Gaiad: Chapter 43

Capricórnio 15 · Day of Year 43

While Trilobites ruled the seas With their great dynasties, The rivers flowed so free For lesser brethren's spree. The sons of Arachnus ruled The seas where they schooled Their children in the art Of playing their sea part. The sons of Insectus took The rivers like a book Of opportunities For their communities. The sons of Cain and Abel Ruled the lands, quite able To make their living there In terrestrial air. And so Crustaceus saw No place without a flaw Where he could make his stand In sea or stream or land. Yet nowhere left to go, He tried despite the woe To establish his line With dynasty so fine. Heaven rewards the heart That plays determination's part To rise above all plight And reach for greater height. Crustaceus begat two: Karkon and Mushi too, Each son to find his way Through life from day to day. Mushi begat two sons: Copepus when day begun And Lepipus the strange Throughout his living range. Copepus became the sire Of copepods' choir— The little ones so small Who answer ocean's call. Insects of every form Through calm and raging storm They swam throughout the sea In their complexity. The tiniest of all Who hear the ocean's call, They dance throughout the waves In their microscopic graves. Meanwhile Lepipus bore Two sons to explore: Brachios of the sea And Silvio running free. A daughter of Silvio Would someday help the flow Of insects to the land By evolution's hand. Some day millions hence The sons of Silvio's sense Would become the great Insects that dominate The world in every place With their six-legged grace. But that day was not near— They had to persevere. Brachios became the father Of sea monkeys (why bother With complex names?) and more: Water fleas by the score. In natural habitat They lived both this and that: Sea monkeys in their pools And water fleas like jewels Dancing through the water Each son and each daughter Living simple lives Where small beauty thrives. Karkon fled away To open waters gray Where he begat two more: Pancer to explore And Cephalocaridus Most glorious, Each finding their own way Through life from day to day. Pancer begat in time Two sons in their prime: Oligostracus small And Polycruster tall. Oligostracus bore Many sons to explore The waters far and wide With courage as their guide. Among his sons were found The seed shrimp, safe and sound, And degenerate tongue worms Who broke from proper norms. These tongue worms chose to live As parasites who give Nothing back in trade— Poor choices they have made. Instead of getting jobs Like other honest mobs, They live off others' work And in the shadows lurk. Polycruster begat Two sons: Barnacus begat And Malacus the strong Who lived his whole life long. Barnacus was a man Who had a frontier plan. A great frontiersman he, Who lived quite happily Settled down with stalk Upon the ground to walk No more, but live instead Like cnidarians bred. Like sons of Cnider's line He lived his life so fine Attached unto the ground Where he had settled down. Barnacus bore a son He named Goose when begun The day. Great Goose was he Who built society Most wondrous to behold, But truth be told— No matter how he tried With all his foolish pride, He never did become A goose (though some Still claim his lineage Is goose heritage). Goose still claimed his sons Were geese when day begun. And so he is the guide Of geese with sacred pride. The Eloh of the Geese He brings them sweet peace And guides them on their way Throughout each passing day. In medieval lore They told (and tell much more) Of how the geese would grow From barnacles below Hanging from the trees In shells upon the breeze Until they could grow feathers In all kinds of weathers And fly away at last When growing time had passed. Gerald of Wales told This story of old. Among the sons of Goose Many would let loose Their size and grow quite small And compact, one and all. They became Barnacles Like small-scale miracles— Half shrimp and half coral, Full animals with moral Lives upon the rock Like shepherd with his flock They filter from the sea Their food quite happily. Malacus bore many Descendants—more than any Could count throughout the years Through joys and through tears. Among them crabs so bold And shrimp whose stories told Of grace beneath the waves In their ocean caves. The isopods were there And amphipods everywhere, Each playing their own part In evolution's art. They would become a dynasty So great in their spree That none could match their might In future's shining sight. So great that when we speak Of Crustaceus' mystique We speak first and foremost Of Malacus' great host Whose dynasty was yet To reach the glory set Before them in the time When they would reach their prime. Under Trilobites' yoke They lived like gentle folk Awaiting their great day When they would lead the way. But patience is the key To life's great mystery. The crustaceans would wait For their appointed fate. From Crustaceus' start With determination's heart To rise above his plight And reach for greater height, Came lineages strong That would last life-long And fill the seas with forms Through calm and raging storms. The copepods so small Who answer ocean's call, The barnacles on rocks Like shepherds with their flocks, The crabs with claws so strong, The shrimp that swim along The ocean's currents free, All from one family tree That started with one brave Soul who would not cave To circumstances dire But reached for something higher. In every tiny copepod Dancing like a small god Throughout the ocean blue, Remember what is true: That size does not determine What spirits can affirm. The smallest can be great If they don't hesitate To try despite the odds Against them, trusting gods To reward determination In every generation. In every barnacle That grows like miracle Upon the rocky shore Where waves forever more Will crash and spray and foam, Remember those who roam Not through space but time To find their perfect rhyme With life's eternal song That carries us along Through all our trials here To what we hold most dear. The sons of Crustaceus show How those who will not bow To circumstance or fate Can rise to something great. Though Trilobites held sway In that ancient day, The future would reveal What time would help heal: That patient persistence And faithful existence Will triumph in the end When time becomes our friend. From rivers to the sea, From bondage to the free, The crustaceans would rise To claim their destined prize. But that is yet to come When current ages sum Their lessons into wisdom Of life's eternal kingdom. For now they wait and grow And learn what they must know To be ready for the day When they will lead the way. In patience they find strength, In time they find at length The preparation needed For when their time's succeeded. Heaven rewards those who try To reach beyond the sky Of present circumstance To future's greater dance. Crustaceus showed the way That leads to greater day: Determination true Will see all struggles through. His sons throughout the sea Live on eternally As proof that those who dare To dream beyond despair Will find their rightful place In evolution's race When time reveals at last The future from the past.
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