We were wild women
that night, when the
trees waved, whistled
and wove their spectral
shadows in the night.
Howling, a gale
streamed past our
spindly lines. We called
out to each other, another
runner shrieked in my ear.
I jumped higher than you
might think.
Dark, though only
early, but blackest
winter made the
lamplight dim. A
late-walked dog a tripping
hazard that might prove fatal;
the head-torch glare
seared my night-sight.
‘Whole trees in motion,
effort needed to walk
against the wind.’ All
ordinary cares cast
sideways; office politics,
lacklustre lovers, let
loose and hurled about.
An eye, a calm, a
freedom borne of
drama outside the
domestic sphere.
We were wild and
free, we ran faster,
we ran
like the wind.
Note: The quotation in the third stanza is the description of ‘land conditions’ for number 7 on the Beaufort scale. This scale has captivated me since I learnt it as a little girl. Now I realise this is because it is all poetry: ‘Large branches in motion. Whistling heard in overhead wires. Umbrella use becomes difficult. Empty plastic bins tip over.’ (number 6, but it wasn’t dramatic enough for the poem).