Posted: 21/01/22
Sunset 8 January - Amanda Lowe
Vigil – came in on the train, full of people . ‘I will be watching over you,’ I said to myself.
Up there, in the eyrie, the streets I could see looked deserted – dogwalkers in Queen’s Gardens. Who am I watching over? This raggle-taggle city of beautiful buildings and modern horrors. Trying to re-invent itself – sometimes succeeding, sometimes failing, always trying. Left behind city from the bombings – I thought of that – everything that was obliterated and what remained after the war. I thought about my friend who I said goodbye to yesterday at his funeral. I thought of what he’d left behind – everything, and nobody to leave it to. No-one to watch over his things, his pictures, his belongings. I will watch over things. I watch the dogs playing. I want a dog to watch over. I watch the rooftops and the wet roads and the greys and the bright green Queen’s Gardens where the dogwalkers are. I think about where they live – these dogs and their owners – in the city? I think about my grandad who worked in the Queen’s Gardens and Princes Quay docks – a policeman. He watched over the town down there. I think about people long gone – places far away. I see the bridge, spanning the Humber. I think of my North Bank homeland and my South Bank adopted land, visible but miles away. I see the sun – a tiny bean of hot rose pink nosing through the clouds to say goodnight leaving us with a delicate rose sky. I’m watching you, sun. I’m watching you Hull. We’re here, we ain’t going anywhere.