A Winter Daybreak above Vence

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The night’s drifts
Pile up below me and behind my back,
Slide down the hill, rise again, and build
Eerie little dunes on the roof of the house. 
In the valley below me,
Miles between me and the town of St.-Jeannet, 
The road lamps glow.
They are so cold, they might as well be dark. 
Trucks and cars
Cough and drone down there between the golden 
Coffins of greenhouses, the startled squawk 
Of a rooster claws heavily across
A grove, and drowns.
The gumming snarl of some grouchy dog sounds, 
And a man bitterly shifts his broken gears. 
True night still hangs on,
Mist cluttered with a racket of its own.

Now on the mountainside,
A little way downhill among turning rocks,
A square takes form in the side of a dim wall. 
I hear a bucket rattle or something, tinny, 
No other stirring behind the dim face
Of the goatherd’s house. I imagine
His goats are still sleeping, dreaming
Of the fresh roses
Beyond the walls of the greenhouse below them 
And of lettuce leaves opening in Tunisia.

I turn, and somehow
Impossibly hovering in the air over everything,
The Mediterranean, nearer to the moon
Than this mountain is, 
Shines. A voice clearly
Tells me to snap out of it. Galway
Mutters out of the house and up the stone stairs
To start the motor. The moon and the stars
Suddenly flicker out, and the whole mountain 
Appears, pale as a shell.

Look, the sea has not fallen and broken 
Our heads. How can I feel so warm 
Here in the dead center of January? I can 
Scarcely believe it, and yet I have to, this is 
The only life I have. I get up from the stone. 
My body mumbles something unseemly
And follows me. Now we are all sitting here strangely 
On top of the sunlight.

© James Wright