Charcoal
"Keep moving," I said as I ran through the town
with both my feet treading on wet, grimy ground.
The people behind me looked hopeless and dead
with each of their faces contorted with dread.
We ran down the alley, pursued by the guard,
who mistakenly thought it was us who had marred
the great chapel at Queensreach with coal dark as night
and now we made rounds round the town in our flight.
Into the countryside, into the fields,
each of the farmers all counting their yields
of the new autumn's harvest of ripe honeydew.
Through this expanse, our cavalcade flew:
chased by the guardsmen on horseback with bow
they tore through our numbers; their arrows did sow
great discontent among men and their needs
who knew that this blood would not nourish their seeds.
Seeds that they planted to feed the guardsmen,
who slaughtered the children, pinning them in
the warm summer's dirt, hard-tilled by the ox,
but soon they'd be lying in their own wooden box
lowered six feet beneath the wet, grimy ground
by the guardsmen that killed them, in the middle of town
beside of the chapel all blackened with soot
by vandals not chased through the alleys on foot.
We all died that day for a simple mistake,
and now we lie buried, never to wake.
So don't lift a hand if in it lays coal,
or forever you'll lay in the ground, you poor soul.