As a teenager, I had viewed the motorcycle imports from the Far East with the scepticism and chauvinism typical of a British youth of the time. Japanese bikes didn't sound like British bikes and they didn't look like British bikes, but as many soon found out, they didn't leak like British bikes and they didn't break like British bikes either. Throughout the whole time we used it, that little Honda used no oil, used very little fuel, nothing broke and it competently carried us without complaint for many hundreds of miles.
But, while the Honda earned my respect, I didn't love it, more than I would love a refrigerator or sewing machine. It did the job it was designed to do with quiet efficiency but lacked that indefinable quality that connects rider and machine. Gallons of digital ink have been spilled across the internet by people more skilled with word and thought than me, trying to define the nature of 'motorcycle soul', so I won't try here. However, for me, there is far more to motorcycling than efficiency, and I was just as happy to sell the Honda when we were done.
The Road To Missanabie Nick Adams pp90-1