| The Amphioxus Song |
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The Amphioxus Song
or, "It's a Long Way From Amphioxus"
This song, set to the tune of "It's a Long Way to Tipperary", has verses
written by Philip H. Pope (later of Whitman College) in
1921. His fiancee Louise Smith heard students in the summer
course of the Biological Laboratories of the Cold Spring Harbor
Laboratories on Long Island, New York singing a
version of the chorus to the song "Tipperary". She suggested to
Philip that he write lyrics to the song. He did.
The song soon also became a favorite at the
summer courses of the Marine Biological Laboratory in Woods Hole,
Massachusetts.
For more information about the Popes click here.
On another page I have posted an image of Pope's own copy of the words, as
well as information on appearances of the song in MBL songbooks in 1921 and
1922.
The Amphioxus Song was also included in a small book, Songs Of Biology,
by Frank R. Brooks, published by the Beta Beta Beta biological honor
society in 1948 (it may also have been in the first edition of 1939).
A 1965 edition of this book was reprinted in 1978
by the MBL. Songs Of Biology credited Philip Pope with the lyrics.
The song was further popularized by the folk singer (and marine biologist)
Sam Hinton, in his well-received 1961 record
The Song Of Men: All Sorts & Kinds (Smithsonian Folkways FA 2400).
Hinton learned the words in 1934, when he was a zoology student at Texas
A&M University, from his instructor Sewell H. Hopkins. Hopkins did not
sing it but declaimed it as a poem. He said that he had learned it
in the 1920s in Woods Hole, Massachusetts, but he did not
know the name of the author, saying only that its words were found posted on a
bulletin board. MBL records show that Hopkins attended the Zoölogy course
at the MBL in the summer of 1927.
The song is sometimes erroneously credited to the excellent present-day Seattle
songwriter Mark Graham, who does not claim it.
Performance by Hinton (Real Audio .ram format file download)
Lyrics
A fish-like thing appeared among the annelids one day.
It hadn't any parapods nor setae to display.
It hadn't any eyes nor jaws, nor ventral nervous cord,
But it had a lot of gill slits and it had a notochord.
Chorus:
It's a long way from Amphioxus. It's a long way to us.
It's a long way from Amphioxus to the meanest human cuss.
Well, it's goodbye to fins and gill slits, and it's welcome lungs and hair!
It's a long, long way from Amphioxus, but we all came from there.
It wasn't much to look at and it scarce knew how to swim,
And Nereis was very sure it hadn't come from him.
The mollusks wouldn't own it and the arthropods got sore,
So the poor thing had to burrow in the sand along the shore.
He burrowed in the sand before a crab could nip his tail,
And he said "Gill slits and myotomes are all to no avail.
I've grown some metapleural folds and sport an oral hood,
But all these fine new characters don't do me any good.
(chorus)
It sulked awhile down in the sand without a bit of pep,
Then he stiffened up his notochord and said, "I'll beat 'em yet!
Let 'em laugh and show their ignorance. I don't mind their jeers. *
Just wait until they see me in a hundred million years. *
My notochord shall turn into a chain of vertebrae
And as fins my metapleural folds will agitate the sea.
My tiny dorsal nervous cord will be a mighty brain
And the vertebrates shall dominate the animal domain.
(chorus)
* note -- the two lines marked by asterisks are not the original
words, which are:
I've got more possibilities within my slender frame
Than all these proud invertebrates that treat me with such shame.
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Is it scientifically accurate?
Well, yes and no. The origin of the chordates from the annelids is
an obsolete idea (you could come closer by singing "tunicates" instead).
But the Cephalochordates (the group consisting of
the species of amphioxus) do in fact seem to be
the closest relative
(sister taxon) of the craniate chordates (the hagfish and the vertebrates).
This was proposed almost 150
years ago. In between, it fell out of favor. More recent molecular evolution studies have restored Branchiostoma to
this honorable position. Further studies have suggested a modification:
the amphioxus may be the sister group to a group consisting of the
tunicates and the craniate chordates, so that the tunicates are more closely
related to us than is the amphioxus. This would make the amphioxus
more rather than less interesting in illuminating early chordate evolution.
The matter is still under debate: stay tuned.
Sam Hinton to Joe Felsenstein, e-mail of 18 February 1997
I had asked him whether the song originated from MBL or WHOI (the
better-known Woods Hole Oceanographic Institution next door to the MBL).
(I later
found out that WHOI could not have been involved as it didn't exist at
that time).
From: SLHinton17 (at) aol.com
Received: (from root@localhost)
by emout01.mail.aol.com (8.7.6/8.7.3/AOL-2.0.0)
id WAA06281 for joe (at) genetics.washington.edu;
Tue, 18 Feb 1997 22:18:31 -0500 (EST)
Date: Tue, 18 Feb 1997 22:18:31 -0500 (EST)
Message-Id: <970218221829_-1776149618 (at) emout01.mail.aol.com>
To: joe (at) genetics.washington.edu
Subject: Re: A Long Way to Amphioxus
Status: RO
I wish I could be certain about this, but can't. In 1934, when I was a
freshman zoology major at Texas A & M, I learned this song from Mr. Sewell H.
Hopkins of the Zoology Department. He said that it dated from sometiime in
the '20's, and that he had learned it at Woods Hole. He didn't specify WHERE
at Woods Hole. But I think it more likely that he had been at MBL rather
than WHOI; I know he went on to obtain a PhD somewhere, and he became
Director of the State Fish, Game and Oyster Commission of Virginia-- and that
sounds more like an MBL guy than a WHOI one!
Mr. Hopkins didn't sing it for me, but declaimed it as a poem, with quite
vivid histrionics.
He did say that, wherever it was, it had appeared anonymously on a bulletin
board.
Some have tried to credit it to Prof. Walter Garstang (1868-1949) of the
U.K., but I understand he disavowed it, and it does not appear in his book of
collected poems entitled _Larval Forms_.(Oxford: Basil Blackwell, 1962 [3rd
printing]}. In his day Amphioxus (now _Branchiostoma_) was often cited as
proving the theory of recapitulation, and Garstang was the first scientist to
try to repudiate that theory. One of his last communications was to the
effect that Amphioxus most nearly represented a paedomorphic neotenous larva
of a Cyclostome. So I guess he didn't write the song!
When I sing it these days, I try to warn the audience not to take seriously
the idea that there is some sort of Lamarckian tendency toward complexity and
"perfection" in the processes of evolution....
Anyway, I think you should sing it as an MBI creation, and ask the audience
if anyone knows for sure.
I wish I could hear your lecture and singing!
Sam Hinton in liner notes, 1961.
In the liner notes to his record: Sam Hinton Sings The Song of Men:
All Sorts & Kinds, Folkway Records, FA2400,
Hinton wrote:
For some years this was practically the theme-song of the summer
students at the Woods Hole Biological Institution in Massachusetts; it
was made up by persons unknown back in the days when _amphioxus_ (now
technically known as _Branchiostoma_) was thought to resemble the
theoretical ancestor of all the vertebrate groups. Nowadays,
most systematic biologists agree that amphioxus is a
sideline, and that the sea-squirts and other ascidians are more like
our Great-Great-Great-to-the-Nth-power Grandparents. It's still a
good song, though, and has a sort of cheerful optimism for the future
that we need today .... I learned it when I was a freshman at Texas
A&M College, from Dr. Sewell H. Hopkins of the Zo Department, and I
shall never forget the deep feeling and fervor with which he used to
declaim it.
Some other interesting web sites about the song
- Jeff Moran's "Dr. Chordate" pages include
a copy of the song and mention of its presence in the book "Songs of
Biology" in 1948, as well as a
statement that "The above lyrics are claimed by a Philip Pope of Whitman College (probably long since deceased)".
- Joseph M. Newcomer has presented The Annotated Amphioxus, which explains much of the terminology
of the song.
- The excellent
Cephalochordate page at the web site of the University of California
Museum of Paleontology in Berkeley, California, has lots of information about
the amphioxus and, in the page title, makes reference to the song.
This page prepared by Joe Felsenstein. I am indebted to Sam Hinton,
Jeff "Dr. Chordate" Moran,
Joel Weintraub,
Heidi Dobson,
Jean Monahan (MBL Archivist), Clare Bunce (CSHL Archivist),
and especially to
Arthur Rempel
of Whitman College and
Edith Pope Patten
of Shoreline, Washington, who shared recollections and provided materials
about Art's friends and Edith's parents Philip Pope and Louise Smith Pope.
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