<h4><SPAN name="THE_SONG_OF_THE_WHEELS" id="THE_SONG_OF_THE_WHEELS"></SPAN>THE SONG OF THE WHEELS</h4>
<p><span class="font">WRITTEN DURING A FRIDAY AND SATURDAY IN AUGUST</span> 1911.</p>
<p>King Dives he was waiting in his garden all alone,<br/>
Where his flowers are made of iron and his trees are made of stone,<br/>
And his hives are full of thunder and the lightning leaps and kills,<br/>
For the mills of God grind slowly; and he works with other mills.<br/>
Dives found a mighty silence; and he missed the throb and leap,<br/>
The noise of all the sleepless creatures singing him to sleep.<br/>
And he said: "A screw has fallen—or a bolt has slipped aside—<br/>
Some little thing has shifted": and the little things replied:<br/>
<br/>
"Call upon the wheels, master, call upon the wheels;<br/>
We are taking rest, master, finding how it feels,<br/>
Strict the law of thine and mine: theft we ever shun—<br/>
All the wheels are thine, master—tell the wheels to run!<br/>
Yea, the Wheels are mighty gods—set them going then!<br/>
We are only men, master, have you heard of men?<br/>
<br/>
"O, they live on earth like fishes, and a gasp is all their breath.<br/>
God for empty honours only gave them death and scorn of death,<br/>
And you walk the worms for carpet and you tread a stone that squeals—<br/>
Only, God that made them worms did not make them wheels.<br/>
Man shall shut his heart against you and you shall not find the spring.<br/>
Man who wills the thing he wants not, the intolerable thing—<br/>
Once he likes his empty belly better than your empty head<br/>
Earth and heaven are dumb before him: he is stronger than the dead.<br/>
<br/>
"Call upon the wheels, master, call upon the wheels,<br/>
Steel is beneath your hand, stone beneath your heels,<br/>
Steel will never laugh aloud, hearing what we heard,<br/>
Stone will never break its heart, mad with hope deferred—<br/>
Men of tact that arbitrate, slow reform that heals—<br/>
Save the stinking grease, master, save it for the wheels.<br/>
<br/>
"King Dives in the garden, we have naught to give or hold—<br/>
(Even while the baby came alive the rotten sticks were sold.)<br/>
The savage knows a cavern and the peasants keep a plot,<br/>
Of all the things that men have had—lo! we have them not.<br/>
Not a scrap of earth where ants could lay their eggs—<br/>
Only this poor lump of earth that walks about on legs—<br/>
Only this poor wandering mansion, only these two walking trees.<br/>
Only hands and hearts and stomachs—what have you to do with these?<br/>
You have engines big and burnished, tall beyond our fathers' ken,<br/>
Why should you make peace and traffic with such feeble folk as men?<br/>
<br/>
"Call upon the wheels, master, call upon the wheels,<br/>
They are deaf to demagogues, deaf to crude appeals;<br/>
Are our hands our own, master?—how the doctors doubt!<br/>
Are our legs our own, master? wheels can run without—<br/>
Prove the points are delicate—they will understand.<br/>
All the wheels are loyal; see how still they stand!"<br/>
<br/>
King Dives he was walking in his garden in the sun,<br/>
He shook his hand at heaven, and he called the wheels to run,<br/>
And the eyes of him were hateful eyes, the lips of him were curled,<br/>
And he called upon his father that is lord below the world,<br/>
Sitting in the Gate of Treason, in the gate of broken seals,<br/>
"Bend and bind them, bend and bind them, bend and bind them into wheels,<br/>
Then once more in all my garden there may swing and sound and sweep—<br/>
The noise of all the sleepless things that sing the soul to sleep."<br/>
<br/>
<i>Call upon the wheels, master, call upon the wheels.</i><br/>
<i>Weary grow the holidays when you miss the meals,</i><br/>
<i>Through the Gate of Treason, through the gate within,</i><br/>
<i>Cometh fear and greed of fame, cometh deadly sin;</i><br/>
<i>If a man grow faint, master, take him ere he kneels.</i><br/>
<i>Take him, break him, rend him, end him, roll him, crush him with the wheels.</i><br/>
<br/><br/></p>
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