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Mar 28, 20201 min

Excerpts from the First Tamarian-Mormon Dictionary

by James Goldberg

The coolest toy I ever had as a kid (under certain, highly subjective uses of the term “cool”) was a Star Trek action figure of Captain Dathon. Dathon appears in only one episode of Star Trek: the Next Generation—but oh, what an episode it is. That episode, “Darmok,” features the Tamarians, a race of aliens who communicate entirely in allusions.  Captain Dathon is a young Mormon poet’s ultimate role model because for him the sacred stories of the past contain everything. They are a Urim and Thummim: all experience can be translated through them. 

I have been chasing the Tamarian legacy for years. I can hardly believe it only recently occurred to me to write a Tamarian-Mormon dictionary in poetic form. 


 


 

Excerpts from the First Tamarian-Mormon Dictionary


 

I. 


 

Darmok on the ocean: 

Moroni, as he wanders 


 

Jalad on the ocean: 

Joseph, after the grove 


 

Darmok and Jalad at Tanagra: 

Moroni and Joseph at Cumorah 


 

Sokath. His eyes uncovered: 

Gazelem, out of darkness


 

Shaka. When the walls fell: 

Oliver, his mouth closed


 

II. 


 

Mirab, his sails unfurled: 

Alma in the wilderness.  The priests behind. 


 

Uzani, his army with fists open: 

Antipas and Helaman at Antiparah.


 

Uzani, his army with fists closed:

Helaman and his sons, their march turned. 


 

Kiazi’s children. Their faces wet: 

Coriantumr, stumbling to Zarahemla


 

III. 


 

Chenza at court, the court of silence:

Van Buren in Washington, your cause just.


 

Zima at Anzo. Zima and Bakor: 

Moroni and Pahoran, when Zarahemla fell. 


 

Kailash. When it rises: 

The plates at Cumorah. Sealed beneath the ground. 

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