In an exotic isle he lies
A holiday conundrum, dead
Face down beside a nagging doubt
Beneath heaven’s blue skies overhead
The case confined to just four friends
An isolated situation
But none of them could be the murderer
An alibi by others given
Around in circles twisted knots
Until, eureka! Clarity comes
A strange coincidence occurs
Connections made, the puzzle done
They gathered in a tense circle
To hear the verdict boldly laid
Before them by the canny sluth
Who by deduction owns this stage
He walks them through it step by step
By paradise’s swaying palms
Revealing method, means and motive
Our Caribbean Sherlock Holmes
A family guilty pleasure, the murderer mystery set on St. Marie might be formulaic, but we love it.
(13.02.22)
© Ben Quant 2022
Month: Feb 2022
Poem 88 – Box Set Binge
Remember when you had to wait
A week to catch the next part of
Your favourite show upon the box?
Now things have changed, diversified
There’s streaming, on demand, catch-up
And channels multiply, what choice!
The trouble is like a black hole
It pulls you in with the promise
That cliff hangers need not hang on
But now it’s late I ought to stop
As the alarm is primed to ring
But first, perhaps, another one!
We’d only meant to watch a single episode of Drop the Dead Donkey tonight, but somehow a while series had passed us by…
(12.02.22)
© Ben Quant 2022
Poem 87 – Risk Averse
In Africa I once saw boys
Suspended from the back of
A speeding truck ahead of us
My heart was beating in my mouth
My hand firmly clutching the seat belt
Afraid for their safety, but they
Just laughed and waved, content, at ease
Now looking back it seemed like fun
Today I wrote a risk assessment
It made me wonder if we’ve got
Our sense of risk confused because
It seemed to me there was more chance
Of my getting repetitive strain
From typing it up than any
Disaster striking those who come
To stand outside to sing a song….
Today I sent off a risk assessment for an outdoor church service. The form was extensive and not really suited to what we are planning. I can understand the need to be careful, especially in public events, but sometimes…
(11.02.22)
© Ben Quant 2022
Poem 86 – WORDLE
Infuriating TEASE!
This DAILY challenge comes,
Made out of thirty BOXES,
In six rows, each a GUESS,
With five letters to SPELL,
The word concealed BELOW,
And BOAST of victory.
Which word will you try FIRST,
And hope they all turn GREEN?
If not and SPACE permits,
Go WRITE another one!
However, if the FINAL,
BLOCK is filled and you’ve,
Not got it RIGHT, it is,
Too late you’ve lost Wordle.
SHAME….
Late to the game, I’ve discovered the daily fun/torment of the game Wordle, where you have to deduce the day’s five-letter word. Writing this, got me wondering why the creator opted for the name WORDLE when that has six letters. Odd.
(09.02.22)
© Ben Quant 2022
Poem 85 – Reynard
He came under the hedge
Dissolving then resolving
Into our winter garden
His black tipped snout came first
Emerging from the leaves
Held high in arrogance
As if to say its mine
Approaching nose held high
A russet red coat follows
Like others wearing furs
It further reinforces
His proud appearance, standing
Like Hollywood heroes
Above us mere mortals
This attitude adorned
He struts around the grass
Then job done he departs
Another property
Perhaps awaits his pleasure
A second or third home
From his portfolio
After yesterday’s black dog, another canine! Today a fox treating our garden as his caught my attention.
(08.02.22)
© Ben Quant 2022
Poem 84 – The Visitation of Black Shuck
Not sure if this is done yet, I imagine I will continue to tinker with it (if I make any substantial changes I will put it in a new post not just change it here), but I think the time has come to share this draft at least. If you’re interested in such things, I’ve tried to reflect Anglo-Saxon alliterative verse, although I also found myself rhyming the second and fourth lines of each stanza.
Those faithful fellowships did meet that fearful eve
In prayer and praise they sat upon familiar pews
In Blythburgh they began and Bungay parish too
Not knowing the nightmare now drawing near, their doom
With darkness deepening a fearsome storm developed
A ghastly gale bending tree branches gustily
And whipping window panes whilst whistling through the eaves
Before a crash crescendoed of thunder cracking crisply
And lo! Bright lightening flashed lashing the ancient porch
Burning its wooden beams, bursting apart its doors
Revealing standing stark a loathsome silhouette
Which set their feet like stone with savage steely roars
Its haunches high above the heads of those who turned
To see its savage claws come stepping through the gloom
As lifting lips revealed a line of sharpened swords
And bright red radiant eyes surveyed the harrowed room
What terrible tumult amongst the heavens tore
Alarms above were rung, angelic soundings warned
About the biting beast bounding along the nave
Growling against our God to whom good people prayed
The congregation cringed and cowered in its wake
As hastily the hound ran, howling in blind rage
Some swooning as if wounded, whilst swiftly it gave chase
Towards the holy table the target of its hate
Between the terror and the table of our Lord
With bread his broken body and wine the blood he poured
Two knelt in noble thought, kneeling in contemplation
Father and firstborn son in faith both highly favoured
But did the Devil’s dog respect their holy deeds?
Their obeyance of the Bible? The depth of their belief?
The alms they always offered? Their vigils at the altar?
No chance! Instead he nipped their necks with gnashing teeth
Such was his speed and deftness that as their severed heads
Fell from their lifeless shoulders to lay upon the floor
In prayer their posture stayed, poised for the life to come
Yet onward the cruel creature now crazed began to claw
Now, as the people trembled the tower began to shake
Foundations faltering as hopes began to fade
Its growing groans joining the grim beast’s hellish roar
And to the dog’s dismay, downward it now decayed
With bated breath they waited to find out if the beast
Still lived or had the collapse ended its wicked life
This anxious pause persisted until the people saw
There was no crouching creature to cause continued strife
With cautious hope they came out of their crevasses
Where desperately they’d dived expecting death therein
To find all saints and sinners, except the two, survived
So slowly the surprise eventually sank in
With arms aloft they sang alleluias for God’s mercy
Led by their priest perched not on pulpit but the floor
Until the wise church warden, with gnarled white fingers pointed
Towards scorched paw-print stains seared stark upon the door
Their laughter turned to longing for clarity about
The fate of that fierce hound, what had befallen it?
Had the collapse killed him or did his life continue?
Perhaps it now persisted prowling outside they posited
Clutching his golden cross
With prayer the priest with care
Led laity outside
To see what waited there…
(07.02.22)
© Ben Quant 2022

As a young boy I lived in Bungay, Suffolk. One of my teachers told me the story of the black dog of Bungay, which captured my imagination and started a fascination with folklore that has persisted. It is said that in 1577 an appearance of black shuck terrorised the people of Holy Trinity, Blythburgh, and St. Mary’s, Bungay, as described in ‘A Straunge and Terrible Wunder’ by Abraham Fleming. This poem is my re-imagining, a celebration of the story and Mr Talbot through whom I heard it.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Black_Shuck#Bungay_and_Blythburgh
Image: Public domain, Title page of the account of Abraham Fleming’s account of the appearance of the ghostly black dog “Black Shuck” at the church of Bungay, Suffolk in 1577
Poem 83 – Covid Guidelines
I’m still working on ‘The Visitation of Black Shuck’, it’s coming along nicely. In the meantime today I was challenged to rewrite the church’s Covid guidance to those hiring it for parties in verse. Over I quick cup of tea, I hastily threw this together… a bit of light relief
Our doors are open
Please come and visit
But don’t forget
We’re in a pandemic
Here are the guidelines
For us to follow
Please pop on a mask
And open a window
It’s not so wise
To gather in the middle
Don’t overcrowd
Spread out a little!
But if in the end
You’re stuck isolating
We’re more than content
To help rearranging!
(03.02.22)
© Ben Quant 2022
Coming Soon…
My poems may slow down a little bit going forward, at least for now. I’m in the process of rewriting my doctoral thesis, I’ve got a year to resubmit. This needs to be my main focus alongside work and family, but verse will provide a fun release and necessary diversion alongside it! I’m also playing around with a longer piece of poetry, in the form of medieval alliterative verse, based on the legend of the Black Dog of Bungay; a ghostly apparition famous for an appearance in the local church. Here’s the first stanza as it currently stands to whet the appetite…
Poem 83 – The Visitation of Black Shuck
Those faithful fellowships did meet that fearful eve
In prayer and praise they sat upon their usual pews
In Blythburgh they began and Bungay parish too
Not knowing the nightmare awaiting in the gloom
