Poem 898 – This Lost Realm

We step into your verdant world,
the air draws near, a heavy still.
In here the outside ceases,
nothing impinges on us but
this present place. Time’s passage pauses.
Your warm breath passes over us
in shades of photosynthesis.
Fallen trunks like tentacles
lie tangled around our foreign feet.
Somewhere a scurry sounds amongst
the leafy undergrowth. Reeds rustle.
Disturbed a flock takes flight.
Footprints fossilised in sunbaked
mud reveal that others pass
this way but none pass by today.
I half-expect a roar of some
tyrannosaur to rend the peace
with bloody teeth and gaping jaw .

A walk around the lakes in Lea Valley today felt like stepping into another world.
(31.05.26)

© Ben Quant 2026

Poem 779 – In the Beginning

In the beginning, the end.
The trunk lies prone across
the damp, green undergrowth,
a wetland’s edge, a world
of moss and earthy smells.
Before too long its reach
is breached, invaded by
a myriad of hopeful life
that creeps across its skin
and digs within its folds.
Roots tenderly caress
and insects penetrate –
integrity decays
as one becomes the whole and
the whole absorbs the one.
This union births a realm,
a bloom of life, and thus
the end becomes the beginning.

On our walk this afternoon we passed a tree that had been felled and deliberately let to rot and feed the life of a local patch of wetland.
(01.02.26)

© Ben Quant 2026
Photo by Ivy Kleban on Unsplash