I've seen sand flooding through city streets like a torrent of hot gravy drowning sprouts and beetroots, park benches and church rooves.
Or maybe more like the final sprinkle of salt, baptising the parsnips and chicken breast in some sick meal time ritual.
It bursts through stained glass windows, choking the streets and preserving the locals. It rains down.
They used to mix it into a paste and mould it into city scapes - arches topped in humble salute through holes in the clouds.
Nowadays they melt it down and make office blocks out of the stuff, 500 metres in the air propped up like a million glossy middle fingers.
We bake it into computer chips and pluck digits from the stars. We predict eclipses and the dances of the planets with only slightly more accuracy than Ptolemy.
It'll come again, and nothing can slow it down
Dec 5, 2019
Dec 5, 2019 at 5:42 PM UTC
I've seen sand flooding through city streets like a torrent of hot gravy drowning sprouts and beetroots, park benches and church rooves.
Or maybe more like the final sprinkle of salt, baptising the parsnips and chicken breast in some sick meal time ritual.
It bursts through stained glass windows, choking the streets and preserving the locals. It rains down.
They used to mix it into a paste and mould it into city scapes - arches topped in humble salute through holes in the clouds.
Nowadays they melt it down and make office blocks out of the stuff, 500 metres in the air propped up like a million glossy middle fingers.
We bake it into computer chips and pluck digits from the stars. We predict eclipses and the dances of the planets with only slightly more accuracy than Ptolemy.
It'll come again, and nothing can slow it down