There is a beetle on the high street, pushing the sun along at a fraction- 0f-a-mile-per-hour. He is pondering his plans for the summer. Perhaps different venues? Perhaps different dung? But he knows it's all foolishness. He never goes anywhere.
Then a god falls out of the sky. Not a particularly large one, a medium-sized god as far as they go. Roughly human- shaped. Not counting those streaming banners of fire that pour from his eyes. Few humans have burning eyes.
A dagger drips from an open wound and he clenches his blood (it is his own blood) in his hand. More are coming he realizes. All of them. And he's quite correct. Without trumpets or lights or choruses or bowls or scrolls, it starts to rain.
The beetle pauses in his pilgrimage to survey the man underneath the god's feet. A hand in a crater of asphalt with a keen, nigh-inaudible wheeze of breath. A cough and a choke. And the beetle scuttles on.
They fall from clouds that aren't, I mean, actually in the sky. They crush buildings and businessmen, They eat fountains. They descend into an unthinkable and unthinking age like a dizzied chorus that cannot pick up on the beat. Purple sash and green helm, They build mountains.
Teeth chip around the clay- the men and women- like fireworks. The gods' great works resolve like a finished slider puzzle, like the back of the sun. Mannequins watch the moving marble for a moment. But the Mutes eventually find a voice, they shout, they run into the fray.
Tantalus' mouth fills with wine. The beetle walks around his head. Sisyphus' back was broken by a boulder. The poor little fellow descends into an inferno and climbs the devil's back like a Purgative mountaineer. Such struggle, thinks he, to have to take a detour.
Sky sets fire to the shell pink sun at night.
The liquid spheres engulf ideas on a dry stretch of ocean.
Clouds splinter in a victor's hands, are frozen shut.
and everything sinks back home in the middle of a wor