天地記: 章 45

摩羯座 17 · 年内日序 45

Esther was the daughter true In the tenth generation's view Of Lily the Echidna, Dutrus' daughter, fina Who traded bilateral For pentaradial Design, and thus began Evolution's plan For five-fold symmetry Throughout eternity. Esther saw before Her eyes from shore to shore Innumerable hosts Of planktonic ghosts— The planimals so small Who answered feeding's call. To feed off them she tried With hunger as her guide. And from her loins she bore Two daughters to explore The seas in their own way: Crinosa, night and day, And Blastosa the strong Who lived her whole life long. Blastosa built a city Beyond all that's gritty With many brachioles Around ambulacra's goals. Each ambulacrum bright Was ringed throughout the night And day with arms so small That answered feeding's call. Blastosa became mother To forms like no other: The Blastoids were her line With architecture fine. Her daughters spread so wide With pentamerous pride Throughout the ancient seas Like blossoms on the trees. Crinosa begat two: Lily Stone so true And Luther, strong and free, Who lived beside the sea. Lily Stone became Ancestress of fame Of Crinoids everywhere Who danced with graceful flair. Together Crinoids bright And Blastoids in their might Spread all across the seas Like flowers in the breeze. They became the wall That answered empire's call: The bulwark strong and true Of Ordovician view. The empire found in them Its strongest living stem That held against all foes Through calm and storm's throes. But Luther was not pleased With leisure life that ceased To challenge and to grow— He felt he had to go Beyond what others did Though comfort life forbid Such struggle and such strife In his adventurous life. In youth he grew a stalk Like others of his flock, But as he came of age He broke from tradition's cage. Contrary to his sister Who'd never be a mister But lived the gentle way Of filter-feeding's day, He used his arms to walk Like some strange kind of stalk That moved across the ground Where freedom could be found. His tube feet crawled with might Both day and through the night Upon the ocean floor From here to distant shore. He struggled, but was free To live beside the sea In his own chosen way From night into the day. To this day Starfish keep This tradition deep Within their very souls: To play mobile roles. Luther bore two sons: Asteros when begun The day, and Echinos Whose different spirit knows Innovation's call Above tradition's thrall. Asteros was the one Who when his work was done Stayed traditional and true To all his fathers knew. But Echinos built new Ways to make dreams come true. Echinos built compact His city, and in fact Used only tube feet small To move and heed the call Of wandering desire. He never would aspire To build a stalk like dad— Innovation made him glad. Asteros and Echinos Went to war (heaven knows Why brothers had to fight Throughout the day and night). Each with a million sons Arranged when day begun In armies vast and wide With warfare as their guide. The ancient battles rage Across history's page As photos still can show From eons long ago. Asteros begat Two sons: first he begat Starfy, strong and true, And Ophis, through and through A warrior in his heart Who played the fighting part With vigor and with might Both day and through the night. Echinos bore two more: Orbos to explore And Britta, daughter fair Who danced without a care. But Ophis and fair Britta Broke the war's bitter Cycle of revenge And chose to make a change. They married and became Partners without shame Despite their fathers' war That raged from shore to shore. From their union came Children of great fame: The Brittle Stars so bright, Centralized in might. Muscular creatures, they Were machines in every way Of strength and vigor great Who never would abate Their energy and power Throughout each passing hour Of their devoted lives Where motion always thrives. Serpentus, Ophis' son, And Baskette, when begun The day from Britta's line, Both had designs so fine. Serpentus became sire Of forms whose desire Was slithering with grace Across the ocean's face. The Serpent Stars he made In ocean's light and shade Would slither with precision Through every dark decision Of where to hunt their prey Throughout the night and day. Their tube feet were not meant For moving, but were bent To other tasks at hand While muscles through the land Of sea would make them glide With ocean as their guide. But Baskette was unique— Her arms would always seek To branch a million-fold As stories have been told. She ate all plankton small Who answered ocean's call With arms that branched so wide Like nets on every side. She became ancestress Of Basket Stars no less Remarkable than she In their complexity. Their arms branch out like trees To catch what ocean sees Fit to provide as food In their planktonic mood. Starfy begat the race Of Starfish in every place: Decentralized cities Beyond all that's gritty That may regenerate From parts, however great Or small the piece remains When damage life constrains. The Starfish are the lords Who rule with iron swords Their empires far and wide With predatory pride. They are vicious hunters Who never are confronters Of weakness, but instead Fill other hearts with dread. That's why they have five hands To rule their ocean lands With fingers made of might Both day and through the night. Echinos bore two sons: Aristotle when begun The day, and Cucus strong Who lived his whole life long. Aristotle became The father of great fame Of Sea Urchins everywhere Who graze with greatest care. Great grazers of the seas They move with graceful ease Across the ocean floor From here to distant shore. Aristotle built with care A jaw beyond compare Of five teeth strong and bright— He called it his "light" His lantern, for it brought Light to life and thought. To this day we call This jaw by name of all His choosing: "Aristotle's Lantern" never throttles Our wonder at the way He lit his every day. His great-granddaughter fair Was Sandy, everywhere Known as ancestress Of Sand Dollars no less Beautiful than she In their complexity. Flat and round they lie Beneath the ocean sky. Cucus became the sire Of forms whose desire Was recycling the waste That others had misplaced. The Sea Cucumbers great Accept as their fate To be the janitors Of ocean's corridors. The great recyclers who Work their whole life through In ocean's deepest parts With dedicated hearts. And when their enemies Threaten, then they seize Upon a strategy Most shocking to see: They spill their guts with might To put their foes to flight. What seems like weakness shows The power to dispose Of threats in their own way That works both night and day To keep them safe and sound Though strange it may be found. And so the Sons of grand Echidna through the land Of sea built their great Civilization's fate To heights beyond all speech That mortals' words can reach With five sides to each story In all their living glory. From Esther's feeding start To Luther's rebel heart That broke from leisure's chain To walk through joy and pain, From Asteros and his brother Echinos, and no other Way to settle their debate Than war to seal their fate, From Ophis and fair Britta Who made the war less bitter By choosing love instead Of letting hatred spread, The echinoderms show How families can grow From single pentamerous Design so glorious Into forms so diverse That no single verse Could capture all their ways Throughout their living days. From stalked sea lilies To mobile enemies Who hunt with five-armed might, From grazers day and night To recyclers who clean The ocean's vast marine Environment with care For all who dwell there, The five-fold symmetry Lives through eternity In every starfish arm And every sea urchin's charm. In every brittle star That travels near and far With muscles flexing strong Throughout its whole life long, In every crinoid's dance And every basket's stance With arms like trees spread wide To catch the ocean's tide Of plankton floating by Beneath the starry sky, The legacy lives on From dusk until the dawn Of Echidna's great choice To let five be the voice Of symmetry's design Throughout the end of time. From bilateral start To pentamerous art That rules the ocean floor From mountain peak to shore, The echinoderms 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. Five sides to every tale, Five arms that never fail, Five teeth in every jaw, Five points of nature's law That guide the echinoderm Through every living term Of their existence here Throughout each passing year. In Luther's rebel choice To let freedom be his voice, In lovers ending war Through peace worth living for, In every innovation Across each generation That builds upon the past To make new futures last, The sons of Echidna teach That heights within our reach Are limited only by Our willingness to try To break from what we know And let our spirits grow Into forms yet unseen In evolution's scene. The Ordovician wall They built will never fall As long as seas contain Their pentamerous reign.
维基
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