Lost and Found

Three biros, two with lids,
A tarnished 50 pence
Two 2ps and a 1 gone dull,
A plastic gun now bent.

An sticky old sweet wrapper,
A broken lolly stick,
Token from a forgotten game,
A dusty paperclip.

A tired toothless comb,
Illegible receipt,
A Panini football sticker,
Now ripped without its feet.

A family history and
Memories of the past,
A record of their years,
Found down old sofa arms.

I spent the morning dismantling our old sofas too take them to the ‘dump’. The amount that came out from inside them was astonishing!
(29.11.25)

© Ben Quant 2025
Photo by Naomi Hébert on Unsplash

Poem 673 – The Loft

A day of archaeology in the loft
Peeling back the layers through the years
Past Christmas trees and bags of decorations
Old cardboard boxes kept in case of need

The children’s toys kept for the grandchildren
Memories of precious moments housed in tins
Cards, photos, school books and a wedding dress
Reminders of those now no longer here.

A random iron in a grimy box
A bag of gifts given in Sierra Leone
A stash of trash in need of sorting through
Or treasure trove of objects that we own?

A day spent doing a bit of ‘spring’ cleaning.
(30.08.25)

© Ben Quant 2025
Photo by Trnava University on Unsplash

Poem 359 – Curlew Crescent

A home from home, now distant and yet familiar.
I could not reproduce it accurately, it’s been
so many years since I last played there as
a boy, however, objects, clips and scents
remain, impressions deeply embedded within.

Neatly pruned roses with subtle scents,
a maroon coloured football with white pentagons,
a fold up chair with padded back and handles,
a fence over which the neighbour and I would play,
and books of Brooke Bond Tea cards full of adventure.

The ghosts of a cat and Uncle L, their faces
blurred but their unseen presence looms large and real.
Chopping mint and adding vinegar for sauce,
roast lamb, potatoes and carefully cut carrots,
an after dinner butter mint stuck to the teeth.

How can it be almost half a century since I last played in my grandparents house in Bedford?
(20.11.24)

© Ben Quant 2024
Photo by Billy Cox on Unsplash

Poem 204 – Ghosts of Salone*

I felt it then, the first time that I stepped
outside the plane in Lungi International.
Enveloped by a suffocating blanket,
I stood, arrested by the heavy air.
The skies were dark, I could not see its palms,
but soon I found that mine were damp.
This pattern would repeat each morning as
we left our air-conditioned chalets and
exclaimed ‘it’s hot again’, as if surprised.
As if…
        These vibrant midnight scenes still tarry.
The virgin walk across the unknown runway
towards conflicting voices, thick and urgent.
The chaos. Papers waved. Bribes sought. Unmoored.
Sidestepping through the scrum to find our car.
Escape. A momentary peace behind the windscreen.
We drive past twinkling kerosene and figures
emerging from the darkness, eyes lit up,
rushing to meet the ferry at the harbour;
meeting instead a herd of cars. We sit,
the mercury rising, ‘midst the midnight hawkers.
Cicada lullabies meet drowsy eyes.
The ferry never comes. ‘It’s broken down.’
This news does not inspire my confidence.
‘Don’t worry there are two’, I’m told, ‘the other
will soon arrive.’ Alas, that’s late as well.
Strapped in, I sleep a stuffy, restless sleep,
one eye half open so as not to miss
the novelty, the other stupefied with heat.
A decade on and home, I find September’s
unexpected heatwave stirs up old ghosts
wakes up, recalls, these vivid memories
of sticky hands and distant drowsy streets.

* As Sierra Leone is sometimes known by its people.

Walking out in the hottest day of the year yesterday awoke memories of my first moments in Sierra Leone some twenty years ago.
(11.09.23)

© Ben Quant 2023

Poem 169 – I Collect People

I collect people.
Not in an album like
a stamp collector, or
macabre jars like some
demented serial killer,
but in my memories.

Childhood friends stand by
eccentric teachers that
inspire and shape my path.
Loved relatives are filed
with heroes of the stage
and teenage heartbreakers.

Congregation members,
that walked with us awhile,
together with neighbours
who passed our window daily,
their names undiscovered.
Did they know each other?

Time to time I take
them out and dust them down,
revisit, reminisce.
These familiar faces,
both intimate and distant,
make up my life’s matrix.
I am in reference to them,
embedded and defined.
There is no island life.

A conversation at church about personalities who have been part of our family over time prompted the phrase ‘we collect people’. This stuck in my head and eventually prompted this poem.
(20.02.23)

© Ben Quant 2023
Photo by Raj Rana on Unsplash (Original in colour)

Poem 98 – Innocence

Do you recall those hazy childhood days,
Those lazy endless freedom days outside?
The den we made together in the hedge,
Found at the bottom of our road, our world?
Behind it stood a farmer’s field in which,
We used to scatter, hide within the grain.
I wonder if he ever saw us there,
And turned a blind eye to our escapades?
The pylons, alien, stood tall and strong,
Tempting investigation but warnings,
Upon ‘the box’ made us fearful. Likewise,
We never played with matches, afraid of death.
This was our kingdom, on our bikes we reigned.
The rules were ours, no adults interfered,
Until exhausted, dinner called us home,
Across the border full of tales to tell.

Was it really as I remember it, with blue skies all year and endless hours to play? Probably not, but the sense of that is strong.
(26.02.22)

© Ben Quant 2022