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Caroling Dusk/The Ways o' Men

From Wikisource
Caroling Dusk (1927)
edited by Countee Cullen
The Ways o' Men by Angelina Weld Grimké
Angelina Weld Grimké4746790Caroling Dusk — The Ways o' Men1927Countee Cullen

THE WAYS O’ MEN

’Tis queer, it is, the ways o’ men,Their comin’s and their goin’s;For there’s the grey road,The straight roadWith the grey dust liftin’With ev’ry stepAnd the little roads off-flingin’.
Maybe it’s a bit of a sly fieldThat crooks a finger to themAnd sends them to the turnin’;Or the round firm bosomOf a little hillAcallin’ to them, them with their heads   That heavy;Or maybe it’s the black lookGiven out of the tail of the eye;Or a white word, wingin’;Maybe it’s only the back of a little tot’s neckIn the sunlight; Or the red lips of a womanParting slow. . . .Sure there’s no tellin’.
One I saw goin’ towards a white starAt the edge of a daffydill sky,Its lights kissin’ straight into his eyes.Maybe it’s a gold pieceTo be taken from anotherIn the dark;Or the neat place between the ribsWaitin’ for the knifeThat one comes after carryin’ for it.’Tis few, it is, that goes with the grey roadThe straight roadAll the way,With the grey dust liftin’ at ev’ry step.
’Tis queer, it is, the ways o’ men,With a level look at you, or a crookedAs they be passin’.        Pouf!Sure, ’tis so fast they’re goin’,Does it matter about the turnin’s?