*A quick writer's note: "Korinth," is not pronounced like the Greek city Corinth. Rather, the accent is on the second syllable.
The Ballad of Korinth Dane
A world of living metal calmly floats
Beneath a polished, brilliant golden sun,
And on a sea of silver sail the boats,
Whose steely hulls will gleam upon their run.
The forest canopy’s an iron mesh,
Beneath which small metallic creatures curl,
And yet this plane has got its share of flesh,
Which looks with jealousy about the world.
One starlit night, a little boy was born,
Without one drop of metal in his veins.
His metal/fleshy parents looked with scorn
Upon their young Korinth, of family Dane.
As Dane then aged, he constantly was mocked
By others who by metal were infused.
His childhood was like a prison locked
Behind him as he was, by them, abused.
He came of age and had to choose a craft,
A trade that he could train in and be skilled,
The others all insulted him and laughed,
That he would join the Metalworkers Guild.
His application took almost a year,
He tirelessly worked to fill the blanks,
And though rejection came to be his fear,
Eventually, they let him in their ranks.
For half a decade, he would study there,
With scarcely a promotion well in sight,
While others flourished; it was hardly fair,
He knew that something here just wasn’t right.
One day when he was dusting off his shelf,
Within his tiny room, both cold and dim,
He got a note: the
Canonist herself,
She wished to have a private word with him.
The
Canonist was less of flesh than steel,
A paragon of metal, clean and hard,
She hardly seemed, in fact, like she were real,
And looked upon him with a cold regard.
“Your studies,” said she with a tinny voice,
“Are less than satisfying us, Korinth.
And so I think I’ll offer you a choice:
Stay here and fail, or brave the Labyrinth.”
The young man’s skin broke out into a sweat,
His eyes grew wide; his pupils grew as well,
To walk the Labyrinth: to pay a debt,
That you had not incurred on land or hell.
The
Canonist dismissed the younger man,
Who spent the coming days and nights in thought,
He knew that he would have to make a plan;
She said it was a choice, but it was not.
A fortnight hence, Korinth was led below,
And to a gate inlaid with filigree,
His metal mentors left him there to go
Beyond into the torment it would be.
The entrance to the Labyrinth was large,
But what the metalworker noticed most,
Was one huge chair, a throne for those in charge,
And on that chair there sat a
charcoal ghost.
She looked on him with dead, impassive eyes,
And spoke, her voice a whisper on the wind,
“You’ve come to me, but do you realize,
How much this place will leave your mind chagrined?”
“I’ve come to learn the truth of metalwork,”
Said Dane with all the courage he could bring,
The specter shook her head and with a smirk,
She pointed while the wind began to sing.
He took a breath, then walked into the maze,
Enveloped in a strange, unearthly fog,
And as he worked his way into that haze,
He argued with his inner monologue.
Korinth had no idea how long he walked,
It may have been for weeks, or days at least,
Each path he took eventually was blocked,
And every day his hopes to win decreased.
But then he came upon a dead-end path,
And heard a clanging from behind his track,
He turned; his sweat had drenched him like a bath,
It was a man, he thought, of
metal black.
Its slumped and drooping shoulders spoke of sorrows,
Its leg-bent gait a step away from lame,
It seemed to dread the thought of more tomorrows,
And melancholy cloaked his darkened frame.
It moved, though you could hardly call it “life,”
It stared at Dane with eyes that must be blind,
But then it slowly drew a pristine knife,
And stabbed itself, but left no wound behind.
It held out to its sides both of its hands,
The knife’s metallic length was twisted, bent,
It shook its head, then slumped down where it stands,
But still Korinth did not know what it meant.
The
metal man looked like an ending storm,
And something in its presence made Dane grieve,
But carefully Korinth pressed past its form,
And hurried on his way to turn and leave.
Korinth continued through those endless halls,
Whose paths were twisted, turned, and even crossed,
It all looked much the same, the floor, the walls,
And soon it was quite clear that Dane was lost.
The
metal man weighed much upon his mind,
This most disturbing thing that he could see,
It’s lost forever, in this maze confined,
The prison known as immortality.
He grew to know what terror was about,
And all his future started looking grim,
Then soon, a darkness, shadow of his doubt,
Would be the enemy that ended him.
He wished for all the metalworks to burn,
The grave injustice of it made him cry,
He thought they’d sent him to this place to learn,
When clearly he’d been sentenced here to die.
His
very shadow grew within his brain,
Like choking dust that piles on a shelf,
It grew into a strong and pressing pain,
That even Korinth knew he caused himself.
And then his
shade became a living thing,
As mocking laughter sounded from above,
The shadow struck, a dark and deadly sting,
That grasped his heart as though a hand in glove.
And in that moment, Dane collapsed in awe,
So near to death, just hanging on the brink,
And deep within his mind, the young man saw
A
glimpse at what the world would never think.
At least
his world, for there were others now,
As many as the waves on silver seas,
For suddenly, he seemed to know somehow,
About the planes and Blind Eternities.
His eyes, in fear and terror, opened wide,
But all the Labyrinth had disappeared,
And in its place, a forested lakeside,
With non-metallic leaves, alive and weird.
It took him months to learn of what he was,
And of the magic flowing through his veins,
He found a mentor, took to him because
Of his desire now to walk the planes.
He spent his time researching, for an answer,
And thought about it everywhere he’d roam,
In time, he came to be a pyromancer,
And thought to bring the fire to his home.
He realized that world was just a prison,
A metal cell that locked all life away,
For with no death, had life truly arisen?
Without a night, is hell just endless day?
And so he sought out ever hotter flames,
To smelt the metal of that distant place,
The curses that he spoke invoked the names
Of all that world and its metallic face.
He tirelessly worked for several years,
And pyromancers learned the name of Dane,
At all his triumphs, they gave out their cheers,
But never more than his
fires of Bane.
They burned as hot as dragon fire could,
And all his colleagues praised him for his skill,
It burned through metal like it’s made of wood,
And yet he worked ‘til it was hotter still.
Korinth believed that everything could burn,
By flames as
cone, or
burst, or
wave, or
ball,
But he was ready now for his return,
Intent to bring an ending to them all.
When he stepped back into that world, it’s dull
And lifeless air was like a leaden weight,
And as he sucked his breath into his skull,
He set his purpose to
obliterate.
The fires spread out from Korinth in waves,
And all the metal started then to sag,
He turned the metal mountains into graves,
As all the world left its remains as slag.
The screams of dead and dying filled the skies,
Just as the smoke came wafting from the ground,
Now, one by one, each soul from that world dies,
Their dirge a high and horrid hissing sound.
And now that pyromancer walks the planes,
His
baneful fire hotter than a sun,
And all that’s metal now must fear of Dane’s
Obliterating wrath; he’ll smelt each one.