"When I was Professor at the Lycée du Parc at Lyons. I knew Berlioux

and followed eagerly his works on African History. I had, at that

time, a very original idea for my doctor's thesis. I was going to

establish a parallel between the Berber heroine of the seventh

century, who struggled against the Arab invader, Kahena, and the

French heroine, Joan of Arc, who struggled against the English

invader. I proposed to the Faculté des Lettres at Paris this title

for my thesis: Joan of Arc and the Tuareg. This simple announcement

gave rise to a perfect outcry in learned circles, a furor of

ridicule. My friends warned me discreetly. I refused to believe them.

Finally I was forced to believe when my rector summoned me before him

and, after manifesting an astonishing interest in my health, asked

whether I should object to taking two years' leave on half pay. I

refused indignantly. The rector did not insist; but fifteen days

later, a ministerial decree, with no other legal procedure, assigned

me to one of the most insignificant and remote Lycées of France, at

Mont-de-Marsan.

"Realize my exasperation and you will excuse the excesses to which I

delivered myself in that strange country. What is there to do in

Landes, if you neither eat nor drink? I did both violently. My pay

melted away in fois gras, in woodcocks, in fine wines. The result

came quickly enough: in less than a year my joints began to crack like

the over-oiled axle of a bicycle that has gone a long way upon a dusty

track. A sharp attack of gout nailed me to my bed. Fortunately, in

that blessed country, the cure is in reach of the suffering. So I

departed to Dax, at vacation time, to try the waters.

"I rented a room on the bank of the Adour, overlooking the Promenade

des Baignots. A charwoman took care of it for me. She worked also for

an old gentleman, a retired Examining Magistrate, President of the

Roger-Ducos Society, which was a vague scientific backwater, in which

the scholars of the neighborhood applied themselves with prodigious

incompetence to the most whimsical subjects. One afternoon I stayed in

my room on account of a very heavy rain. The good woman was

energetically polishing the copper latch of my door. She used a paste

called Tripoli, which she spread upon a paper and rubbed and

rubbed.... The peculiar appearance of the paper made me curious. I

glanced at it. 'Great heavens! Where did you get this paper?' She was

perturbed. 'At my master's; he has lots of it. I tore this out of a

notebook.' 'Here are ten francs. Go and get me the notebook.' "A quarter of an hour later, she was back with it. By good luck it lacked only one page, the one with which she had been polishing my

door. This manuscript, this notebook, have you any idea what it was?

Merely the Voyage to Atlantis of the mythologist Denis de Milet,

which is mentioned by Diodorus and the loss of which I had so often

heard Berlioux deplore.[10] [Footnote 10: How did the Voyage to Atlantis arrive at Dax? I have

found, so far, only one credible hypothesis: it might have been

discovered in Africa by the traveller, de Behagle, a member of the

Roger-Ducos Society, who studied at the college of Dax, and later, on

several occasions, visited the town. (Note by M. Leroux.)] "This inestimable document contained numerous quotations from the Critias. It gave an abstract of the illustrious dialogue, the sole

existing copy of which you held in your hands a little while ago. It

established past controversy the location of the stronghold of the

Atlantides, and demonstrated that this site, which is denied by

science, was not submerged by the waves, as is supposed by the rare

and timorous defenders of the Atlantide hypothesis. He called it the

'central Mazycian range,' You know there is no longer any doubt as to

the identification of the Mazyces of Herodotus with the people of

Imoschaoch, the Tuareg. But the manuscript of Denys unquestionably

identifies the historical Mazyces with the Atlantides of the supposed

legend.




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