Talking about Ladders

after Ian Starsmore

 

There is a ladder angled to the roof of the world

where blue darkens

and you cannot hold the footing in your breath for long.

You have a small window

above the Valley of Flowers.

 

You feel the odds of risking your neck.

Feel the sugar nut brittle edge of a honey gatherer.

It’s like climbing in high heels

and it’s not only your heels that are high

above the Valley of Flowers.

 

Because you have a spine

you make one for the mountain.

Each bone a pine rung left for the next person.

A ladder to a larder

of snowflakes and honey;

 

a medicine cabinets of gold and flowers.

Leave a winter geocache for the bees

and their small alchemies

like a kind burglary.

 

Edmund Hilary kept a cloud of bees on a long string,

the settle and shift of black and violet

around his mask

like some matter at basecamp.

 

Think on those men who climbed out of the orangey

up a ladder with a rabbit’s foot on a stick

to pollenate where mulberries now age.

Think about powdering a cheek in a hothouse.

 

The mountain holds no wishes

as you hold your hand

to the fear of going home empty handed.

This leaving is like leaving a ladder somewhere

or leaving just enough honey in the hive for next year.

 

 

 

 

 

Judith Lal lives in Norwich. Her poems have been published in various magazines including Poetry London, The Rialto and The Lighthouse. Her pamphlet Flageolets at the Bazaar was chosen as a Poetry Book Society recommendation. Her poems also appear in an anthology The Harper Collins Book of English Poetry.