Masters of the Wheel

Masters of the Wheel

A Poem by Ron Sanders
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A history lesson, with a twist.

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Masters of the Wheel



We were victors, we were gods, we were keepers of the crown; we had plucked the fire’s eye, we had worn the monster down. We had pierced creation’s heart, we had brought its pulse to heel, we had cracked the atom’s code. We were masters of the Wheel.


Yet we withered at inflections, we wallowed in our psalms, we watched our brute reflections as we wiped our sweaty palms. So stranger prayed for stranger, so father wept for son, till came that awful moment when the sirens wailed as one, and the world went mad.


Whole nations torn, woods and cities burning--into the tempest life’s ashes borne; what keeps the cinder turning? Came the rains: relentless, deluging all. Banshees of steam screamed, merging only to fall. Hurricane winds ever tapered, and then, sunshine enlightened the planet again. And the world was seed.


Now, for every step its evolution takes, this rock uncounted revolutions makes. In seas, in pools, in hollows, in lakes, sunlight the forces of Certainty wakes. Eons, ages--incalculable span--in seas, in pools, in hollows, in lakes…in time, the journey of life began. And the world blushed green.


Wherever life ventured, it flourished; fin begat foot, the land opened wide. Through conflict, through want, brute powers were nourished. Blood howled its passage, fresh blood replied.


Whole species vanished, new species clashed; life savaged life in forests and seas. In shadows of monsters a warm creature dashed: something unique was afoot in the trees.


Then one signal spring, embracing the land, a wayfarer into the wilderness ran. He outshone his cousins: erect he could stand; he prowled the wide savanna, his head held high--the Man. And the world beckoned.


He ranged in tribes, worked wood and bone, built gods of loam, struck fire with stone. One prize drove this hunter, one prey made him burn--to break his world, to make it bend…he had to know--he had to learn.


He walked the plains of forgotten cities, all long reduced to dust.

He studied the fossils of iron pillars, and pondered on the rust.


Millennia passed, he courted the Wheel; his science grew apace. Nature’s spires fell to steel, his towers took their place. Cities blossomed, succumbed to war, sacred trusts decayed. Nations clashed like beasts of yore, men took to arms and prayed.


Then one anxious fall, his slick treaties scrapped, this warrior turned magician: the atom’s force was tapped. A hero, a giant, a god would he be! He held this power captive--this power greater than he.


So we wither at inflections, we wallow in our psalms, we watch our brute reflections as we wipe our sweaty palms. So stranger prays for stranger, so father weeps for son, till comes that awful moment when the sirens wail as one, and the world sighs again.

© 2024 Ron Sanders


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Added on October 28, 2024
Last Updated on October 29, 2024
Tags: paranoia, nuclear annihilation

Author

Ron Sanders
Ron Sanders

San Pedro, CA



About
Free copies of the full-color, fleshed-out pdf file for the poem Faces, with its original formatting, will be made available to all sincere readers via email attachments, at [email protected]. .. more..

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A Story by Ron Sanders


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A Story by Ron Sanders