Gaiad: Chapter 50

Steinbock 22 · Day of Year 50

Silur, son of Chelicer, Saw the world in ruin's blur. And in this devastation Saw opportunity's creation. Silur shouted out with might To all sons in his sight Of Animus, declaring His vision, never caring For those who'd gone before: "I did not steal this lore Of kingship from the crown. I found it lying down In gutter, and I picked It up, my fate predicted By sword that I had found. But 'twas the people's sound Of voices that placed it On my head, perfect fit For one who'd take the throne And make it all his own." And so began the era Of Silurian chimera, Rising from the ashes Of Ordovician's crashes. Silur bore two sons: Eurypter when begun The day, and Chasmas strong Who lived his whole life long. Chasmas begat two more: Belangkas to explore And Xiphos, who would be Living by the sea. Xiphos became the sire Of crabs whose desire Was horseshoe-shaped design Throughout the end of time. Belangkas climbed up high Onto the land to try What none had done before: To claim from shore to shore The land from Hirnan's hand And make his own command Of territories wide Where he could reside. Like Myriapus of old He found his story told In suffocation's pain Upon the terrestrial plain. But pierced wounds in his side And was thus satisfied With air that he could breathe To give his lungs relief. Belangkas begat two: Soliber, tried and true, And Opiliona fair Who spread life everywhere. Opiliona spread the moss Across the world, no loss Too great for her to bear In her maternal care. She grazed upon the green And on what could be seen Of daughters of Millipa Throughout the earthly steppe-a. Opiliona was a mother Great, and like no other Farmer with her legs So long, and wisdom begs Us to remember her As one who would confer Great blessings on the land With her maternal hand. Beautiful legs so long Made her the subject of song: "Granny Long Legs" they'd call Her, beloved by all. "Granny Harvest" too, For all the work she'd do To spread the green of life Through joy and through strife. And so in honor of Her life and of her love, We call her children still "Daddy Long Legs" (though will Seem strange to some that "Daddy" Names descendants of a lady). "Harvestmen" as well Their story always tell. Soliber begat two: Pneumaran, tried and true, And Kitzi, small but strong Who lived his whole life long. Pneumaran begat then Two sons beyond all ken: Solaran of the sun And Acares, begun As dwarf among his kin, But he would always win A place in history As ancestor, you see, Of mites, the little ones Who when their work is done Live everywhere on land Built by their tiny hand. Acares bore two sons: Sarco when day begun And Trombo, who would be Living peacefully Or not, as fate would tell His story oh so well Of how some choose the light While others choose the night. The sons of Sarco clean The world, and can be seen As dust mites everywhere Who take the greatest care To keep the world swept clean Of dust that might have been A problem for us all Who answer life's sweet call. Among the sons of Trombo Some live like peaceful combo Of gentleness and grace In their appointed place. But others are the plague That makes all good souls vague With worry and with fear— Parasites we hear Stifle life with their ways Throughout our living days, Horrific in their greed That plants destruction's seed. Among the peaceful ones Are Trombo's gentle sons: The red velvet mites Who bring us pure delights. From red velvet mites We learn love's sacred rites: A story of the heart That plays the loving part In nature's grand design Where all true loves align With beauty and with grace In every living place. Solaran begat two: Solifugon so true And Ricinulon the small Who answered duty's call. Solifugon became The father of great fame Of Wind Spiders who race Across the earth's face. Ricinulon became The father of the name Of Tick Spiders so small Who answer hunting's call. Kitzi begat two sons: Byblos when day begun And Paras, who would be Small in his degree. Byblos the Book Knight Continues day and night To this very day To guard in his own way The books that hold the lore Of all who came before. His sons, the Book Scorpions, Are knowledge's companions. They defend with their might The books both day and night From those who would destroy What brings the world such joy. Paras begat two more: Mesos to explore And Holoxos the strong Who lived his whole life long. Mesos was a hunter Fierce, and he would shunt-er Across the globe to find Prey to feed his mind And body's gluttony— A small but mighty fee He'd take from life around Wherever he was found. But Holoxos walked where Blood flowed everywhere From his fallen kin: Sons of Arachnus thin And sons of Myriapus Who'd been victorious In other times and places Before death's embraces. He drank their blood and bore Two sons to explore The paths of blood and death: Thyrus drew his breath From peaceful tradition, Drinking by submission Only blood of those Who'd found their last repose. But Ricinus turned dark And left his evil mark On all the world around— Where he could be found He fed on living blood Like some unholy flood Of evil and of greed That plants destruction's seed. Ricinus drinks the life From those in joy and strife, Injecting with his bite Venom through the night That paralyzes those He's chosen as his foes. Paralytic, sweaty, His venom's never petty But always brings the pain Like some unholy rain That falls on those who can't Escape his evil grant. Ricinus swells up Like some unholy cup Inflated with the blood Of innocents, a flood Of stolen life that flows Within him as he grows Fat with others' pain Like some unholy stain Upon the world of life That cuts like sharpest knife Through all that's good and true In me and you. By Ricinus the blood Of scorned women's flood May taint our mortal veins With all their bitter pains. When Lilith's blood flows in Our veins, we can't win Against the poison's might: Typhus brings its blight And Spotted Fever too To me and you Who cannot fight alone Against what we have sown By letting evil in Our world where it can win Against the good and true That lives in me and you. The Midichlorians live In what Ricinus' give: Within their mitochondria Lives Lilith's bacteria— The greatest revenge told By stories new and old Of those who choose the dark And leave their evil mark. And after daughters come Of Lilith, and the sum Of all their evil ways: Malarius' dark days And Lyme and all the rest Of sisters who're possessed By pestilence and death That steals away our breath. Ricinus, father of Ticks who show no love But only greed and hate, Engorged with others' fate, Shows us what becomes Of those whose evil sums Into a force so strong That right can't win from wrong. But Eurypter would be Father of dynasty Far greater than the line Of Chasmas' design. A nation he would make That would its rightful take Of glory and of might To fill the world with sight Of what the good can do When they are tried and true To principles of right That shine like morning light Through all the world's dark places Where evil shows its faces But cannot win the day When good shows its way. From Silur's opportunity Seen in calamity To Opiliona's care For life everywhere, From Book Knights who defend The knowledge we depend Upon to light our way Through each and every day, To those who choose the dark And leave their evil mark On all the world around Where they can be found, The Silurian shows How each one's choice grows Into the world we see For you and me. Some choose to heal and mend What others would rend Apart with greed and hate That seals our mortal fate. Others choose to take For their own selfish sake What others need to live And never learn to give. The lesson clear as day Shows us the way To choose what we will be For all eternity: Those who heal and bless Or those who make the mess That others have to clean In places yet unseen. From Silur's royal crown To blood-suckers who drown The world in pain and death, Each choice draws its breath From what we hold most dear: Love that casts out fear Or fear that kills all love And blocks the light above. The choice is ours to make In every step we take Along life's winding road Where we must bear the load Of what our choices bring To every living thing That shares this world with us In ways both glorious And terrible to see For you and me Who must decide each day Which path we'll take away. The Silurian age began With one who had a plan To rise from ruin's call And build hope for all. But also shows how some Will always choose to come Down on the side of death With their every breath. The choice is always ours To use our mortal powers For good or ill each day Along our living way. From opportunity's call To rise above the fall Of golden ages past To build what will last, The Silurian reminds Us that each one finds The world they choose to make For everyone's sake. Choose well, for what you choose Will be what you will lose Or gain for all the days Of your immortal ways. From Silur's royal start To ticks' bloodsucking art, The lesson's clear to see: We are what we choose to be.
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