poetry

What it’s like to belong to a biker ‘gang’

As she makes her way to a weekly meeting for those (like her) who love motorbikes, poet and artist Frieda Hughes meditates on speed, ageing and the open road

Friday 10 May 2024 09:58 EDT
At the weight of the previous sky, and the roads / Were washed clean and now dry for a Thursday night, / When bikers meet weekly to be among motorbikes
At the weight of the previous sky, and the roads / Were washed clean and now dry for a Thursday night, / When bikers meet weekly to be among motorbikes (Frieda Hughes)

BIKE NIGHT

Week after week the rain saturated the earth

Until the overspill ran through grain silos

And between the knees of cattle in sheds on hillsides,

Funnelling itself into the rivers below

Until they gagged and gave up their edges.

Trees languished leafless until April split open

Their chrysalis foldings, and then were suddenly green.

But the beeches remained unmoved, dead to the world.

Crispy twigs scratching at air; I feared they would

Never leaf again. And while I waited, I found my mind

Like a bag of squabbling marmosets

Being dragged into hedges by decisions, opportunities,

Set-backs, the egos of others and all kinds of incidents.

Until suddenly, sun. In a blaze of three days in May

The beech trees unravelled their disinterest

At the weight of the previous sky, and the roads

Were washed clean and now dry for a Thursday night,

When bikers meet weekly to be among motorbikes.

My ride there was a meditation on speed and what matters

As each of us age in our wing mirrors.

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