"You must realize," he continued, "the mistake of those who, believing

in Atlantis, have sought to explain the cataclysm in which they

suppose the island to have sunk. Without exception, they have thought

that it was swallowed up. Actually, there has not been an immersion.

There has been an emersion. New lands have emerged from the Atlantic

wave. The desert has replaced the sea, the sebkhas, the salt lakes,

the Triton lakes, the sandy Syrtes are the desolate vestiges of the

free sea water over which, in former days, the fleets swept with a

fair wind towards the conquest of Attica. Sand swallows up

civilization better than water. To-day there remains nothing of the

beautiful isle that the sea and winds kept gay and verdant but this

chalky mass. Nothing has endured in this rocky basin, cut off forever

from the living world, but the marvelous oasis that you have at your

feet, these red fruits, this cascade, this blue lake, sacred witnesses

to the golden age that is gone. Last evening, in coming here, you had

to cross the five enclosures: the three belts of water, dry forever;

the two girdles of earth through which are hollowed the passages you

traversed on camel back, where, formerly, the triremes floated. The

only thing that, in this immense catastrophe, has preserved its

likeness to its former state, is this mountain, the mountain where

Neptune shut up his well-beloved Clito, the daughter of Evenor and

Leucippe, the mother of Atlas, and the ancestress of Antinea, the

sovereign under whose dominion you are about to enter forever."

"Sir," Morhange with the most exquisite courtesy, "it would be only a

natural anxiety which would urge us to inquire the reasons and the end

of this dominion. But behold to what extent your revelation interests

me; I defer this question of private interest. Of late, in two

caverns, it has been my fortune to discover Tifinar inscriptions of

this name, Antinea. My comrade is witness that I took it for a Greek

name. I understand now, thanks to you and the divine Plato, that I

need no longer feel surprised to hear a barbarian called by a Greek

name. But I am no less perplexed as to the etymology of the word. Can

you enlighten me?"

"I shall certainly not fail you there, sir," said M. Le Mesge. "I may

tell you, too, that you are not the first to put to me that question.

Most of the explorers that I have seen enter here in the past ten

years have been attracted in the same way, intrigued by this Greek

work reproduced in Tifinar. I have even arranged a fairly exact

catalogue of these inscriptions and the caverns where they are to be

met with. All, or almost all, are accompanied by this legend:

Antinea. Here commences her domain. I myself have had repainted with

ochre such as were beginning to be effaced. But, to return to what I

was telling you before, none of the Europeans who have followed this

epigraphic mystery here, have kept their anxiety to solve this

etymology once they found themselves in Antinea's palace. They all

become otherwise preoccupied. I might make many disclosures as to the

little real importance which purely scientific interests possess even

for scholars, and the quickness with which they sacrifice them to the

most mundane considerations--their own lives, for instance."




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