A vintner of aged leaves in the wine-press of the sun, Thin-skinned like the lucent grapes from the vine-runs Of the island trellises and teal-cordoned waves, lowest slung Fruit-laden bough of sky, Sicily, whose ateliers of rolled cigarettes And uprolled sleeves like tides tease smoke into studio paints, The black apple wine of storm made into mouthfuls of pulp rain, Before the sunrise is gathered again in fishing nets and crab pots, The coastal towns with their salted roofs of pied clay and pigeons Along the lava stone streets, and night from the chanteuse of Egypt, Singing her coral to heron, as when her bird-like barefooted slaves Left tracks across Old Kingdom wastes, so this dreaming old man Leaves his wrinkles to these grapes and across the sand-island pillow, Asleep with his fathers, hay-hauling peasants of wandering darkness.