Atlantida - Page 65/145

"I learned, therefore, from Denys, not only that the central part of

Atlantis, the cradle and home of the dynasty of Neptune, had not sunk

in the disaster described by Plato as engulfing the rest of the

Atlantide isle, but also that it corresponded to the Tuareg Ahaggar,

and that, in this Ahaggar, at least in his time, the noble dynasty of

Neptune was supposed to be still existent.

"The historians of Atlantis put the date of the cataclysm which

destroyed all or part of that famous country at nine thousand years

before Christ. If Denis de Milet, who wrote scarcely three thousand

years ago, believed that in his time, the dynastic issue of Neptune

was still ruling its dominion, you will understand that I thought

immediately--what has lasted nine thousand years may last eleven

thousand. From that instant I had only one aim: to find the possible

descendants of the Atlantides, and, since I had many reasons for

supposing them to be debased and ignorant of their original splendor,

to inform them of their illustrious descent.

"You will easily understand that I imparted none of my intentions to

my superiors at the University. To solicit their approval or even

their permission, considering the attitude they had taken toward me,

would have been almost certainly to invite confinement in a cell. So I

raised what I could on my own account, and departed without trumpet or

drum for Oran. On the first of October I reached In-Salah. Stretched

at my ease beneath a palm tree, at the oasis, I took infinite pleasure

in considering how, that very day, the principal of Mont-de-Marsan,

beside himself, struggling to control twenty horrible urchins howling

before the door of an empty class room, would be telegraphing wildly

in all directions in search of his lost history professor."

M. Le Mesge stopped and looked at us to mark his satisfaction.

I admit that I forgot my dignity and I forgot the affectation he had

steadily assumed of talking only to Morhange.

"You will pardon me, sir, if your discourse interests me more than I

had anticipated. But you know very well that I lack the fundamental

instruction necessary to understand you. You speak of the dynasty of

Neptune. What is this dynasty, from which, I believe, you trace the

descent of Antinea? What is her rôle in the story of Atlantis?"

M. Le Mesge smiled with condescension, meantime winking at Morhange

with the eye nearest to him. Morhange was listening without

expression, without a word, chin in hand, elbow on knee.

"Plato will answer for me, sir," said the Professor.

And he added, with an accent of inexpressible pity: "Is it really possible that you have never made the acquaintance of

the introduction to the Critias?"