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19 lines
1.5 KiB
Plaintext
19 lines
1.5 KiB
Plaintext
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The naginata of "Umigozen," the mighty warrior of Watatsumi. Its edge flows with the phosphorescence of the depths.
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The way this person once made the navies of Narukami quail are well-recorded in the island's music.
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The whalesong that the twin Watatsumi shrine maidens once sang followed the tide's flow into the dreams of the island's people.
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All of Watatsumi's warriors pinned their hopes and will to fight upon their shoulders.
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And they brandished their nagamaki like a white, flowing wave, and with a loud shout advanced upon the other islands.
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Yet the glory of Omikami and that of his warriors were dimmed by the lightning's glow...
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Mouun was consumed by a dark storm of crow feathers, and the great whale who sang with the sisters sank to the bottom of the sea.
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The vassal ruler, determined as a child, the vanguard of their forces, vanished into a rift rent into the very earth itself.
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"Umigozen" was lost to the waves, becoming a myth to the archipelago at large.
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Some say that she dove alone into the press of tengu warriors to reclaim the bodies of her comrades, and was lost after a valiant last stand.
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Others say that she hid thenceforth, steering her flagship into the Dark Sea at the borders of the world...
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The only proof that she once sought to change the tides of the world is this still-sharp naginata.
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As long as the seas are yet disturbed by the waves, so too might the memory of her song live on.
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Legend even has it that the song yet echoes within seashells and the bellies of mighty whales at the bottom of the sea.
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