الغاياد: فصل 38

الجدي 10 · يوم من السنة 38

As sons of Chordatus grew Their bloodlines strong and true, And Annelon's children spread Their segments widespread, The sons of Ambulus sought The greatness they had fought To achieve through patient art And wisdom of the heart. While sons of Chordatus learned To swim as hearts burned, The sons of Ambulus found Their way was to be bound As one with nature's way, Fishing night and day. They started much the same As Chordatus' noble name. But Hemichus, Ambulus' son, Built his proboscis one Day long to serve his need. Half-cord would be his creed. His cord was only half, His brain on nature's behalf Was also halfway made— Thus Hemichordates stayed. Hemichus bore two sons: Acorn when day begun And Oak, his brother strong, Who lived his whole life long. Acorn lived as worm Through ocean's every term. But Oak lived as a tree Rooted eternally. Oak bore two sons in time: Biscarpon, strong and prime, And Pterobronk his twin, With different discipline. Pterobronk became the sire Of forms that would aspire To heights in ocean blue: Graptolites he grew, And Pterobranches too, Colonial and true. Like trees beneath the sea They lived quite happily. Biscarpon built with care A skeleton to wear Of limestone white and bright To armor him for fight. Biscarpon bore two more: Ctenocyston to explore The seafloor dark and deep, And Cincton, who would keep His gill slits pumping well Through his armored shell. Water flowed through his frame To catch fish in his name. While Ctenocyston crawled Where ocean's floor enthralled, Cincton pumped and fished For everything he wished. Protected by his mail His fishing would not fail. Through gill slits water flowed Where tiny fishes showed. Cincton begat Soluton, A strange and bold one. One arm he extended out With tubes that had no doubt Inflatable and long To make his fishing strong. His left side took control While right side paid the toll. His right side shriveled small While left ruled over all. Asymmetry was born That bright and fateful morn. Soluton begat Helicoplacus, begat With arms that multiplied By three on every side. No bilateral form Could weather this storm Of change that swept his line— Triradial design He took upon his frame, A form without a name That none had seen before In all primeval lore. Helicoplacus took the shape That let his line escape The ancient symmetry For new geometry. Helicoplacus wed Fair Adria-Esther, led By love both true and strong To sing their mating song. Together they built low A city's five-fold glow Upon the rocks below Where ocean currents flow. Pentus was their son When their work was done. Five-sided was his way, His form from that day. The sons of Pentus grew Both numerous and true. Great numbers they became With pentamerous fame. Pentus begat Stromatos, Who built like great kratos His strength in five-fold form Through every ocean storm. Stromatos begat Lepidos, Who like Soluton chose To extend his arms once more Along the ocean floor. Ambulacra arms he made In water's bright parade. These arms would pump and flow With life from head to toe. Lepidos begat Felbabka, Who built his strange cabka Of plates arranged with care In patterns everywhere. Felbabka begat Echidna, The stalked one, quite a Sight with spiny skin That glowed from deep within. Echidna was the mother Of children like no other: The great Echinoderms Who live through all terms. Her daughters were sea lilies That bloomed like water lilies And dominated seas With graceful artistry. Invulnerable to attack Their cities bore no lack Of beauty or of might— A wondrous, flowery sight. Floating cities they built Without any guilt Upon the ocean floor Like gardens evermore. Their great cities were The greatest ever there In all the ancient time When ocean was in prime. Today we see only Ruins sad and lonely Of their once mighty home Beneath the ocean foam. But in times past they ruled As none before had schooled The art of living well In ocean's deepest dell. From half-cord Hemichus To great Echidna thus The line of Ambulus Grew glorious. The hemichordates showed How nature's garden flowed From simple worm-like start To complex living art. The graptolites and more Pterobranches explore Colonial living true In waters deep and blue. The early echinoderms Found through all their terms That symmetry could change Through evolution's range. From bilateral design To triradial line To five-fold form complete— No other has this feat. The son of Ambulus Found glory glorious Not through swimming fast But through forms that last. Their calcium carbonate Made them fortunate With armor strong and true That would see them through The trials of the sea Through all eternity. Their spiny skin would show How beauty's gardens grow. In every starfish arm That moves without alarm, In every sea urchin's spine That shows pentamerous design, In every sea lily's grace That held the ancient place Of ruler of the deep Where ocean's secrets keep, Remember Ambulus' line And how their design Became the five-fold way That lasts until today. The sons of Ambulus Were not so glorious In swimming strength and speed As Chordatus' noble creed. But in their patient art Of living part by part With nature's gentle way They found their destined day. Their fishing was their gift, Through ocean's every drift They learned to be at one From dusk until the sun. And so from humble start They mastered nature's art Of living in the sea In perfect harmony. From Hemichus the half To Echidna's behalf Of all echinoderm kind, The line of thoughtful mind Found its way to shine In pentamerous design. Five-fold symmetry Through all eternity. The ancient cities fell But still their stories tell Of how the patient way Can win the final day. In gardens of the sea They lived most gracefully. Their floating cities bright Were truly wondrous sight. Though now in ruins lie Their glory will not die. The five-fold legacy Lives through eternity.
ويكي
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