The Sycamore Gap tree, on Hadrian’s Wall in Northumberland, was cut down in an act of vandalism last week.
Chris McDonnell reflects: Sycamore Gap
Standing in a sloping gap
in a dry stone wall
a sycamore tree spread
its open hand shadow
across the starlit Northern sky.
A gathering point for years,
the Sycamore Gap marked meetings
and endless dreams, shelter
from rain, shade in summer sun.
Now felled by chain saw
in a late September night
spotlit by stars leaving
a hollow echo of space in a
shattered ancient wall
A single tear-drop stain of loss.
Editor’s note: Another young man, Kieran Chapman, planted a young sycamore next to the fallen tree ‘to restore hope’. However, according to the BBC: “The man who planted a sapling near the felled Sycamore Gap tree said he was ‘devastated’ National Trust bosses had removed it...But National Trust officials said they had to remove it because of the site’s Unesco World Heritage status.”