Gaiad: Chapter 52

גדי 24 · Day of Year 52

Vater was the son so great In the tenth generation's fate Of Pteraspis, and he'd be Ancestor of humanity And myriad species more From mountain peak to shore. His innovation would Change all for the good. Vater built a channel Grand beyond all span-el Uniting liver bright And pancreas in sight Into his belly's space. To this day we trace This channel's honored name: "Ampulla of Vater's" fame. Such an exalted father, Father of more than other Men could ever dream, The Elohim's esteem Called him Abraham According to their plan For one whose progeny Would fill eternity. Vater bore two sons: Arandus when begun The day, and Hestracon Whose work would carry on The family's great name Through evolutionary flame That burns in every heart That plays innovation's part. Hestracon found his belly Inadequate, not ready For the work he knew That he would have to do. From mouth to anus all The same, and he'd call This simple with disdain— Only his father's main Ampulla in the middle To solve digestion's riddle. But this was not enough For one so strong and tough As Hestracon, who'd see What greater good could be If he would dare to build What none before had willed. Hestracon built with care A chamber prepared Before his father's gift To give digestion lift. He called it his stomach, And this would come to stick As the great divider Between the provider Of food from mouth above And what intestines' love Would process down below To make the body grow. Before the stomach laid The esophagus, well-made To carry food along Its pathway, swift and strong. After the stomach laid The intestine, well-played In its appointed role To nourish the whole. Hestracon begat two: Astrops, tried and true, And Eteros the strong Who lived his whole life long. Eteros begat then Two sons beyond all ken: Cyatha, cup-shield bright, And Tsubasa's sight Wing-shielded, prepared For all that he had dared To face in his lifetime Through reason and through rhyme. Tsubasa begat two: Thelos, tried and true, And Cephalus the wise With penetrating eyes. Thelos broke his armor Into scales—no former Rigidity would bind His innovative mind. Into innumerable scales His armor never fails To give him flexibility And great ability To live within the reefs Where none could find reliefs From rigid armor's weight That sealed their swimming fate. Where none others could bend Well enough to transcend The coral's tight embrace, Thelos found his place. Neither sons of Arthropus Nor sons of Molluscus, Nor sons of Chordatus Could match his status In the reef's tight spaces Where his grace replaces Rigidity with flow That helps him grow Into every niche Where others couldn't reach The food that he could take For his own sake. Cephalus bore wings bright On each side in sight Of his helmet's form, Through calm and raging storm. His head flew as he swam According to his plan For stability and grace In every watery place. His lateral line would keep Him ahead, and never sleep In vigilance for all That might befall His swimming through the sea. Aware of all that he Could sense around his form, He weathered every storm. Cephalus begat two: Galeas, tried and true, And Osteos, who'd see What innovation's key Could open in the world Where possibilities unfurled For those who dared to think Beyond tradition's link. Osteos was in plight— His bones weren't right For efficiency, he knew. He had to make them new. His bones were expensive, Comprehensively Wasting countless moles Of calcium that rolls Through phosphorus and more Elements by the score That could be better used If they were not abused In static, lifeless bone That stood there all alone Without a greater plan For helping mortal man. So he decided he Would build more cleverly His skeleton anew With wisdom tried and true. Osteos built with care Blood channels everywhere Inside his bones, making Living, breathing, taking Stores of minerals That worked like generals In abundance building up From nature's flowing cup, And in scarcity He'd borrow, you see, From what he'd stored before Like treasure in his store. And so he grew more strong And prosperous life long Than all his relatives Who took what nature gives But never learned to save For what the future gave Of challenges and need When they would have to feed From stores they'd built in plenty When resources weren't scanty But flowed like rivers wide With bounty as their guide. Osteos bore two sons: Pituri when begun The day, and Ostracos Whose children, glorious, Would multiply and spread Until the world was fed With countless forms of life Through harmony, not strife. Ostracos bore a host Of sons from coast to coast: A million who would spread Wherever they were led By life's eternal call To multiply for all Who'd come in times ahead When they would have to fed The world with their own forms Through calm and raging storms Of evolution's way From night into the day. Pituri grew a snout Long beyond all doubt The longest ever seen In evolution's scene. Pituri begat then Beakon beyond all ken In wisdom and in might To see with clearer sight. Pituri's mouth was made Of lips, but never strayed Into the realm of jaws— He followed simpler laws. Could only close the space But never could erase His prey with biting might— No jaw was in his sight. But Beakon saw potential In what was essential About his father's snout And figured it out. And so Beakon moved His gill arches and proved That innovation's art Could play a vital part. Into his mouth he brought The arches, and he fought For food in a new way That worked both night and day. Beakon's son named Gnathus Saw potential, glorious, And he with wife Pelaca Hunted like none other. They hunted trilobites And brought them to their lights Of innovation's flame That burned in their name. They didn't just catch prey In the ancient way But crushed them with their might And brought them to the sight Of their armored jaws That followed nature's laws But used them in new ways Throughout their living days. They sliced through every meal With jaws of steel-hard feel That brought life-giving food In their hunting mood. And so Jaws were born On that fateful morn When Gnathus and Pelaca Showed what none could match-a: The power to break through What none before could do— To crush and to consume What others could assume Was safe in armor's shell From those who'd never tell The secret of the jaw That follows newer law. The world would never be The same for you and me From that day forth when jaws Became the newer laws Of predatory might That brought to sight A revolution new In what life could do. From Vater's ampulla To Gnathus' formula For crushing with his jaws According to new laws, The vertebrates show how Innovation's vow To never be content With what is merely sent By fate, but always strive To be more alive And capable and strong Throughout their whole life long Journey through the sea Of possibility Where those who dare to grow Will always come to know New heights of what can be For all eternity When innovation's fire Burns with true desire To make the world more bright With new forms that take flight Beyond what was before To open up the door Of possibility For all humanity And every living thing That answers life's ring. From Hestracon's stomach To Osteos' pragmatic Bones with channels through, From scales that Thelos knew Would give him flexibility To Cephalus' ability To fly through water's space With stabilizing grace, The vertebrates remind Us that the searching mind That breaks from what is known Can reap what it has sown In innovations new That see old dreams through To heights beyond all thought That wisdom ever brought. From simple mouth that closed To jaw that none opposed In crushing power's might, The story shows the sight Of how small changes grow Into the flow Of evolution's stream Where nothing's what they seem But everything can change Beyond familiar range If we but have the will To climb each higher hill Of possibility Through all eternity Where dreams can all come true For me and you today. The jaws that Gnathus made Will never ever fade From vertebrate design— Protection so fine Against the world's hard ways Throughout our living days When we must fight to eat And make our lives complete. From Vater's family tree To jaws that set us free From limitations old Of stories yet untold, The vertebrates have shown How far we've grown From simple, humble start To mastery of art That lets us rule the sea And land and be The masters of our fate Through innovations great That never cease to grow In all we'll ever know Of what can be achieved When dreams are believed And turned to reality Through wise ability To see what others miss And find in this The power to transcend All limits and extend The boundaries of life Through harmony, not strife. The world that Gnathus bit With jaws of steel and grit Lives on in every tooth That tells the truth Of how innovation's way Can change both night and day Into something new For me and you Who dare to break the mold Of stories never told And write upon the page Of evolution's age New chapters yet unread Where we are led By wisdom's guiding light To make the future bright With possibilities That nobody sees But those who dare to dream Of more than what they seem And turn those dreams to life Through joy and through strife That marks the growing soul Who plays the vital role In evolution's plan For every woman, man, And every living thing That answers hope's ring. From Vater's great design To Gnathus' jaw so fine, The story's clear to see: Innovation sets us free.
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