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LOOKING FOR LUCY
Lucy the sentinel, skirts the roadside,
harks back to a bygone age of travel,
and looks for traces of trolley buses:
like the four four six to Wolverhampton.

She lies low, hides right before your eyes,
too preoccupied to see you pass by;
and like a magician clicking fingers
she disappears behind the commonplace:

camouflaged by pavement grey or verge green,
masked by the beckoning of traffic lights,
she’s silent behind sounds of diesel, petrol,
and cloaked by chattering pedestrians;

though once seen you can find her everywhere
in the midst of all the off-beat places;
searching for liveries of green and cream -
she wears a brooch like a crest, an emblem.

Take your eyes off her and she’ll fade away,
remembering the trams and their horses;
sometimes she’ll take a ticket to the past
on a twelve minute journey to Newbridge.

Below the sparking overhead wires she’ll
switch the power for the tracks, and some will
re-emerge years hence, shedding bitumen
and chippings - as if they’re looking for Lucy.

Looking for Lucy started as a poem and evolved into
a visual piece. ‘Lucy Boxes’ are the many cast iron boxes on the street that were originally installed to power the old trolleybus network in Wolverhampton.


To hear this poem go to the main menu and click on the Poetry Jukebox icon