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Time and the Gods

Chapter 23: THE JEST OF THE GODS
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About This Book

A collection of mythic vignettes set in dreamlike lands where gods, their servant Time, and mortal figures interact across moments of creation, loss, and destiny. Stories move from cosmogonic episodes such as the coming of the sea and the fall of a marble city to shorter parables about divine caprice, human vengeance, prophetic visions, and a symbolic royal journey. The prose pairs ornate, lyrical description with spare, melancholic scenes, repeatedly considering the fragility of civilizations, the fleeting authority of deities, and the uneasy relationship between eternal designs and Time's autonomous force.

THE JEST OF THE GODS

Once the Older gods had need of laughter. Therefore They made the soul of a king, and set in it ambitions greater than kings should have, and lust for territories beyond the lust of other kings, and in this soul They set strength beyond the strength of others and fierce desire for power and a strong pride. Then the gods pointed earthward and sent that soul into the fields of men to live in the body of a slave. And the slave grew, and the pride and lust for power began to arise in his heart, and he wore shackles on his arms. Then in the Fields of Twilight the gods prepared to laugh.

But the slave went down to the shore of the great sea, and cast his body away and the shackles that were upon it, and strode back to the Fields of Twilight and stood up before the gods and looked Them in Their faces. This thing the gods, when They had prepared to laugh, had not foreseen. Lust for power burned strong in that King’s soul, and there was all the strength and pride in it that the gods had placed therein, and he was too strong for the Older gods. He whose body had borne the lashes of men could brook no longer the dominion of the gods, and standing before Them he bade the gods to go. Up to Their lips leapt all the anger of the Older gods, being for the first time commanded, but the King’s soul faced Them still, and Their anger died away and They averted Their eyes. Then Their thrones became empty, and the Fields of Twilight bare as the gods slunk far away. But the soul chose new companions.