poetry Festival's director, Chloe Garner, who delivered her impassioned appeal to the Queen to break with tradition and appoint a female laureate, rejected Cope's assertions that the job was outdated. "I don't agree with that," she says. "I think it's really good that the job exists as it's the one high-profile job as a poet."
Garner continues to be optimistic that the role can be filled by a woman. "If it went to a new upcoming poet, that would be just as good; it doesn't have to be a big name," she says.
The position was last vacant when Ted Hughes died in 1999, at which point then Prime Minister Tony Blair changed the role from a life appointment to a decade-long posting.
- INDEPENDENT