Difference between revisions of "How Your Seeds have Grown"
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− | '''Description''': A long poem said to have been written by a follower of Sextes Jylis in the years shortly after he departed Creation. It weaves the tale of a journey across Creation, | + | '''Description''': A long poem said to have been written by a follower of [[Sextes Jylis]] in the years shortly after he departed Creation. It weaves the tale of a journey across Creation, retracing the footsteps of the Immaculate Dragon, remembering His wise words and marveling at seeds He had sewn now grown to large and verdant plants. Though not part of the [[:Category:Immaculate Texts|Immaculate Texts]], the poem remains popular with the [[Immaculate Order]], considered a generally accepted part of the Immaculate Apocrypha. |
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− | [[Category:Literature]] [[Category:Poetry]] | + | [[Category:Literature]] [[Category:Poetry]] [[Category:Immaculate Apocrypha]] |
Latest revision as of 01:05, 6 November 2014
Author: Hu Daileng
Description: A long poem said to have been written by a follower of Sextes Jylis in the years shortly after he departed Creation. It weaves the tale of a journey across Creation, retracing the footsteps of the Immaculate Dragon, remembering His wise words and marveling at seeds He had sewn now grown to large and verdant plants. Though not part of the Immaculate Texts, the poem remains popular with the Immaculate Order, considered a generally accepted part of the Immaculate Apocrypha.
One section of the poem tells of an encounter with a bird, that gives name to the Seven-faced Bird:
Bird, bright of face and fan of tail,
I see you amidst the roots hungering still.
Seven faces do you show me at what you find,
Though nothing stops you from your work.
All seeds and sprouts vanish to your gobbling gullet,
That anything survived to grow is itself a miracle.