The term "top" could refer to:

Why? Because Sisyphus becomes fully conscious of his absurd condition. In the moment he descends the mountain to retrieve the rock, he knows the futility of his task. He has no hope of success. Yet he scorns the gods’ punishment by continuing. His revolt lies in his lucidity and his defiance. The struggle itself—the sweat, the muscle, the downward walk—is enough to fill a human heart. Sisyphus is happy because he has renounced nothing. He lives without appeal, and in doing so, he makes the rock his rock.

Imagining Sisyphus happy: DNA barcoding and the unnamed majority