The Inking: A Tale of Squid Society Struggling for Equal Rights

 
The Inking
 
By Henry Meinstereifel
And Nicholas Doan
 
 
 
Once in the depths of the sea,
 Lived a convent of squids in harmony.
These  cephalopods brandished tentacles in
eights,
It was a peaceful time in their city state.
 
 
 
These squids with a set of eight tentacles,
All of their endeavors were quite memorable
They kept to themselves and to themselves did
they keep
Only sights of the norm did they see in the
streets
 
 
On the outskirts of town, lived the freaks
The losers, the psychos,  the outcasts, the geeks
For these were the squids with one extra leg
They were the city’s batch of old spoiled eggs
 
 
 
Inside of the city, everyone felt bliss
Outside the walls, something was amiss
The “eights” inside were so safe in their homes
The “nines” outside were sad to their bones
 
 
The eights and the nines hated each other
Some of these squids came from the same mothers
They inked at each other until the day’s end
For one another, they refused to fend
 
 
 
Then came days that were dark and were dreary
Things for the squids began to get eerie
The nines were full of hope, the eights full of
fear
For the incredible changes that would soon be
here
Equal
Rights!
 
 
The nines demanded changes
Which threw the eights into rages
The eights and the nines were all but at war
Not one really knowing what was in store
 
 
 
 
 
 
As to who should receive what kind of
treatment
They fought and they fought to come to some
sort of agreement
Slowly they moved, and without much zeal
To a system they called “separate but equal”
The nines wanted to get rid of this policy, for
they said it was quite a fallacy
9 legs
 
 
Slowly both sides began to see
Slowly both sides came to agree
That the only way to end all the fights
Was to give every squid
The same equal rights.
 
Fin
 
 
The
 
End
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In a city of harmony, squids with either eight tentacles or nine legs find themselves at odds, leading to a conflict over equal rights. The story unfolds as the nines demand changes and the eights resist, resulting in a system of separate but equal treatment. Tensions rise as they struggle to reach an agreement amidst fear, hope, and the impending incredible changes.

  • Squids
  • Society
  • Equal Rights
  • Conflict
  • Harmony

Uploaded on Oct 03, 2024 | 0 Views


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  1. The Inking By Henry Meinstereifel And Nicholas Doan

  2. Once in the depths of the sea, Lived a convent of squids in harmony. These cephalopods brandished tentacles in eights, It was a peaceful time in their city state. 8

  3. These squids with a set of eight tentacles, All of their endeavors were quite memorable They kept to themselves and to themselves did they keep Only sights of the norm did they see in the streets 8 8

  4. On the outskirts of town, lived the freaks The losers, the psychos, the outcasts, the geeks For these were the squids with one extra leg They were the city s batch of old spoiled eggs 9

  5. Inside of the city, everyone felt bliss Outside the walls, something was amiss The eights inside were so safe in their homes The nines outside were sad to their bones No 9 s allowed

  6. The eights and the nines hated each other Some of these squids came from the same mothers They inked at each other until the day s end For one another, they refused to fend

  7. Then came days that were dark and were dreary Things for the squids began to get eerie The nines were full of hope, the eights full of fear For the incredible changes that would soon be here Equal Rights!

  8. The nines demanded changes Which threw the eights into rages The eights and the nines were all but at war Not one really knowing what was in store

  9. As to who should receive what kind of treatment They fought and they fought to come to some sort of agreement Slowly they moved, and without much zeal To a system they called separate but equal The nines wanted to get rid of this policy, for they said it was quite a fallacy 9 legs

  10. Slowly both sides began to see Slowly both sides came to agree That the only way to end all the fights Was to give every squid The same equal rights.

  11. Fin The End

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