spotters called it the loco
a bridge we straddled
to get bathed in coal
smoke and steam
playing chicken
whilst patiently waiting
for the signals to change
down for south, up for north
oh! the keen anticipation,
known as 15A in those days
it was nothing special,
we’d buy a 2d ticket,
squeeze through the fence
behind platform 6,
skirt the sidings trying
not to get caught
slip through the roundhouse
then cross over to the sheds,
we thought nothing of it
back then, all of us kids did it
Spud, Nelly, Josh and me,
dog-eared Ian Allen book
tucked in our back pockets
duffle bags, Tizer, sandwich
and a chocolate yo-yo
if it was pocket-money day,
these days the bridge is no-go,
too busy, too narrow, mad traffic,
never any kids there now
and they’re building a new road
and excavating the roundhouse
razed to rubble in the ‘70s,
and then all these years later,
a lifetime in a blink,
in the local news
Wellingborough sheds become
an archaeological dig,
even the new relief route
is named Roundhouse Road,
alas, nowadays not a kid in sight
no steam, no grime, no grease
just the crackle and hum
of electricity in the wires
and Time-Team scratching
the earth to rediscover
my childhood
*
© Graham Sherwood 02/22
Right up my street Graham. I love the whole idea, and am a bit jealous that you had access of this kind! Have you seen the film Train of Events with Jack Warner as an engine driver? It features the whole area around Euston and Camden. Half a tizer please! Spawned an idea as well: Pfizer the Appetizer. Ray
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