it has a rhyming translation from the Russian poet Pushkin.
A bearded sage once said that there’s no motion.
His silent colleague simply strolled before him,--
How could he answer better?! -- all adored him!
And praised his wise reply with great devotion.
But men, this is enchanting! -- let me interject,
For me, another grand occurrence comes to play:
The sun rotates around us every single day,
And yet, the headstrong Galileo was correct.
http://spintongues.vladivostok.com/pooshkin3.htm
it has an historical essay on the "Stone-von-Neumann" theorem by Rosenberg
http://www.math.umd.edu/~jmr/StoneVNart.pdf
the last paragraph is inspiring (I omit the quote from Lopez):
"The main conclusion of this paper is that physics is beautiful. Questions aroused two and half millennium ago and scrutinized many times are still not exhausted. Zeno’s paradoxes deal with fundamental aspects of reality like localization, motion, space and time. New and unexpected facets of these notions come into sight from time to time and every century finds it worthwhile to return to Zeno over and over. The process of approaching to the ultimate resolution of Zeno’s paradoxes seems endless and our understanding of the surrounding world is still incomplete and fragmentary."