poetry

After 300 years of weather and two world wars, the Sycamore Gap tree could not survive the spite of a saw

In her latest exclusive poem, Frieda Hughes mourns the late, great tree at Hadrian’s Wall – and also muses on what it feels like to be a ‘fugitive’ in London, late at night...

Friday 29 September 2023 09:09 EDT
The major advancements of The Minor Hotels Group Are being celebrated at Manzi’s in Soho, and I am invited
The major advancements of The Minor Hotels Group Are being celebrated at Manzi’s in Soho, and I am invited (Frieda Hughes)

A LONDON MARATHON

As my last guest leaves my gallery’s first opening on the fourth day,

Their arms embracing a painting bought on their way out at 10pm,

I turn to face the white empty spaces now left that denote a success.

I long to sleep, but sleep is fugitive for London;

The major advancements of The Minor Hotels Group

Are being celebrated at Manzi’s in Soho, and I am invited. There will be

Too many oysters to refuse, despite the two hundred miles between me

And their life-size green mermaids. So, I cluster appointments to fill the day

As if it were a shopping cart, leaving home like a fugitive in the 3am dark

To arrive in the southeast at seven. I work my way back through the city

To the party, the M40 and Wales via meetings and an hour’s spare time

At The Groucho Club bar with a tonic and lime. Three brothers beside me

Are celebrating the youngest’s fortieth birthday. One has written a book

About brother-love during lockdown from the Covid isolation

Of his Spanish olive grove. I ask if he has achieved all he’s aimed for

Even as I realise I am half way there; having shovelled and dug and shifted

The soil of all my small goals, I can see the mountains have finally moved

And I have a clear view of the valley beyond. Then the Sycamore Gap tree falls.

After 300 years of weather and two world wars standing at Hadrian’s Wall

It could not survive the spite of a saw.

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