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+<html lang="en">
+<head>
+ <meta charset="UTF-8">
+ <title>
+ The Sunken World | Project Gutenberg
+ </title>
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+<div style='text-align:center'>*** START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK 77257 ***</div>
+
+<div class="transnote center">
+Transcribed from <i>Amazing Stories Quarterly</i>, Summer 1928 (vol. 1, no. 3, pp. 292–377).
+</div>
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_292">[p. 292]</span></p>
+<h1 style="margin-top:2em">
+<i>The</i> SUNKEN WORLD</h1>
+<br><br>
+<p class="center p5"><strong><i>By Stanton A. Coblentz</i></strong>
+</p>
+<br><br>
+
+<div class="chapter"></div>
+
+<figure class="figcenter illowe32_9375" id="img293">
+ <img class="w100" src="images/img293.jpg" alt="">
+ <figcaption>
+ Then, as the searchlights swayed and shifted till they swept the
+depths directly beneath, we began to make out familiar objects amid
+the obscurity.... For a moment I observed nothing alarming. Then, as
+my gaze became focused upon a gray dome just below, I too cried out in
+dread realization.... Here and there a lantern-bearing object, with
+flapping finny body, went wavering through the windows and above the
+temple roofs!
+ </figcaption>
+</figure>
+
+<hr class="tb">
+
+<div class="chapter"></div>
+<h2>CONTENTS</h2>
+<p>
+<a href="#FOREWORD">FOREWORD</a><br>
+<a href="#INTRODUCTION">INTRODUCTION</a><br>
+<a href="#CHAPTER_I">CHAPTER I – Harkness Explains His Disappearance</a><br>
+<a href="#CHAPTER_II">CHAPTER II – Untraveled Depths</a><br>
+<a href="#CHAPTER_III">CHAPTER III – On Unknown Shores</a><br>
+<a href="#CHAPTER_IV">CHAPTER IV – A Tour of Exploration</a><br>
+<a href="#CHAPTER_V">CHAPTER V – The Mysterious City</a><br>
+<a href="#CHAPTER_VI">CHAPTER VI – The Temple of the Stars</a><br>
+<a href="#CHAPTER_VII">CHAPTER VII – Trapped</a><br>
+<a href="#CHAPTER_VIII">CHAPTER VIII – Sapphire and Amber</a><br>
+<a href="#CHAPTER_IX">CHAPTER IX – The Will of the Masters</a><br>
+<a href="#CHAPTER_X">CHAPTER X – Discoveries</a><br>
+<a href="#CHAPTER_XI">CHAPTER XI – Questions and Answers</a><br>
+<a href="#CHAPTER_XII">CHAPTER XII – The Submergence</a><br>
+<a href="#CHAPTER_XIII">CHAPTER XIII – Trial and Judgment</a><br>
+<a href="#CHAPTER_XIV">CHAPTER XIV – The Upper World Club</a><br>
+<a href="#CHAPTER_XV">CHAPTER XV – The Pageant of the Good Destruction</a><br>
+<a href="#CHAPTER_XVI">CHAPTER XVI – An Official Summons</a><br>
+<a href="#CHAPTER_XVII">CHAPTER XVII – The High Initiation</a><br>
+<a href="#CHAPTER_XVIII">CHAPTER XVIII – The Journey Commences</a><br>
+<a href="#CHAPTER_XIX">CHAPTER XIX – The Glass City</a><br>
+<a href="#CHAPTER_XX">CHAPTER XX – Farm and Factory</a><br>
+<a href="#CHAPTER_XXI">CHAPTER XXI – The Wall and the Wind-makers</a><br>
+<a href="#CHAPTER_XXII">CHAPTER XXII – The Journey Ends</a><br>
+<a href="#CHAPTER_XXIII">CHAPTER XXIII – Xanocles</a><br>
+<a href="#CHAPTER_XXIV">CHAPTER XXIV – What the Books Revealed</a><br>
+<a href="#CHAPTER_XXV">CHAPTER XXV – Duties and Pastimes</a><br>
+<a href="#CHAPTER_XXVI">CHAPTER XXVI – Curiosities, Freaks and Monstrosities</a><br>
+<a href="#CHAPTER_XXVII">CHAPTER XXVII – The Warning of the Waters</a><br>
+<a href="#CHAPTER_XXVIII">CHAPTER XXVIII – The Waters Retreat</a><br>
+<a href="#CHAPTER_XXIX">CHAPTER XXIX – The Party of Emergence</a><br>
+<a href="#CHAPTER_XXX">CHAPTER XXX – Crucial Moments</a><br>
+<a href="#CHAPTER_XXXI">CHAPTER XXXI – “The History of the Upper World”</a><br>
+<a href="#CHAPTER_XXXII">CHAPTER XXXII – A Happy Consummation</a><br>
+<a href="#CHAPTER_XXXIII">CHAPTER XXXIII – The Flood Gates Open</a><br>
+<a href="#CHAPTER_XXXIV">CHAPTER XXXIV – Swollen Torrents</a><br>
+<a href="#CHAPTER_XXXV">CHAPTER XXXV – The Return</a><br>
+<a href="#Transcribers_note">Transcriber’s note</a>
+</p>
+
+<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop"><div class="chapter"><h2 class="nobreak" id="FOREWORD">FOREWORD</h2></div>
+
+<div class="blockquot">
+<p><i>The world of literature is full of Atlantis stories, but we are
+certain, that there has never been a story written with the daring
+and with such originality as to approach “The Sunken World.”</i></p>
+
+<p><i>Science is pretty well convinced today, that there was an Atlantis
+many thousands of years ago. Just exactly what became of it, no
+one knows. The author, in this story, which no doubt will become a
+classic some day, has approached the subject at a totally different
+angle than has ever been attempted before; and let no one think
+that the idea, daring and impossible as it would seem at first, is
+impossible. Nor is it at all impossible that progress and science
+goes and comes in waves. It may be possible that millions of years
+ago, the world had reached a much higher culture than we have today.
+Electricity and radio, and all that goes with it, may have been
+well known eons ago, only to be swept away and rediscovered. Every
+scientist knows, that practically every invention is periodically
+rediscovered independently. It seems there is nothing new under the
+sun.</i></p>
+
+<p><i>But the big idea behind the author’s theme is the holding of
+present-day science and progress up to a certain amount of ridicule,
+and showing up our civilization in a sometimes grotesque mirror,
+which may not be always pleasing to our vanity and to our appraisal
+of our so-called present day achievements.</i></p>
+
+<p><i>The point the author brings out is that it is one thing to have
+power in science and inventions, but that it is another thing to use
+that power correctly. He shows dramatically and vividly how it can be
+used and how it should be used.</i></p>
+
+<p><i>From the technical standpoint, this story is tremendous, and while
+some of our critics, will, as usual, find fault with the hydraulics
+contained in this story, the fact remains they are not at all
+impossible.</i></p>
+</div>
+
+
+<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop"><div class="chapter"><h2 class="nobreak" id="INTRODUCTION">INTRODUCTION</h2></div>
+
+<p>It was in the spring of 1918 that the United States submarine
+X-111 was launched upon its adventurous career. The German commerce
+raiders had now reached the height of their effectiveness; almost daily
+they were taking their toll of luckless seamen and provision-laden
+steamers; and the United States government, in alarm that was never
+officially admitted, had resolved upon desperate measures. The result
+was the X-111. The first of a fleet of undersea craft, this vessel
+was constructed upon lines never before attempted. Not only was it
+exceedingly long (being about two hundred feet from stem to stern), but
+it was excessively narrow, and a man had to be short indeed to stand
+upright within it on its single deck without coming into contact with
+the arching ceiling. The ship, in fact, was nothing more nor less than
+a long pipe-like tube of reinforced steel, able to cleave the water at
+tremendous speed and ram and destroy any enemy by ramming it with its
+beak-like prow. But this was only its slightest point of novelty. At
+both ends and at several points along the sides it was equipped with
+water-piercing searchlights of a power never before known (the creation
+of Walter Tamrock, the Kansas inventor who lost his life in the
+war); and it was provided with a series of air-tight and water-proof
+compartments, any one of which might be pierced without seriously
+injuring the vessel as a whole. Hence the X-111 was generally known as
+unsinkable, and upon it the American officials fastened their hopes of
+abating the nuisance of the enemy “U-boat.”</p>
+
+<p>The sinking of this “unsinkable” vessel is now of course a matter
+of history. Close observers of naval events will recall how, in May,
+1918, the newspapers reported the disappearance of another United
+States submarine. All that was known with certainty was, that the ship
+had been commissioned to the danger zone; that it had failed to return
+to its base at the expected time, and that the passing days brought
+no news of it; that wireless messages and searching expeditions alike
+proved unavailing, and that it was two months before the only clue as
+to its fate was found. Then it was that a British destroyer, on scout
+duty in the North Sea, picked up a drifting life preserver bearing the
+imprint “X-111.” For strategic reasons, this fact was not divulged
+until much later, and for strategic reasons it was not made known
+that the missing submarine was of a new and previously untried type;
+but the mystery of the X-111’s disappearance weighed heavily upon the
+minds of naval officials, and secretly they resolved upon immediate and
+exhaustive investigation. All in vain. Not a trace of the lost ship or
+of the thirty-nine members of its crew could be found; not a scrap of
+the usual drifting flotsam or wreckage could be picked up anywhere on
+the sea; and at last it was admitted in despair that the waters would
+perhaps guard their secret forever.</p>
+
+<p>Seven years went by. Peace had long since returned, and the X-111
+and its tragedy had been forgotten except by a few relatives of the
+unfortunate thirty-nine. Then suddenly the mystery was fanned into
+vivid life again. A bearded man, with a strange greenish complexion and
+eyes that blinked oddly beneath wide, colored glasses, appeared at the
+offices of the Navy department at Washington and claimed to be one of
+the company of the X-111. At first, of course, he was merely laughed at
+as a madman, and could induce no one to listen to him seriously; but
+he was so persistent in his pleas, and so anxious to give proof of his
+identity, that a few began to suspect that there might be some shadow
+of truth to his claims after all. Half-heartedly, an investigation was
+undertaken—and with results that left the world gaping in amazement!
+The testimony of a dozen witnesses, as well as the unmistakable
+evidence of finger-prints and handwriting, proved that the wild-looking
+stranger <span class="pagenum" id="Page_294">[294]</span>was
+none other than Anson Harkness, Ensign on the ill-starred X-111,
+long mourned as dead. Now, for the first time, the truth about the
+disappearance of that remarkable vessel was to be made known; and
+the eager public was treated to a story so extraordinary that only
+irrefutable evidence could make it seem credible. It is safe to say
+that never, since Columbus returned to Spain with the news of his
+discoveries in seeking a western route to the far East, had any mariner
+delivered to his people a revelation so unexampled and marvelous.</p>
+
+<p>But while numerous accounts of the great discovery are extant,
+and while the furore of discussion over the newspaper articles and
+interviews shows no sign of waning, the public has yet to read the
+tale in the words of Harkness himself. And it is for this reason that
+the accompanying history, to which Harkness has devoted himself ever
+since his return from exile, possesses a peculiar and timely interest.
+Harkness has described, unaffectedly and sincerely, the most perilous
+exploits which any man has ever survived. Hence the following pages
+should prove entertaining not only to the student of world events, but
+to that larger public which finds value in a rare and stirring bit of
+autobiography.</p>
+
+<p class="right">
+<span class="smcap">Stanton A. Coblentz</span>,<br>
+(New York, 1928.)
+</p>
+
+<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop"><div class="chapter"><h2 class="nobreak" id="CHAPTER_I">CHAPTER I
+<br>
+Harkness Explains His Disappearance</h2></div>
+<br>
+<div>
+ <img class="drop-cap" src="images/dropcap_t.jpg" width="81" height="82" alt="">
+</div>
+
+<p class="drop-cap"><span class="upper-case">T</span>he maiden voyage of the X-111 was ill-fated
+from the first. Perhaps the new inventions
+had not yet been perfected, or perhaps, in
+the haste of wartime, adequate tests had
+not been made; at any rate, the vessel
+developed mechanical troubles after her first half
+day at sea. To begin with, the rudder and steering
+apparatus proved unmanageable; then, after
+hours spent in making repairs, the engines showed a
+tendency to balk under the tremendous speed we were
+ordered to maintain; and finally, when we had about
+solved the engine problem, we had the misfortune to
+collide with a half-submerged derelict, while running
+on the surface, and one of our water-tight compartments
+sprang a leak.</p>
+
+<p>
+Immediately following the accident, we had risen
+to the surface, for the break was about on a level
+with our waterline, and the compartment could not be
+completely flooded so long as we did not submerge.
+Yet Captain Gavison warned us not to waste a moment,
+and the men worked with desperate speed to
+repair the damage, for we knew that we were in the
+zone of the German U-boat, and that any delay might
+prove perilous, if not fatal. Unfortunately, the sea
+was unusually calm and the day was blue and clear,
+so that even our low-lying hulk could be sighted many
+miles across the waters.
+</p>
+<p>
+I do not know precisely at what position we were
+then stationed, except that it was somewhere in the
+Eastern Atlantic, and at a point where, according to
+the warnings of our Secret Service, a concentration of
+German submarines was to be expected. At any other
+time we would have welcomed the opportunity to come
+to grips with the foe; but now, in our disabled condition,
+we kept a lookout with grave misgivings, and
+silently prayed that the damage might be repaired
+before the enemy slunk into view. Yet it was slow
+work to man the pumps and at the same time to weld
+a strip of metal across the jagged gap in our side;
+and hours passed while we stood there working thigh-deep
+in water, our heads bent low, for there was but
+two or three feet of breathing space beneath the
+curved iron ceiling. Suppressed growls and curses
+came from our lips each time a sudden surge of the
+waters interfered with the welding. Meanwhile all
+was in confusion; the men worked with the feverish
+inefficiency of terror, scarcely heeding the orders of the
+officers; the chief contents of the compartment floated
+about almost unnoted. I distinctly remember that
+several articles, including a life preserver which one
+of the recruits had unfastened in his fright, were
+washed overboard.
+</p>
+<p>
+Still, we did make some progress, and after four or
+five hours, and just as the blood-red sun was sinking
+low in the west, we found our task nearing completion.
+A few more minutes, and the welding would be
+accomplished; a few more minutes, and darkness
+would be upon us, leaving us free from fear of attack
+for the next eight or ten hours.
+</p>
+<p>
+It was just when we felt safest that the real danger
+presented itself. A swift trail of white shot across
+the waters far to westward, and, advancing at full
+speed, vanished in a long, frothy furrow just in our
+wake. “A German U-boat! A U-boat two points off
+the port bow!” frantically cried the watch; and we
+scrambled from the flooded compartment as the Captain
+gave the order “Submerge!” Now we heard the
+rapid churning of our engines as we went plunging
+into the blackness beneath the sea; now we made
+ready to launch a torpedo of our own as our periscope
+showed us the disappearing tip of an enemy
+submarine; now we were hurled into an exciting chase
+as our prodigiously powerful searchlights illumined
+whole leagues of the water, even revealing the dark,
+cigar-shaped hulk of the foe. Had we not been impeded
+by the dead weight of a compartment full of
+water, we would unquestionably have overtaken the
+enemy, rammed it and ended its career; even as it
+was, we seemed to be gaining upon it, and we had
+hopes of shooting up unseen and bullet-like from the
+dark, and with tremendous impact smiting it in two.
+Not even the unexpected appearance of a second submarine
+altered our plans. Handicapped as we were,
+we would show our superiority to both the enemy
+craft!
+</p>
+<p>
+But it was at this point that mechanical troubles
+again betrayed us. Overworked by our excessive burst
+of speed, our engines (which were of the super-electric
+type recently invented by Cogswell) gave signs of
+slowing up and stopping; and so dangerously overheated
+were they, that our Captain had to halt our
+vessel abruptly, almost within striking distance of the
+foe. Our position became extremely precarious, for at
+any moment the German searchlights might spy us
+out, and a few undersea bombs might send us to
+the bottom.
+</p>
+<p>
+As our own equipment had purposely been made as
+light as possible, we were provided with no explosive
+shells other than torpedoes: hence we were compelled
+to rise to the surface in order to attack. This, we
+realized, was a hazardous expedient, since both the
+enemy vessels were already in a position to answer
+our bombardment, volley for volley. But trusting to
+the gathering darkness and to our aggressive tactics
+to win us the advantage, we unhesitatingly rose to
+the level, and, with as little delay as possible, discharged
+a torpedo toward the dim, low-lying form of
+the foe.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_295">[295]</span></p>
+
+<p>Whether that projectile reached its goal, none of
+us will ever be able to say. From the sudden, furious
+eruption of spray in the direction of the enemy craft,
+I am inclined to believe that this was among the
+U-boats later reported missing; yet, the torpedo may
+merely have struck some floating object and so have
+lost its prey. Whatever the results, we were unable
+to observe with certainty, for at the same moment a
+gleaming streak shot toward us across the dark waters,
+and the next instant we went sprawling about the
+deck as a dull thudding crash came to our ears and
+the vessel shook and wavered as though in an earthquake’s
+grip. Half dazed from the shock, we gathered
+ourselves together and rose uncertainly to our
+feet, staring at one another in dull consternation. And
+at the same moment one of the seamen burst wildly
+into the cabin, despair and terror in his maddened
+eyes. “The central compartment!” he cried. “The central
+compartment. It’s flooded, all flooded!” And as
+if to prove his words, we felt ourselves sinking, sinking
+slowly, though we had not been ordered to submerge;
+the darkness of the twilight skies quickly gave
+way to the darkness beneath the ocean.</p>
+
+
+<p>It was some minutes before we quite realized what
+was happening. Accustomed as we were to undersea
+traveling, we did not at first understand that this
+was an adventure quite out of the ordinary. Even
+when the waters had lost their first pale translucency
+and had become utterly black and opaque, we did not
+realize our terrible predicament. Only after our vessel
+began listing violently, and we felt the deck sloping
+at an angle of forty-five degrees, did we recognize
+the full horror of our position. Although we could
+see not one inch beyond the thick glass portholes, I
+had an indefinable sense that we were sinking, sinking
+down, down, down through vague and unknown
+abysses; and the stark and helpless terror on the assembled
+faces gave proof that the others shared my
+feelings. Not a word did we utter. Indeed, speaking
+would not have been easy, for a low, continuous roaring
+was in our ears, a hoarse, muffled roaring reminding
+me of the murmuring in a sea-shell. At the
+same time, a strange depression overwhelmed my
+senses; it seemed as though the atmosphere had suddenly
+become thick and heavy, too heavy for breathing;
+it seemed as though an unnatural weight had
+been piled upon me, threatening to crush and stifle
+me. Yet I did notice that the vessel quivered violently
+and lunged upward every few seconds, in a
+furious effort to right itself and rise to the surface.
+I did fancy that I heard the buzzing of the engines
+at times, an intermittent buzzing that was most disquieting;
+and I found myself, like the others, hanging
+to the brass railings to steady myself when the ship
+heaved and shuddered, or to keep my footing when
+we slanted downward.</p>
+
+<p>Perhaps five minutes passed when the door leading
+forward was thrust open, and Captain Gavison climbed
+precariously into the room. All eyes were bent upon
+him in silent inquiry; but his grim, stoically firm
+countenance was far from reassuring. It was apparent
+that he had something to say, and that he did not
+care to say it; and several anxious moments elapsed
+while he stood glowering upon us, evidently undecided
+whether to give his message words.</p>
+
+<p>Yet even at this crisis he could not forget discipline.
+His first words brought us no information, and his
+first action was to station us about the room in
+orderly fashion, assigning each to some specific duty.</p>
+
+<p>“I will not keep the facts from you,” he declared,
+with slow, deliberate accentuation, when finally we
+were all in position. “Three of our compartments are
+flooded. The other compartments seem to be holding
+out as yet, but the great mass of water in our hold
+is bearing us rapidly downward, and the engines seem
+unable to neutralize the effect. At the last reading,
+we were nine hundred and twenty-seven feet below
+sea level.”</p>
+
+<p>“Great God! What are we to do about it?” I
+gasped, in biting terror.</p>
+
+<p>“Suggestions are in order,” stated the Captain, laconically.</p>
+
+<p>But no suggestion was forthcoming.</p>
+
+<p>“Of course, we are in no immediate danger&thinsp;...”
+he resumed. But he might have spared his words.
+Most of us had had sufficient experience of undersea
+travel to know that the danger was real enough.
+Barring the remote contingency that the engines would
+be brought back into efficient working order, there
+were only two possibilities. On the one hand, we
+might reach the bottom of the sea, and, stranded there,
+would perish of starvation or slow suffocation. Or, in
+the second place, we might continue drifting downward
+until the tremendous pressure of the water, proving
+too strong even for the stout steel envelope of
+our vessel, would bend and crush it like an egg-shell.</p>
+
+<p>Although we could no longer guide our course, our
+gigantic searchlights were at once brought into play,
+piercing the water with brilliant yellow streamers. Yet
+they might have been searchlights in a tomb, for they
+showed us nothing except the minute wavy dark shapes
+that occasionally drifted in and out of our line of
+vision. There was something ghastly, I thought, about
+that light, that intense unearthly sallow light, which
+glided slowly in long curves and spirals about the
+thick enveloping darkness. And the very penetrating
+power of the rays served only to accentuate the horror.
+For the illumination ended in nothingness; nothingness
+seemed to stretch above us, beneath us, and to
+all sides of us; we were enfolded in it as in a black
+mantle; it seemed to be stretching out long arms to
+fetter us, to gather us up, to strangle us slyly.</p>
+
+<hr class="tb">
+
+<p>Slowly, with agonizing slowness, the moments crept
+by; slowly we continued sinking, down, down,
+down, ever down and down, with movement gradual
+and constantly diminishing, yet never ceasing. Never
+before in history, we told ourselves, had living men
+been plunged so far beneath the ocean. Our instruments
+recorded first twelve hundred feet, then fourteen,
+then sixteen, then eighteen hundred feet below sea
+level!</p>
+
+<p>And as we sank downward, we became aware that
+we were not the only living creatures in these depths.
+Our searchlights made us the center of attraction for
+myriads of scaly things; whole schools and squadrons
+of fishes were gathering moth-like in the vivid illumination
+thrown out by our vessel. Some were long,
+snaky monsters, with thin heads set with rows of
+spike-like teeth, and tiny eyes that gleamed evilly in
+the uncanny light; some were lithe sea dragons, with
+wolfish mouths and sabre-like bony appendages projecting
+from low foreheads; some were many-colored,
+rainbow-hued or streaked with black and golden, or
+red and azure, or yellow and white; some had chameleon
+eyes that flashed first green and then blue, according
+to the play of the light about them; many
+were flitting to and fro, circling and spiralling and
+doubling back and forth at incredible speed; and not
+a few, unacquainted with the ways of submarines,
+collided full-tilt with the thick glass of our portholes.</p>
+
+<p>But as our depth gradually increased, our finny
+visitors began to give way to others stranger still.
+When we were twenty-two hundred feet below the
+surface, the searchlights were no longer necessary to
+reveal the denizens of the deep, for the inhabitants of
+those unthinkable regions carried their own lamps!
+And how they amazed us and startled us!—how, in
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_296">[296]</span>our shuddering nerve-racking terror, they appeared to
+us as ghosts or avenging fiends, or struck our overworked
+imaginations as approaching foes or rescuers!
+Suddenly, out of the deathly blackness, a spurt of
+green light appeared, swiftly widening until it seemed
+an unearthly searchlight—and, from a narrow focus
+of flame, two huge burning green eyes would shoot
+forth, darting cold malice at us through the glass port,
+until the yellow electric light would seem tinged with
+an emerald reflection. Or else a tiny flattened disk,
+softly phosphorescent throughout and marked on one
+surface by two bright beady eyes, would come floating
+in our direction like a pale apparition; or, again, a
+long dark rod, brilliantly white like a living flashlight,
+would dart curving and gleaming toward us
+out of the remote gloomy depths. But more terrifying
+than any of these were the nameless monsters with invisible
+bodies and lidless, fiery yellow eyes of the size
+of baseballs,—eyes that stared in at us, and stared
+and stared, as though all the concentrated horror of
+the universe were glaring upon us, seeking to ferret
+us out and mark us for its victims.</p>
+
+<p>And still we were sinking, unceasingly sinking, till
+the last faint hope had died in the heart of the most
+sanguine, and in despair and with half-mumbled phrases
+we admitted that there could be no rescue for us.
+When we were twenty-five hundred feet below the surface,
+the fury of expectation had given place to a
+blank and settled despondency; when the distance was
+twenty-eight hundred feet, each was striving in his
+own way to prepare himself for the fate which all felt
+to be but a question of hours. In our panic-stricken
+horror, we had all long ago forgotten the positions assigned
+us by the Captain; and the Captain himself
+did not appear to notice where we were. Young Rawson,
+the newest of the recruits, had gone down on his
+knees, and with tears in his eyes was murmuring
+half audible prayers; Matthew Stangale, one of the
+oldest and most hardened of the seamen, was pacing
+restlessly back and forth, back and forth, in the narrow
+compartment, clenching his fists furiously and
+muttering to himself; Daniel Howlett, veteran of many
+campaigns, contented himself with a suppressed growling
+and profanity, and his curses were echoed by his
+companions; Frank Ripley, a college gridiron hero,
+enlisted for the war, buried himself in a corner of
+the room, his face covered by his hands, the very
+picture of dejection, though every once in a while,
+wistfully and half-furtively, he would let his gaze
+travel to a little photograph he guarded close to his
+bosom. And as for Captain Gavison, on whom we
+had fastened our last fading hope of escape—he merely
+stood near the porthole with arms clenched behind his
+back and thin lips tightly compressed, peering out into
+the black waters as though he read there some secret
+hidden from the obtuse gaze of his followers.</p>
+
+<hr class="tb">
+
+<p>We were below the three thousand foot level when
+fresh cause for anxiety appeared. “The holy
+saints have mercy on us!” suddenly exclaimed James
+Stranahan, one of the common seamen, as he crossed
+himself piously. And pointing in awe-stricken amazement
+through one of the glass spy-holes which led
+from the deck, down through the bottom of the ship,
+he called attention to a dim shimmering luminescence
+far below. Excitedly we crowded about him, almost
+tumbling over one another in our eagerness and
+terror, but for a moment we could see nothing. Then,
+slowly, as we stood straining our eyes to fathom the
+blackness, we became aware of a vague filmy, widespread
+sheet of light twinkling faintly beneath us,
+and remote as the stars of an inverted Milky Way.</p>
+
+<p>A sheet of light beneath us, at the bottom of the
+sea! In incredulous astonishment, we turned to one
+another, scarcely able to believe our senses, our horror
+written plainly in our gaping eyes! And in silence,
+and with fear-blanched faces, half of the company
+made the sign of the cross.</p>
+
+<p>“Sure it’s a ghost, a deep-sea ghost!” ventured the
+superstitious Stranahan.</p>
+
+<p>“It’s where the sea serpents have their home!” put
+in Stangale, with an abortive attempt to be jocular.
+“There’s ten million of them down there, with devil’s
+eyes of fire!”</p>
+
+<p>“Maybe it’s the Evil One himself!” suggested
+Stranahan, not content with a single guess. “What
+if it’s the very throne-room of Hell, and them are
+the flames of Old Nick!”</p>
+
+<p>These words did not seem to reassure the rest of
+the crew. Several were trembling visibly, and several
+continued to cross themselves in silence.</p>
+
+<p>Meanwhile the Captain had ordered the searchlights
+turned downward, and in long loops and curves
+the cutting light swept the darkness beneath. But not
+a thing was visible, except for a few flapping fishy
+forms; and our lanterns served only to conceal the
+mysterious luminescence.</p>
+
+<p>Yet, when the searchlights were again directed upward,
+that luminescence became more distinct and
+seemed to stretch to infinite distances on all sides. But
+it was still incalculably remote, and still filled us with
+alarm and foreboding. Whatever it was (and we
+could not help feeling that it was evil), we knew that
+it was a thing beyond the reach of all human experience;
+whatever it was, it was a monstrous thing, possibly
+malevolent and terrible, and not inconceivably
+ghostly and supernatural.</p>
+
+<p>But as we continued to sink, I began to doubt
+whether any of us should live to solve the mystery.
+The air in our overcrowded compartments was becoming
+oppressively heavy and vitiated; we were like men
+locked in sealed vaults, and there was no possibility of
+renewing our exhausted oxygen supply. Already I was
+beginning to feel drowsy from the lack of air; my
+head was aching dully and I had almost ceased to
+care where we went or what befell us. Today, when
+I look back upon the racking events of those terrible
+hours, I feel sure that I was not far from delirium;
+and when I recall how some of my comrades reclined
+drunkenly on the floor, with half-hysterical mumblings
+and wailings, I am certain that there were but few of
+us, who retained our right senses.</p>
+
+<p>There is, indeed, a blank space in my memory concerning
+what occurred at about this time; I may have
+fallen off into a doze or sodden slumber lasting for
+minutes or even for hours. I can only say that I
+have a recollection of coming abruptly to myself, as
+from a state of coma; and, with a sudden jolt of
+understanding, I realized where I was, and observed
+with a shock that half a dozen of my comrades were
+gathered together in a little group, pointing downward
+with excited exclamations.</p>
+
+<p>Staggering to my feet, I joined them, and in a
+moment shared in their agitation. The lights beneath
+us were now far brighter—they no longer formed a
+vague shimmering screen, but were concentrated brilliantly
+in a score of golden globes of the apparent size
+of the sun. “Could it be that the ocean too has its
+suns?” I asked myself, as when one asks dazed questions
+in a dream. And looking at those spectral lights
+that wavered and gleamed through the pale translucent
+waters, I felt that this was surely but a nightmare
+from which I should soon awaken. Fantastic fish,
+with triangular glowing red heads and searchlight
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_297">[297]</span>eyes projected on slender tubes, darted before our windows
+in innumerable schools; but these seemed almost
+familiar now by comparison with those eerie golden
+lights below; and it was upon the golden illumination
+that my gaze was riveted as we settled slowly down
+and down. Soon it became apparent that the great
+central globes were not the only source of the radiance,
+for smaller points of light gradually became visible,
+some of them moving, actually moving as though
+borne by living hands!—and even the spaces between
+the lights seemed to wear an increasing golden luster!
+Yet with the golden was mingled a singular tinge of
+green, a green that seemed scarcely of the waters;
+and the mysterious depths were no longer black, but
+olive-hued, as though the light came filtering to us
+through some solid dark-green medium.</p>
+
+<p>But a more imminent peril was to distract our attention
+from the weird lights. For some minutes I
+had been vaguely aware of something peculiar in the
+aspect of our compartment; yet, in my stupefied condition,
+I had not been able to determine just what was
+wrong. But full realization came to me when Stranahan,
+pointing upward, wide-eyed with horror, suddenly
+exclaimed, “Heaven preserve us, look at the ceiling!”</p>
+
+<p>We all looked. The ceiling was bulging inches downward,
+as though the terrific pressure of the waters
+were already bursting the tough steel envelope of the
+X-111. And at the same time we observed that the
+deck we stood on was bulging upward, and that the
+bulkheads were being twisted and distorted like iron
+rails warped by an earthquake.</p>
+
+<hr class="tb">
+
+<p>But now came the greatest surprise of all. “By
+all the saints and little devils!” burst forth the
+irrepressible Stranahan, pointing downward and forgetting
+the aspect of the bulkheads and deck. “There’s
+a city under the sea!”</p>
+
+<p>“A city under the sea!” we echoed, in stupefied
+amazement. And from one corner of the room came
+a burst of hysterical laughter, which wavered and
+broke and then died out, sounding uncannily like a
+fiend’s derision.</p>
+
+<p>“But I tell you, there is a city under the sea!”
+insisted Stranahan, noting the incredulous stares with
+which we regarded him. “The Lord strike me dead
+if I didn’t see its streets and houses!”</p>
+
+<p>Though none of us doubted but that the Lord
+would indeed do as Stranahan suggested, we interpreted
+his remarks as mere delirious ravings, and
+continued to stare at him in petrified silence.</p>
+
+<p>“You see, there she is!” persisted the seaman, still
+pointing downward regardless of our disbelief. And,
+crossing himself piously, he continued, in awed tones,
+“May the Virgin have pity on us, if that don’t look
+like a church!”</p>
+
+<p>Stranahan’s last words had such a tone of conviction
+that, though our doubts were still strong, we
+could not forebear to look. And, after a single glance,
+our scepticism gave place to dumbfounded amazement.
+For was this not a city staring up at us from the
+green-golden depths? Or at least the ruins of what
+had been a city? In outlines wavy because of the dense,
+shifting waters, and yet as definite of form as reflections
+in a still pool, half a dozen great yellow-white
+temples seemed to glimmer beneath the brilliant
+lights, with massive columns, wide-reaching porticoes
+and colonnades, and gracefully curving arches and
+domes.</p>
+
+<p>Was this but a mirage? we asked ourselves. Or
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_298">[298]</span>were these the remains of some submerged, ancient
+town? Never had we heard of mirages beneath the
+sea—but if this were a dead city, then why these vivid
+lights? And, certainly, no living city could be
+imagined in these profound watery abysses.</p>
+
+<p>Even as we wondered, we seemed to note a gradual
+change in our movement. We were no longer sinking;
+we were drifting with slow motion, almost horizontally;
+and just beneath us appeared to be an impenetrable
+but transparent dense, greenish wall, a wall that—had
+the idea not been too preposterous—we might almost
+have imagined to be of glass. Beneath this wall
+gleamed no lantern-bearing, fishy eyes, but the dazzling
+golden orbs and the smaller scattered lights shone
+steadily with piercing radiance; and beneath us, at a
+distance that may have been five hundred feet and
+may have been a thousand, the vaults and domes and
+columns of innumerable stone edifices shone palely and
+with sallow luster. Surely, we thought, this was some
+unheard-of Athens, doomed long ago by tidal wave
+or volcano.</p>
+
+<p>Gradually, for some reason that we could not quite
+explain, our horizontal motion seemed to be increasing;
+and, caught apparently by some rapid deep-sea
+current, we drifted with appreciable velocity above
+those dim realms of green and golden. Palace after
+magnificent palace, many seemingly modelled by architects
+of old Greece, went gliding by beneath us; countless
+statues, tall as the buildings, pointed up at us
+with hands that were uncannily life-like; wide avenue
+after wide avenue flashed by, and one or two colossal
+theatres of old Grecian design; but no living thing
+was to be seen, or, at least, so it seemed, for though
+we strained our eyes, we could discern only shadows
+moving in those uncertain depths, only shadows and
+an occasional firefly light which zigzagged fitfully
+among the buildings and which we took to be some
+strange illuminated finny thing.</p>
+
+<p>Then suddenly, for no apparent reason, fresh terror
+seized us. Perhaps it was because we realized abruptly
+the full eerie horror of floating thus above a city of
+the dead; perhaps it was that the whole unspeakable
+ghastliness of the adventure had again flashed upon
+us. Be that as it may, we began to shake and shiver
+once more as though in the grip of a mastering emotion,
+or as though obsessed by forethought of approaching
+disaster; and muttered prayers again were heard,
+and more than one silent tear was shed.</p>
+
+<p>But the time for tears and prayers was over. Our
+motion, gradually increasing for some minutes, was
+suddenly accelerated as if by some gigantic prod; we
+seemed caught in some mighty movement of the
+waters, some maelstrom that whirled us about and
+buffeted us like a feather; a hoarse, continuous thunder
+dinned in our ears, and we went shooting forward
+with prodigious speed. Then came a violent jerk,
+and we found ourselves tossed pellmell to all corners
+of the room; then another jerk, and we were flung
+back again like dice shaken in a box; then still another
+jerk, more vehement than the others, and our
+terrorized minds lost track of events as our vessel
+lunged and heaved, then veered and stood almost on
+end, then began to spin round and round, like a swift
+gyrating top&thinsp;... And in that whirling confusion our
+senses reeled and grew blurred, and darkness came
+clouding back, darkness and sleep and nothingness&thinsp;...</p>
+
+<hr class="tb">
+
+<figure class="figcenter illowe33_3750" id="img297">
+ <img class="w100" src="images/img297.jpg" alt="">
+ <figcaption>
+ Our searchlights made us the center of attraction for myriads of scaly
+things; whole schools and squadrons of fishes were gathering moth-like
+in the vivid illumination thrown out by our vessel&thinsp;... flitting to and
+fro, circling and spiralling and doubling back and forth at incredible
+speed.
+ </figcaption>
+</figure>
+
+
+<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop"><div class="chapter"><h2 class="nobreak" id="CHAPTER_II">CHAPTER II
+<br>
+Untraveled Depths</h2></div>
+
+
+<p>How any of us chanced to survive is more than I
+can say. In the turbulence and vertigo of that
+last blind roaring moment, I had vaguely felt
+that we had reached the end of all things; hence it was
+almost with surprise that I found myself hazily regaining
+consciousness, and discovered that I could still
+move my limbs and open my eyes. At first, indeed, I
+had the dim sense that I was dead and embarking upon
+the Afterlife; and it was only the definite sensation
+of pain in my bruised arms and legs, and the definite
+sight of my comrades tumbled about in ungainly attitudes,
+which convinced me that I was still on the
+better known side of the grave.</p>
+
+<p>“Sure, and I thought we went through the very
+gates of Hell!” came a familiar voice; and Stranahan
+rose unsteadily to his feet, lugubriously nursing a
+sprained wrist. “By all the saints in heaven, we
+must be a devilish lot! The devil himself didn’t seem
+able to get us!”</p>
+
+<p>Cheered by sound of a human voice, I followed
+Stranahan’s example, and slowly and painfully arose. I
+was thankful to learn that, although badly battered,
+I had suffered no broken bones; and as my comrades
+one by one staggered up from the deck, I was glad to
+observe that none were gravely injured.</p>
+
+<p>Our vessel had assumed a horizontal position again,
+but I felt that our surroundings were strangely altered.
+While a pale luminescence seemed to transfuse the
+waters on both sides and above us, yet below us the
+golden lights were no longer visible, and everything
+seemed impenetrably black.</p>
+
+<p>Of course, the Captain again ordered the searchlights
+turned on—and this time with extraordinary
+results. Just beneath us, actually in contact with the
+bottom of the X-111, a flat, sandy reach of ground was
+visible—certainly, the bottom of the sea! But this
+fact was the least remarkable of all. On both sides
+of us, at distances possibly of two hundred yards, a
+high and geometrically regular embankment shot up
+precipitously, ending in a yellow illuminated patch of
+water whose nature we could scarcely surmise. The
+one thing apparent was that we were in a submarine
+channel, a sort of river bed in the bottom of the sea.
+This fact was made evident by a current which sent
+us skimming along the soft sands although our engines
+had long since ceased to supply us with power.</p>
+
+<p>“I can’t understand it!” sighed Captain Gavison,
+shaking his head dolefully. “I can’t understand it at
+all! For twenty-five years I’ve studied the ocean currents,
+but I’ve never before heard of anything like
+this!”</p>
+
+<p>Just at this point our searchlights showed us a
+long, lithe dark form gliding rapidly by through the
+waters perhaps fifty feet above. It was as large as
+the largest known shark, but was shaped like no fish
+I had ever seen, tapering to a slender, canoe-like point
+at both ends; and, as it passed, the water seemed to
+foam and bubble strangely in its wake.</p>
+
+<p>“Perdition take me, if it ain’t a sea dragon!” ventured
+Stranahan, who had to have his say.</p>
+
+<p>“Stranahan, be silent!” snapped the Captain, in high
+irritation. “You’re always saying the wrong thing at
+the wrong time!”</p>
+
+<p>“Yes, sir,” admitted Stranahan, meekly, a grave expression
+in his pale blue eyes.</p>
+
+<p>“If you want to make yourself useful, Stranahan,”
+continued the Captain severely, although with less
+asperity than before, “go forward, and find out how
+far we are beneath sea level.”</p>
+
+<p>“Aye, aye, sir,” agreed Stranahan, remembering to
+salute.</p>
+
+<p>“How far below were we at the last reading, sir?”
+I inquired of the Captain, after Stranahan had vanished
+through the small compartment door.</p>
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_299">[299]</span></p>
+<p>“Thirty-seven hundred feet,” returned the officer,
+abruptly. “But we’ve sunk considerably since then.”</p>
+
+<p>It was at this juncture that Stranahan reappeared in
+the doorway, a stare of blank, incredulous astonishment
+on his lean, hardened face.</p>
+
+<p>“Well?” the Captain demanded. “How far below
+are we now?”</p>
+
+<p>Stranahan mopped his brow as if to wipe off an invisible
+perspiration. But he answered not a word.</p>
+
+<p>“Stranahan,” growled the exasperated officer, somewhat
+after the manner of a schoolma’am to an unruly
+pupil, “do you hear me? I’m asking to know how
+far below we are now.”</p>
+
+<p>“Well, sir,” drawled Stranahan, saluting mechanically,
+“wouldn’t I be telling you if I knew? But, saints in
+heaven, sir, that machine must be bewitched! Else I’m
+seeing things!”</p>
+
+<p>“Didn’t you notice the reading?” bawled the Captain.</p>
+
+<p>“Yes, sir,” Stranahan replied, humbly. “That’s what
+the trouble is, sir.”</p>
+
+<p>“Then how far below are we?”</p>
+
+<p>Stranahan hesitated as though he would rather not
+speak. “Forty-four feet,” he muttered, at length.</p>
+
+<p>A murmur of suppressed excitement passed from
+end to end of the room. “Forty-four feet!” yelled
+the Captain. “You mean forty-four hundred!”</p>
+
+<p>“No, sir,” maintained Stranahan, quietly. “I mean
+forty-four.”</p>
+
+<hr class="tb">
+
+<p>The Captain’s anger became uncontrollable. “Stranahan,
+you must take me for a fool!” he shouted.
+“This is not the moment for practical jokes! At
+any other time I’d have you thrown in the brig!”</p>
+
+<p>“But, sir——” Stranahan started to protest.</p>
+
+<p>“That’s enough!” roared the officer, fairly shaking
+with fury. And, turning to one of the younger men,
+he commanded, “Ripley, see how far below water level
+we are!”</p>
+
+<p>“Aye, aye, sir,” assented Ripley, and left the room.</p>
+
+<p>A moment later he returned with a sheepish grin
+on his face.</p>
+
+<p>“Well, how far below are we?” demanded the Captain.</p>
+
+<p>But Ripley, like Stranahan, seemed reluctant to
+speak. He coughed, gasped, stammered out an unintelligible
+syllable or two, cleared his throat, stood gaping
+at us stupidly while we looked on expectantly, and
+finally blurted out, “Forty—— forty-three feet, sir!”</p>
+
+<p>“Forty-three feet!” bellowed the Captain. “Has the
+whole crew gone crazy?”</p>
+
+<p>And, without further ado, Gavison himself went
+lunging toward the door, and disappeared in the forward
+compartment.</p>
+
+<p>It was several minutes before he returned. But
+when he rejoined us, his face wore a look of undisguised
+amazement. Furtively and almost shamefacedly
+he peered at us, like one who fancies he is losing his
+wits.</p>
+
+<p>“Well, sir, how far below are we now?” I questioned.</p>
+
+<p>The Captain cleared his throat, and hesitated perceptibly
+before replying. “I—— I really don’t know.
+I can’t understand—— I can’t understand it at all.
+If the instruments aren’t out of order, we’re exactly
+forty-two feet below!”</p>
+
+<p>I gasped stupidly; then suggested, “No doubt, sir,
+the instruments are out of order.”</p>
+
+<p>“They are not!” denied the Captain. “I’ve tested
+them!”</p>
+
+<p>Again the Captain hesitated briefly; then abruptly
+he resumed, “Besides, as you know, there are two
+instruments. They both record forty-two feet. Surely,
+they can’t both be wrong in exactly the same way.”</p>
+
+<p>There ensued a moment of silence, during which we
+stared dully at one another, filled with mute questionings
+we would not dare to put into words.</p>
+
+<p>“But how do you explain——” I at length started to
+inquire.</p>
+
+<p>“I don’t explain at all!” interrupted the officer.
+“We’re simply running counter to all natural laws!
+According to all estimates, we should be nearly a
+mile deep by now!”</p>
+
+<p>And the Captain stood stroking his chin in grave
+perplexity. Then turning suddenly to us all, he remarked,
+“I can’t see how it can be true, boys; but
+if we’re only forty-two feet deep, then maybe the
+engines will have life enough in them to pull us out.
+At least, it’s a chance worth taking.”</p>
+
+<p>Half an hour later, after a few instructions and
+the assignment of the crew to duty, we had the
+pleasure of hearing once more the churning and throbbing
+of the engines. At first it promised to be a
+barren pleasure indeed, for the abused machinery
+gasped and sputtered as though determined upon a
+permanent strike; but finally after many vain efforts,
+we were greeted by the continuous buzzing of the
+motors. Then we found ourselves slowly moving, at
+first scarcely faster than the current, but with gradually
+increasing velocity; and by degrees we felt
+the deck taking on an upward slope as the nose of
+the vessel was pointed toward the surface of the
+waters. It was not an easy pull, for our three
+flooded compartments were powerfully inclined to hold
+us to the bottom; and in the beginning we made very
+little progress; several times we felt our hull scraping
+the ocean floor. Eventually, the engines, waxing
+to their full power, began to cleave the water at gratifying
+speed, and we found that we were moving
+definitely, though slowly upward.</p>
+
+<p>Of course, hope came to us then in a powerful wave,
+accompanied by black flashes of despair, for what if
+impassable thousands of feet of water still rolled
+above us? Impatiently we fastened our eyes on the
+pressure gauges, and impatiently watched the registered
+distance dwindle from forty feet to thirty-five,
+from thirty-five to thirty, from thirty to twenty-five,
+and from twenty-five to twenty! And now, in a sudden
+wild burst of joy, we realized that probably we
+were saved! A pale but unmistakable radiance was
+seeping in through the glass ports, a radiance far
+more distinct and reassuring than the eerie luminescence
+we had noticed before. Certainly, this was
+the sunlight—and in a few moments we might bask
+again in the warmth of day!</p>
+
+<p>And as we rose from twenty feet to fifteen, and
+from fifteen to ten, our hopes found increasing fuel.
+The light filtering in through the windows brightened
+at a rate that was more than heartening—and through
+the clear waters, even without the aid of the searchlights,
+we could distinguish a steep embankment, perhaps
+fifty or a hundred yards away. And just above
+us, almost within grasping distance, we thought we
+could notice the line where water met air!</p>
+
+<p>But we had no intimation of the surprise that lay
+in store for us. Today, as I look back upon those
+events with clear perspective, it seems incredible to
+me that we could actually have expected to escape at
+once to the upper world. But hope had doubtless
+blinded our eyes and suffering blunted our perceptions,
+so that we could not understand that we were
+at the beginning, rather than at the end of our adventures.</p>
+
+<hr class="tb">
+
+<p>Suddenly, with a furious lunge and an unwonted,
+violent burst of speed, we found ourselves
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_300">[300]</span>launched upward toward the wavy, light-shot level that
+was our goal; and now a blinding brilliance was upon
+us, and for a moment we had to shade our eyes to
+shield them from the dazzling change. Then, when by
+degrees we were able to glance again about us, we
+found that we were on the surface of the waters, actually
+on the surface!—but where was this that we
+had come up? and in what strange and unmapped continent?
+There was scarcely one of us that could suppress
+a cry of astonishment—we were afloat, not upon
+the ocean, as we had expected, but rather on a wide
+and rapidly flowing river—a river that washed no
+shores, ever described by human tongue! Altogether,
+it was one of the weirdest and most magnificent lands
+imaginable; on both sides of the stream spread a flat
+plain, dotted with great sea shells and greenish boulders,
+which in their turn were interspersed with a
+mossy brown vegetation and pale, graceful flowers
+like waterlilies on solitary stalks. At measured intervals,
+as far as the eye could reach, were colossal
+stone columns, enriched with pastel tintings of pink
+and blue; and these shot upward hundreds of feet
+as though supporting some titanic dome, ending, unaccountably,
+in a dark, green sky from which glared
+several sun-like, golden orbs, which suffused the
+scene in a mellow, unearthly luster that was beautiful,
+yet terrifying and ghostly.</p>
+
+<p>Rubbing our eyes, like children still not half awake,
+we gazed at this fantastic, lovely spectacle. Not a
+word did we speak; we could not have found language
+to voice our amazement. Only the Captain, out of the
+whole thirty-nine of us, retained some measure of
+self-possession; and though, as he afterwards confessed,
+he was so dazzled that he spoke and acted
+mechanically, he did retain the presence of mind to
+order our vessel steered to shore and anchored.</p>
+
+<p>It is still a marvel to me that we had the energy
+to carry out these commands. Somehow we brought
+the X-111 to land; and somehow, after several false
+starts, we managed to moor the ship to a large
+boulder in a sort of miniature bay.</p>
+
+<p>And then Stranahan proved again that he possessed
+an original mind. Not only was he the first to force
+himself out of the opening door of the submarine,
+but he carried out a large American flag, which he
+planted in the ground among the brown weeds between
+the boulders, while with sedate and ceremonious
+gestures, he proclaimed, “In the name of the United
+States of America, I take possession of this land!”</p>
+
+<p>But the rest of us gave no heed to his words. We
+were taking deep, refreshing breaths of the pure,
+clean air, which came to us almost like a mercy from
+heaven after the suffocating atmosphere of the submarine.
+And before we had had half the needed
+time to revive our starving lungs, an astounding
+phenomenon, as unexpected as the very discovery of
+this spectral region, was to drive Stranahan from our
+thoughts at the same time that it flooded our minds
+with terror. For the golden lights above suddenly
+flickered, gave out a fugitive spark or two, and with
+meteor swiftness went out. We found ourselves
+mantled in a starless and impenetrable blackness, more
+mysterious and dreadful than the loneliest watery
+abysses from which we had just escaped.</p>
+
+
+
+
+<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop"><div class="chapter"><h2 class="nobreak" id="CHAPTER_III">CHAPTER III
+<br>
+On Unknown Shores</h2></div>
+
+
+<p>No sooner was the darkness complete than it
+seemed to be populated with all manner of
+weird and terrible things. The disappearance
+of the light seemed to be the signal for the approach
+of a host of evil monsters. A chorus of hoarse, unearthly
+voices, loud as the bellowing of a bull, resounded
+about us in a deep, continuous bass; and
+throaty gruntings and savage snorts and howlings
+echoed and droned as though they issued from ten
+thousand pairs of giant lungs. Dazed with horror,
+we stared into the unbroken gloom like doomed men;
+I had visions of colossal eyes smoldering from the
+blackness, and jaws that struck and tore, and gnashing
+teeth that rent and shattered.</p>
+
+<p>But it was not a moment before our dumbfounded
+inaction was over. Pellmell we flung ourselves toward
+the submarine, almost failing to find it in the darkness,
+and tumbling tumultuously over one another in
+our haste to crowd through the narrow door. Several
+of the men were shoved accidentally into the water,
+and Stranahan came in dripping from an unexpected
+swim; while the Captain walked with a slight limp,
+newly acquired.</p>
+
+<p>At length, however, we were all safely within the
+ship, and the doors were barred against the unknown
+peril. Several of the men, still trembling with
+terror, were eager to get under way directly; but this
+idea the Captain emphatically vetoed, declaring that
+the X-111 was no longer seaworthy. All that we could
+do now was to try to locate the danger with our searchlights;
+and accordingly, we wasted no time before
+switching on our powerful lanterns and revolving
+them in slow circles that illumined by turns every
+inch of the boulder-strewn, weedy plain. All in vain.
+Although the unearthly chorus could be heard even
+through the closed doors and showed no sign of diminishing,
+our searchlights revealed nothing that we had
+not already seen.</p>
+
+<p>For some time we watched and waited—but nothing
+happened. And at length, turning to us all with a
+smile, the Captain advised, “Well, boys, we’ve all had
+a pretty hard time of it. Suppose we just forget
+about that racket out there and try to take a little
+rest.”</p>
+
+<p>We were all glad enough to follow the Captain’s
+suggestion. Several of the men were commissioned to
+take turns standing watch; and the rest of us were
+not long in seeking much needed sleep. Within a few
+minutes, the deep and regular breathing from the
+nearby bunks informed me that my companions had
+temporarily forgotten the day’s adventures.</p>
+
+<p>For my own part, exhausted as I was, I could not
+so readily find relief. The events not only of the past
+few hours, but of many months, came trooping before
+my mind in continuous blurred procession; I was
+obsessed by my own imaginings, and from a dim half-consciousness,
+I would awaken time after time
+to a vivid re-experiencing of some almost forgotten
+episode. And, strangely enough, my reveries were
+concerned mainly with a single phase of my life—the
+phase I was now living. My youth and early manhood
+might almost not have existed, for all that I
+remembered of them now; but I did sharply recall
+how, at the outbreak of war more than a year ago,
+I had decided abruptly upon the action that had
+plunged me into my present plight. Resigning my
+position at Northeastern University, where I had been
+serving as instructor in classic Greek, I had enlisted
+in the navy, and had promptly been sent to an officers’
+training school, from which I had emerged as
+Ensign. Friends had commended me upon my patriotism,
+yet it was not patriotism, but rather the
+greed for adventure, that had motivated my decision;
+and now, as I looked back, it seemed ironic to me
+that my previous uneventful days had been so much
+more pleasant than any of my adventures. There was,
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_301">[301]</span>however, one factor which had served to make those
+days enjoyable, a factor without which even the most
+active life would be barren indeed—and that factor
+was one which could have no place in wartime. Frequently,
+as I tossed and struggled fitfully on my narrow
+bunk, there flashed before me out of the darkness
+the blue eyes and laughing face of one whom I could
+scarcely recall without a pang; and I lived again with
+Alma Huntley those sparkling days among the Vermont
+hills, when she was to me all that life was, and
+I won her promise of devotion among the scented pines
+and to the music of rippling waters&thinsp;... That day
+was long past, yet how actually it came back to mind!
+And how acutely memory brought back a later day,
+when her cheeks were moist and I held her in a
+minute-long embrace, and mutual vows and soft murmurings
+were exchanged, and then there came the
+sharpness of “Farewell!” and she was gone, lost amid
+a blur of faces, and I marched sedately on while the
+world was blotted out in loneliness and grief&thinsp;... Oh,
+why had I left her, plunging thus among these unknown
+horrors?... Fervently, as I lay there listening
+to the uncanny bellowings from the ghostly world
+without, I longed to reach out my arms to her, to
+hold her warmly, to speak to her, and to hear her
+speak, if only one loved word....</p>
+
+<p>But even the most intense yearning may be blotted
+out by sleep. And at last, after hours, I lost my
+memories in unconsciousness—an intermittent unconsciousness,
+broken by disturbed dreams and vague
+images of death and disaster....</p>
+
+<hr class="tb">
+
+<p>I opened my eyes to find a bright, golden light
+pouring in through the unshuttered windows. Surprised,
+I leapt to my feet, and discovered that the
+great mysterious golden orbs were shining as before
+from far above, the boulder-strewn plain glimmered as
+clearly as at first, the massive columns were still fairy-like
+in their tints of pale pink and blue, while the
+hideous bestial noises had unaccountably ceased.</p>
+
+<p>Hastily I dressed and rejoined my companions. I
+found them gathered about in a little circle, earnestly
+talking; and they welcomed me gladly into their discussion,
+the subject of which I at once surmised. For
+what but our mysterious plight could now occupy our
+minds and tongues? None of us, as yet, had more
+than the faintest inkling of where we were or what
+had befallen us. That we were in some sort of cavern
+beneath the sea was the belief of the Captain and
+several of the men, but this region seemed so oddly
+unlike a cavern that the explanation was not generally
+accepted; and the more superstitious were inclined
+to hold that we had been bewitched into some
+sort of supernatural, goblin realm. For my own part,
+I could hardly understand how we could be in a submarine
+cavern without being completely flooded; and
+much less could I understand how we could be in any
+known land above seas.</p>
+
+<p>Obviously, the only likely source of information was
+through exploration. And since it was not possible
+to conduct any explorations with the aid of the disabled
+X-111, the Captain took the only other available
+course—which was to order some of the men to set
+forth into the Unknown on foot, determine the lay of
+the land and return as soon as possible with whatever
+tidings they might gather.</p>
+
+<p>Stangale and Howlett, being the most experienced
+veterans, were selected to make the initial attempt. In
+a few minutes, they set off cheerfully together,
+equipped with firearms and a day’s supply of food and
+drink, with instructions to return within twenty-four
+hours at the latest.</p>
+
+<p>Twelve or fifteen hours went by while we waited
+impatiently; the great golden orbs flashed out as mysteriously
+as before, and for eight or ten hours we
+slept; then, upon awakening, we found the lights still
+shining as brightly as ever, and noted that it was time
+for the return of our two scouts. We watched in
+vain for their arrival. Not a moving thing greeted us
+from the unchanging, bouldery plain; hours went by;
+excited speculation gave way to more excited speculation,
+and wild rumor to still wilder rumor; the
+suspense became tantalizing, and yet there was nothing
+to do but wait. Had the men lost their way? or
+had they met with some disastrous adventure? or had
+the savage inhabitants of these wild realms seized
+and imprisoned them? To these questions there was
+no answer, though many were the conjectures. When
+the darkness had fallen upon us once again, and once
+again we had slept and awakened to find the golden
+light restored, we knew that it was time to set out in
+search of the missing ones.</p>
+
+<p>This time the Captain called for volunteers to invade
+the Unknown, which, as he warned us, might be
+dangerous beyond all expectations; and after half the
+crew had offered themselves for the adventure, his
+choice fell upon Ripley and Stranahan.</p>
+
+<p>It was with genuine regret that I watched these
+two gallant seamen set forth amid the reeds by the
+river’s brink, to disappear at length among the boulders
+and behind the great stone columns. Somehow, as
+I lost sight of them, I had a sense that we might not
+see them again so soon. I was sad as though with
+a forewarning of disaster; and, as I reflected upon
+the pitfalls and dangers they might have to face, I
+experienced more than one twinge of vicarious fear.</p>
+
+<p>Worst of all, my misgivings seemed to be justified
+by time. Twelve hours passed, and the explorers had
+not returned; twenty-four hours, and there was still
+no word from them, though they had been given explicit
+orders to be back. With grim, set eyes, the
+Captain stood alone by the river bank, gazing sternly
+into that wilderness which had already engulfed four
+of his men; and the rest of the crew stood chattering
+fearfully among themselves, declaring that this land
+was “haunted,” “spooky,” and “thick with devils.”</p>
+
+<p>It was curious to note how, in these weird, unknown
+domains, outworn superstitions were being reborn;
+how ready the men were to believe in goblins,
+dragons, sea serpents, werewolves and all manner of
+fantastic monsters. Even the more enlightened of us
+seemed about to forget all that civilization had taught
+us; and, in the failure of all that we had been accustomed
+to cling to, we were clutching at a savage,
+terrorizing faith in incredible and ghostly things.</p>
+
+<p>By the time that Stranahan and Ripley had been
+absent forty-eight hours, the crew was in a state of
+impatience verging upon madness. The fluttering of
+a feather would have sent them scampering like frightened
+horses; the buzzing of a bee might have been
+the signal for spasms of dread. On one occasion, indeed,
+the chirping of some cricket-like insect did put
+half a dozen of the men into a panic; and on another
+occasion three or four of them turned pale merely upon
+hearing the swishing and flapping of a small fish in
+the river.</p>
+
+<p>It was when the excitement was nearing its highest
+that the Captain called once more for volunteers to
+search for the missing men. But so deep-rooted and
+paralyzing was the general alarm that only two of us
+offered our names—young Phil Rawson and myself. I
+do not know what strange wave of courage had suddenly
+emboldened this timorous recruit while less callow
+men held back. For my own part, I must admit
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_302">[302]</span>that I volunteered from the mere desire to escape
+from ennui and the half-frenzied rabble of my comrades.
+But, whatever our motives, we were promptly
+to be launched into adventures that were not only to
+test our hardihood, but to prove interesting beyond
+anything we could have imagined.</p>
+
+<hr class="tb">
+
+<figure class="figcenter illowe33_5000" id="img302">
+ <img class="w100" src="images/img302.jpg" alt="">
+ <figcaption>
+ —and from a narrow focus of flame, two huge burning green eyes would
+shoot forth, darting cold malice at us through the glass port.... Or
+else a tiny flattened disk, softly phosphorescent throughout and marked
+on one surface by two bright beady eyes, would come floating in our
+direction like a pale apparition....
+ </figcaption>
+</figure>
+
+
+
+
+
+<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop"><div class="chapter"><h2 class="nobreak" id="CHAPTER_IV">CHAPTER IV
+<br>
+A Tour of Exploration</h2></div>
+
+
+<p>Rawson and I had been gone not half an hour
+when the aspect of the country began suddenly
+to change. It was as though we had passed
+some indistinguishable boundary, for the boulders were
+rapidly becoming less numerous, and at length disappeared
+entirely, while at the same time the odd, mossy
+vegetation became astonishingly rich and profuse. Or,
+to be precise, it gave place to a different vegetation
+entirely, an unearthly vegetation, almost too strange
+for belief. At the risk of being accused of fabrication,
+I must describe those incredible plants: the creepers
+with long leaves of lace-like brown, which twined
+in dainty wreaths and veils about the olive-green boles
+of limbless trees, the bushes, shaped like starfishes, and
+of the hue of dried grass, with diaphanous flowers
+that a breath might have blown away; the cinnamon-brown
+reeds that rose to double a man’s height, ending
+in a profusion of cucumber-shaped fruits; the
+peculiar, abundant growth that looked at a distance
+like a great earthen jar, but proved upon closer examination
+to be the hollow container of a species of
+milk-white down that grew in long and silken strands
+like untended hair.</p>
+
+<p>So dense was the foliage that we would not have
+been able to force our way through it, and would
+not have dared to make the attempt, had it not been
+for a sharply cut path which wound in leisurely curves
+and undulations close to the river’s brink. It was not
+like one of those paths which nature occasionally plans,
+or which are due to the tracks of wild beasts, for it had
+a regularity of design and an evenness of width that
+proved it to be unmistakably the work of man. Yet
+what man could have penetrated before us into these
+uncanny sunless depths? At the mere thought that
+others might have preceded us we involuntarily shuddered;
+we were half convinced that we were intruders
+into a tomb closed ages ago. But despite this conviction,
+we kept a constant, half-terrified outlook for
+sign of human presence.</p>
+
+<p>It was not long before our vigilance was rewarded.
+Abruptly the path before us widened, until it was
+of the size of a broad highway; and above the dense
+masses of vegetation, we beheld in astonishment the
+looming marble pillars of a Grecian colonnade. Toward
+this the road led in long and graceful curves;
+and it was but a few minutes before we found ourselves
+at the entrance of a covered walk or “stoa”
+that brought back to me vivid memories of “the glory
+that was Greece.” On both sides of us the palely-tinted
+Ionic columns rose to a majestic height, daintily
+ornamented at the base with the acanthus design, and
+curving in symmetrical proportions that brought to
+mind the perfection of the Parthenon; while the marble
+floor on which we walked and the marble ceiling above
+us were frescoed with figures that seemed drawn bodily
+from the romance of the ancient world. They were
+not wholly Greek. I knew these pictures of sportive
+mermaids and lightning-hurling gods and dragon-slaying
+heroes and misty caves of twilight and the throbbing
+lyre; but there was something suggestively Greek
+about them all; and steeped as I was in the lore of
+ancient Hellas, I had the singular feeling that the
+hand of time had been turned backward two thousand
+years or more.</p>
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_303">[303]</span></p>
+<p>This feeling was accentuated when, having followed
+the covered walk for a distance of several hundred
+yards, I observed that it led to a magnificent, many-columned
+edifice which could pass for nothing if not
+for a temple of the ancient gods. It was a structure
+of solid marble, white marble artistically varied with
+veilings of black; its pillars were massive as the
+trunks of the giant redwoods I had seen in the California
+forests years before, and like those redwoods,
+produced an effect of solemnity and awe; but all was
+so perfectly designed and proportioned that, while the
+building occupied an area perhaps as large as the
+average city block, it gave an effect less of magnitude
+than of artistic completeness and beauty. No living
+thing was visible about the precincts of this amazing
+temple, nor would I have expected any living thing in
+what I had come subconsciously to regard as a realm
+of the dead; but I was overawed at thought of this
+abandoned loveliness, and paused at some distance to
+regard it reflectively, mentally asking whether it was
+some still undiscovered survival from classical times or
+whether I was but seeing a vision.</p>
+
+<p>A suppressed exclamation from young Rawson
+brought me back to reality—or, at least, to the unbelievable
+thing that passed for reality. In the very
+center of the swift-rolling river, the banks of which
+paralleled the colonnade at a distance of a dozen paces,
+I observed a low-lying, gliding form, gracefully elevated
+at both extremes, which at the first terrified
+glimpse I took to be some fabulous monster, but which
+I soon recognized as some sort of boat or canoe. Before
+I had had time for a half-composed glance at it,
+it had gone speeding out of view; but in its fast-moving
+frame, I thought I could distinguish half a
+dozen dusky bobbing shapes, and half a dozen pairs
+of oars that reached out rhythmically, and noiselessly
+clove the dark waters. Later, when I had had time
+for reflection, I was to recognize this strange craft as
+akin to the shadowy apparition, the unknown sea monster
+which had so terrified us in the submarine; but
+at present I was overwhelmed by the knowledge that
+this weird place was actually peopled, peopled by living
+men whom at any moment we might meet face to
+face!</p>
+
+<hr class="tb">
+
+<p>We had scarcely recovered from this surprise when
+an even greater surprise flashed upon us. Out of
+the windows of the temple, which we had believed long
+closed to human sound, a strange, thin music began
+to float, serenely beautiful and of elfin remoteness and
+charm.... And while, entranced, we listened to those
+magical strains, there came the fluttering of a butterfly
+gown, and from the temple doors issued a shimmering,
+dancing form, followed by a score of other
+dancing, shimmering forms—scarcely human, we believed,
+so ethereal did they seem in the flashing and
+waving of arms, the swift rhythm of feet, and the play
+and interplay of pale blue and gold and pink and
+lavender and white from their flowing and multi-colored
+robes. A singular iridescence seemed to overspread
+them, almost a halo such as may envisage a
+goddess; and, gaping and enthralled, we gazed on them
+as men might gaze on Venus were she to return to
+earth. Now down the long colonnade they started,
+tripping toward us with birdlike gestures and the
+airy unreality of perfect time and movement; and,
+fearful to disturb the vision by our gross presence,
+we hid ourselves behind the great stone columns, peeping out furtively
+as though they might vanish bubble-like at our gaze. But, apparently
+absorbed in their dance, they continued gracefully toward us, not
+glancing to right or to left, and catching no hint of our
+intrusion—until, as the procession drew more near and
+the charm of the music more compelling, I peered out
+too incautiously from behind my marble bulwark, and
+found myself staring full into the face of the most
+ravishingly beautiful woman I had ever beheld. There
+was a quality about her face that seemed to mark it
+as not of the earth, the Madonnas of old paintings
+have something of that look; and the most perfect
+womanly bust that sculptor has ever conceived; but
+there was also a vividness and an animation that no
+mere painting or statue has ever shared, together with
+an air of such innocence, such candor and kindliness
+of soul that, had I been a believer in angels, I might
+have gone down straightway upon my knees.</p>
+
+<p>But all this I beheld in the space between two heartbeats. Even as
+the vision greeted me it vanished; the beautiful clear eyes were
+distended with terror upon their first contact with mine; there came a
+scream of fright, followed by a chorus of screams; then a scurrying of
+fast-retreating feet, and the bright, fairy-like shapes had vanished;
+and the empty river flowed silently past the empty colonnade and temple.</p>
+
+
+
+
+<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop"><div class="chapter"><h2 class="nobreak" id="CHAPTER_V">CHAPTER V
+<br>
+The Mysterious City</h2></div>
+
+
+<p>The next few hours showed us a continuous amazing
+panorama. The marble temple proved to be
+but one of a series connected by long and graceful
+colonnades; and in the central structures, the Ionic
+and Doric architecture were curiously mingled with a
+type that seemed scarcely Grecian at all, since it admitted
+of all variety of arches and curves unknown
+to the builders of classical Hellas. Most remarkable
+of all, perhaps, were the gorgeously ornamented vases—some
+of them six or eight feet in height—which
+were of a style akin to those excavated from the ruins
+of old Ilium. But what caught my eye even more
+strikingly were the statues that occasionally appeared
+in niches along the marble galleries or in alcoves of
+the temples—statues that would surely not have been
+unworthy of a Praxiteles, since even Praxiteles could
+not have surpassed the symmetry of form and the unstrained
+reality of pose and expression with which
+these unknown artists had depicted their wrestling
+heroes and dancing fauns and stern-browed old men
+and queenly maidens and gracious youths. For one
+who had been nurtured on modern art, these busts and
+marbles were as old paintings would be to him who
+had known only sketches in black and white; there
+was none of that snowy coldness or bronze severity of
+hue which are so common in sculpture today, but all
+of the statues had been skilfully tinted with the complexion
+of life, and such was the verisimilitude, that
+several times I started in surprise on beholding what
+I took to be a living man but which proved to be only
+an image of stone. I was interested, moreover, to note
+that none of the sculptured features had that peculiar
+hardness and selfish keenness so common among the
+men I had known, but that all seemed suffused with
+a clear and tranquil spirituality; and every lyric impulse
+within me was awakened when I observed on
+many of the faces of the women that same unearthly
+Madonna look which had graced the butterfly-gowned
+dancing maiden.</p>
+
+<p>But, of course, Rawson and I did not allow our
+pleasure in the statuary to keep our minds from more
+vital subjects. Above all, we maintained a constant
+lookout for the inhabitants of these queer regions,
+for we could no longer suppress the suspicion that unseen
+furtive eyes were peeping out at us from behind
+every pillar and wall. For my own part, I had more
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_304">[304]</span>than one qualm that I did not care to admit, and
+secretly wished myself back on the X-111; and as for
+Rawson—I found that youth afflicted with far too
+much imagination for an adventurer, and repeatedly
+begged him to keep his fantastic fears to himself.</p>
+
+<p>But there was no repressing the excitable young
+Rawson. When he was not drawing pictures of the
+serpents and wild beasts that probably infested the
+thickets beside the temples, he would be diverting me
+with the most grewsome ghost stories I had ever
+heard; and he went so far as to suggest that the
+dancing girls had been only airy apparitions, while
+the brilliant golden lights above us had no more reality
+than a will-o’-the-wisp. Evidently he had been too
+much nurtured on fiction of the blood-and-terror
+variety, for only a devotee of the most hectic adventure
+tales could have imagined, as he did, that our
+pathway was beset with robbers’ lairs, pirates’ dens,
+scorpions and crocodiles, head-hunting cannibals, siren
+women luring us to destruction, and murderous desperadoes
+of a thousand ilks and guilds.</p>
+
+<p>Fortunately for my peace of mind, I heard not
+half of Rawson’s ravings, for my interest in the wayside
+architecture served as a distraction. For two
+or three hours I was occupied with inspecting the
+gracefully connecting galleries of five or six temples;
+and, having passed the last of the group, I was absorbed
+in my observations of a long, marble colonnade
+which extended apparently for miles in a straight
+line amid the gray and brown fantastic vegetation.</p>
+
+<p>And now it was that I made the most startling
+discovery of the day. At intervals along the floor
+of the colonnade, which was of a red and yellow
+mosaic of baked and hardened clay, appeared deeply-graven
+inscriptions which I paused eagerly to survey.
+At first I thought that they were in no known language,
+but it was not long before I had detected a
+certain resemblance between the characters and those
+of the ancient Greek. Profiting from my collegiate
+study of that tongue, I puzzled over the words while
+Rawson stood by impatiently urging me to be off; and
+one by one I succeeded in identifying the letters with
+those of the Greek alphabet! Not every one of the
+characters, it is true, could be recognized with assurance,
+but enough of them were unmistakably Greek
+to give me a clue to the whole; and at length I found
+myself making a translation that might solve the
+entire mystery of this extraordinary land.</p>
+
+<hr class="tb">
+
+<p>But the process was a slow and plodding one, and
+I did not make the progress I had expected. Even
+though the letters were clear enough, the meaning of
+the words was not. Evidently this was not the Greek
+of Plato or Thucydides, in which I had been thoroughly
+schooled; but rather it was a language that was to
+classical Greek what Chaucer is to modern English.
+Still, I was not completely discouraged, for I did
+manage to make out an occasional word, though not
+at first enough to give meaning to any passage. All
+in all, considering the limited time at my disposal,
+my efforts seemed futile; and I was about to yield to
+Rawson’s importunities and give up this diverting
+study for further exploration, when suddenly I made a
+successful discovery. I must have come upon a passage
+simpler than the rest, for unexpectedly half a sentence
+flashed upon me with clear-cut meaning at once so
+striking and so enigmatical that I stopped short with
+a little cry of surprise.</p>
+
+<p>“Placed here in the year Three Thousand of the
+Submergence,” ran the words, which occurred in large
+lettering at the base of a statue of a strong man
+trampling down the ruins of what looked like a steel
+building. “Placed here&thinsp;...” at this point were several
+words that I could not make out—“in celebration
+of the Good Destruction.”</p>
+
+<p>“In celebration of the Good Destruction!” I repeated,
+after translating the words aloud. “Sounds as if written
+by a madman!”</p>
+
+<p>“Maybe you didn’t read it right,” commented Rawson.</p>
+
+<p>This suggestion, of course, I ignored. “Wonder
+what the Submergence can mean,” I continued, meditatively.
+“That doesn’t seem to make sense, either.”</p>
+
+<p>“No, it doesn’t,” Rawson admitted, with a thoughtful
+drawl. “Everything down here seems sort of
+topsy-turvy. Suppose we go on and see what else
+we can find out.”</p>
+
+<p>I nodded a hesitating assent, and we proceeded on
+our way in silence. But, though we did not speak,
+our thoughts were active indeed, for more than ever
+I was convinced that somehow, unaccountably, we were
+amid the remains of a Grecian or pre-Grecian countryside.
+Had Socrates or the radiant Phobus himself
+stepped out of the grave to greet me, I would not
+have been surprised; and I more than half expected
+to catch a glimpse of Athena’s robe from behind the
+dark shrubbery, or to see the winged feet of Hermes
+or hear the clear notes of Pan.</p>
+
+<p>But neither Pan nor Hermes nor any of their
+famed kindred presented themselves upon the scene.
+And after walking at a good pace for more than an
+hour along the marble colonnade, I forgot those interesting
+individuals in contemplation of a scene that
+left me gaping in greater astonishment than if I had
+invaded a council of the high Olympian gods. For
+some minutes a series of huge templed domes and
+columns, dimly visible through rifts in the vegetation,
+had attracted my attention and aroused Rawson’s misgivings;
+but neither of us had had any intimation
+of the sight that was to greet us when at length we
+came to the end of the colonnade.</p>
+
+<p>Suddenly we saw a clay road sloping down sharply
+beneath us, and found ourselves gazing out over a
+valley more dazzling than we had ever before known
+or imagined. Through its center flowed the great
+river, with gentle loops and twinings; above us, as
+before, reached the dark-green sky illumined with
+the golden suns; and an innumerable multitude of
+palely tinted columns, like the tree trunks of some
+colossal forest, shot upward to that sky as though
+to support it. But what were truly remarkable were
+the buildings that adorned the plain. On both sides
+of the river they stretched, far to the distance and
+out of sight, palaces of white marble and of black
+marble, of jade and of alabaster, some with an elegant
+symmetry of Greek columns, some with a solidity
+of masonry that seemed half Egyptian, some with an
+almost Oriental profusion of spires and turrets, of
+porticoes and balconies and arches and domes. But
+all alike were reared in perfect taste, and with perfect
+regard to the style of their neighbors; all alike faced
+on wide avenues, flowery lanes or lawny and statue-dotted
+parks; all appeared but parts of a single design
+which, when seen from above, was like some
+consummate tapestry patterned by a master artist.</p>
+
+<p>As Rawson and I stood staring at this matchless
+scene, I suddenly recalled the steeples and towers of
+that city we had seen beneath us in the submarine.
+A strange similarity in the outlines of the buildings
+impressed itself upon me—then in a flash it came to
+me that the two cities were one and the same! And
+at that instant I shuddered, amazed and horrified at
+the abrupt solution of the mystery&thinsp;... It was as the
+Captain had suggested; we were indeed beneath the
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_305">[305]</span>ocean, thousands of feet beneath the ocean, in some
+cavern inexplicably spared from the waters and
+haunted by the ghosts and relics of some ancient and
+vanished race!</p>
+
+
+
+
+<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop"><div class="chapter"><h2 class="nobreak" id="CHAPTER_VI">CHAPTER VI
+<br>
+The Temple of the Stars</h2></div>
+
+
+<p>Far from echoing the agitation I felt, Rawson
+seemed actually pleased at the turn of events. It
+piqued his imagination to think that we should be
+so far beneath the sea; and he conjured up all manner
+of alluring possibilities that testified more to his
+youth than to his common sense. He suggested that
+we were the discoverers of a great and magnificent
+empire which we should explore, conquer and then
+annex to the United States; and he formed his plans
+regardless of the probability that we should never see
+the United States again, and almost as though there
+were regular transportation facilities to the upper
+world. The sheer scientific difficulties—the apparent
+impossibility that a cavern free from water could exist
+beneath the ocean, the even more striking impossibility
+that human beings could inhabit such a cavern—seemed
+to make little impression upon the illogical
+mind of Rawson; and he was convinced that only by
+the rarest good fortune had we been entombed in these
+fantastic and dream-like depths.</p>
+
+<p>So intense was his enthusiasm, that he urged me to
+descend at once with him to the many-templed city.
+But I did not willingly accede; I pointed out that it
+would be wiser to hasten back to the submarine, inform
+Captain Gavison of what we had seen, and return
+here—if we returned at all—in greater numbers
+than at present. Besides, as I reminded Rawson, the
+Captain had ordered us back within twenty-four hours;
+and, if we dallied, some mischance might delay us until
+too late.</p>
+
+<p>Had Rawson but had a dim prevision of the black
+hours ahead, he would certainly have accepted my
+suggestions. But, perversely enough, he seemed to be
+almost without his usual fears just when those fears
+might have proved most useful. And since of course
+I could not allow myself to be outdone in bravery by
+a mere boy, I had to signify a grudging assent to his
+proposal. I must confess, however, that my motives
+were not unmixed, for pictures of the iridescent dancing
+girl kept flitting before my mind and would give
+me no peace; and I may have had hopes (I will not
+say that I did) of meeting her again in this city of
+fountains and palaces.</p>
+
+<p>But not a living creature could be seen stirring in
+the avenues of that strange town as Rawson and I
+began our slow descent. Once or twice we thought we
+saw the glimmer of a light or the flash of some moving
+thing in the far distance, but we could not be
+sure; and the silence and the immobility gave the
+general effect of a city of the dead. There was something
+ghostly about that calm, still atmosphere, something
+that might have made me turn back in alarm
+had it not been for the presence of Rawson; but there
+was also something soothingly peaceful, a charmed
+quiet that brought to mind the fairy tales I had
+heard in childhood, and in particular that enchanted
+palace where the Sleeping Beauty had slumbered for a
+hundred years. Here, I thought, one might dream away
+a hundred years or a thousand, and never know that
+time had passed at all; here, conceivably, the ancient
+world might lapse into the modern, and the modern
+into the far future without apparent change.</p>
+
+<p>My reveries were interrupted by our arrival at the
+gates of the city. We passed beneath a high arch
+almost Roman in style, with marble base and facade
+ornamented with strange blue sea-shells; then, proceeding
+along a winding cement walk inlaid with mother-of-pearl,
+we approached the most stately palace of all.
+In architecture, it was totally dissimilar to anything
+we had ever before observed: although perhaps five
+hundred feet in length, it was as much like a great
+statue as like a building; it had none of those features
+common in edifices for the shelter of man and his
+works, but seemed to have been erected exclusively as
+a piece of art. Its form was that of a woman, a
+woman reclining at full length, her breast to the
+ground, her head slightly elevated, propped meditatively
+upon her palm; and the structure as a whole
+had been planned with such subtlety and skill, with
+such consummate attention to every detail of the
+woman’s position, form and garments and to the
+beatific and yet lifelike expression of the face, that
+Rawson and I could only pause in bewildered silence
+and stare and stare as though this work had been
+created through no human agency but by some superhuman
+master hand.</p>
+
+<p>In that first spellbound moment, it did not occur
+to us that there might be an entrance to the palace.
+But at length, where a lock of the woman’s dark,
+sculptured hair fell across her breast, we noted a
+little doorway so skilfully concealed that it had originally
+escaped our attention. Since the gate swung
+wide upon the hinges, curiosity, of course, prompted
+us to glance within—and with results that proved but
+a further spur to curiosity. All that we could see
+was a pale, golden glitter against a background of
+black; but imagination supplied that which our physical
+sight could not reveal, and we had visions of
+gorgeous halls and corridors which we longed to inspect.</p>
+
+<hr class="tb">
+
+<p>Had our courage been sufficient, we would have
+entered at once. The idea, in fact, came to both
+of us simultaneously, but at first neither of us could
+summon up the requisite boldness. There seemed to
+be something mysteriously, almost irresistibly, attractive
+about that twinkling darkness, something that held
+us fascinated and forbade us to leave; and for several
+minutes we stood hesitating, and straining our eyes,
+yet making no motion to invade the unknown.</p>
+
+<p>Then, when the suspense had become so protracted
+as to be ridiculous, Rawson surprised me by exclaiming,
+suddenly, “I’m not afraid!” And at the same time
+he slapped his sides energetically as though to prove
+to himself that he had no fears. “I’m going right
+in!” he announced, with what I thought to be unnecessary
+loudness. And, feeling for his revolver with
+a hand that trembled perceptibly, Rawson strode resolutely
+into the building.</p>
+
+<p>There was nothing for me to do but follow. But,
+somehow, I could not help wishing that my friend had
+not been so rash; and, somehow, I foresaw that we
+might not be able to leave this strange edifice so
+easily as we had entered.</p>
+
+<p>But, once within, we forgot our misgivings in contemplation
+of the magnificent scene around us. I
+had been in luxurious galleries before; I had seen the
+most ornate salons of the Old World, and the most
+lavishly bedecked of mosques and cathedrals; but
+never had I viewed or imagined so utterly sublime a
+hall. Here was a new art of the interior decorator,
+an art that seemed wholly without parallel in human
+experience; I was scarcely conscious that I was indoors,
+but rather felt myself to be in the open, in
+the open at night, under the wide and glittering
+heavens, with the light of innumerable stars above me,
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_306">[306]</span>and the dim cloudy arch of the Milky Way. How
+the artist had produced his effect was more than I
+could say, but somehow, in his limited space, he had
+given the impression of vastness and distance, of the
+mystery and infinite silence of the starlight; and as I
+stood there entranced, I could almost imagine that I
+was back again on earth, gazing out into the night-skies
+as I had gazed so often from the Vermont hills
+with Alma Huntley.... And yet, perfectly patterned
+as they were, these skies were not the skies I had
+known. As I stood there watching, I became aware
+that certain of the constellations were slightly, almost
+indistinguishably out of position, the stars not quite
+in their proper relations to one another—and why
+this was, I could not attempt to say. But more striking
+was another alteration that had been wrought deliberately
+and with subtle artistry: above the stars, and
+about the thin girdle of the Milky Way, were filmy
+formations of light, which—perhaps it was only my
+imagination—gradually resolved themselves into tenuous
+human figures. One, an exquisitely graceful
+woman, seemed to be playing upon some lyre-like
+instrument; another, a youth with head uplifted as
+though in enraptured contemplation, impressed me as
+the spirit of all human aspiration; and still others, no
+less consummately outlined, appeared to represent the
+hopes and loves and immortal yearnings of man.</p>
+
+<p>But while I remained rooted there in ecstatic contemplation,
+filled with wonder at the paradox of beholding
+the stars thousands of feet beneath the sea,
+there occurred one of those changes by which occasionally
+a beautiful dream becomes distorted into a
+nightmare. Imagine the consternation of one who,
+while gazing at the cloudless night-skies, finds blackness
+suddenly sweeping all about him—a blackness that
+has quenched the stars as a storm might quench a
+candle flame. Such consternation was ours, and even
+greater horror, for without so much as a flicker of
+warning, the lights of the seeming heavens flashed
+out, and darkness stretched above us and all about
+us, a darkness so all-consuming that not even a
+shadow remained. With half-suppressed cries of terror,
+Rawson and I turned to one another, each totally
+invisible in the blank night; and before we had had
+time for coherent speech, there came a rattling and
+a slamming from behind us, and we knew that the
+one possible exit had been closed and that we were
+prisoners in this unknown place.</p>
+
+
+
+
+<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop"><div class="chapter"><h2 class="nobreak" id="CHAPTER_VII">CHAPTER VII
+<br>
+Trapped</h2></div>
+
+
+<p>For a moment we were like rats newly trapped.
+All trace of reason left us in our sudden furious
+terror; we began to scurry blindly to and fro, to
+and fro in the darkness, panic-stricken in our frenzy
+to escape. Where we were dashing we did not know,
+nor whether we might not be rushing into greater
+peril still; we collided more than once with the unseen
+walls, stumbled over invisible objects on the
+floor, and went fumbling about in long loops and
+circles—but all to no avail. The marvel is not that
+we accomplished nothing, but that we did not break
+our necks, for so utterly fear-maddened were we that
+it was minutes before we had any thought of ceasing
+our mad perambulations and considering our predicament
+calmly and rationally.</p>
+
+<p>If I can judge aright from my confused memories
+of those terrible moments, it was the sound of a
+heavy body falling that shocked me back to my senses.
+The fall, which was thudding and resonant, was accompanied
+by a suppressed oath, which seemed to
+issue from far to my rear, but which none the less
+sounded familiar.</p>
+
+<p>“Rawson!” I cried, stopping short, and forgetting
+caution in my alarm. “Are you hurt?”</p>
+
+<p>“No, I’m not hurt,” came the drawled reply, as
+though from a tremendous distance. And then, after
+a groan, “No, I’m all right.”</p>
+
+<p>“Where are you?” I yelled back. “How can I get
+to you?”</p>
+
+<p>Rawson shouted directions, and I went groping toward
+him. The process was by no means easy, for I
+was guided wholly by the senses of touch and hearing,
+and more than once I came into painful contact with
+some unforeseen obstacle. But after some minutes I
+found myself grasping a solid, yielding mass which I
+recognized as the arm of my friend.</p>
+
+<p>Rawson was as glad as I of our reunion. Somehow,
+now that we were together again, we both felt much
+stronger and the unknown foe seemed less redoubtable.
+Yet that foe seemed terrible enough as we sat
+there on the floor conversing in whispers. Although
+we had regained some slight composure, the falling
+of a pin might have sent us off into convulsions; and
+our imaginations were busy painting grotesque and
+shadowy horrors.</p>
+
+<p>“What can it mean?” murmured Rawson, as he sat
+with his hand upon my knee, as though to reassure
+himself by the mere physical fact of my presence.
+“What do you think it can mean?”</p>
+
+<p>I declined to venture any direct reply, although
+suggestions sufficiently dreadful were piling up in my
+brain.</p>
+
+<p>“Remember how Stranahan and the others were
+lost,” continued Rawson, solemnly, as if the explanation
+of their disappearance were now self-evident.</p>
+
+<p>“I don’t see what that has to do with us,” I
+argued. And then, with a forced attempt at bravado,
+“Don’t worry, Rawson. Chances are everything will
+turn out all right.”</p>
+
+<p>“I hope so,” conceded Rawson, in a tone indicating
+that he rather wished things would turn out badly.
+And, by way of fanning my courage, he entertained
+me with the most ghastly stories he could imagine—stories
+of men trapped in coal mines, men lost in
+labyrinthine caves, men entombed in deep pits or immured
+in lightless dungeons. To all these tales I
+listened with growing uneasiness, meanwhile racking
+my mind to remember a parallel to our own predicament.
+But I could think of nothing that even remotely
+resembled it; and, having nothing to say, I answered
+Rawson only in monosyllables.</p>
+
+<p>Perhaps owing to the terseness of my replies—or
+perhaps because of the terror of our plight—his loquacious
+mood soon deserted him. It was not long before
+we had lapsed into silence; and it was minutes before
+either of us spoke again. Meantime the darkness was
+so intense, the silence so complete and the stillness so
+absolute that I was persecuted with all manner of
+fantastic fears. What unknown horrors were brewing
+in these serene depths? What grotesque or malevolent
+or even murderous things? In my anxiety, I
+peopled the gloom with monstrous shapes of a thousand
+varieties, with slimy, crawling serpents, with
+lithe, crouching panthers, with great apes, whose
+brawny arms could strangle a man, and—worst of all—with
+slinking, barbarous humans that crept up slyly
+to seize and stab one in the dark.</p>
+
+<p>By degrees my imaginings were becoming so grewsome
+that I could no longer endure them. And, merely
+to find relief from myself, I whispered, “Come,
+Rawson, it’s senseless to sit here doing nothing.
+Maybe we can find some exit, if only we look carefully
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_307">[307]</span>enough. What do you say? Shall we try anyhow?”</p>
+
+<p>“I say it’s a good idea,” assented Rawson, rising
+cautiously to his feet.</p>
+
+<p>Without a word I followed his example, and for
+the next half hour we groped laboriously along the
+walls, which we found to be of an ice-cold stone, as
+smooth as polished marble, absolutely perpendicular
+and apparently without a flaw or break. Our movements
+were slow and even agonizing, for the blackness
+was still unbroken, and in that hushed, mysterious
+place, the slightest sound would send sharp tremors
+running down our spines. Even the grating of our
+own echoes against the floor seemed to take on a
+sinister, uncanny meaning; the whispered tones of our
+own voices seemed unhallowed and ghostly; while the
+occasional rapping of our fists against the walls or
+our clattering contact with some unseen obstacle sent
+the echoes ringing and reverberating with unearthly,
+hollow notes until our overwrought nerves quivered
+at the rustling of our clothing or at the sound of
+our own breath.</p>
+
+<p>Possibly two or three times we encircled that great
+hall—in the darkness it was impossible to tell where
+our starting place had been—but we could find no
+indication of any passageway or door. And at length,
+exhausted by the strain, we crouched on the floor
+near the wall and waited miserably for something to
+happen. Almost anything that could have happened—no
+matter how grim and terrible—would have been a
+relief; but the quiet was undisturbed, while we sat
+tense and alert, with fast-throbbing hearts, and eyes
+that searched and searched the gloom in vain. Neither
+of us spoke now; and the garrulous Rawson seemed
+wrapped up in his own dismal thoughts. How long a
+period passed thus I cannot say; my watch may have
+recorded whole hours, but certainly my thoughts recorded
+whole years, for I have lived years that knew
+less of suspense, uneasiness and dread.</p>
+
+<p>But at last, after endless waiting, relief came with
+disconcerting suddenness. As though by the turning
+of an electric switch, a dazzlingly brilliant light flashed
+into view above us—a light that contrasted strangely
+with the stars of some hours before, and that shone
+blindingly in a pale blue field like the sun in the
+cloudless heavens. Then, while we stood shading our
+eyes from the glaring illumination, we observed just
+opposite us, the gate through which we had doubtless
+entered. And with surprise we noted that it moved
+slowly upon its hinges; that slowly and as if by
+magic it made clear the way of escape!</p>
+
+<p>“The place is enchanted!” muttered Rawson, in
+dazed fascination. “Come, let’s get out of here!”</p>
+
+<p>But when, overjoyed at our rescue, we started toward
+the gate, an unexpected obstacle intruded. Half
+a dozen of the queerest beings we had ever seen came
+crowding into our path—tall, butterfly-like creatures
+with faces almost waxen pale and long capes and
+robes of pink and blue and lavender and yellow pastel
+tints. All had long, flowing light red or golden hair
+which reached at least to the shoulders; one, apparently
+the oldest, wore an ample beard, but the majority
+were smooth shaven; none had headgear of any type,
+and all were shod with sandals covered with green
+moss, above which for several inches the unclothed
+legs were visible. From the blank, amazed stares with
+which they greeted us, it was evident that our appearance
+was as much a surprise to them as theirs was to
+us. But from a certain sternness and resolution which
+invested their faces following the first speechless
+astonishment, we concluded that they had probably seen
+others of our kind, and were not disposed to treat
+us leniently.</p>
+
+<p>We noted also that, though quivering with dread,
+they kept the exit firmly blocked. And in the long,
+staring silence that ensued, we felt in dismay that
+at last we had met the masters of this strange land;
+and with sinking hearts we realized that our chances
+of escape had vanished.</p>
+
+<hr class="tb">
+
+<figure class="figcenter illowe34_3125" id="img307">
+ <img class="w100" src="images/img307.jpg" alt="">
+ <figcaption>
+ &thinsp;... We all looked up. The ceiling was bulging inches downward, as though
+the terrific pressure of the waters were already bursting the tough
+steel envelope of the X-111.
+ </figcaption>
+</figure>
+
+<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop"><div class="chapter"><p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_308">[308]</span></p>
+
+
+
+<h2 class="nobreak" id="CHAPTER_VIII">CHAPTER VIII
+<br>
+Sapphire and Amber</h2></div>
+
+
+<p>It may have been no more than thirty seconds before
+the silence was broken, though it felt like
+many, many minutes. But at length one of the newcomers,
+turning to his companions, the while keeping
+his eyes still fastened upon us, began to speak in low,
+rhythmic tones that were singularly musical and
+pleasant. I could catch not one syllable of what he
+said, though I strained my ears in the attempt; nor
+could I understand any syllable of what his fellows
+spoke in reply, though their voices too were so soft
+and sweet-sounding that they might have been intoning
+poetry. Yet, in spite of the gentleness of their
+voices, I could detect a certain excitement in their
+manner; and, from their casual nods and gestures in
+our direction, I was only too certain of the theme of
+their discussion.</p>
+
+<p>After several minutes of whispered conversation,
+one of the strangers stepped toward us and raised
+his voice as if addressing us. As might have been
+foretold, I understood nothing of what he said; and,
+as this was no doubt what he expected, he did not
+look surprised, but after a moment ceased speaking
+and motioned us to follow him.</p>
+
+<p>Since there was manifestly nothing else to do, we
+obeyed readily enough, and were glad indeed to find
+ourselves stepping once more through the doorway and
+out into the street, even though the half dozen
+strangers had grouped themselves on all sides of us
+as a sort of bodyguard. We knew, in fact, that we
+were virtually prisoners, and yet were no longer
+alarmed, for no imprisonment could be worse than
+that which we had already suffered. Also we had an
+intuitive sense that we should not be badly treated;
+whether out of consideration for our feelings or merely
+because they were afraid of us, our attendants did
+not attempt to lay hands on us or to coerce us in any
+way. Yet when they indicated by gestures the direction
+in which they desired us to walk, we had no
+thought of objecting, but obeyed as docilely as though
+they were our acknowledged masters.</p>
+
+<p>For a distance of possibly two or three miles they
+led us with them through the city streets; and far
+from brooding over our predicament (which was manifestly
+serious), we amused ourselves with observing
+the sights of the town. Dozens of the inhabitants
+had come out to peer at us as we strode past; and,
+though they kept at a cautious distance, we could see
+them clearly enough: their slender, graceful forms and
+blond features, their amiable blue eyes and rippling,
+unbound hair, their loose-hanging, light-tinted robes,
+variously colored from buff and lilac to azure and
+pale rose, gave them the appearance less of human
+beings than of walking butterflies or flowers.</p>
+
+<p>But even more interesting to us than these humans
+was the architecture of the town. We were fascinated,
+first of all, by the very pavement beneath us,
+which was of baked clay worked into a multihued and
+picturesque mosaic; we were still more fascinated by
+the buildings, which on close observation proved to be
+even more artistically designed than we had imagined,
+for exquisite little statues abounded in niches between
+the columns or under the domes and spires, and
+superb frescoes decorated the ceilings of the numberless
+colonnades and the outside walls of temples, and
+curving walks wound gracefully between terraces
+adorned with a lovely waxen flower or around the
+brink of the shimmering rainbowed fountains. I particularly
+noted the width of the avenues, in whose
+spacious reaches and wide adjoining courts the bright-robed
+children laughed and played; and I was surprised
+to observe that the buildings, instead of being
+jammed together in the modern box-like fashion, were
+each separated from their neighbors by broad paved
+ways or wide patches of vegetation, so that the whole
+gave an uncrowded and leisurely and yet skilfully patterned
+effect.</p>
+
+<p>But magnificent as were the edifices in their garb
+of sandstone or granite or many-hued marble, the most
+extraordinary by far was that to which our guides
+ultimately led us. It was not the size of the structure
+that distinguished it, since the city boasted far larger
+buildings, and size in itself did not seem to have
+been an object with the builders; but the quality of
+the masonry and the style of the workmanship had
+surely no parallel in human experience. For the walls
+and the interior circles of columns were not of any
+material ever employed before, not of steel or of
+stone, of brick or of clay, or gold or of ebony; they
+were of a translucent yellow hue, the hue of amber,
+and seemed to be composed, if not actually of amber,
+at least of glass tinted amber color. This, however,
+was scarcely the most remarkable fact, for the floor
+was likewise translucent, and shone with an entrancing
+blue, the blue of sapphire; and sapphire seemed also
+the substance of the fretted and vaulted ceiling, from
+which hung images of great birds with wide-spread
+wings, giving a startling illusion of flight. Three successive
+circles of columns, each more massive than
+the last and all adorned at the base with bas-reliefs of
+strange fishes and stranger sea plants, supported the
+great arching expanse of the roof; and completely
+enclosed by the columns, on a steep and curving incline
+of the sapphire floor, were row after row of
+amber seats grouped in a half circle about a flat open
+space, and forming—so it seemed to me—a Grecian
+theatre of unique design.</p>
+
+<hr class="tb">
+
+<p>As Rawson and I accompanied our guides into this
+queer building, we were so captivated by the
+architecture and so enthralled by the silence and the
+weird half-light of sapphire and amber that we did
+not at first observe that other human beings had preceded
+us into the place. It was long, indeed, before
+we could recover from the awed sense of entering some
+cathedral where all is reverential and unworldly; and
+it was long before, turning our eyes upon the theatre
+with its rows and rows of seats, we observed that
+not all the chairs were vacant as we had at first
+assumed. In the front tiers sat perhaps a hundred
+light-gowned individuals whose sedate and earnest
+faces proclaimed that they were convened for some
+solemn purpose.</p>
+
+<p>Our arrival was greeted by a sudden murmuring of
+low, musical voices, but by nothing more demonstrative;
+and our presence was doubtless explained by our
+attendants, who spoke a few words to the assembled
+group, after which they took seats to one side and
+motioned us to do likewise. We obeyed readily
+enough, but as I crossed the room to take my designated
+place, I received a sudden shock, an electrical
+shock of pleasure, such as one experiences upon meeting
+a friend unexpectedly in a strange city. In the
+foremost row, staring up at me with a most curious
+and kindly air, sat that enchanting woman whom I
+had seen dancing along the colonnades! As a sober
+and practical man, and one already in love with the
+gracious Alma Huntley, I should no doubt have regarded
+her with a wholly aloof and impersonal air;
+but I was sadly impressionable, alas! and was almost
+transfixed with joy at sight of those shining Madonna
+features and clear magnetic, great blue eyes. For
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_309">[309]</span>an instant, indeed, I actually stopped short in my
+tracks, until, regaining my presence of mind, I hastened
+toward my seat shamefaced at having so betrayed
+myself. It was several minutes before I ventured
+again to glance toward the fair one, and then
+she was looking in an opposite direction; and, stare
+at her as I might, she seemed totally oblivious of my
+existence.</p>
+
+<p>I am afraid that, in the ensuing hour, my thoughts
+were more on her than on proceedings in the theatre.
+I was aware, indeed, that some sort of debate was
+in progress, a discussion in which most of the spectators
+took part and during which Rawson and I were
+more than once pointed out with significant gestures.
+But, since I could understand not one word of what
+was spoken, I let my imagination travel to the beautiful
+unknown, and tried to fancy how it would feel
+to be befriended by so fairy-like a creature. Even to
+speak a word with her, I thought, would be a delight,
+and to hold a conversation with her would be the
+rarest of good fortune. Of course, her face might
+belie her character, and she might be unintelligent
+as she was beautiful; yet I was convinced that a
+rare soul shone out of the calm seductive depths
+of her eyes, and was more than willing to believe
+that she combined the wisdom of a Socrates with the
+charms of an Aphrodite.</p>
+
+<p>So pleasantly was I occupied in contemplating this
+fascinating being and her scarcely less fascinating fellows,
+that it seemed but a moment before the debate
+was over and the assembled men and women rose from
+their seats and began to depart. With a start I
+sprang to my feet, suddenly realizing that the assemblage
+had perhaps reached some critical decision regarding
+me. And when four or five of the men approached
+Rawson and myself and motioned us away,
+I had the feeling of a captive being led back into imprisonment.
+The loveliest of all women had now been
+lost to view amid the crowd, and I was sadder at her
+disappearance than at thought of my personal sufferings;
+but as I walked slowly out of that sapphire and
+amber palace, gentle strains of music began to play
+on unseen instruments, rippling delightedly as waves
+on a calm sea; and gradually and insensibly I was
+comforted, and somehow I was convinced that I should
+see that glorious womanly apparition again.</p>
+
+<hr class="tb">
+
+<p>Once more we were escorted through the city
+streets, but this time had only a few hundred
+yards to walk. After a minute or two we were led up
+the steps of a many-columned marble mansion, and
+into a long hall whose stained glass windows cast a
+subdued illumination upon a score of vivid paintings.
+We were wondering what to do, when our guides motioned
+us to cushioned seats that seemed made of
+woven seaweed; and after we had settled ourselves at
+ease in the great sofa-like chairs, two of the men disappeared
+momentarily and returned with a feast of
+some singular substance reminding me of mushrooms
+flavored with a sprinkling of honey. At first we were
+suspicious and reluctant to eat; but the honest and
+frankly puzzled faces of our hosts convinced us of
+our folly; and we found the dish, while strange to
+our palates, not only appetizing but invigorating after
+our long fast.</p>
+
+<p>After we had eaten and the remains of the meal had
+been borne away, we were treated to a still greater
+surprise. A man came stalking in laden with five or
+six variously colored cloths, which I recognized as the
+native costumes; and, having spread these out before
+us, he motioned us to discard our own clothing and
+take our choice of the local apparel. Our attendants
+then politely withdrew, leaving us more perplexed
+than ever.</p>
+
+<p>But it was long before we could make up our minds
+to array ourselves in the native garb. And while we
+stood hesitating, casting occasional disdainful glances
+at the colored garments before making the decision
+which we knew we ultimately must make, our attention
+was distracted by the paintings that adorned the
+walls. Although all were executed with the deft and
+flawless hand of a master, they were in a sense different
+from any paintings I had ever seen before;
+and what struck me in particular was not so much
+their peculiar style of art, which combined a minute
+realism with an almost cosmic suggestiveness, as their
+arresting and unparalleled subject-matter. Half of
+them were of a marine type, and depicted ocean caves
+where the giant squid or octopus wavered through the
+gray depths, or gardens of the ocean floor where the
+many-branching coral was the playground for shimmering
+blue and yellow fishes; the other half, and the
+most remarkable by far, portrayed scenes of ruin and
+destruction on a scale that might have staggered the
+most daring imagination. One of them, for example,
+pictured a city with slender skyscrapers not unlike
+those of modern New York, but all the skyscrapers
+were crumpled and toppling as though from some
+titanic blast; another, which likewise represented a
+many-spired city, showed the ocean rolling up in one
+colossal wave and battering and washing away the
+buildings as a rain storm may wash away a child’s
+sand castles; while a third, and by all odds the most
+ghastly of the group, depicted a sea bottom strewn
+with the wreckage of great stone edifices, in whose
+vacant towers and windows and among whose shattered
+courts the sword-fish and the eel sported and
+slunk and the fanged shark pursued its prey.</p>
+
+<p>“Strange!” I remarked to Rawson. “What peculiarly
+morbid people is this that its artists should delight
+in scenes of flood and ruin? Or is it that its painters
+are striving to represent some actual disaster, some
+overwhelming ancient catastrophe unheard of on
+earth?”</p>
+
+<p>Hoping to find an answer to these questions, I
+strained my eyes over the inscriptions that marked
+each picture—inscriptions in the near-Greek characters
+I had already tried to decipher. As before, I
+had at first no success in translation; but, having
+nothing else to do, I persevered; and once again I
+ended by construing two or three words—words that
+left me only more deeply mystified. “After the Submergence,”
+was the legend that explained the picture
+of the ruined town at the sea bottom; and, noting
+how closely this phrase resembled those I had previously
+interpreted, I was forced to conclude that “The
+Submergence” was indeed some definite historical event.
+But when it had occurred or how was still a question
+as unanswerable as though it had concerned the planet
+Mars.</p>
+
+<p>“It is possible that we will never be able to solve
+the problem.” I was observing to Rawson, when suddenly
+I heard that which made me stop short in
+amazement, momentarily forgetting all about tidal
+waves and sunken cities.</p>
+
+<p>“Saints in heaven, that’s a good one! That’s the
+time I put one over on you, boys!” came to me in indistinct
+tones, accompanied by a loud guffaw; and
+Rawson and I stared at one another in astonishment,
+bewildered as men who have seen a ghost.</p>
+
+<p>“Stranahan!” we cried in one voice; and the tears
+were ready to flow at the thought that we had found
+our lost companion.</p>
+
+<p>A moment later, having made our way through a
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_310">[310]</span>columned hallway into an adjoining room, we were
+met by the strangest sight we had yet seen in this
+land of many wonders.</p>
+
+<p>Sprawled haphazard on the floor, absorbed in the
+distribution of a pack of cards, were our four lost fellow
+seamen, all of them looking grotesque indeed in
+their colored native garments, and Stranahan appearing
+particularly outlandish in his gown of pale green, his
+trouser legs showing from beneath, his blue sailor’s
+blouse conspicuous through the open neck in front!</p>
+
+
+
+
+<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop"><div class="chapter"><h2 class="nobreak" id="CHAPTER_IX">CHAPTER IX
+<br>
+The Will of the Masters</h2></div>
+
+
+<p>“Lord have mercy on me, if it ain’t Harkness!
+And Rawson, too!” cried Stranahan, leaping
+to his feet, and seizing our hands in a hearty
+grip. “By all things holy, I thought I’d never see
+you again!”</p>
+
+<p>For a moment we were unable to reply, so great
+was the confusion of shouts, greetings, and excited
+questionings from our four new-found companions.
+Though we were fully as delighted as they, our first
+words came in inchoate, mumbled phrases, for our surprise
+was apparently even greater than theirs.</p>
+
+<p>“Well, and what are you doing in this part of the
+country?” Stranahan at length inquired, with a smile.
+“I thought you were safe in the old X-111.”</p>
+
+<p>“Nothing is safe in the X-111,” I replied. “Captain
+Gavison sent us out after you when you didn’t
+come back.”</p>
+
+<p>“I’m sorry to hear that,” declared Stranahan, ruefully.
+“You know I hate to disobey orders, but I’m
+afraid I’ll have to. We won’t be coming back just
+yet.”</p>
+
+<p>“What makes you think that?” I demanded, with
+sudden misgivings.</p>
+
+<p>“I don’t think it—I know it,” he maintained, with
+an air of certainty. And, leaning on one foot against
+a marble column while his brawny hand stroked his
+chin, he continued, ruminatingly, “Suffering sea snakes,
+do you take me for a fool? Do you think I’d be here
+if I could find a way out?”</p>
+
+<p>“But can’t you?” I questioned, innocently.</p>
+
+<p>“No, by the devil, I can’t!” he swore. “Neither
+can you! We’re all prisoners here!”</p>
+
+<p>“What? Prisoners in this building?” I gasped.</p>
+
+<p>“No, not in this building! In this town!” corrected
+Stranahan.</p>
+
+<p>“In this town?” Despite my agitation, I began to
+laugh. “This town makes a fair-sized jail.”</p>
+
+<p>“You won’t think so for long!” warned Stranahan,
+with all the fury of conviction. “The Lord strike my
+heart from my breast if I ever saw a deader place—except
+maybe my own home town on Sunday afternoons!”</p>
+
+<p>Following this outburst, Stranahan recounted his
+recent experiences, which were not altogether different
+from our own. Like us, he and Ripley had reached
+the city following an ambling excursion among the outlying
+colonnades and temples; but unlike us, they had
+not been so unfortunate as to be trapped in one of
+the buildings. In fact, they had suffered a different
+misfortune entirely. Upon entering the city, they had
+been confronted by several of the natives; and, surmising
+that these strange beings were hostilely disposed,
+the terrified Stranahan had whipped out his revolver
+and fired toward the crowd. So far as was
+known, no one had been injured, but all had been
+badly frightened by the report; and for a while, the
+two seamen had had the freedom of the town.</p>
+
+<p>They were ultimately stopped, however, by a band
+of determined-looking natives. Though apparently unarmed,
+and though they used no violence, these men
+overpowered the intruders in some inexplicable way.
+Not only were Stranahan and Ripley deprived of their
+pistols, but they were rendered docile as children, and
+were conducted, as we had been, to the place of amber
+and sapphire, where a hundred pale-robed individuals
+debated and passed on their fate. Next they were
+brought to their present dwelling, where they were
+clothed and fed, and where they were reunited with
+Stangale and Howlett, who had preceded them to the
+city. They had now been living here for several days,
+and during that time had been treated with unexpected
+civility and kindness and even allowed to roam at
+will through the city; but whenever they had approached
+the boundaries of the town, they had encountered
+a band of citizens who, by shouts and gestures
+and a mysterious but irresistible power of suggestion,
+had given them to understand that they were
+not to leave.</p>
+
+<p>Stranahan was approaching the end of his recital,
+and was telling us how he had been compelled to wear
+the native costume and how his meals had been
+brought to him regularly twice each day, when he
+was interrupted by the entrance of several natives,
+who had been looking for us in the adjoining room
+and seemed a little annoyed at our disappearance.
+Unceremoniously they led us back to the other apartment,
+where the half dozen robes were lying in wait
+for us; and, perceiving from their gestures that we
+would do well to don the native garb, I promptly arrayed
+myself in a gown of pale lavender, while Rawson
+exchanged his sailor’s suit for a costume of
+daintiest yellow. Both of us had difficulty in adjusting
+the garments, which were fastened at the shoulder
+by a fish-bone device resembling a safety-pin; and we
+had our hesitation about the sandals, which were
+slipped on at a stroke and yet were held firmly in
+place by inconspicuous cords. But though we puzzled
+over our new apparel for many minutes, Rawson
+found in the end that he had his on inside out, while
+the front of mine was where the rear should have
+been. Of course, we did not discover these mistakes
+for ourselves. Our attendants, on returning to see us
+fully attired, indicated the errors with smiles and
+suppressed laughter; and with their aid, we managed
+to array ourselves almost like self-respecting natives.</p>
+
+<hr class="tb">
+
+<p>Fortunately, we had little time just then to
+notice how ridiculous we looked in our colored
+gowns. As soon as the perplexing business of dressing
+was settled, one of the men motioned me to a
+sofa in a corner of the room, where he took a seat
+beside me as though for some important purpose; and
+a second similarly led Rawson to an opposite corner,
+while the other natives unceremoniously took their
+leave. My particular attendant, who was a tall man,
+neither young nor old, with classic features and keen
+but kindly gray eyes peering from beneath a wide
+expanse of forehead, now began to go through a
+series of apparently meaningless gestures, accompanied
+by no less meaningless words. First he
+would tap his head while emitting a peculiar sound;
+then he would tap his breast while emitting another
+peculiar sound; then he would touch his arm, his
+knee, his foot, always slowly and carefully pronouncing
+one or two unintelligible syllables. In the beginning,
+I was inclined to wonder whether he was not
+mad, but this view was not furthered by the discovery
+that Rawson’s attendant was conducting a similar
+performance. It was doubtless only my own
+stupidity that prevented me from grasping the truth
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_311">[311]</span>immediately. At length my companion drew a small
+pad of paper from his pocket and began to write upon
+it with an instrument resembling a fountain pen, and
+I understood clearly enough then that he was trying
+to teach me his language; so I gave him my undivided
+attention, noting carefully each object he
+touched and the corresponding sounds, and noted particularly
+the characters he jotted down upon the
+paper.</p>
+
+<p>Then suddenly I saw light amid the darkness! Although
+this was but my first lesson, I was making
+faster progress than either of us could have anticipated—my
+knowledge of ancient Greek was proving invaluable!
+At the first glance, I observed the resemblance
+between the letters my instructor was inditing and
+those of the old Greek, even as I had noticed the resemblance
+on the stone inscriptions; and it was not
+many minutes before I discovered that some of the
+words, although not to be recognized when pronounced,
+were written in a style closely similar to the Greek,
+and were obviously built upon Greek roots. This was
+not true of all the words, but it was true of such
+a large percentage, that I had hopes of soon being
+able to speak the language and so to solve the mystery
+of this fantastic deep-sea people.</p>
+
+<p>After about two hours, my instructor rose from his
+seat, shoved the pad of paper back into his pocket,
+and indicated that our lessons were over for the day.
+But he smiled upon me graciously, as though to indicate
+that I was a not unpromising pupil; and he
+spoke a word which I thought I recognized as “Tomorrow,”
+after which he saluted me with a courteous
+wave of the hand, and joining Rawson’s instructor,
+went ambling leisurely out of view.</p>
+
+<p>It was with a wry smile that Rawson rejoined me.
+“Say, did you get anything out of it at all?” he inquired.
+“I just couldn’t make head or tail of it.
+Heavens, at this rate it would take me ten years to
+learn my A, B, C’s!”</p>
+
+<p>I did not confide that I had private reasons for
+feeling more optimistic than my friend. But, after
+I had offered to help and was rejected, I was content
+to let the conversation drift to other subjects.</p>
+
+<p>Rawson was now annoyingly given to useless lamentations.
+Hotly he deplored our plight; he declared
+that he no longer saw anything romantic about it,
+and least of all perceived anything romantic about
+being made to go to school again; and he reminded
+me time after time of Captain Gavison and the crew,
+whom we had last seen stranded in the wilderness
+with the disabled X-111, and who were no doubt
+awaiting our return in hope that was fast giving way
+to despair. Though I did not share in Rawson’s dislike
+of our present quarters, and though I was deterred
+from leaving, not only by hopes of learning the
+language but by thoughts of the nameless fair one,
+yet I had to listen when Rawson spoke of our duty to
+our waiting comrades; and, in spite of the forbidding
+precedent set by Stranahan and Ripley, I could not
+but consent to try to return to our shipmates.</p>
+
+<p>As the doors of our dwelling were wide open and
+there was no one to interfere with us, we sauntered
+forthwith into the streets. As usual, we found them
+almost deserted, and so had no hesitation in proceeding
+along the winding walks and broad avenues and
+past the innumerable terraces, courts and temples in
+the direction from which we had entered the city. As
+the various distinctive gardens and palaces constituted
+unmistakable landmarks, we were seldom at a loss as
+to our route, and in little more than half an hour we
+found ourselves at the threshold of the town, before
+that odd statue-like edifice where we had been imprisoned.
+The path of escape now seemed open, and our
+flight appeared so easy that we paused momentarily,
+almost with misgivings at having encountered no obstacles.
+But not a person was in sight, and no sign
+of any impediment was visible, and so in surprise we
+started up that slope which led to the colonnades and
+outlying temples.</p>
+
+<p>We had almost reached the top, and I was already
+deep in regrets at leaving this charming city just as
+it was becoming so interesting, when half a score of
+pale-gowned individuals suddenly appeared from above
+the ridge, their vociferous cries and commanding gestures
+warning us back. They carried no weapon, yet
+they could not have been more imperious had they
+borne loaded rifles; there seemed almost to be some
+hidden compulsion, some irresistible magnetism about
+them, so that our weak wills quailed and bowed to
+theirs, and we retreated before them as impulsively as
+a singed animal retreats before fire. I do not know
+why it was, for they surely would not have set violent
+hands upon us; but we no more thought of disobeying
+them than a trained dog thinks of disobeying its master;
+and back to the city we hastened, while they followed
+on our heels with faces stern and set; and, having
+re-entered the town, we made our way directly to
+the building we had just left, as though some superior
+mind controlled our movements and we were no longer
+free.</p>
+
+<p>Upon our return, we met with another surprise.
+Naturally, we were prompted to seek Stranahan and
+our three other shipmates again; but we had expected
+that they would be occupied, as before, by cards or
+some other time-killing game. Instead, we found them
+seated in the four corners of the room, each with
+a companion (needless to say, a native); and from the
+peculiar gestures of those companions and their habit
+of writing occasionally on pads of paper, we recognized
+that they were giving instructions in the language
+of the land. But this in itself was not the surprising
+fact. Two of the four newcomers were ladies, one
+of them being of matronly years; but the other, who
+sat opposite Stranahan, smilingly making notes with
+her pen, was not only in the full bloom of youth, but
+had that singularly sweet cast of countenance, those
+singularly clear and magnetic large blue eyes, which
+could belong to only one woman in the world!</p>
+
+<hr class="tb">
+
+<figure class="figcenter illowe66_6250" id="img312313">
+ <img class="w100" src="images/img312313.jpg" alt="">
+ <figcaption>
+... Beneath us, at a distance that may have been five hundred feet
+and may have been a thousand, the vaults and domes and columns of
+innumerable stone edifices shone palely and with sallow luster. Surely,
+we thought, this was some unheard-of Athens, doomed long ago by tidal
+wave or volcano&thinsp;... Palace after magnificent palace, many seemingly
+modelled by architects of old Greece, went gliding by beneath us;
+countless statues, tall as the buildings, pointed up at us with hands
+that were uncannily life-like; wide avenue after wide avenue flashed
+by, and one or two colossal theatres of Grecian design&thinsp;...
+ </figcaption>
+</figure>
+
+
+
+
+<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop"><div class="chapter"><h2 class="nobreak" id="CHAPTER_X">CHAPTER X
+<br>
+Discoveries</h2></div>
+
+
+<p>Great as was my joy upon observing that the
+entrancing mysterious lady was Stranahan’s
+tutor, it was to be some time before her daily
+proximity had any effect upon my life. And meanwhile
+I was resigning myself to a regular routine, a
+routine only partly of my own choosing, and largely
+prescribed by those whom I had come to consider my
+masters. Each night (and by night I mean the
+period of eight or ten hours when the golden orbs
+were quenched and the city was in total blackness)
+I would sleep with Rawson and Stranahan on screened
+open-air rooms on the roof. And each day I would
+live almost as though by formula. Aroused by the
+burst of light that marked the queer underworld dawn,
+I would take a plunge in a salt-water swimming pool
+in a court of our apartment. A few minutes later I
+would join my companions in a repast of some fragile
+little native cakes and of some queer fruit like a cross
+between the apricot and peach, which were brought
+to us regularly by well-laden carriers whom I observed
+likewise supplying neighboring houses. Breakfast over,
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_312">[312]</span>we were free for a while; and then I would usually
+go rambling about the city with Rawson or Stranahan,
+or sometimes with all my five former shipmates;
+and we would have a merry time laughing and chatting,
+inspecting the various palaces, colonnades and gardens,
+and poking fun at any object that happened to strike
+us as curious or absurd.</p>
+
+<p>After an hour or two we would return to our
+apartments, to await the arrival of our tutors, who
+had a habit of appearing in a band of six (one for
+each of us) sometime toward the end of the morning.
+Stranahan was still the most fortunate of us all, since
+for many weeks his tutor continued to be that woman
+of the Madonna features and magnetic large blue
+eyes; but the rest of us were also fortunate in a way,
+for she would always beam upon us with bright
+“Good morning” in the native tongue; and I personally
+had hopes that the time was not far-off when we
+should be better acquainted.</p>
+
+<p>At the end of perhaps two hours, the tutors would
+leave for the day; but they would always provide us
+with ample work in the shape of simple exercises to
+be written or of passages to be deciphered in textbooks
+of the kind evidently used for six-year-olds. This
+“home-work” (as Rawson designated it) would keep
+us busy until late in the afternoon, when a native
+would arrive with a tray containing various savory
+viands: a gray bread made from a grain with a flavor
+like walnuts; a succulent vegetable like French toast
+well browned; a spiced, starchy food reminding me
+vaguely of baked potatoes; cakes of a hundred varieties,
+and fruits shaped like tomatoes and tasting like
+muscat grapes, or elongated like cucumbers and
+flavored as oranges, or round and large as cantaloupes
+and substantial as bananas. But while we were of
+course delighted at the abundance of these appetizing
+unfamiliar foods, we were not a little surprised—and
+not a little disappointed—at the absence of much that
+we would once have considered essential; and we constantly
+wondered why it was that no meat nor fish
+nor any other animal product found its place on the
+bill of fare.</p>
+
+<p>After this meal (the second and last for the day)
+we were once more free to do as we wished; and we
+would ordinarily spend the time until dark in strolling
+around the city, or in sitting about in a little circle
+exchanging anecdotes, or in propounding theories as to
+where we were and how we had arrived, or in playing
+cards or any other little game that we could devise.
+Except for our tutors, we came into contact with
+none of the natives; we were too ignorant of the
+language to speak with the occasional few whom we
+passed on the streets; and as yet we knew virtually
+nothing of how they lived.</p>
+
+<p>But we were much less concerned about the natives
+than about our comrades of the X-111. We were still
+restrained in the city by the mysterious, irresistible
+power of compulsion exercised by our hosts; and
+though the days were lengthening into weeks, no word
+of Captain Gavison and our absent shipmates had
+reached us. For all that we could say, they might
+have perished of starvation or fallen through a black
+hole in the ground—or, more plausibly, they might
+have been discovered by the natives, and led as captives
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_313">[313]</span>to lodgings miles away. Should we see them
+soon, or at least have news of them? or should we
+never learn what had befallen them? There was no
+way to decide except to wait—and the process of waiting
+was distressingly slow.</p>
+
+<hr class="tb">
+
+<p>But I was secretly determined to do everything possible
+to hasten events. Obviously, the first necessity
+was to understand the native language—hence I
+put forth every effort to learn to read and write. Less
+because of my natural linguistic tendencies than because
+of my acquaintance with ancient Greek, I was
+making more rapid progress than any of my fellows,
+and was acquiring the rudiments of a speaking and
+reading knowledge. Not only did my own ears tell
+me so, but my instructor admitted as much by his
+occasional nods of approval, and now and then even
+by a “Very Good” or “Excellent” when I was speaking
+or reciting to him. But not content with my
+normal rate of advance, I was fortifying myself with
+much secret practice. Often I would refrain from
+joining my comrades in their morning and evening
+strolls and pastimes, and would remain quietly in my
+room with a pad of paper and a pencil supplied me
+by my tutor. I would devote hours to writing in the
+native alphabet, until I could employ it with facility
+and assurance; or I would jot down a list of words
+and phrases and repeat them aloud time after time, trying
+to imitate the peculiar accentuation of my instructor.
+The latter task in particular was difficult
+and even painful, and subjected me more than once
+to ridicule, when Stranahan or the others entered the
+room unexpectedly and found me apparently talking
+to myself. But I persisted in spite of discouragements,
+and had hopes that, instead of commanding but a few
+scattered words and phrases, I would shortly be able
+to conduct an extended conversation.</p>
+
+<p>It was only natural, however, that I should be able
+to read the language before I could speak it. Not
+more than two or three weeks had passed before I
+felt capable of deciphering any average native document.
+But, unfortunately, I had little opportunity to
+practice my talents, for the only written material I
+saw was in the shape of the simple exercise books
+lent me by my instructor. These, while admirably
+adapted for clarifying grammatical problems, were
+entirely devoid of vital information; and when I asked
+my instructor for more edifying works, I did not
+seem able to make him understand, for what he
+brought me was merely a more advanced exercise
+book.</p>
+
+<p>Consequently, I had every reason to be grateful for
+that chance which put me in possession of several
+volumes designed for adult readers. For lack of better
+occupation, Rawson and I were minutely inspecting
+our apartments one afternoon, scrutinizing in particular
+the picturesque patterns of the veined marble
+walls, when suddenly I stopped short with a cry of
+surprise, startled at sight of a little rectangle faintly
+although unmistakably engraved in otherwise unbroken
+surface of the marble.</p>
+
+<p>Promptly I informed Rawson of my discovery. He
+shared in my surprise, and excitedly suggested that
+this was some mysterious trap-door.</p>
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_314">[314]</span></p>
+<p>Although I saw no reason to agree with him, I approached
+the rectangular patch to examine it more
+closely, and in so doing rested my hand appraisingly
+on the marble surface.</p>
+
+<p>To my utter amazement, a portion of the wall gave
+way, swinging inward as if on noiseless hinges!</p>
+
+<p>But if Rawson had had visions of secret corridors
+and darkened chambers, he was to be disappointed.
+The displaced rectangle revealed not a mysterious passageway,
+but a little closet or vault possibly three
+feet deep—a vault filled to the brim with treasure!
+At least, it was filled with what I regarded as treasure,
+for within it were piled scores of books!</p>
+
+<p>Hastily I reached for the nearest volume—a heavy
+tome bound in what I took to be a sort of artificial
+leather. The title filled me with rejoicing: it was a
+“Lexicon of the More Commonly Used Words.”</p>
+
+<p>Aided by the bewildered Rawson, I at once examined
+the entire collection. Although he could decipher not
+a word, Rawson feigned the profoundest interest; and,
+indeed, he may well have been interested, for, as I
+read and translated the titles, I was making discovery
+after extraordinary discovery. Not that any of the
+books were those works of sheer information which I
+most desired, but that they all embodied significant
+hints and clues. Some, like the inscriptions I had
+observed among the colonnades, seemed to refer to
+some great disaster, as in the case of one entitled,
+“Artistic Progress Since the Destruction”; another,
+which was called “Speculations Concerning the Supermarine
+World,” fortified my impression of being in
+some inexplicably buried land; while several were
+treatises on such difficult subjects as “Intra-Atomic
+Engineering,” “Marine Valves and Their Construction,”
+and “The Creation of Artificial Sunlight.”</p>
+
+<p>But the book that caused me the greatest surprise—a
+book that struck me as at once a priceless find and
+an insoluble mystery—was the well-thumbed yellowing
+little volume at the very bottom of the heap. Even
+today, when all that passed in those enigmatic realms is
+an old and oft-repeated story, I have difficulty in repressing
+my astonishment at that discovery. Imagine
+the bewilderment of one who, having voyaged to another
+world, suddenly receives news of familiar things,
+and at the same time learns unsuspected facts about
+the familiar! Imagine this, and you will have only
+a vague notion of the amazement I felt when, turning
+the pages of the book in that unknown cavernland, I
+recognized the name of—Homer!</p>
+
+<p>And not only did I recognize the name of Homer,
+but I found it affixed to a work not previously catalogued
+among the productions of the great Attic bard!
+“Telegonus” was the title—and instantly I recalled that
+there had been a legend among post-Homeric writers
+of one Telegonus, the son of Odysseus and Circe, who
+had been sent by his enchantress mother in search of
+his father, and had slain his sire without realizing
+his identity.</p>
+
+<p>One may be sure that I wasted no time about plunging
+into the book. One may be sure that I took no
+heed of the surprised exclamations of Rawson, nor
+even paused for more than a word of explanation, but
+read and read as fast as my knowledge of the language
+would permit. Truly, the poem was Homeric
+in quality!—I recognized at once the swing of the
+inimitable hexameter, handled with masterly craftsmanship;
+and the opening passages, executed with epic
+dash and sweep, simplicity and power, convinced me
+that here was a work worthy of standing side by
+side with “The Iliad” and “The Odyssey.”</p>
+
+<p>But how came the poem to be here in this weird
+undersea realm? How came these submerged people
+to possess an Homeric work unknown to the modern
+world? These were the questions that perplexed me
+as I excitedly followed stanza after noble stanza; and
+ponder the problem as I might, debate it as I would
+with myself or the eager Rawson, I could conceive of
+no explanation, but was as mystified as if I had
+traveled to Mars and found the people addressing me
+in English or presenting me with copies of Shakespeare.</p>
+
+
+
+
+<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop"><div class="chapter"><h2 class="nobreak" id="CHAPTER_XI">CHAPTER XI
+<br>
+Questions and Answers</h2></div>
+
+
+<p>The chief effect of the discovery of the books
+was to make me doubly anxious to speak the
+native tongue. Not one of the score of volumes
+cast any light on the problems that bewildered me, and
+least of all on the mystery of Homer’s “Telegonus”;
+and it was apparent that I should remain in ignorance
+until I could converse with the natives. Accordingly,
+I had need of that rarest of all qualities, a virtue
+in which I am almost wholly lacking—patience.
+Stifling my eagerness and curiosity as best I could, I
+had to plod away for days and days in acquiring new
+native words and phrases and in practicing speaking
+in the solitude of my own rooms. The task was far
+from pleasant, and the suspense and the waiting were
+harrying; but I was like a traveler following a trail
+through an unfamiliar jungle; and, feverish as I was
+to escape, I had no choice except to persist on the one
+visible course.</p>
+
+<p>But had I not been so eager to batter down the
+mystery, I would have found abundant cause for encouragement.
+I was still progressing, progressing rapidly,
+attaining a speaking knowledge of the language with
+a speed possible only for one long trained as a linguist.
+And, as the result of many a secret conversation, which
+I held with myself by way of practice, I advanced swiftly
+to the point of being able to exchange ideas with the
+natives. At least, I felt that I had advanced to that
+point, and awaited only opportunity to test my new-won
+powers.</p>
+
+<p>The obvious course would have been to address myself
+to my tutor, and several times I was on the point
+of doing so, but on each occasion he seemed so absorbed
+in the day’s exercises, that I decided to postpone
+the experiment. In the end, however, I should
+no doubt have opened my mind to him—had not chance
+intervened and sent me a more charming informant.</p>
+
+<p>I had of course not forgotten that entrancing Madonna-like
+woman who was Stranahan’s tutor. Indeed,
+I could not easily have forgotten her, for her exquisite
+features and bright eyes kept flashing before me at
+all hours of the day and night; and already I felt myself
+as completely subject to her spell as Dante to the
+spell of a Beatrice. Under the witchery of her influence,
+Alma Huntley was becoming no more than the
+figment of a remote and misty past—and yet I was
+not even acquainted with the fair unknown, I had
+never exchanged more than a formal greeting with
+her. I scarcely knew how to sow the seeds even for
+a casual friendship, and what she was like at heart
+and how she would react to my advances, were matters
+of pure conjecture.</p>
+
+<p>But the time was to come when she would be more
+to me than one to be admired at a distance. She was,
+in fact, to serve in a double rôle: for not only was
+she to fascinate me with her companionship, but she
+was to cast light upon those problems which were
+tantalizing me.</p>
+
+<p>Although I caught glimpses of her almost every
+morning when she came as Stranahan’s instructor, yet
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_315">[315]</span>I would have had little chance to speak with her even
+had I chosen, since (as I have already related) she
+ordinarily arrived and left in the company of the
+other tutors. But one day—perhaps because she had
+some particularly difficult bit of grammar to explain—she
+lingered over her work much longer than usual,
+and was so absorbed in it that she did not appear to
+notice that her fellow teachers had left. At the moment
+I did not perceive that this was my opportunity;
+but good fortune was to be with me, and when she
+emerged from the marble doors of our home, I happened
+to be strolling along the colonnade not a hundred
+yards away.</p>
+
+<p>At first it was almost a shock to me to see her come
+unaccompanied toward me—a shock in which intense
+pleasure was mingled with something akin to dread.
+For a moment I had an impulse to hide behind one
+of the great stone columns; fortunately, I thrust this
+foolish desire from me, and, after a few seconds, had
+almost regained my composure.</p>
+
+<p>As she approached, I could scarcely take my gaze
+from her. Upon her face was a serene, placid expression,
+such as she almost always wore; but the
+shadow of a smile flickered about her lips, and her
+great blue eyes were withdrawn as if they saw not the
+world wherein she walked but only some calm and
+perfect inner vision.</p>
+
+<p>Slowly I advanced; and diffidently placed myself in
+her path. At first she did not seem to see me, but
+in an instant, almost as though she had been expecting
+some one, her gaze was lifted to meet mine; and
+no surprise was marked there, nor any trace of annoyance,
+only an unlooked-for pleasure. In low, musical
+tones, and with grace that to me seemed goddess-like,
+she murmured “Good morning,” while such a lovely
+and unmatched light shone in her eyes and such transfiguring
+inner radiance illumined her features, that I
+felt that I had encountered an immortal.</p>
+
+<p>“Good morning,” I replied, in the native dialect,
+and at the cost of greater effort than I would have
+cared to admit; and I shuddered inwardly lest I give
+her cause for laughter.</p>
+
+<p>She smiled charmingly, and was about to pass on,
+when in desperation I strove to detain her. “I beg
+your pardon,” said I, stiffly, speaking almost by rote
+in phrases I had memorized days before. “I beg your
+pardon, but have you a minute to spare? There are
+one or two questions I should like very much to ask
+you.”</p>
+
+<hr class="tb">
+
+<p>For an instant she stared at me in transparent
+surprise. But a smile played lightly about the
+corners of her mouth, and apparently she was not
+offended. “Why, of course, you may ask any question
+you want,” she replied, more puzzled than annoyed.
+And, pointing down the colonnade to a circular marble
+bench enclosed by a ring of slender columns, she continued,
+“Let us go over there. Then we can talk, if
+you wish.”</p>
+
+<p>In silence we traversed the intervening two or
+three hundred yards. My heart was so full that I
+could not have spoken had I desired; I could scarcely
+credit my double good fortune in having won this
+lady’s good will and in speaking well enough to be
+understood by her.</p>
+
+<p>And when at length I found myself seated at her
+side, her vivid blue eyes looking inquiringly and yet
+kindly into my own, I felt as one who enters the
+land of dreams come true. It was with difficulty that
+I answered when, in low, sweet tones, she asked me
+what it was that I desired to know; and when the
+first words came to me, they were forced out only
+by an effort of the will, for I should much have
+preferred to sit there in silence, staring and staring
+at her animated lovely face, her sharp-cut classic
+profile and symmetrically modelled features.</p>
+
+<p>But, unfortunately, the laws of human intercourse
+demanded that I do more than gaze at her in speechless
+rapture. And I answered her question, therefore,
+with one or two commonplace remarks which expressed
+nothing of the exaltation within me, and
+which could have conveyed no high opinion of my
+intelligence. “I am a stranger in this land,” said I,
+picking my words with a translator’s care, “and so
+find many things here which perplex me. I was wondering
+whether you would not be good enough to help
+me. Am I imposing too much upon your kindness?”</p>
+
+<p>“Oh, no, of course not,” she murmured; and as she
+spoke I noted that her upper lip trembled slightly, as
+though from extreme sensitiveness and sympathy. “Do
+you not know that it would be a pleasure to be of aid?”</p>
+
+<p>I was enchanted by this reply, for there could be
+no doubting the utter candor and sincerity in her earnest
+blue eyes, which were glowing with a softness
+equal to the magnetism they sometimes displayed.</p>
+
+<p>Encouraged to the point of boldness, I decided upon
+a daring step. “Before I ask any other question,” I
+ventured, “might it not be well for us to know each
+other’s names?”</p>
+
+<p>“Why, of course,” she agreed. “My name is Aelios.”</p>
+
+<p>“Aelios!” I repeated, charmed by the sound. “What
+a delightful name! And what is your other name,
+may I ask?”</p>
+
+<p>“My other name?” she echoed, astonished. “What
+other name do you mean?”</p>
+
+<p>I saw that somehow I had made a mistake. “Why,
+haven’t you another name?” I inquired, with distinct
+loss of confidence.</p>
+
+<p>“Another name?” She tittered delightedly, as though
+enjoying a rare joke. “Well, if that isn’t the most
+outlandish idea! What do you think I’d do with another
+name?”</p>
+
+<p>“Why, that—that’s not for me to say,” I stammered.
+“Only, where I come from, every one has at least two
+or three names.”</p>
+
+<p>“Oh, how perfectly ridiculous!” she exclaimed. “Just
+as if we haven’t enough to remember one name
+apiece!”</p>
+
+<p>She paused momentarily, and I was too much embarrassed
+to resume the conversation. Fortunately,
+she continued without my aid. “How many names
+have you?” she inquired; and the playful light in her
+eyes told me that she could not have been more
+amused if asking how many hands or feet I had.</p>
+
+<p>“Only two,” I admitted, glad that I had not to confess
+to three or four. “I am called Anson Harkness.”</p>
+
+<p>“Anson Harkness,” she repeated, slowly, as if savoring
+the peculiar sound. “Why, if that isn’t the strangest
+name I ever heard!”</p>
+
+<p>“Where I come from it isn’t considered strange,” I
+assured her. “Of course, in my country everything is
+very different—”</p>
+
+<p>“Yes, I know,” she interposed. “You come from
+above the sea.”</p>
+
+<p>“How do you know?” I cried, astonished.</p>
+
+<p>Again she peered at me in surprise, and almost, I
+thought, with something of that puzzled air with
+which one regards a child who persists in asking the
+ridiculous. “Why, of course you must come from above
+the sea,” she explained. “Where else is there to
+come from?”</p>
+
+<p>“And do the people here all know we come from
+above the sea?”</p>
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_316">[316]</span></p>
+<p>“Yes, indeed,” declared Aelios, a naïve seriousness
+replacing the frolicsome air of the moment before.
+“That’s what we’ve all been worrying about. We
+thought we were proof against invasions from above,
+and we simply can’t understand how you got here.
+Why, for three thousand years the upper world doesn’t
+seem even to have suspected our existence.”</p>
+
+<p>“Three thousand years?” I burst forth. “Three
+thousand years? Then, for God’s sake, how old is this
+land of yours? And, in heaven’s name, what country
+is this, anyway?”</p>
+
+<p>“Why, I thought you knew,” murmured Aelios, with
+a look of surprise. “This is Atlantis, of course.”</p>
+
+<p>“Atlantis!” I ejaculated, in overpowering amazement.
+“Atlantis!” And confused visions of a lost
+continent swarmed through my mind, and I wondered
+whether this could be the sunken world described by
+Plato.</p>
+
+<p>But before I could utter another word, my attention
+was diverted by an unpardonable intrusion.
+“Great shades of Alexander, having a nice little tête-a-tête,
+are you?” came a familiar voice from the rear;
+and Stranahan, stalking up uninvited, deposited himself
+on a seat just to the left of Aelios, and grinningly
+requested us not to heed him, but to go right on with
+our little talk.</p>
+
+
+
+
+<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop"><div class="chapter"><h2 class="nobreak" id="CHAPTER_XII">CHAPTER XII
+<br>
+The Submergence</h2></div>
+
+
+<p>The arrival of Stranahan, of course, had its effect.
+Not only did he interrupt my conversation with
+Aelios at a crucial point, but he made it impossible
+for the discussion to take a personal turn.
+I realized, to be sure, that he was actuated by motives
+of good fellowship, but I felt that he exhibited remarkably
+poor sense; and I am afraid that I displayed
+not a little of my displeasure in the forced
+welcome that I frowned upon the intruder. But
+Stranahan appeared to be afflicted with no foolish
+sensitiveness; and, having decided to join us, he
+seemed not to notice the frozen reception I accorded
+him.</p>
+
+<p>And like one determined to see things through to
+the end, he remained resolutely with us. He seemed
+scarcely discouraged by his limited knowledge of the
+language, which made him a total stranger to most
+of what we were saying; and for a good part of
+our conversation, he sat by in gaping ignorance, venturing
+an occasional remark with such poor display
+of grammar and pronunciation that I could only
+smile.</p>
+
+<p>Yet our discussion was so engrossing that for minutes
+at a time I quite forgot the existence of Stranahan.
+Even the bright sparkling eyes of Aelios had
+for the moment no more than an impersonal interest
+for me, for I found myself making a discovery so
+strange, so amazing and so utterly unprecedented as
+to upset my conception of human history.</p>
+
+<p>“Can this really be Atlantis?” I heard myself inquiring,
+once the disturbance created by Stranahan’s
+arrival had subsided. “Can this really be the famous
+lost Atlantis?”</p>
+
+<p>“The lost Atlantis?” repeated Aelios, looking perplexed.
+“I didn’t know there was any lost Atlantis.”</p>
+
+<p>I explained as briefly as possible the legend of the
+ancient continent that was said to have sunk beneath
+the sea. “If there’s any truth in the story, that was
+one of the greatest disasters in history,” I remarked,
+trying to lend importance to what I felt to be but
+the flimsiest of myths.</p>
+
+<p>“Disaster!” echoed Aelios, her perplexity deepening.
+“Disaster! This is the first time I ever heard any
+one call the submergence a disaster!”</p>
+
+<p>“Do you mean, then, that there actually was a submergence?”
+I demanded. “That a whole continent
+sank beneath the waves?”</p>
+
+<p>“Why, of course!” she exclaimed, astonished at so
+self-evident a question. “How else do you think we
+got here beneath the sea?” And she pointed significantly
+to the great greenish roof and the bright, golden
+orbs above us, while into her eyes came a wonderfully
+sweet, indulgent light, as into the eyes of one
+who delights to teach children the obvious.</p>
+
+<p>“Where did you suppose we could be now,” she
+continued, “except in Archeon, the Capital of Atlantis?”</p>
+
+<p>It was at this point that Stranahan thought it time
+to let himself be heard. He drew his lips far apart
+as if to speak, uttered an inarticulate syllable or two,
+and then stopped abruptly short, as though unable to
+frame the desired words.</p>
+
+<p>“What is it, my friend?” asked Aelios, turning to
+Stranahan with a gracious smile. But since Stranahan
+could only gape idiotically in reply, I thought it my
+duty to answer for him.</p>
+
+<p>“What I cannot understand,” I said, returning to
+the question that had been puzzling me most of all,
+“is that you say there was a submergence, and yet
+seem to think it was not a disaster. Surely, if the
+whole continent of Atlantis was lost—”</p>
+
+<p>“What makes you think the whole continent was
+lost?” demanded Aelios, a quizzical, almost amused
+light in her great blue eyes. “Why, the better part
+of Atlantis is safe here beneath the sea!”</p>
+
+<p>“Safe here beneath the sea?” I cried, in growing
+confusion. “Why, how is that possible?”</p>
+
+<p>“That is a long story,” she started to explain. “It
+goes back very far, thousands of years, in fact—”</p>
+
+<p>“And cannot you tell me that story?” I proposed,
+eagerly. “Cannot you tell me from the beginning?
+Remember, I am a stranger here and find everything
+very confusing. What is this Atlantis of yours? And
+how old is it? And how large? And how did it come
+to be submerged? And how does it happen that you
+are living here now beneath the ocean?”</p>
+
+<p>“Whole volumes have been written in answer to
+those questions,” declared Aelios, with a winning
+smile. “But I’ll try to explain everything as best I
+can.” And she paused momentarily, while Stranahan
+craned his long neck far forward, as if to take in all
+that she had to say.</p>
+
+<p>“It is perhaps the most romantic tale in history,”
+she resumed, speaking almost with exaltation, while
+her eyes took on a far-away dreamy look that I
+thought most becoming, and her upper lip twitched
+with the same sympathetic quivering I had noted before.
+“Atlantis is one of the most ancient republics
+in the world, and at one time was the most populous
+and powerful of all countries. Our history goes back
+more than seven thousand years, four thousand above
+the sea and three thousand beneath—four thousand
+years of growth, tumult and conquest, and three thousand
+years of maturity and peace. At a time when
+Egypt and Babylonia were still unheard of, our engineers
+reared monuments more massive than the pyramids;
+and when Babylonia and Egypt were in the full
+pride of their renown our people regarded them contemptuously
+as the merest barbarian tribes. Our accomplishments
+were to them what theirs were to the
+unclothed blacks of the south; and our country surpassed
+theirs as a marble palace surpasses a clay
+hut.”</p>
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_317">[317]</span></p>
+<hr class="tb">
+
+<p>“But what was the precise location of your country?
+And how large was it?” I interposed.</p>
+
+<p>“It was in an isolated position a full day’s sailing
+west of the Pillars of Hercules. As for its size, it
+was large, and yet not overwhelmingly so; a swift
+runner might have traveled around it between full
+moon and full moon. But today you might took vainly
+for its plains and snow-tipped mountains, for above
+all but its highest peaks, the unbroken waters foam
+and toss.”</p>
+
+<p>Aelios paused momentarily, and a melancholy reminiscent
+light came into her eyes, while her long, lithe
+fingers toyed absently with the folds of her lavender
+gown.</p>
+
+<p>“Ah, how sad!” I could not forebear murmuring.
+“What a ghastly tragedy!”</p>
+
+<p>“No, not a tragedy,” she quickly denied, regarding
+me again with a peculiar surprise that I could not
+understand. “There is no tragedy in the history of
+Atlantis, though of course there might have been.”</p>
+
+<p>“No tragedy?” I cried, wondering vaguely if Aelios
+could be trying to make sport of me. “Is it not
+tragedy for a whole great country to be submerged?”</p>
+
+<p>“It may be, or again it may not be,” she replied,
+enigmatically. “In this case, it was not.”</p>
+
+<p>Noting my quizzical silence, she continued, with a
+reassuring smile, “No doubt you will find this difficult
+to understand. In your world above seas, conditions
+are perhaps very different from those of old Atlantis.
+Certainly, you are spared the perils which we faced,
+and which compelled us to submerge our continent.”</p>
+
+<p>“Compelled you to submerge your continent?” I repeated,
+growing more amazed each instant. “Do you
+mean to say you submerged it deliberately?”</p>
+
+<p>“Yes. How else?” she returned, in matter-of-fact
+tones. “The Submergence—or the Deliverance, as it
+is sometimes called—was the most fortunate event in
+our history. We celebrate it annually at our great
+festival, the Festival of the Good Destruction.”</p>
+
+<p>Again she paused, as if uncertain how to proceed,
+while I was forced to join Stranahan in a bewildered
+silence.</p>
+
+<p>“In order to make things clear,” she continued at
+length, with upper lip still fluttering and eyes that
+smiled with kindly good will, “I suppose I will have
+to describe Atlantis as it was in the old days, the
+days before the flood. Thirty-one hundred years ago,
+or at the time when the Submergence was first proposed,
+we were in possession of secrets which the upper
+world has perhaps not rediscovered even today. I
+will not speak of our art, literature and philosophy,
+which, though advanced for their day, were incomparably
+inferior to what we have since produced; it
+was in scientific spheres that our progress was most
+pronounced. From the beginning, our science was a
+strangely lopsided growth; it was most developed on
+the purely material side; and while it could tell us
+how to compute a comet’s weight and enabled us to
+communicate with the people of Mars, still on the
+whole it was concerned with such practical questions
+as how to produce food artificially or how to utilize
+new sources of energy. And in these directions it was
+amazingly efficient. We had long passed the stage, for
+example, when we needed to rely upon steam, gasoline
+or electricity to run our motors or to carry us
+over the ground or through the air; we had mastered
+the life-secret of matter itself, and by means of the
+energy within the atoms could produce power equal
+to that of a tornado or of a volcanic eruption.”</p>
+
+<p>“Marvelous!” I exclaimed, enthusiastically. “Marvelous!
+What magnificent opportunities that gave you!”</p>
+
+<p>“Yes, that was just the trouble,” pursued Aelios, the
+trace of a frown darkening her lovely cheeks and
+eyes. “There are some opportunities that no men
+should have. What would be the gain in giving a
+wasp the power of a bull? It was not a mere coincidence,
+for example, that the decline of art was simultaneous
+with the rise of science. After thousands
+of years in which the pursuit of the beautiful had
+been one of the objects of life, men began to be bewildered
+by the idea of their conquest over matter;
+they came to apply themselves to the construction of
+huge and intricate machines, of towering but unsightly
+piles of masonry, of swift means of locomotion and
+of unique and elaborate systems of amusement. And
+at the same time they devoted themselves extensively
+to destruction. Not to the destruction of their own
+monstrous contrivances, alas! but to the undermining
+of human happiness and human life. In our isolated
+position, we had had comparatively little intercourse
+for centuries with other lands; but now that we
+possessed lightning means of travel and lightning
+weapons of aggression, our citizens began to swoop
+down occasionally upon a foreign cast, picking a quarrel
+with the people and finding some excuse for smiting
+thousands dead. At first, of course, our enemies had
+no means of retaliation, but it was certain that in the
+end they would have imitated our methods and singed
+us with our own fire.”</p>
+
+<p>“And is that what actually happened?” I asked,
+fancying I saw a trace of light at last. “Is that
+why you had to submerge your land?”</p>
+
+<p>“No, that is not what happened,” said Aelios, smiling
+at my naïveté, while a half-suppressed yawn from
+Stranahan gave her but little encouragement to continue.
+“Not all our people were savages, and not all
+approved of our policy of international murder; nor
+were all content to see art and beauty trodden down
+by the twin hoofs of mechanism and multiple production.
+Of course, the protestants were at first mere
+voices wailing against the waves, and more than one
+was jeered as a maniac; but the protest continued and
+grew through many decades; and though there were
+thousands that continued to appraise the cities by
+their size and scientific accomplishment by its deadliness,
+the time came when the party of rebellion was
+almost as numerous as the conservatives or ‘Respectables,’
+and when the limitation of mechanical power
+became an issue that threatened the very life of the
+State.</p>
+
+<p>“I will not trouble you with the details of that struggle,
+or with the powerful cause made out by the
+enemies of Super-Science—for of this you shall hear
+more later. For the present it is sufficient to state
+that the climax arrived in the year 56 B. S.——”</p>
+
+<p>“What does B. S. mean?” I interrupted.</p>
+
+<p>“Before the Submergence, of course!” explained
+Aelios, with a slight frown that instantly made way
+for a broad and glowing smile.</p>
+
+<p>“It was in the year 56,” she proceeded, “that the
+Agripides ministry came into office. Following the
+open insurrection of beauty-lovers against the ‘Respectables,’
+the Anti-Mechanism party triumphed in a
+general election; and Agripides, known by his friends
+as ‘Savior of the World’ and by his foes as the ‘City-Wrecker,’
+began to carry out the revolutionary policies
+he had been advocating for years.</p>
+
+<p>“These policies, which were perhaps the most daring
+ever conceived by the human mind, contemplated
+nothing less than the overthrow of existing civilization
+and the substitution of something better suited to
+endure. It was Agripides’ contention—and a contention
+established by the researches of the very scientists
+he opposed—that the State of Atlantis, under current
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_318">[318]</span>conditions, had a potential life of not more than five
+hundred years; that it was burning away its energies
+with profligate abandon, and would soon droop withering
+and exhausted into permanent decay. Its best
+human material was being used up and cast aside
+like so much straw; its best social energies were being
+diverted into wasteful and even poisonous channels;
+its too-rapid scientific progress was imposing a wrenching
+strain upon the civilized mind and institutions.
+There was only one remedy, other than the natural
+one of oblivion and death; and that remedy was in a
+complete metamorphosis, a change such as the caterpillar
+undergoes when it enters the chrysalis, a transformation
+into an environment of such repose that society
+might have time to recover from its overgrowth and
+to evolve along quiet and peaceful lines.”</p>
+
+<hr class="tb">
+
+<p>Another half-unconscious yawn from Stranahan
+imposed a brief interruption at this point; but
+Aelios had now thoroughly warmed to her theme; and,
+disregarding Stranahan’s rudeness, she continued almost
+without delay.</p>
+
+<p>“The proposal which Agripides had to make, and
+which he had been advocating eloquently for years,
+was one that caused even the liberal-minded to gasp
+and shake their heads doubtfully. He declared, in a
+word, that Atlantis was not sufficiently isolated and
+enisled; that it would never be safe while exposed to
+the tides of commerce and worldly affairs; that the
+only rational course was for it first to destroy whatever
+was noxious within itself, and then to prevent
+further contamination by walling itself off completely
+from the rest of the planet. And since no sea however
+wide and no fortress however strong would be
+efficacious in warding off the hordes of mankind, the
+one possible plan would be to go where no men could
+follow; to seal Atlantis up hermetically in an air-tight
+case—in other words, to sink the whole island
+to the bottom of the sea!”</p>
+
+<p>“Good Lord!” I exclaimed, horrified at so strange a
+suggestion. “Sounds just like a lunatic’s ravings!”</p>
+
+<p>“No, quite the opposite,” replied Aelios, with an
+indulgent smile. “I see you don’t understand at all.
+Agripides was not a lunatic; he was the greatest man
+that ever lived.”</p>
+
+<p>“I thought he must be either a madman or a genius,”
+I returned, dryly.</p>
+
+<p>“Look, I’ll show you!” she flung out, almost as a
+challenge, since I did not seem convinced of her
+hero’s greatness. And rising hurriedly and flitting a
+dozen paces down the colonnade, she pointed to a life-sized
+marble bust on a panel between the columns.
+“See! That is Agripides! Does that look like the
+face of a lunatic?”</p>
+
+<p>Hastily I had followed Aelios, with Stranahan at
+my heels; and he joined me in surveying the bust
+with a show of interest, though his puzzled expression
+showed that he did not know and much less cared
+who Agripides may have been. “The glorious saints
+have mercy on us, if he hasn’t a beard like a goat!”
+was his one and only comment. But I did not deign
+to reply, and fixed my eyes sternly and appraisingly
+upon the countenance of Agripides. The hair and
+beard were perhaps a little long, I thought, unconsciously
+agreeing with Stranahan; but the features
+were the most striking I had ever seen in any human
+being. Like many of the faces which have come down
+to us from classical times, this countenance combined
+intellect and beauty to a singular degree. The brow
+was broad, as in the representations of Homer, but it
+also rose to a majestic dominance; the eyes were
+large and alert, the lips thin and compressed, the
+cheeks long and firmly modelled, while the features
+were furrowed with deep lines of sympathy that reminded
+me of Lincoln, and at the same time were
+marked with a wistful, dreamy expression that contrasted
+strangely with a savage, almost tigerish determination
+more implied than clearly graven on the
+even contours of the face.</p>
+
+<p>“Agripides was a remarkable orator, and at the
+same time a writer of force,” stated Aelios, as we returned
+to our seats. “Hundreds of his essays and
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_319">[319]</span>addresses have been preserved, and they show such
+brilliance, vehemence, and wit, and at the same time
+such clarity and logic of presentation, that it is
+little wonder that he converted all Atlantis to his way
+of thinking. Or perhaps it would not be fair to say
+that he converted all Atlantis—there was plenty of
+wordy opposition to his schemes, as well as several
+little armed revolts and insurrections that had to be
+suppressed. But Agripides was not a man to be easily
+daunted, and in spite of the strenuous objections of
+the ‘Respectables,’ the year 49 saw the publication of
+his complete plans for the Submergence.</p>
+
+<p>“Those plans were more daring than the worst
+enemies of Agripides could have anticipated. He proposed,
+in a word, to cover a large part of Atlantis with
+an enormous glass wall, reaching like an artificial sky,
+hundreds of feet above ground, and thick enough to
+withstand the pressure of unthinkable tons of water.
+Near the base of this wall should be two great valves,
+one through which the ocean might be admitted into a
+broad canal or artificial river, and a second (at the
+opposite end of Atlantis) through which the waters
+might be forced out again by means of gigantic intra-atomic
+pumps. I need not mention, of course, that
+deep wells and distilled sea water would serve for
+domestic and drinking purposes; that decomposed
+water would provide sufficient oxygen for breathing;
+and that artificial sunlight, synthesized chemically so
+as to produce the life-giving elements of the original,
+would not only supply illumination but would support
+vegetation and human life as well.”</p>
+
+<p>“Yes, yes, that is all very good,” said I, feeling that
+Aelios had not yet touched upon the most essential
+fact of all. “But how did Agripides propose to sink
+the island beneath the sea?”</p>
+
+<p>“That is a difficult question,” she murmured, with
+a smile that was worth more to me than volumes of
+knowledge. “It involves technical questions of engineering
+with which, I must confess, I am very poorly
+acquainted. But, as I understand it, what Agripides
+proposed was that enormous tank be buried under the
+sea bottom far to the west of Atlantis, and that, at a
+given signal, the water should be raised to boiling
+point by an application of intra-atomic heat. The resulting
+tons of steam, in their fury to escape, would
+create an explosion that would burst the very floor
+of the sea; in one direction there would be a gigantic
+upheaval, and a lifting of the ocean bed; and in another
+direction, by way of reaction, there would be a
+sinking of the ocean bottom in an effort of the strata
+not directly affected, to fill in the gap left by those
+displaced. And while a whole vast area would rise
+thousands of feet (although not to the level of the
+water), another area would be forced downward an
+equal distance; and that area, which would be of
+enormous extent, would include the island of Atlantis.
+To use a crude illustration, one may think of a common
+plank, balanced on its center, of which one end
+cannot be tilted upward without causing the other end
+to slant down; and one may imagine Atlantis as reposing
+on the lower slope of such a plank.”</p>
+
+<hr class="tb">
+
+<p>“But that is all mere theory,” I pointed out. “Certainly,
+Agripides wouldn’t dare to sink the island
+merely on the basis of such unproved calculations.”</p>
+
+<p>“Oh, no, of course not. The computations were all
+verified by actual experiment. With the aid of two
+accomplished engineers, Agripides made a small model
+of the continent and the surrounding ocean, accurately
+reproducing every detail; and, having stimulated an
+explosion under the proper conditions, he found that
+the miniature island sank precisely as he expected the
+real island to do.”</p>
+
+<p>“Even so,” I argued, “would not the explosion have
+shattered the entire crust of the earth? And would
+not the great glass dome have been split and ruined
+even if the ground beneath it remained firm?”</p>
+
+<p>“All that was duly provided for,” explained Aelios.
+“The submergence was to be so gradual as to require
+several hours; and since the explosion was to occur
+under the sea rather than under the island itself,
+it would shatter the crust of the earth only in remote
+localities, and the shock would not be severe enough to
+affect the glass wall. In other words—to make another
+comparison—the island was to be like a ship that
+sinks in its entirety after striking the reefs, although
+only the prow is damaged and the rest remains uninjured.”</p>
+
+<p>“Yes, I understand perfectly,” said I, recalling my
+recent experiences in the X-111. “But even assuming
+that the experiment was perfectly safe, how did
+Agripides ever persuade the people to sink their homes
+beneath the sea?”</p>
+
+<p>“It was precisely there that he proved his greatness,”
+said Aelios, casting an admiring glance in the
+direction of Agripides’ statue. “Well knowing that
+imagination is the most powerful force in human life,
+he began to work upon the imagination of the masses
+to show the dangers of civilization. Simultaneously
+with the publication of his plans for the Submergence,
+he opened to the public an enormous exhibition palace
+in which he presented the most ghastly display in history.
+With the vision of the social philosopher and
+the intuition of the prophet, he had constructed in
+miniature the Atlantis of the future as he conceived
+it would be—and no man could gaze upon that Atlantis
+without heartily praying for the Submergence.
+The landscape had been blasted, muddied and made
+black, and scarcely a green leaf could be seen; steel
+towers and smokestacks dotted the island until it
+looked like a range of artificial hills; great wheels and
+chains whirled and rattled in the dark interiors of
+the buildings, and to each wheel and chain a man
+was tied; and the huge engines and motors were fed
+with the blood of men, and watered with their tears.
+Innumerable multitudes—not only of men but of
+women, and of sickly, pinch-faced children—were
+bound as slaves to the machines, and responded to
+automatic orders that the machines flashed forth; and
+after they had served long and their limbs were
+growing frail, they were crushed and mangled by the
+very masters they had served, or else were cast out
+to perish like frost-bitten flies. But the great wheels
+never ceased to turn or the levers to clatter, and
+their steel jaws gnashed the gouged-out hearts and
+brains of men, and their dust and cinders clouded
+the fields and forests, and their poison fumes invaded
+the lungs of the people, blunting their minds and
+making them droop and die by the million.”</p>
+
+<p>“What a hideous picture!” I cried, with a shudder.
+“But certainly, certainly it was an exaggeration!”</p>
+
+<p>“No, Agripides had no need to exaggerate. He
+merely showed the logical advance upon existing advances.
+But this was the least grewsome of the exhibits.
+One half of the display, which he entitled ‘The
+Triumph of Science,’ was devoted to the supreme
+horror. Here again he depicted artificial landscapes
+and many-towered cities; but the wheels of those
+cities were not revolving, though smoke was indeed in
+the air. At first sight, they might hardly have been
+recognized as cities at all; they were really little
+more than chaotic heaps of iron and stone; many of
+the buildings had been blasted to fragments, some
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_320">[320]</span>had toppled over, others were mere mangled frameworks
+of steel. Scarcely more than an isolated wall
+remained standing here and there to show that this
+had been the home of men; but of the inhabitants
+themselves there was indeed an occasional sign: here
+one was futilely gasping for breath, writhing on the
+ground like a tormented worm; there one was groping
+crazily through the ruins, with torn breast and
+blinded eyes; yonder a family group was lying
+sprawled at all angles, with pale faces convulsed with
+their last agony.</p>
+
+<p>“But had one looked for the source of the destruction,
+one would not easily have found it—except that
+far above, so remote as scarcely to be visible, a fleet
+of mosquito-like flying craft were buzzing on their
+way like stealthy marauders.”</p>
+
+<p>Aelios paused, a deep seriousness darkening her
+fair features; and as I sat there regarding her in
+silence, I could not but reflect what unspeakable distances
+separated the bloody picture she described from
+the enchanting scenes among which she dwelt.</p>
+
+<hr class="tb">
+
+<p>“Naturally,” she continued, “the people were
+not captivated with the thought of the future
+depicted by Agripides. And, Agripides, acting at the
+psychological moment when all Atlantis was most
+aroused, convened the National Assembly, and polled
+a majority of—three to one in favor of the Submergence!
+This majority being confirmed by a referendum
+of the people, the great leader took immediate
+steps toward carrying out his revolutionary project.</p>
+
+<p>“Nearly forty-eight years were consumed in the
+necessary preliminaries, and in that time Atlantis
+found itself forced halfway toward the realization of
+Agripides’ direct prophecies. The island of Antiles,
+a small republic located far to westward, had spied out
+the aggressive schemes of the Atlantean military experts,
+and enlarging upon them, had manufactured a
+fleet of poison-bearing aircraft capable of smiting whole
+cities with death and ruin. That they were aimed
+for a contemplated conflict with Atlantis there could
+be not a doubt; that such a conflict could not be
+averted by diplomacy was too self-evident to require
+demonstration; and that there was no resisting the
+destructive airships was generally, although unofficially,
+admitted. Conceivably, it was the dread of imminent
+disaster that restrained the minds of the people from
+vacillating at the last moment and that brought the
+plans of Agripides to their triumphant issue.</p>
+
+<p>“Agripides, unfortunately, did not survive to see
+the consummation of his plans. Such a happiness
+was more than he had hoped for; the years were already
+heavy upon him when his revolutionary ideas
+first won approval. But, dying peacefully at an advanced
+age in the year 15 B. S., he yet lived long
+enough to supervise the more important details of
+the project and to be assured of its eventual success.</p>
+
+<p>“In accordance with Agripides’ directions, a reinforced
+glass wall many layers thick was erected over
+the most picturesque part of Atlantis, for it was agreed
+that the rest (which included the site of many cities)
+was not worth saving. I shall not describe the steps
+taken to insure the health and comfort of the people
+after the Submergence, to rear elegant palaces and
+mansions, to duplicate the sunlight and to produce
+food chemically; I shall not even dwell upon the
+Good Destruction, except to say that all save the most
+essential of power-driven tools were piled up in the
+doomed part of the island, to be buried on the day
+of the Submergence together with the towers of the
+deserted cities. But what I must mention—and this is
+most important—is that not all our people were content
+to be submerged; that about one-third, irreconcilable
+to the last, emigrated eastward in a great body a
+few months before the Submergence. It was this that
+made us most sad when Agripides’ plans were fulfilled
+and we sank at last to the bottom of the sea.”</p>
+
+<p>“Have you ever heard what happened to them?” I
+inquired, marveling at this extraordinary migration.</p>
+
+<p>“No, how could we? We have never since established
+communication with the earth. But I was thinking
+that perhaps you, who are from the upper world,
+could give us some tidings of our lost fellow men.”</p>
+
+<p>“I am not sure but that I can,” I replied, slowly,
+thinking of the ancient Greeks and their striking resemblances
+to the Atlanteans and wondering whether
+the immigrants from the sunken island might not
+have been among the original settlers of Athens and
+Corinth.</p>
+
+<p>And then, recalling the mystery of the “Telegonus,”
+that powerful lost Homeric epic, I perceived a possible
+clue. “Tell me,” I asked, though the question
+was apparently irrelevant, “what do you know about
+Homer?”</p>
+
+<p>“Homer?” she echoed. And then, with the ease of
+perfect familiarity, “Why, Homer was one of the greatest
+poets we know of—almost equal to the best that
+have arisen since the Good Destruction. He lived at
+about the time of the Submergence in a country far
+to the East, with which we had trade relations in
+spite of its half barbarous condition. It was, in a
+way, a sort of dependency, a ward of Atlantis; and
+it was from us that its people derived their alphabet
+as well as much of their language and many of their
+institutions. Possibly it was there that the Atlantean
+migrants settled.”</p>
+
+<p>“Ah, I see,” said I, with a flash of understanding.
+“Then you mean—”</p>
+
+<p>But before I could utter another word, interruption
+came from an unexpected quarter. And with a jolt I
+returned from ancient Atlantis to the realities of my
+own life. “Hello, boys! Hello! Hello! There they
+are, there they are!” came in loud familiar tones from
+our rear, followed by a salvo of cheers; and before
+Stranahan and I could quite realize what was happening,
+we felt our hands grasped in a multitude of
+hands, and found ourselves surrounded by dozens, literally
+dozens, of well known faces. The first I recognized
+was that of Captain Gavison, who grinned happily
+in welcome; then I distinguished one after one
+the faces of my fellow seamen, apparently all of them,
+and all of them talking, laughing, crowding about,
+slapping us on the back, and shouting out greetings in
+tumultuous chorus.</p>
+
+<hr class="tb">
+
+<figure class="figcenter illowe33_5625" id="img318_2">
+ <img class="w100" src="images/img318.jpg" alt="">
+ <figcaption>
+ &thinsp;... although perhaps five hundred feet in length, it was as much like a
+great statue as like a building; it had none of those features common
+in edifices for the shelter of man and his works, but seemed to have
+been erected exclusively as a piece of art. Its form was that of a
+woman, a woman reclining at full length&thinsp;...
+ </figcaption>
+</figure>
+
+
+
+<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop"><div class="chapter"><h2 class="nobreak" id="CHAPTER_XIII">CHAPTER XIII
+<br>
+Trial and Judgment</h2></div>
+
+
+<p>To our disappointment, we received no immediate explanation
+of the arrival of Captain Gavison and his
+men. A score of the natives, who stood frowning
+in the background, appeared disinclined to permit any
+extended conversation; and it was but a minute before
+they motioned the newcomers to follow them. I was
+interested to observe that all, from the Captain down
+to the humblest recruit, obeyed as readily as though
+in response to an absolute master, marching not in
+military formation and yet at a regular pace and with
+every appearance of discipline.</p>
+
+<p>Having nothing better to do, Stranahan and I
+trailed in their wake, for at their first appearance
+Aelios had murmured a hasty “Good-bye” and had
+gone tripping out of sight around a bend in the colonnade.</p>
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_321">[321]</span></p>
+<p>In a few minutes we saw our comrades entering a
+building we well knew—the palace of sapphire and
+amber. Although expecting to be ordered out, we
+made bold to follow, and to our surprise passed
+through the gates of the building and into its gorgeous
+interior without attracting any noticeable attention.
+Arriving at the great central theatre, we observed that
+hundreds of the natives were assembled as though in
+solemn debate. Many an eye was turned upon the
+newcomers in curiosity and amazement; but there was
+no audible murmur at our entrance. And when Captain
+Gavison and his followers were motioned to seats,
+Stranahan and I had no hesitation about joining them.</p>
+
+<p>But the unlucky Stranahan was doomed to still
+further boredom. For nearly an hour he was compelled
+to listen to a discussion of which he understood
+scarcely a word. Certainly, he had cause to envy me,
+for I easily followed the greater part of what was said—and
+most unusual and absorbing I found it!</p>
+
+<p>The leader of the debate was a broad-browed
+woman, with a firm and distinguished manner, and
+more than a trace of beauty in spite of her graying
+hair. But she spoke comparatively little; and six or
+eight of the audience took turns in standing in the
+open space in front and delivering brief addresses.
+Their theme was not at first apparent to me; I thought
+that they were perhaps discussing some question of
+politics, or pleading the merits of some new law; and
+I was surprised to discover that what they were arguing
+was no mere practical matter, but concerned the
+architecture of a new building, to be known as the
+“Palace of the Ten Arts.” One, there was that suggested
+a lagoon fronting the edifice, a second who
+recommended rainbow fountains, and a third who favored
+an arcade of multi-colored crystal; and all the
+proposals were heard with equal respect and duly noted
+down by the leader of the debate, who smiled benignantly
+upon all the speakers and refrained from
+obtruding her personal preferences.</p>
+
+<p>I was relieved when at length all who desired to
+speak had had their say. The leader now declared the
+meeting open for further business; and now it was
+that a tall young man, whom I recognized as one of
+the attendants of Captain Gavison and his men, rose
+quickly to his feet and advanced with a determined air
+toward the speaker’s space. A hush of expectation
+had come over the gathering; all eyes were fastened
+upon the tall young man as though he had a message
+of rare importance.</p>
+
+<p>His first words were to justify this impression.
+“Fellow citizens,” said he, speaking in a deep-toned
+voice which had something of that musical quality
+common to his people, “I have to bring to your attention
+today a matter unique in the history of Atlantis.
+First, however, let me recall to your minds several
+facts with which you are no doubt familiar. Two
+months ago we were astonished to find in our midst
+two creatures whose sallow complexion, grotesque costume
+and still more grotesque features, proclaimed
+them not to be natives of Atlantis. How they had
+penetrated beneath the secluded dome of our country
+we could not imagine, but it was decided that the
+best course would be to educate them in our language,
+and, after they were thoroughly conversant with the
+tongue, to question them in the attempt to solve the
+mystery. This decision was only reinforced by the
+appearance of two more of the queer creatures a day
+or so later, and then again by the arrival of a third
+strange couple. While it was feared that our age-old
+seclusion had been broken and that we were being invaded
+by the upper world, still it was decided that for
+the present the best course would be to maintain an
+unperturbed but vigilant silence.”</p>
+
+<p>The speaker paused, and cleared his throat as though
+the important part of his address were to follow. “Only
+yesterday, fellow citizens,” he continued, “you heard the
+startling sequel. A field naturalist, roaming along the
+Salty River in the wilderness beyond the furthest
+colonnades, made the most surprising discovery of his
+life—a peculiar ugly rod-like ship of unknown type,
+a ship that seemed to be fairly swarming with uncouth
+humans! Naturally, the scientist was alarmed;
+and, having made his escape, he hastened back to the
+city to secure aid in capturing the aliens. As he
+described them, they were in every respect like the
+barbarians of which ancient annals tell,—great, brawny
+humans of unkempt and ferocious appearance. But
+we knew that they could be no more redoubtable than
+their kindred who were already among us; we knew
+that they would be easily subdued by the superior
+minds and irresistible magnetic wills with which nature
+and a select inheritance have endowed our race.
+And when the twenty men of the searching expedition
+set out early this morning, we had reason to believe
+that the aliens would be present by evening to face
+trial before this assemblage.</p>
+
+<p>“As you observe, we have not been disappointed.
+But now, fellow citizens, the great problem arises.
+The prisoners appear to be unclean as well as wanton
+and unprincipled men. Contrary to all regulations,
+they have been catching fish from the Salty River and
+using them for food. They have been slaying unoffending
+crabs and turtles, and—disgusting though the
+idea be—frying and eating them! They have been polluting
+water of the stream; they have been trampling
+down the rarest seaweeds, and beating to death the
+daintiest of water-flowers; they have been scrawling all
+sorts of crude and outlandish designs on the delicate
+pink and blue of the roof-bearing columns.</p>
+
+<p>“But all this—criminal though it be—we may overlook
+for the moment. The chief problem presented by
+the arrival of these aliens is of such wide-reaching
+social consequence that their minor transgressions pale
+into insignificance. For the first time in more than
+three thousand years, the principles of Agripides have
+been violated. Visitors from outside have at last appeared;
+at last we are in danger of contamination by
+the passions and vices of the upper world. Whether
+the invasion was deliberate is not definitely known,
+but how it was made is sufficiently clear: the barbarian
+ship, which was equipped to travel under the
+sea, was sucked into the whirlpool at the ocean entrance
+of Atlantis and forced into the valve through
+which the waters of the Salty River find admittance.
+Of course, this trespass may have been merely accidental;
+but remembering the warlike and unfriendly
+ways of the upper world, I personally suspect that the
+intrusion was planned with cunning design, and that
+other invading craft—possibly a whole invading fleet—may
+be expected to arrive. Fellow citizens, what is
+your opinion?”</p>
+
+<hr class="tb">
+
+<p>Amid general silence the speaker took his seat—applause
+was apparently unknown among the Atlanteans.
+But this fact did not then enter into my
+thoughts; I was too much enraged at the tall young
+man’s misstatements. With a lack of self-consciousness
+that I can explain only by my blinding fury, I found
+myself doing the unprecedented.</p>
+
+<p>Springing excitedly to my feet, I demanded, hotly,
+in the native tongue, “Friends, may I say a word?”</p>
+
+<p>Instantly hundreds of pairs of eyes were turned
+upon me in surprise; I saw that I had no more been
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_322">[322]</span>expected to speak than if I had been a tree or a stone.
+But the glances that were darted at me were not unfriendly,
+and as yet I was too much incensed to regret
+my words.</p>
+
+<p>“Certainly, you may say all you wish,” rang out the
+clear, well-rounded tones of the lady leader of the
+debate. “This is the Hall of Public Enlightenment, you
+know, and any person with anything to say will gladly
+be heard.”</p>
+
+<p>“Go on, old sport, give it to them good!” whispered
+Stranahan into my ear, although he could not have
+caught the drift of what was happening; and, with his
+words rankling in my mind, I started toward the
+speaker’s space.</p>
+
+<p>But as I took my place before that silent, staring
+multitude, I wished that I could have been safely back
+in my seat. Something suspiciously like fear overcame
+me—what right had I to be addressing this strange
+assemblage? What reason to expect that I could
+speak their language intelligibly? Yet necessity
+prodded me on; and, after gaping stonily at the spectators,
+I found myself somehow uttering a series of
+more or less connected sounds. I did not say what I
+had intended, and I suspect that more than one English
+word got itself intertwined with my Atlantean vocabulary;
+but I was encouraged when I observed that
+all eyes were fixed upon me with apparent interest,
+and that no one openly laughed or so much as tittered,
+though one or two (and among them Stranahan) could
+hardly suppress a smile.</p>
+
+<p>After a vague, sputtering introduction that I cannot
+begin to recall, I found myself on fairly solid
+ground. I declared that I could answer many of the
+questions which the previous speaker had put; I explained
+that my companions and myself were not
+barbarians, being representatives of the highest of
+modern civilizations; I stated that we had no evil intentions,
+having come to Atlantis by accident, and certainly
+not being the forerunners of a wave of invasion;
+and, at the same time, I offered our thanks
+for the treatment already accorded us, and expressed
+our intention to abide by the laws of Atlantis and to
+act in conformity with the best traditions of the land.</p>
+
+<p>As I took my seat, I could see from the faces of
+my hearers that I had produced a favorable effect.
+Many were the nods of approval that greeted me, and
+many the sympathetic smiles. But at the same time I
+could perceive that I had not made myself perfectly
+clear; and when a score of voices simultaneously requested
+that I return to the platform, I had no other
+choice.</p>
+
+<p>Questions regarding my native land were now
+rained upon me in profusion. But whether because
+of my limited knowledge of the language or because
+the experience of the Atlanteans differed so fundamentally
+from my own, I had great difficulty in making
+myself understood. My description of the growth and
+attainments of the modern world was listened to
+with interest, but with a lack of comprehension that
+I thought almost idiotic. Thus, when I declared that
+the United States was a leading nation because of its
+population of a hundred million, its rare inventions
+and its prolific manufactures, my hearers merely
+looked blank and asked how the country ranked in
+art; and when I stated (what surely is self-evident
+to all patriotic Americans) that New York is the
+greatest city on earth because of its tall buildings
+and its capacity for housing a million human beings
+in one square mile, my audience regarded me with
+something akin to horror, and one of the men—evidently
+a dolt, for he seemed quite serious—asked
+whether no steps had even been taken to abolish the
+evil.</p>
+
+<p>But it was when describing my own career that I
+was most grievously misunderstood. Had I confessed
+to murder, the people could not have been more
+shocked than when I mentioned that I was one of
+the crew of a ship commissioned to ram and destroy
+other ships; and I felt that my prestige was ruined
+beyond repair when I stated that I had entered the
+war voluntarily. Even the most friendly hearers
+seemed to draw unconsciously away from me after my
+recital; loathing and disgust showed plainly in their
+faces, as though I had announced myself to be an
+African cannibal or a Polynesian head hunter. Only
+too plainly I perceived that what was termed heroism
+among my fellows was here regarded as villainy. It
+did little good to explain that war was a cherished
+custom in the upper world, and that patriotism was
+among the prime virtues; it was useless to plead that
+there might be reasons for taking the lives of men,
+whom one had never seen, and that such reasons were
+generally recognized among civilized nations. The
+more I argued, the greater the abhorrence I aroused;
+and beyond an occasional murmured “Agripides was
+right,” my words brought little direct reply. And at
+length I returned to my seat feeling myself to be in
+disgrace, yet curbing my embarrassment by inwardly
+cursing the stupidity of the Atlanteans.</p>
+
+<p>The remaining business of the assemblage was disposed
+of quickly enough. Following my retreat, the
+tall young man again addressed the meeting, reminding
+his audience that they had not yet passed judgment
+upon us. “Fellow citizens,” said he, in conclusion,
+“I have a proposal to make, which, so far as I
+can see, is the only one possible under the circumstances.
+Whether we like it or not, we must recognize
+that the intruders are here; and, though we did
+not will their presence, we must treat them humanely.
+Since we cannot dispose of them by violence and since
+we must accept their assurance that no others of their
+kind are to follow, we must let them remain, and see
+that they are educated and put to work like all other
+citizens. But one thing we must insist upon above
+all else: the isolation of Atlantis must be protected, and
+the countries above seas must never learn of our
+existence. Hence we must decree that, no matter how
+many years go by, none of the aliens shall ever return
+to the upper world!”</p>
+
+<p>And it was with a sinking heart, with the hopelessness
+of one being sentenced to life imprisonment, that
+I heard the assemblage endorse this recommendation.</p>
+
+<hr class="tb">
+
+<figure class="figcenter illowe33_6250" id="img323">
+ <img class="w100" src="images/img323.jpg" alt="">
+ <figcaption>
+ Half a dozen of the queerest beings we had ever seen came crowding
+into our path&thinsp;... from the blank amazed stares with which they greeted
+us, it was evident that our appearance was as much a surprise to them
+as theirs was to us. But from a certain sternness and resolution which
+invested their faces following the first speechless astonishment, we
+concluded that they had probably seen others of our kind, and were not
+disposed to treat us leniently.
+ </figcaption>
+</figure>
+
+
+
+
+<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop"><div class="chapter"><h2 class="nobreak" id="CHAPTER_XIV">CHAPTER XIV
+<br>
+The Upper World Club</h2></div>
+
+
+<p>During the next few hours, Captain Gavison and
+the new-found members of his crew were all
+provided with the native garb and lodged in
+sumptuous quarters in various parts of the city. They
+looked peculiar indeed in their new costumes of light
+blue and green and yellow, and grumbled not a little
+at the change; but they confessed to their relief at
+having left the X-111; and not even the prospect of
+passing their remaining days in Atlantis sufficed to
+neutralize their joy.</p>
+
+<p>As nearly as I could determine, they had had an
+altogether wretched time during the past few weeks.
+A spirit of panic had grown among them, following
+the failure of Rawson and myself to return from our
+searching expedition, and neither by bribe nor by
+threat could any other member of the crew be induced
+to venture into that wilderness where we had disappeared.
+<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_323"></a><a id="Page_324"></a>[324]</span>And so they had all remained anxiously in
+the vicinity of the disabled ship, drinking the distilled
+water of the Salty River and snatching what food they
+could from the land while exhausting their vessel’s reserve
+supplies. How long they could have held out it
+was impossible to say, but certainly they could not
+have held out long; madness had been overtaking them
+with the delay and the suspense; and, but for the
+timely arrival of the natives, bloody disaster might
+have ensued.</p>
+
+<p>Yet, while they realized that they had been rescued
+from possible destruction, I must not give the impression
+that they were altogether contented with their
+new surroundings, or that their queer native garments
+constituted their only source of complaint. Being
+normal human beings, they found abundant cause
+for dissatisfaction. And, indeed, they were not much
+to blame, for how could they adapt themselves immediately
+to an environment so unfamiliar as that of
+Atlantis? For some time they walked about like men
+in a daze; or, rather, like men who know they are
+dreaming and expect shortly to awaken; and they
+stared with incredulous eyes at the marble columns
+of the Sunken World, its sculpture-lined thoroughfares
+and statuesque palaces. And what wonder if
+they were dazzled and yet a little frightened by this
+beauty, which seemed to them so cold and alien a
+thing? What wonder if the more superstitious shuddered
+a little at times, and muttered to themselves in
+the presence of what they took to be the supernatural?
+What wonder if they missed the familiar things of
+the earth, the scenes and the faces they had left behind
+them, the habits they had discarded and the remembered
+life that was dwindling to a shadow?</p>
+
+<p>Fortunately, they were not always free to brood
+over their misfortunes. Like those of their shipmates
+who had preceded them to Archeon, they were at once
+supplied with tutors who sought to teach them the
+Atlantean tongue. Each of them received at least
+two hours a day of personal instruction, and each was
+required to devote several hours to various prescribed
+written exercises. It need hardly be stated that not
+all of them took kindly to this enforced application,
+for most of them were anything but studious by nature;
+but the tutors persisted even though their task
+was a hard one, and prevailed by means of that magnetic
+dominance I had often noted in the Atlanteans;
+and all of the crew, from the grizzled McCrae to the
+callow young Barnfield, were soon plodding regularly
+over their lessons in grammar and spelling.</p>
+
+<p>But among a group of nearly forty men, it was
+but natural that some should make more willing and
+able students than others. And so, while the more
+backward were still struggling with the elements of
+Atlantean, others were striding toward a speaking
+knowledge. Among the latter was Captain Gavison,
+who still had a position to maintain, and could not let
+himself be outdone by his men. Whether because of
+a natural aptitude or of diligent application, he speedily
+outdistanced all his crew, with the exception (I
+must modestly admit) of one whose pre-war specialty
+had been Greek. And partly on account of his evident
+supremacy in Atlantean, but more largely owing
+to the force of ironclad habit, he was still the acknowledged
+leader of us all; and his word still was like
+the word of a king, his approval still a favor to be
+courted and his anger a thing to make one quail, although
+his commission from the United States Navy
+Department, could hardly give him any authority here
+in Atlantis.</p>
+
+<p>I do not know whether it was at Captain Gavison’s
+prompting, or whether it was at the suggestion of one
+of the men, that we took the step which was to band
+us more closely together. At all events, the step was
+inevitable; for all of us felt like kinsmen isolated
+among strangers, and our common experiences and
+common origin constituted an irresistible bond.</p>
+
+<p>And so it was that we found ourselves convening
+one afternoon—the whole thirty-nine of us—in a little
+colonnaded court in one of the city parks. All of us
+were waiting in vociferous expectancy, for it had been
+whispered that important events were in store; and
+so we listened eagerly when Captain Gavison arrived,
+and took the center of the stage, launching at once into
+an address.</p>
+
+<p>“The proposal has been made,” he announced, beginning
+without formality, “that we all join forces by
+forming a social club. We’re all in the same boat still,
+you see, even though we’re out of the X-111. Most of
+us feel rather out of place down here in Atlantis;
+we find the people strange, the land stranger still, and
+the customs strangest of all. And so the best way
+will be to stick together and try to make things agreeable
+for one another&thinsp;...” And in this vein he continued
+for five or ten minutes, pointing out the advantages
+of union, the increased power as well as
+the social gain, the possibility of making our will felt
+in Atlantis if we acted in concert.</p>
+
+<hr class="tb">
+
+<p>When he had finished, he asked for opinions—and
+received them in abundance....</p>
+
+<p>“If we got together and started a club,” summarized
+Stangale, whose views coincided with the majority,
+“things might begin to look a little less dead. Seems
+to me every day down here is Sunday!”</p>
+
+<p>“Sure, and they’ve got lots of Sunday closing laws,
+too!” Stranahan contributed, with a wry grimace to
+ward the massive columns and tinted statuary.</p>
+
+<p>Very tactfully Captain Gavison reminded Stranahan
+that the question to be decided did not concern the
+Sunday regulations of the Atlanteans. And without
+further dalliance he raised his voice and inquired how
+many were in favor of a social club.</p>
+
+<p>The proposal having been accepted by unanimous
+acclaim, the next question was one of nomenclature.
+Various names were suggested: “The Woodrow Wilson
+Club,” “The Theodore Roosevelt Club,” “The U. S. A.
+Club,” “The X-111 Club,” “The Underseas Association”—but
+finally, after much pointless debating, we decided
+that, since we were the sole representatives of the
+upper world in Atlantis, the most appropriate title
+would be “The Upper World Club.”</p>
+
+<p>Having threshed out this important matter, we now
+felt it necessary to elect the officers of “The Upper
+World Club.”</p>
+
+<p>Obviously, there was only one possible nominee for
+President. It seemed almost a matter of form to propose
+the name of Gavison; and once this name had
+been mentioned, the election was settled, for there was
+no one daring enough to run in opposition or even
+to think of suggesting another candidate.</p>
+
+<p>After being duly installed in office, the Captain
+made his inaugural address. It was brief and to the
+point. He began by thanking us in conventional terms
+for the honor and by assuring us that he would try
+to run the club as well as if it were a ship under
+his command. And he concluded with a declaration
+of policy: “We’re all of us caught like rats in a trap,
+you know, so while we’re here there’s nothing to do
+but to try to make the best of our prison. And I
+think the Upper World Club should be the means. It
+should have, I believe, the following objects: first, to
+bring us together for social purposes. Secondly, it
+should give us the chance to discuss our problems in
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_325">[325]</span>this strange world, and should be the means of expressing
+our combined views to the Atlanteans. Lastly,
+it should keep us all together, so that we can act in
+unison if the time ever comes to make a dash for
+liberty.”</p>
+
+<p>“That time will never come!” I surprised myself
+by exclaiming, after Gavison had lapsed into silence.
+And, finding all eyes bent upon me inquiringly, I felt
+bound to continue.</p>
+
+<p>“Let us not deceive ourselves by the thought of
+escape,” I proceeded, stepping toward the center of the
+assemblage. “We are buried beneath thousands of feet
+of water, and for all practical purposes America is as
+far from us as the moon. Even if there were a way
+back, what good would that do us when we cannot
+even leave this city against the will of the Atlanteans?
+No, my friends, let us look facts in the face. We
+shall remain here till we are gray and toothless, and
+shall never see the United States again. And let us
+try to reconcile ourselves to that certainty. Let us
+try to become citizens of Atlantis, and share in the
+life about us&thinsp;...”</p>
+
+<p>And in this vein I continued for some minutes,
+while my hearers followed me with transparent interest,
+and reluctantly nodded agreement.</p>
+
+<p>In general, my words may have been without effect;
+but they had at least one result I had not anticipated.
+For when, a few moments later, Gavison announced
+that nominations were in order for Vice-President, I
+was surprised to find that my name was the first put
+forward, and that no others were put forward at all—so
+that I was selected without opposition.</p>
+
+<p>After I had duly thanked my fellow club members
+for this honor, the President turned to me, and said,
+“Harkness, I appoint you a committee of one to confer
+with me in drawing up the constitution of the Upper
+World Club.” And with that the meeting adjourned.</p>
+
+<p>And thus began my intimacy with Captain Gavison.
+I do not know how seriously he took the Upper
+World Club and its constitution, for at most times his
+grim, firm face was inscrutable; but he acted as if he
+took it seriously indeed, and he and I spent hours together
+debating and planning for the club, almost as
+though we had had to draw up a pact not for thirty-nine
+individuals but for thirty-nine sovereign states.</p>
+
+<p>How much the club profited from our activities shall
+always be a question in my mind; but I am certain
+that I personally profited a great deal, and make bold
+to believe that even Gavison was not without benefit.
+Although he had a habit of shutting his thin lips
+stoically and glaring upon the world with stern, impassive
+air, an occasional look of weariness and even of
+melancholy in his keen gray eyes told me that he too
+was suffering from loneliness; and while he would
+have been the last man in the world to make such an
+admission openly, he made it tacitly by the amount
+of time he spent in my company, theoretically drawing
+up the constitution of the Upper World Club. He
+was always far from loquacious; frequently he was
+taciturn indeed, and would simply sit before me with
+a detached and meditative air, occasionally grunting
+some comment or question in response to my remarks.
+Perhaps the consciousness of the former gulf between
+us would not leave him; but all the while I felt that
+we were drawing together, were even beginning to look
+upon one another with a genuine, although undemonstrative
+regard. Certainly, he was emerging by degrees
+from the thick shell of his reticence, as I was
+emerging from mine. We began quite naturally by a
+discussion of Atlantis and the Atlanteans; and gradually
+we ventured into more personal subjects. There
+came a day when I went so far as to tell him of
+my former life, my training in ancient Greek, my
+betrothal to Alma Huntley; and, responsive to my confidence,
+he offered me one or two glimpses into his
+own past, and made himself appear more human than
+ever before, by stating that he had a wife and two little
+daughters in New York, who no doubt were even
+now mourning him as lost.</p>
+
+<p>“You know, Harkness, that’s the hardest thing of
+all to bear,” he said, while his thin fingers stroked his
+bristly chin ruminatingly, and the drawn lines of his
+gaunt face enhanced his habitual gravity. “If there
+were only some way of getting word to them, it
+wouldn’t be so bad. But I might be dead for all they
+know—and would you believe it, Harkness, sometimes
+it seems to me as if I’m actually in my tomb.” And
+the Captain averted his gaze, and after staring into
+vacancy for an indeterminate period, he continued,
+speaking more rapidly, and almost with brusqueness,
+“Now you see why I’m so anxious to get back! For
+my own part, it wouldn’t matter so much, but I can’t
+help thinking it must be Hell for those waiting up
+there!” And he concluded by drawing vivid pictures
+of blue-eyed Martha, his wife, and of the auburn-haired
+six-year-old Ellen, who was waiting for the
+father that would never come back.</p>
+
+<p>To all this I listened earnestly; and when Gavison
+had finished, I tried to say whatever I could by way
+of consolation. And in order to make his woes seem
+less by comparison, I exaggerated my own; I discoursed
+upon the misfortune of being sundered from my old
+father and mother (who, as a matter of fact, had previously
+been sundered from me by death), and dilated
+upon my grief at losing Alma Huntley—although, to
+tell the truth, she had been almost driven out of my
+thoughts by the proximity of one even fairer than
+she.</p>
+
+<p>It was from the time of our mutual confessions that
+my real friendship with Gavison dated. Not unnaturally,
+we now lost sight of our former positions as
+superior officer and subordinate, and began to act
+unrestrainedly toward one another as man to man.
+And while I was on terms of fellowship with all the
+crew and intimate with several, my attachment to
+Gavison became the closest of all; and often of an
+afternoon, when he had completed the day’s studies,
+or of an evening before the great golden orbs had
+been extinguished, we might have been seen strolling
+together along the winding colonnades, or seated on
+seaweed cushions in a marble hall, discussing the art
+or the odd ways of Atlantis, practicing the Atlantean
+speech, exchanging reminiscences of the world we had
+left, or merely absorbed in one of those long silences
+that marked our queer acquaintanceship.</p>
+
+
+
+
+<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop"><div class="chapter"><h2 class="nobreak" id="CHAPTER_XV">CHAPTER XV
+<br>
+The Pageant of the Good Destruction</h2></div>
+
+
+<p>While my intimacy with Captain Gavison was
+ripening, I had of course not forgotten one
+whose friendship meant more to me than that
+of any man. In the exhilarating moments of that
+first happy interview with Aelios, I had had visions
+of speaking with her often, visions of an Atlantis
+made bright by her very presence. But before long I
+began to feel that I had been too sanguine. Although
+I still caught glimpses of her when she came to give
+Stranahan his daily lesson, and although she would
+sometimes nod ingratiatingly to me, it was long before
+I had another opportunity to speak to her, since I
+could not detach her from the company of the other
+tutors. And so day after long uneasy day dragged by
+until they had piled up into a week, and slow, protracted
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_326">[326]</span>weeks until they had accumulated into a month,
+before at last we had another conversation.</p>
+
+<p>Then came a day when I observed her by chance
+in one of the great festooned courts at the base of a
+towering campanile. She saw me even before I saw her;
+and approaching of her own volition, she flashed upon
+me a smile that seemed to make the universe stand
+still with joy. “I am glad to see you, my friend,”
+she said, simply and with unaffected kindliness. “I
+have been wanting to tell you about our coming
+pageant. I know you will not want to miss it, for it
+will explain many things you have been wondering
+about.”</p>
+
+<p>“What pageant do you mean?” I asked.</p>
+
+<p>“The Festival of the Good Destruction,” she explained.
+“Every year, as I believe I’ve told you, we
+hold a celebration on the anniversary of the Submergence.
+This year it will take the form of a
+pageant. It will be the Three Thousand and Thirty-fifth
+anniversary.”</p>
+
+<p>“In eight days. It will commence at noon in the
+Agripides Theatre, which you will very easily find,
+since it is in the center of town. I certainly hope
+to see you there.”</p>
+
+<p>“I certainly hope to see you there,” I declared,
+quite truthfully. But at the same time a shadow
+crossed my thoughts. Hesitatingly, and possibly blushing
+in my embarrassment, I had to confess that, after
+all, I would not be able to go.</p>
+
+<p>“Not be able to go?” she demanded, in manifest disappointment.
+“What other engagement can you possibly
+have?”</p>
+
+<p>Since some definite excuse appeared to be necessary,
+I explained—very reluctantly to be sure—that I
+could not pay my admission.</p>
+
+<p>“Pay your admission?” echoed Aelios, in such shrill
+surprise that I thought she had misunderstood me.
+“What on earth are you thinking of? Do you imagine
+we are barbarians?”</p>
+
+<p>“I’m afraid I haven’t made myself clear,” I hastened
+to explain. “Where I come from it is customary to
+pay upon going to a theatre.”</p>
+
+<p>“Really?” demanded Aelios, so incredulously that I
+thought her most naïve.</p>
+
+<p>“Of course!” I assured her, in such a manner as to
+stamp all doubt from her mind.</p>
+
+<p>“How queer!” she exclaimed. “How very queer! Still,
+I do remember hearing that people used to have
+to pay for everything before the Submergence. But
+that was so long ago, I thought the world had outgrown
+such crudity.”</p>
+
+<p>“I don’t see anything wrong about paying for what
+you get,” I stated, thinking this the most topsy-turvy
+land in the world. “Don’t they really charge you
+for going to theatres down here?”</p>
+
+<p>“Of course not! How could any one be so gross?
+Fancy being charged for beauty or ecstasy or dreams!
+Why, one would as soon think of paying for the air
+one breathes or the light that shines upon one! The
+State naturally recognizes the theatre as the birthright
+of every citizen, just as it recognizes poetry and
+music and education. We all take part in giving the
+performances, and of course every one is invited.”</p>
+
+<p>“And do you yourself take part?” I queried, my personal
+interest in Aelios overshadowing my general interest
+in the native customs.</p>
+
+<p>“Oh, yes, I try to do my share,” she acknowledged,
+with a faint blush that seemed only to accentuate her
+beauty. “I sometimes lead in the dances.”</p>
+
+<p>“And a most exquisite dancer you make!” said I,
+recalling my first enchanting glimpse of Aelios on the
+colonnade outside the city.</p>
+
+<p>But before I had had time for further compliments,
+she had whispered a light “Good-bye,” and had gone
+tripping toward the further end of the court and out
+of sight through a little half concealed door at the
+base of the campanile.</p>
+
+<hr class="tb">
+
+<p>It hardly need be stated that I waited eagerly for
+the day of the Pageant. Not that I was looking
+forward to the entertainment itself; I remembered only
+that Aelios had seen fit to invite me, and that I should
+be able to see her again. So utterly out of my head
+was I that her bright face now appeared to me at all
+times of the day and night; her least smile, her slightest
+gesture, her most careless nod, was re-enacted a
+thousand times in my memory. And what if somewhere
+in the past there had been an Alma Huntley whom I
+had admired and fancied I had loved?—she was now
+no more than a ghost amid the shadows of a vanished
+world.</p>
+
+<p>Certainly, I had no thought of Alma when at last the
+day of the pageant arrived. I was jubilant merely at
+the prospect of speaking with Aelios again; I could
+hardly restrain my impatience, but left for the festivities
+a full hour earlier than necessary. Such was my
+eagerness that I could not even walk at a normal
+pace, but unconsciously hastened my steps as when,
+in my native land, I had feared to miss a street car
+or be too late for an appointment with Alma.</p>
+
+<p>But the day’s pleasure was to be unexpectedly varied.
+As I hastened through the streets, striding more rapidly
+than ever before in this land of leisure, I heard
+a well known voice shouting behind me, “Hey, wait
+a minute! Where are you going so fast?”</p>
+
+<p>With a sinking heart I wheeled about—to face the
+grinning Stranahan.</p>
+
+<p>“Great Jerusalem, you were racing so I could hardly
+catch up!” he panted, as he joined me. “Where you
+bound for, anyway?”</p>
+
+<p>“Where are you bound for?” I countered.</p>
+
+<p>“To the pageant, of course,” he informed me. And,
+amiably unconscious that he might be interfering with
+my plans, he suggested, “Well, we both seem to be
+going in the same direction, so what do you say to
+going together?”</p>
+
+<p>“Yes, let’s go together,” I had to acquiesce; and so
+it happened that Stranahan and I reached the Agripides
+Theatre arm in arm.</p>
+
+<p>As I might have known, we were much too early;
+the doors were open, but the audience had scarcely
+begun to arrive. Indeed, the whole enormous open-air
+theatre was occupied only by a few children who
+danced and played about the stage and romped from
+tier to tier of the seaweed-cushioned marble seats.</p>
+
+<p>Upon entering, we paused for a view of the giant
+theatre, which seemed large enough to accommodate
+an entire community, and which was constructed with
+a simple and yet majestic art that I thought admirable.
+The seat arrangement was that of the typical
+Greek theatre, but the stage surprised me, not only
+by its size but by its general appearance, for it was
+not less than two or three acres in extent, and was
+completely enclosed by a ring of columns bearing a
+dome apparently inlaid with ebony and gold. But
+what particularly caught my attention was an object
+which was evidently not an integral part of the building—an
+amorphous mass many feet in height and covering
+more than half of the stage, but completely
+mantled in a linen-like white cloth that was like a
+garment of mystery.</p>
+
+<p>But Stranahan would brook not more than a moment’s
+pause for viewing the building. Impetuously he
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_327">[327]</span>started down the steeply sloping central aisle, and did
+not halt until he had reached the front row, where
+he appropriated the best seat as nonchalantly as
+though it had been reserved for him. Of course, I
+had no choice except to deposit myself at his side;
+but I could not help wishing that he had chosen a
+less conspicuous position.</p>
+
+<p>It was not long before the theatre began to fill.
+Singly and in whole family groups the people were
+arriving, children and gray old men and bright-faced
+girls and youths; and all wore happy, expectant smiles,
+and all were clad in their pastel-tinted gowns that made
+them look like animated flowers. I had a chance now
+to observe the Atlanteans as never before; and, as
+never before, I was struck by the exceptional number
+of well formed and beautiful faces; by the fact that
+every one seemed tranquil and contented, and that
+there was little if any sign of tragedy or sorrow.
+Here was no evidence of the worn and withered, the
+distorted, the grotesque, the wolfish, the weasel and
+the bovine types so common on earth; even the old
+seemed to wear a sweet and placid and at times a
+beautiful look, which contrasted strangely with the
+sour and crochety expression I had regarded as
+natural; and most of the faces bore the imprint of
+something akin to poetry and music, an exalted something
+that I had first noted in Aelios and that set the
+Atlanteans apart from every other race I had ever
+known.</p>
+
+<p>Even to be among these people seemed to produce a
+strange and uplifting effect upon me. I do not know
+what mysterious psychic currents were at work, and
+I cannot say that my imagination did not betray me;
+but I do distinctly remember that, as the theatre gradually
+filled, a singular sense of well-being and almost
+of thankfulness came upon me, a feeling of spiritual
+tranquility and repose, as though by some subtle
+transference of thought I had shared the mood of
+the multitude and become one with them in heart.
+Even Stranahan seemed to have been affected, for he
+had none of his usual boisterousness; he talked but
+little, and there was a rapt and almost devout look
+in his eyes, as though he too had caught the glimmer
+of some rare loveliness.</p>
+
+<p>Yet there was still a shadow across my happiness—and
+possibly across his as well. As I scanned the
+faces that thronged down the aisles and along the
+tiers of seats, there was one smiling countenance for
+which I searched in vain. Surely, Aelios had not
+forgotten the day, nor had she forgotten her implied
+promise to see me here; yet till the last seat was
+filled by the expectant crowd, I scrutinized the faces
+of the newcomers, only to be assured that Aelios was
+not among them.</p>
+
+<p>But after about an hour, my thoughts were forcibly
+recalled from Aelios to the spectacle in the great
+theatre. A sudden flickering of the great golden orbs
+attracted our attention; and we noted that those luminaries
+were being dimmed as though by unseen hands
+until they had less than half their usual brightness.
+At the same time, long shafts of light began to shoot
+out simultaneously from all points of the horizon,—multicolored
+shafts that included all the hues of the
+rainbow. In wide ambling curves they met the dark
+glass of the roof, splashing it with red and purple,
+orange and green, lavender and violet; and for many
+minutes the play and interplay of color continued, the
+searchlights seeming to work out all manner of patterns
+and arabesques which endured for a moment
+and vanished.</p>
+
+<hr class="tb">
+
+<p>The one thing to which I could liken this pageant
+of light was the music that sometimes preceded
+theatrical performances in our own land. The flashing
+colors had all the ethereal loveliness of music; and
+like music they prepared one for a mood of rapture
+and contemplation. And when at length the original
+lights had faded out, to be replaced by others that
+shone directly down upon the open platform or stage,
+this mood was strengthened and intensified; and at
+the same time I felt that we had but beheld an introduction
+to the real exhibition.</p>
+
+<p>Suddenly, in the illumination of the many-hued
+searchlights, a white-gowned woman appeared upon
+the stage. She was very young, scarcely more than
+a girl, I thought, and her face had something of that
+sweetness and radiance which distinguished Aelios;
+while in the colored glow of the everchanging lights
+she seemed some shimmering, ethereal thing, possibly
+a butterfly, possibly some apparition as unreal as rainbows
+or moonlit cloud.</p>
+
+<p>I was surprised, accordingly, when the fairy-like
+creature began to speak. Or perhaps it would not be
+correct to say that she spoke; her words came in a
+soft, wonderfully melodious voice more than half like
+song; and merely to listen to her was to be lulled and
+soothed as though by music.</p>
+
+<p>Yet, despite the spirit of exaltation and almost of
+worship she aroused in me, I did not miss the drift
+of what she was saying.</p>
+
+<p>“Fellow citizens,” she declared, while a hush came
+over the assemblage, and all strained forward so as
+to lose not a syllable, “fellow citizens, for this year’s
+celebration we have decided to present a historical
+pageant. Imagine yourselves borne backward almost
+thirty-one hundred years, to those days when the
+Submergence was not yet an accomplished fact, and
+Agripides stood before the old National Assembly
+urging the Good Destruction. Agripides shall now
+appear before you, as he appeared to your forefathers
+in the lands above the sea; you shall be the National
+Assembly before which he speaks; and he shall present
+his views to you as he presented them to our ancestors,
+and depict for you, as he depicted for them, the
+reasons why Atlantis should become a sunken continent.
+Behold, here comes Agripides!”</p>
+
+<p>With a wide-sweeping bow the speaker ceased, retreating
+from view through some unseen door; and
+at the same instant some invisible instrument sent
+forth a sound like a trumpet blast, and from the rear
+of the stage a tall figure appeared, walking slowly
+and with head bent low as though in thought.</p>
+
+<p>“Agripides! Agripides!” came one or two indistinct
+murmurs from behind me, but there was no such
+tumult of applause as I might have expected. Yet all
+eyes were directed eagerly toward the newcomer, and
+I found myself a partner in the tense excitement of
+the multitude.</p>
+
+<p>Even had I not heard the name Agripides, I should
+have recognized the advancing figure from the bust
+shown me by Aelios—there was the same bearded
+countenance, the same broad and noble brow, the same
+furrowed and sympathetic features. But one characteristic
+there was which the bust could not show,
+and which, while merely incidental, struck me with
+peculiar force. The garments of Agripides were not
+gay-hued, like those of modern Atlanteans, but were of
+a deep and somber brown; and they clung to his body
+so closely as apparently to interfere with his walking,
+and to make him look disquietingly like an animated
+corpse.</p>
+
+<p>But I forgot all such irrelevant impressions the moment
+that Agripides—or, rather, his living representative—had
+uttered his first word. “Fellow members
+of the National Assembly,” said he, with a low bow,
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_328">[328]</span>while in the audience an awed silence held sway, “for
+the hundredth time I address you on the subject of
+the proposed Submergence. And for the hundredth
+time I remind you that we have no choice in the matter:
+it is a question of the submergence either of
+the land of Atlantis or of its soul. Let me prove this
+to you, Members of the Assembly; let me show you
+how near the soul of Atlantis already is to submergence.
+Watch carefully as a stream of typical present-day
+men and women passes by.”</p>
+
+<p>The speaker ceased, and from invisible corridors on
+both sides of the stage came a noise as of shuffled
+feet, chattering voices, horns and bells and clattering
+wheels. “By the Holy Father, if we’re not back in
+the old U. S. A.!” muttered Stranahan so loud that
+many of the audience could hear him; and he leaned
+so far forward that I feared he would fall over the
+railing into the stage.</p>
+
+<p>But the spectacle before us was so engrossing as
+to make me forget even Stranahan’s absurd conduct.
+Very quickly I came to agree that Atlantis before the
+Submergence must indeed have been hideous; I had
+never known anything quite so ugly as the scene we
+now witnessed. From both sides of the stage a slow
+procession of men and women began to file, the two
+streams passing each other and trailing out in opposite
+directions; and the faces and figures of the people
+were the most repulsive I had ever seen. Some were
+so lean and scrawny as to remind me of walking
+skeletons; others, fat and bloated, waddled along like
+living caricatures with scarcely the power of self-locomotion;
+and the majority had an unnaturally sallow,
+flushed or mottled complexion that seemed to set
+them off as a species apart. And their clothes were
+in accord with their appearance; they were all clad
+in a drab brown or black, some with a peculiar steely
+color that encircled their chins and ears, some with
+strange metallic waist-bands that prevented them from
+turning in any direction, some with ornamental brass
+spikes that elevated the soles of their feet inches
+above their heels and converted their walking into a
+form of hobbling.</p>
+
+<p>But what chiefly interested me were the faces of the
+people. Not a few, with heavy paunches, and baggy,
+feeble cheeks, reminded me of nothing so much as of
+a certain bristly domestic beast; not a few others had
+features grotesquely like those of baboons, bears,
+wolves, foxes, weasels, or tigers. And a majority
+looked like nothing so much as the prey of tigers,
+weasels, and foxes. Their eyes had a hunted expression,
+and their whole manner was one of timidity;
+they seemed continually confused and frightened and
+ready to run at any sound, and yet had something of
+the cowed look of creatures beaten into resigned
+despair.</p>
+
+<p>All the while, as they proceeded across the stage,
+they produced a perfect pandemonium of squeaks,
+grunts, hoots, rumblings, howlings, and snarlings, some
+seeming quite familiar to me, others sounding like
+voices of the wilderness. The acting, I thought, was
+marvelous; it was executed so perfectly that for the
+time I had quite forgotten it was acting at all. Hearing
+the uproar and looking at the dark-robed, distorted
+multitude, I could not but think by contrast of
+Aelios and the grace and beauty that surrounded her;
+and I missed her even more keenly than before, and
+wondered impatiently if I should not yet see her at
+the pageant.</p>
+
+<p>At length, to my relief, the last of the uncouth mob
+had gone trooping off the stage, and only the tall
+figure of Agripides remained. “Members of the Assembly,”
+resumed the statesman, after all had again
+become quiet, “you have now had a close view of our
+typical citizens. Do you not believe them more deeply
+submerged than if a thousand fathoms of water rolled
+above them? Or if you are not yet convinced, let me
+show you these people in their normal occupations.”</p>
+
+<p>As though at a prearranged signal, three or four
+huge instruments, with long segmented oblong belts
+moving on wheels, were dragged to the center of the
+stage by half-invisible wires. I recognized these machines
+as curious forms of treadmills, for on each of
+the belts a man had been deposited, and each, man
+was forcing his legs back and forth at tremendous
+speed, as though running in a desperate hurry. But
+no matter how furiously they worked, all the men remained
+in exactly the same place, for the belts slid
+backward precisely as fast as their feet pressed forward.</p>
+
+<p>“Saints in heaven,” opined Stranahan, with a puzzled
+frown, “they’d get there just as fast if they took their
+time!”</p>
+
+<p>After a minute or two the treadmills were pulled off
+the stage and Agripides again briefly addressed the
+audience. “My friends,” said he, “I will now illustrate
+for you another of the leading occupations of our
+times.”</p>
+
+<hr class="tb">
+
+<p>I do not know what rare art of stagecraft was then
+applied, for as if by magic a bright bed of flowers
+sprang to life before us, and long-stemmed purple and
+yellow blossoms resembling tulips and hollyhocks waved
+above some retiring white-budding plant reminding me
+of the violet. But I was to be disappointed if I expected
+anything beautiful to follow. From one side of
+the stage came a series of oaths, growls, curses,
+shrieks, hisses, and mutterings, gradually increasing
+in fierceness and volume; and soon an amorphous mass
+of squirming, twisting, embattled men writhed into
+view. I could not tell how many of them there were,
+except that they were numbered by the dozen; and I
+could not determine what they looked like, except that
+they were all soberly attired. But it was as if a
+storm had been let loose among them; they were literally
+tumbling over one another, wrestling with the
+ferocity of lions, snatching violently at one another’s
+arms, legs and necks, until they seemed little more
+than a blur of convulsive, wildly agitated trunks and
+limbs.</p>
+
+<p>“Holy Methuselah, it’s a new kind of football!” cried
+Stranahan, excitedly, as he craned his long neck far
+forward for a better view of the contest.</p>
+
+<p>But before I had time to chide Stranahan on this
+senseless outburst, I was occupied by a new observation.
+The struggling men were advancing across the
+stage, and slowly intruding upon the flower beds.
+But none seemed to notice, and the pandemonium continued
+until the actors were beating down the flowers
+on all sides and not a hollyhock or tulip or violet remained.</p>
+
+<p>Then suddenly one of the men was thrust out of
+the wild multitude, and lay on the ground as if dead,
+his clothes ripped and torn, his body gashed and
+bleeding. But no one seemed to notice him, and his
+shrieks and howls rang forth until another had been
+flung aside with broken limbs, and then another, and
+then another. In the end only two remained standing,
+both grappling desperately for a little metallic disk
+that glittered a deep yellow. With bestial snarls and
+screeches they wrestled over this trinket; and at
+length, still wrestling, and with faces blood-red and
+distorted, they tumbled, moaning, off the stage.</p>
+
+<p>After this exhibition there was silence for several
+minutes. I was glad when at length Agripides seemed
+<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_329"></a><a id="Page_330"></a>[330]</span>to feel that his audience was ready for a change of
+mood, and again took the center of the stage.</p>
+
+<p>“Members of the National Assembly,” he said,
+“you have now observed modern life in two of its
+more common phases. You will find something no less
+familiar in the third phase, which I am about to present
+to you.”</p>
+
+<p>This time a gigantic clattering black machine was
+rolled on to the stage by some unseen power, its innumerable
+wheels and belts and chains in rapid motion,
+some of them moving so swiftly as to look like
+whirring shadows. But it was not the speed or smoothness
+of its action that made the mechanism remarkable:
+all about its side, in a long, even row, stood
+scores of grime-faced and sooty men, their feet clamped
+to the ground by iron vises, their arms fastened by
+long rods to the wheels above. And all the while those
+rods were moving, moving with rhythmic, clock-like
+regularity, moving unceasingly up and down, pulling
+the arms of the men with them, first the right arm
+and then the left, then again the right and then the
+left, as though they had done so for all eternity and
+would continue to do so for all eternity.</p>
+
+<p>“The devil take me,” muttered Stranahan, who had
+to have his way, “It ain’t the men that work the machines!
+It’s the machines that work the men!”</p>
+
+<p>I am afraid that Stranahan’s remarks diverted my
+attention and made me miss part of the performance,
+for when next I turned my eyes to the stage, the
+scene was much changed. A great claw-like steel device
+was reaching out from the interior of the machine,
+seizing one of the men, wrenching him from
+his position as though he had been a misplaced screw,
+and casting him bleeding to the floor. And while he
+lay there moaning and helpless, a clamor of shouts
+was heard from off stage, and a score of tattered men
+came rushing in and threw themselves down before
+the machine as if in reverence. And, as though endowed
+with intelligence, the machine seemed to hear,
+for it reached out the same great claw-like hand,
+clutched one of the men at random, and thrust him
+into the place of the rejected one. And now the
+arms of the newcomer began to work up and down,
+up and down unremittingly, accompanying the steel
+rods in the same even and automatic fashion as the
+arms of his predecessor.</p>
+
+<p>The next feature on the program was a long oration
+delivered in Agripides’ most celebrated words; following
+which the actor prepared the way for the climax
+by a few explanatory comments. “Members of
+the National Assembly,” said he, still using phrases
+first uttered three thousand years before, “I wish you
+to look carefully at Axios, which, as you know, is one
+of the leading commercial cities of our age. First
+gaze upon its domes and towers as they are now
+familiar to you; then behold them as they will be
+when the unleashed waters of the Atlantic come sweeping
+across them; then open your eyes wide for a foreglimpse
+of our land in the golden era after the Submergence.”</p>
+
+<hr class="tb">
+
+<p>Even as the last words were uttered, my attention
+was drawn to the huge amorphous mass which
+lay cloaked in white linen at one side of the stage.
+Invisible hands seemed to take hold of the covering;
+slowly it was lifted into the air, then slowly pulled
+to one side and out of sight. At first I could only
+gape in astonishment—the strangest of all conceivable
+things was being unbared! Distinctly I was reminded
+of the paintings I had seen in various of the halls of
+Archeon—that which stared before me was a city in
+miniature, but a city such as I would have expected
+no Atlantean to conceive. Not the faintest resemblance
+did it bear to this undersea realm of statue-like
+temples and many-columned palaces; rather, it
+was like a city of the modern world. Row upon unbending
+row of box-like edifices, apparently of granite
+or brick, loomed at irregular heights and with flat,
+ungarnished roofs; tier after tier of little oblong windows
+looked out from the smoke-stained sides of the
+towers; slender defiles, so narrow that they reminded
+one of light-wells, separated the opposing ranks of
+masonry; and at the base of these dreary gray pits
+swarmed masses of dark-robed men and women,
+jammed together so compactly that one wondered if
+they were not standing on each other’s toes.</p>
+
+<p>“By the Blessed Mother, if it ain’t little old New
+York!” stuttered Stranahan, nudging me knowingly in
+the side.</p>
+
+<p>Even as he spoke, I was startled by a noise as of
+a thunder clap. And the next instant, the midget
+men and women scattered pellmell, vanishing through
+little openings in the walls. Meanwhile the thunder
+claps continued, loud-rumbling and resonant, one crash
+pealing and reverberating before the echoes of the last
+had died away; and miniature lightnings darted and
+flared from the great greenish vault above. As the
+display proceeded, it grew constantly brighter and
+more vivid; and I was wondering what the sequel
+would be, when suddenly there came a blast so loud
+that I clapped my hands to my ears in terror. Simultaneously
+a brilliant blade of light seemed to cut
+dagger-like through the buildings, wrapping them
+momentarily in a sheet of flame; the walls seemed
+to be heaving and trembling as though in an earthquake’s
+claws, and there came to my ears a rattling
+and crashing as of falling masonry.</p>
+
+<p>Then, while the clamor increased and the buildings
+heaved and wavered with the motion of tossing ships
+at sea, the ground beneath them gave a sharp lunge
+downward; and like toy castles, the towers all at once
+collapsed, some falling over their neighbors in crashing
+confusion, some shaken into great dusty piles of
+mortar and stone, some stripped of their walls yet
+still standing with gaunt contorted ribs of steel, some
+bursting into flame that glared and crackled fiendishly
+and poured out dense, black spirals of smoke.</p>
+
+<p>But scarcely had the thunder of the overthrown
+walls died down when a new and more ominous roaring
+came to my ears, a tumult as of Niagara or of
+sea-waves splashing the cliffs. Out of the great
+earthen basin into which the ruined city had subsided,
+there issued a foaming confusion of waters, as though
+a reservoir had burst its dam; and from all sides a
+white-flecked torrent came plunging down upon the
+wrecked towers, struggling and storming above their
+lower stories as if to wash them utterly away. And
+it seemed that they were to have their will, for the
+towers were sinking, visibly sinking beneath the waves.
+Heap after gigantic heap of debris dipped its head into
+the waters and was lost to view; edifice after looming
+edifice, dismantled and battered, was engulfed by
+the insatiable flood. And now the fires no longer
+burned and the smoke no longer soared; now only two
+or three tortured steel columns reached out of the indifferent
+sea; now only one was left, one lean and
+crooked metallic shaft like the agonized clutching hand
+of a drowning man. But soon even this had slipped
+from view, and the frothy-tongued, deep-blue waters
+gave no sign that a city had ever barred their path.</p>
+
+<p>And as the last trace of old Atlantis vanished, a
+grayness as of twilight suffused the scene; the golden
+lights became dim, and dimmer still, until they had
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_331">[331]</span>fluttered out altogether, and blackness blotted all
+things from our gaze.</p>
+
+<p>But as we sat there spellbound in the dark, feeling
+like men who had beheld the end of all things, there
+came on airy change to break the dreariness of our
+mood. From far, far away, apparently whole worlds
+away, issued a faint tinkling music, more like the
+song of elves than of any mortal being. It was half
+like the loveliness that one hears in dreams, and more
+than half like the remote ghostly melodies borne to
+one across the wind; but gradually it grew nearer,
+gradually louder and more distinct, although its
+ethereal and fairy-like quality still remained. At
+length I recognized that it proceeded from a chorus
+of voices, a wonderfully sweet womanly chorus whose
+members may have been human but who seemed little
+less than angelic. For it was with a divine exaltation
+that they sang, and their tones were the tones of immortal
+sweetness and hope, and they seemed to assure
+me that all was well with the world and with life,
+and that beauty and happiness must triumph.</p>
+
+<p>As the singing continued, the darkness was gradually
+dispersed; yet the great orb above did not resume
+the full brightness of the Atlantean day, but remained
+subdued to a rose-tinged twilight glow. And in that
+twilight a troop of shimmering-gowned dancing maidens
+appeared, swinging from side to side with superbly
+harmonious movements of arm and waist and ankle
+until they seemed not so much individual dancers as
+parts of the eternal rhythm of the universe. But
+whether the singing proceeded from them or from persons
+unseen was more than I could judge; for just
+then my eye was caught by the leader of the dancers,
+and my thoughts were as if paralyzed. As she glided from
+side to side with movements like music, she smiled a
+gloriously sweet smile; and that smile seemed to be
+bent full upon me, though here my imagination may
+have borne false reports. But with furiously thumping
+heart and a surging of something dangerously like
+tenderness, I realized that Aelios had kept her promise
+to see me at the pageant.</p>
+
+<hr class="tb">
+
+<figure class="figcenter illowe33_3125" id="img329">
+ <img class="w100" src="images/img329.jpg" alt="">
+ <figcaption>
+ Then, while the clamor increased and the buildings heaved and wavered
+with the motion of tossing ships at sea, the ground beneath them gave
+a sharp lunge downward; and like toy castles, the towers all at once
+collapsed.... But scarcely had the thunder of the overthrown walls died
+down, when a new and more ominous roaring came to my ears, a tumult as
+of Niagara or of sea-waves splashing the cliffs&thinsp;...
+ </figcaption>
+</figure>
+
+
+
+<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop"><div class="chapter"><h2 class="nobreak" id="CHAPTER_XVI">CHAPTER XVI
+<br>
+An Official Summons</h2></div>
+
+
+<p>Three or four days after the pageant, I was surprised
+to receive a visitor in the shape of a
+serious-looking gray old man whom I did not
+remember ever having seen before. In his hand he
+bore a little blue-sealed parchment scroll, on which my
+name had been inscribed in the native language; and
+by his grave manner, and particularly by the significant
+way in which he held the document, I feared that
+his mission might prove of ominous importance.</p>
+
+<p>My first impression was that I had unwittingly violated
+some local law, and was being summoned to
+court to answer for the crime. But this fear was
+swiftly dissipated. “I congratulate you, young man,”
+said my visitor, having determined that I was the person
+he sought. “This is an occasion such as comes
+but once in a lifetime.” And with a sedate and deferential
+air, and apparently not surmising that the nature
+of his mission was still a mystery to me, he
+passed the little document to me; following which he
+congratulated me again, and solemnly bowed his way
+out of the room.</p>
+
+<p>I now suspected that I was either the recipient of
+some high honor or the appointee to some responsible
+office. It is no wonder, accordingly, that my fingers
+trembled when I ripped open the blue seal, and that
+in my eagerness I almost tore the parchment as well.
+But again my expectations were to prove ill-founded.
+The message turned out to be very brief; and, far
+from providing cause either for exultation or dismay,
+it served merely to puzzle me.</p>
+
+<p>“To the respected Anson Harkness,” ran the words,
+which were handsomely formed in the native script,
+“the Committee on Selective Assignments wishes to
+announce that it is ready for the hearings and examinations
+in his case. If he will therefore be so kind
+as to present himself at the Committee offices any noon
+during the next ten days, he may be assured that the
+investigations will be carried out with a minimum of
+delay and a decision promptly rendered.”</p>
+
+<p>And that was all, except for the signature of the
+Head of the Committee! Not a word as to what the
+Selective Assignments might be! Not a word as to
+the nature of the “hearings and examinations!” Time
+after time I re-read this queer message, scrutinizing it
+until I had memorized it in its entirety; but the more
+I read the more perplexed I became, and I could almost
+believe myself the target of some practical joker. Just
+what was to be investigated? And what decision was
+to be reached? Was it that my conduct was thought
+improper and was to be reviewed? That I was considered
+too scornful of local customs, or too friendly to
+Aelios? Or—judging from the congratulatory manner
+of the gray-haired one—was I somehow deemed
+worthy of reward, possibly through the connivance of
+Aelios? Or was I to be examined as prize scholars
+are sometimes examined before being granted a
+scholarship?</p>
+
+<p>To confess the truth, none of these possibilities appeared
+very credible to me. But I could think of
+nothing more plausible, and at length was forced to
+recognize that the mystery was too deep for my penetration.
+The only reasonable course would be to consult
+one of the natives, who could doubtless answer
+all my questions without any trouble. And since I
+was acquainted with only one of the natives besides
+my tutor, and since it would give me particular
+pleasure to consult that one, I decided that, if possible,
+I should refer the baffling document to Aelios.</p>
+
+<p>But how to isolate Aelios long enough for a conversation
+was in itself a problem. After some thought,
+however, I conceived an idea which seemed promising:
+if I could determine where Aelios lived and then pay
+her a visit, I might solve the mystery of the Selective
+Assignments at the same time as I made possible a
+closer intimacy with Aelios herself.</p>
+
+<p>Yet it was only by a severe effort that I found the
+courage to carry out my plans——to follow Aelios
+one afternoon after the conclusion of her day’s instruction.
+Through innumerable curving lanes and
+avenues I trailed her and her fellow tutors, pressing
+close to the columns and the walls of the building,
+like a detective tracking his prey. At length, when
+we seemed to be approaching the outskirts of the
+city, Aelios waved a pleasant farewell to her companions,
+and started off alone down a little path bordered
+by a deep-red geranium-like flower. Thinking
+this to be my opportunity, I hastened my footsteps;
+but before I could overtake her she had reached the
+end of the path, and, quite oblivious of my approach,
+had entered the arching doorway of a house—or, should
+I call it a palace?—with curving convex walls of the
+color of pearl.</p>
+
+<p>For several minutes I stood wavering without. And
+it was in half-timid hesitancy, that at lest I forced
+my feet to the threshold and urged my hands to rap
+at the violet stained-glass panels of the door.</p>
+
+<p>It was but a minute before the sound of approaching
+footsteps notified me that I had not knocked in
+vain. But in that minute I was swept by wild hopes
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_332">[332]</span>and still wilder torments and regrets. Would it be
+Aelios herself that answered me? Or would it be
+some member of her family, possibly her mother or
+father, or else a sister almost as charming as herself?
+And, if so, what should I say? and on what business
+pretend to seek a conference with Aelios?</p>
+
+<p>While I was wrapped in such thoughts, the door
+swung open, and I found myself face to face—not with
+Aelios, nor with her mother or father, nor with a
+sister of hers! But a young man of perhaps twenty-five,
+broad-browed and sparkling-eyed like most of the
+Atlanteans, stood looking inquiringly out at me.</p>
+
+<p>“Is this—is this where Aelios lives?” I gasped, in
+embarrassment.</p>
+
+<p>“Yes, Aelios lives here,” he returned, in matter-of-fact
+tones. And then, with a winning smile, “You
+would like to see her?”</p>
+
+<p>I admitted that he had surmised correctly, and was
+relieved to be admitted into the house without further
+questioning. Having passed through a broad hallway
+or vestibule illumined by large, swinging orange-colored
+lamps, we entered a daintily tapestried sitting
+room featured by lanterns of pale blue. The young
+man bade me be seated on the seaweed-decorated sofa,
+and then left me momentarily to myself; and in that
+brief snatch of solitude I found myself assailed by
+storms of jealous questions. Who was the young man?
+And in what relationship did he stand to Aelios?
+Was he perchance some suitor of hers? Or was he
+merely her brother? Or was it possible—oh, unspeakable
+thought!—that she was already married, and that
+this was her husband?</p>
+
+<p>At the latter reflection I experienced in advance all
+the pangs of unsuccessful love. My head swam with
+senseless fury; I was weighed down with anticipatory
+despair, and saw myself the victim of hopes that
+could never be fulfilled. I had just reached the darkest
+point of my broodings, and was just telling myself
+that of course I could never attract so admirable a
+woman as Aelios, when I heard a well known melodious
+voice murmuring, “What is the matter today,
+my friend? What are you so depressed about?”</p>
+
+<hr class="tb">
+
+<p>Recalled from my dejection as from a bad
+dream, I sprang up to take the hand of Aelios,
+who was smiling as graciously as though my visit had
+been expected and even welcomed.</p>
+
+<p>But what I next said I cannot recall. No doubt it
+was some bit of nonsense not worth repeating; indeed,
+it would perhaps have been some bit of sentimental
+nonsense, had I not recalled the existence of the unknown
+young man. But since I was too diffident to
+inquire who he might be, and since the thought of him
+remained with me in spite of Aelios’ kindness, I refrained
+from all sentimental advances in this, our first
+private meeting. It is true, that whenever her blue
+eyes flashed, they drew me toward her like twin magnets;
+it is true, that whenever she smiled, her inexpressibly
+sweet smile, I yearned to dash down all
+barriers in one long fervent confession; yet I was
+thankful even to be able to sit side by side with her
+quietly talking. In the wide years that separate me
+now from that brief enchanted interview, my memory
+has lost track of what she said, it merely retains how
+she said it; I can recall the sparkling eagerness with
+which her words poured forth, like the wavelets of a
+rapid crystal stream; I can recapture the sage nodding
+and tossing of her head, the ripples of deep feeling
+that passed and repassed on her mobile countenance,
+the luminescence as from some inner sun that would
+make her whole face shine as she uttered some rare
+bit of wit or fancy. But I do not even know the subject
+of our discussion, except that it was a theme
+suggested by her and that it was impersonal; I only
+know that it was she who did most of the talking
+while I looked on in awed worship, and that either
+she was blind to my reverence for her or else chose
+to ignore it.</p>
+
+<p>It was not until I rose to leave that my thoughts
+reverted to the subject which had brought me to see
+Aelios. And then, since the hour was late and my
+mood was no longer prosaic, I did not choose to discuss
+that topic long. I merely showed Aelios the
+letter, which she glanced at briefly and with a broad
+smile; then she surprised me by congratulating me
+just as the gray-haired bearer of the message had
+done.</p>
+
+<p>But she was exceedingly chary of information. “If
+you will go to the Committee offices,” she suggested,
+“the whole matter will be made much clearer to you
+than I could make it.” And, after directing me where
+to find the offices, she added, “I’d advise you to waste
+no time, or else you may lose your turn and have to
+wait another half year. You know, that’s what happened
+once to my cousin Argol, who met you at the
+door just before.”</p>
+
+<p>Genuinely gratified that my doubts about Cousin
+Argol had been dispersed, I thanked Aelios and turned
+to leave. My heart pattered happily when I found
+her accompanying me to the outer door; and I felt
+an actual thrill of joy when she pressed her little hand
+firmly in my great one, and murmured, in tones that
+could leave no doubt of her sincerity, “Come again,
+my friend. Come whenever you wish some one to talk
+with. I shall always be glad to see you.”</p>
+
+<p>And it was with a glow of triumph that I found
+myself walking down the flower-bordered walk toward
+the main avenue. Aelios was more friendly than I
+had had any reason to expect!—her company was even
+more charming than I had imagined! Considering all
+things, I had every cause to be thankful, and who
+knew but that some day— But here my thoughts
+reached a dazzling veil beyond which I would not allow
+them to penetrate, for there were still heights that I
+could not mount even in my most daring fancies.</p>
+
+<hr class="tb">
+
+<figure class="figcenter illowe33_0625" id="img333">
+ <img class="w100" src="images/img333.jpg" alt="">
+ <figcaption>
+ Some of the trees had branches symmetrically woven into the likenesses
+of great cobwebs, and from those cobwebs at regular intervals dangled
+clusters of grape-like fruits; other trees were cactus-like and
+leafless; and some of the shrubs and creepers bore pods resembling
+those of beans and peas, except that they were over a foot in length.
+The vast majority of this strange assemblage of plants seemed to be
+fruit-bearing&thinsp;...
+ </figcaption>
+</figure>
+
+
+
+
+<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop"><div class="chapter"><h2 class="nobreak" id="CHAPTER_XVII">CHAPTER XVII
+<br>
+The High Initiation</h2></div>
+
+
+<p>Promptly at noon the following day I presented
+myself before the Committee on Selective Assignments.
+The offices, which I found without
+difficulty, were located on the lower floor of an imposing
+blue-tinted granite edifice; and the Committee itself
+occupied a hall reminding me vaguely of a court-room,
+except that its ornamental columns and busts and
+statues were unparalleled in any court-room I had ever
+seen. Before a long marble railing sat about fifteen
+men and women, some old but several conspicuously
+young. All were perched on cushioned marble seats
+before little marble pedestals or writing stands, and
+to their rear were cases lined with rows of parchment-bound
+volumes that lent the place a scholarly dignity.
+In front of them, across the railing, were half a
+dozen tiers of blue stone benches; and on each of the
+benches stood a huge pile of books, as though the
+spectators were expected to make use of their time
+during any delay in the proceedings.</p>
+
+<p>But I was not admitted at once into this great hall.
+First I was escorted into a small anteroom, where
+three Atlanteans—two youths of about twenty, and a
+girl of the same age—were seated studiously reading.
+From a little parchment document which each carried,
+I felt sure that they were here on a mission
+<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_333"></a><a id="Page_334"></a>[334]</span>similar to my own; but so preoccupied did they seem,
+that I had no opportunity to question them. For a
+moment I merely stared at them impatiently; then,
+turning to inspect the room, I was delighted to observe
+a pile of little books on a reed stand in one corner.</p>
+
+<hr class="tb">
+
+<p>After a single curious glance, I began examining
+these volumes with hungry interest. Their very
+titles proved alluring, far more alluring than anything
+printed I had yet seen in Atlantis, with the exception
+of the lost Homeric masterpiece. Some were works
+of information dealing with subjects so varied as
+“Post-Submergence Mural Art,” “The Rise of Government
+by Selection,” “The Stimulation of Plant Life by
+Artificial Sunlight,” “History of the Abolition of
+Crime,” or “History of the Decline of the Upper
+World”; others were essays on such rare topics as
+“The Cultivation of Genius,” “Is Altruism One of the
+Human Instincts?” and “How Atlantis Found the
+World by Losing It”; still others were works of literature,
+and, though I had no time to observe them
+carefully, I saw that they included an epic poem on
+“Agripides,” a volume of lyrics by some unknown
+writer of two thousand years ago as well as selections
+from a dozen lyricists of the present, a poetic drama
+evidently designed for performance at the annual celebration
+of the Submergence, several novels and a collection
+of stories, and a romance of the far future
+entitled “Super-Art.”</p>
+
+<p>But what particularly engaged my attention was
+a genial little satire known as “The Prisoner.” This
+story, which was written in a crisp and simple style
+that I found delightful, recounted how an Atlantean
+of a thousand years before had been sentenced, as
+the penalty for his sins, to pass his remaining years
+in the upper world. Having been sent above seas in
+a little water-tight craft propelled by intra-atomic
+engines, he had set about to seek his fortune in his
+new surroundings; and, finding that the way to win
+distinction was to accumulate much gold, he applied
+his superior Atlantean wits so well that in a short
+while he became fabulously wealthy. But, after attaining
+what was reputed to be success, he discovered
+that his wealth meant nothing to him; he was hungry
+for the art and the beauty of Atlantis, without which
+the world seemed barbarous and empty. Even though
+he could have purchased any treasure or luxury on
+earth, he took to morbid repining; he brooded and
+brooded until he went completely out of his wits,
+which were finally restored to him when the Atlanteans
+took pity and decided to let him return. And so
+the poor man went back to his native land, having
+first forfeited his riches; and this was the last case
+of insanity even known among the Atlanteans.</p>
+
+<p>I had just completed this little story when I was
+roused to reality by hearing a strange voice sonorously
+pronouncing my name. Looking up, I saw a lavender-gowned
+man motioning me toward the main Committee
+Room; and I observed with surprise that the youths
+and the girl had disappeared while I was absorbed
+in my book.</p>
+
+<p>I found the central hall empty except for the fifteen
+men and women sedately seated behind the railing;
+but at sight of these grave individuals I felt my misgivings
+returning, and wished that I could have been
+anywhere else in the universe.</p>
+
+<p>“This is Anson Harkness, is it not?” rang forth
+the high-pitched and yet not unpleasant voice of an
+aged man whose proximity to the railing indicated that
+he was the head of the Committee. And after I had
+assured him that I was the person designated, the
+Head Member continued, earnestly and yet not so menacingly
+as I had expected, “Be seated, Anson Harkness.
+It is an important matter that brings you here.
+And I believe that, in your case, more than the usual
+amount of time and thought will be necessary before
+we can reach a decision.”</p>
+
+<p>The Head Member paused, cleared his throat, and
+slowly proceeded, “I trust that you will co-operate
+with us to the best of your ability, for only so can
+we expect satisfactory results. Just as the average
+man is betrothed but once in his life, so he appears
+but once before this Committee; and since, as in the
+case of a betrothal, much may depend upon the proper
+choice—”</p>
+
+<p>“I beg your pardon, sir,” I interrupted, unable to
+endure these long-winded sentences that only added to
+my confusion, “Would you mind telling me why I am
+here? As yet I haven’t the faintest idea.”</p>
+
+<p>The Head Member peered at me in mild surprise;
+his fourteen associates darted inquiring looks at one
+another.</p>
+
+<p>“Why, yes, that is a proper question,” he resumed,
+blandly. “I had forgotten: you are a foreigner, and
+are unacquainted with our ways. You will understand,
+of course that foreigners were so totally unknown
+before your coming that the necessity for explanation
+had not occurred to me. However, the whole
+matter can be made clear in a few words. You are
+summoned for what is known as the High Initiation—in
+other words, this should be the happiest day of
+your life, since you are now regarded as having
+reached maturity and so may set forth upon your
+career of service to the State.”</p>
+
+<hr class="tb">
+
+<p>Having been a voter in the United States for the
+past eleven years, I was not flattered to be told
+that I had reached maturity. None the less, I held
+my tongue, and listened patiently as the Head Member
+continued.</p>
+
+<p>“The government tutor who has been instructing
+you,” he pursued, “has reported that you have at least
+an elementary knowledge of our language and customs,
+and suggests that you be assigned at once to
+service. Acting upon his recommendation, we intend
+to promote you to duties that accord as nearly as
+possible with your desires and capabilities. But first
+we must say a word as to the methods in vogue in
+our land. Ever since the great social revolution which
+occurred in the second century after the submergence
+and which for a time threatened to engulf us in chaos,
+we have employed what is known as the Beehive System
+of labor—which means that every citizen is required
+to perform a certain minimum amount of
+work for the State in order to accomplish those tasks
+indispensable for our continued existence. Fortunately,
+the utilization of intra-atomic energy and the
+elimination of waste and of duplication of effort have
+reduced the essential work to one-tenth of that
+thought necessary before the Submergence; and the
+average citizen now labors not more than an hour and
+a half or two hours a day. There have, indeed, been
+occasional men and women so enamored of their employment
+as to insist on working four or five hours,
+but such excessive application is not encouraged, for
+it is believed to overcast the mind and blunt the
+esthetic sensibilities.”</p>
+
+<p>“Then for heaven’s sake,” I burst forth, thinking
+this country to be wholly without “push” and energy,
+“What do people here do with their time? If they
+don’t work, they must be simply bored to death!”</p>
+
+<p>The Head Member regarded me with a tolerant
+smile, as one might regard a lunatic who makes some
+harmless remark.</p>
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_335">[335]</span></p>
+<p>“That is where you misunderstand the meaning of
+the word work,” he explained, with something of the
+manner of a schoolmaster to a backward pupil. “Our
+people do work, and work diligently indeed, and sometimes
+work many hours a day—but not on those barren
+practical duties to which they are assigned, and which
+are necessary merely in order that the community may
+exist. As soon as any man or woman has passed the
+period of elementary instruction and is assigned to
+service by this Committee, he finds himself in possession
+of many leisure hours a day—and those hours of
+leisure constitute the important part of his life, and
+it is on their account that he is to be congratulated
+on reaching maturity. For now he may have the opportunity
+both for self-expression and for the better
+sort of service to the State; he may devote himself to
+study, research or creation in any field that suits his
+fancy (there is absolutely no restriction in this regard,
+although every one is expected to apply himself
+to some definite pursuit). One, for example, may elect
+to paint landscapes; a second to conduct some elaborate
+philosophic inquiry; a third to write poetry; a fourth
+to investigate the ways of marine animals; a fifth to
+be an actor, or a musical virtuoso, or the author of
+historical essays, or a critic of architecture, or a designer
+of fine tapestries.”</p>
+
+<p>“But what if one finds nothing at all that he can
+do?” I inquired, wondering how on earth I could fit
+myself into this superior scheme of things.</p>
+
+<p>“Oh, but one must find something!” declared the
+Head Member, while his colleagues eyed one another
+with looks implying that I was really too naïve for belief.
+“It would be a disgrace to do nothing at all except
+one’s practical duties. It would mean that one had
+been a failure in life; that one’s existence had added
+nothing to the world. Why, there isn’t more than one
+such a case a year—and then it’s usually found that
+the poor sufferer has been the victim of some accident,
+which blunted his mental faculties.”</p>
+
+<p>The Head Member paused; and while I had horrific
+visions of myself as the first failure in a year, one of
+the members just to the rear of the Head Member
+leaned over and whispered something into his ear.
+Just what he said I could not catch, but the evident
+effect was to hasten proceedings, for the chief official
+promptly turned to me, and, with unwonted directness,
+continued, “Well, now that we have made all the necessary
+explanations, let us get down to the actual assignment.
+Just what sort of work do you think you
+would prefer, young man?”</p>
+
+<p>Having no reason to believe that I would prefer any
+work at all, I did nothing but gape blankly at the
+speaker.</p>
+
+<p>“I am surprised at your hesitancy,” that sedate individual
+at length continued, blandly. “There is so
+much for you to do that I should think you would
+simply overwhelm us with suggestions.”</p>
+
+<hr class="tb">
+
+<p>But I fear that I continued to do nothing but look
+blank. “You will pardon me,” I pleaded, when
+the suspense had become embarrassing, “if I leave the
+suggestions to you. I really know so little about Atlantis
+that I couldn’t possibly choose wisely.”</p>
+
+<p>“True, you do know little about Atlantis,” coincided
+the Head Member, with a smile. “But there is something
+about which you undoubtedly know a great deal,
+and about which we Atlanteans know nothing at all.”</p>
+
+<p>“You mean—my own country?” I demanded, while
+all the members of the Committee leaned forward with
+interested glances.</p>
+
+<p>“Of course—your own country, and the upper world
+in general,” the Head Member nodded, approvingly.
+“You must remember, our latest news of your world
+was received some three thousand years ago. Even
+for a leisurely people like us, that is a long while. You
+cannot imagine how curious we are as to all that
+has happened since.”</p>
+
+<p>“And that’s what you want me to tell you?”</p>
+
+<p>“Naturally. We know, to be sure, that no one man
+could begin to tell us everything, but at least we’d
+like to learn the general outline of events. And so
+we are thinking of appointing you Official Historian
+of the Upper World.”</p>
+
+<p>“Official Historian of the Upper World!” I repeated,
+like one in a daze.</p>
+
+<p>“Yes. Why not? Judging from the fact that
+you’ve made quicker progress in our language than
+any of your companions, we think you would perhaps
+be better qualified for the office.”</p>
+
+<p>“But I haven’t specialized in history—” I started to
+plead.</p>
+
+<p>“We’re more interested in general movements than
+in particular incidents,” explained the Head Member.
+“The sort of knowledge that any educated man might
+give us, is what we want.</p>
+
+<p>“You certainly are not unacquainted with the present
+civilization up above, are you?”</p>
+
+<p>“No, not altogether,” I was forced to acknowledge.</p>
+
+<p>“And you’ve been taught a reasonable amount about
+the past, have you not?”</p>
+
+<p>“I’ve taken a number of history courses at college,
+if that’s what you mean.”</p>
+
+<p>“Excellent! Excellent!” And the Head Member
+beamed upon me ingratiatingly. “Then the rest should
+be a mere matter of study and application. You don’t
+object to the appointment, do you?”</p>
+
+<p>I confessed that I did not object.</p>
+
+<p>Whereupon, turning to his associates, he inquired,
+“Do you all approve of the appointment of Anson
+Harkness as Official Historian of the Upper World?”</p>
+
+<p>Since there was no dissent among the Committee
+members, my life-work was apparently settled.</p>
+
+<p>“But just what do you expect me to do?” I queried,
+somewhat doubtfully, after my appointment had been
+confirmed.</p>
+
+<p>“You are to write a history of the upper world, of
+course,” explained the Head Member, surprised that I
+should ask the obvious. “How you are to proceed
+will be for you to decide; but you must remember
+that this will be your assigned work, to which you are
+expected to devote not less than two hours a day. I
+might point out, moreover, that yours is one of those
+rare cases where the assigned work is so important
+that you might do well to combine it with your optional
+work, and so dedicate your time exclusively to
+your duties as historian.”</p>
+
+<p>“Perhaps that would be the best way,” I agreed, for
+it struck me that the task before me would require
+all my energies.</p>
+
+<p>But at that juncture an important question occurred
+to me. I did not wish to seem too commercial; but
+it was evident that the examiners had overlooked something
+essential. “Now as to the practical returns,” I
+ventured, mildly. “I know, of course, that I cannot
+expect to be paid very much—”</p>
+
+<p>“To be paid?” repeated four or five of the Committee
+members all at once, with looks of such sheer
+amazement that I knew that I had blundered.</p>
+
+<p>“Oh, then perhaps I must show you some results
+first?” I suggested, perceiving no other alternative.</p>
+
+<p>For two or three seconds there was silence—an
+ominous, puzzling silence which made me realize that
+I had given deep offense.</p>
+
+<p>“Young man,” the Head Member at length broke
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_336">[336]</span>forth, severely, “I fear that you are under a grave
+misapprehension. But possibly you are not wholly to
+blame, for it may be that your own country still labors
+under those primitive social arrangements which we
+Atlanteans abolished three thousand years ago. Know,
+then, that there is no such thing as payment in our
+land. There is no money; there is no medium of
+exchange. You do your work, and in return receive
+all the necessaries of life; your meals are brought to
+you by State employees, just as they have been
+brought to you thus far; you are also lodged by the
+State, clothed by the State, educated by the State; the
+State works of art are at your disposal, you are admitted
+freely to all State entertainments, and are
+even granted periodic vacations to break the monotony
+of existence. What more could any man desire?”</p>
+
+<p>“No more, of course,” I conceded, feeling utterly
+crushed.</p>
+
+<p>“Very well, then,” said the official, with an indulgent
+smile that made me feel ridiculous. “Now there is
+only one more matter to be decided. How would you
+like to set out on your travels the day after tomorrow?”</p>
+
+<p>“What travels?” I gasped, wondering what on earth
+he could mean.</p>
+
+<p>“Why, evidently you haven’t heard about that,
+either!” remarked the Head Member, noting my surprise.
+“You see, every Atlantean, upon receiving his
+assignment and before taking up his duties, is expected
+to make a tour of the country, so as to acquaint
+himself with it at first hand. Otherwise, how
+could he expect to voice himself intelligently on national
+affairs?”</p>
+
+<p>Having nothing to say in reply, I merely gaped and
+remained silent.</p>
+
+<p>“Ordinarily, this journey requires about a month,”
+my informer proceeded. “The trip is made entirely
+on foot, so that one may observe the country thoroughly.
+There is a party leaving in two days—perhaps you
+would like to join them.”</p>
+
+<p>“Very well,” I assented. And, after being advised
+regarding a few details of the trip and then notified
+of my dismissal, I went away feeling more puzzled than
+ever, for I could not believe that Atlantis could show
+me anything more marvelous than it had already
+shown.</p>
+
+
+
+
+<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop"><div class="chapter"><h2 class="nobreak" id="CHAPTER_XVIII">CHAPTER XVIII
+<br>
+The Journey Commences</h2></div>
+
+
+<p>Two days later I set out on what was to prove
+the most extraordinary excursion of my life.
+Arriving early in the morning at the appointed
+meeting place—an open, flower-bordered “circle” or
+park near the western end of the town—I was greeted
+by a score of eager young men and women, who introduced
+themselves as my traveling companions. They
+were all in an excited, highly animated condition, chatting
+and jesting continually, moving about restlessly,
+gay with the gaiety of high expectations; and they all,
+without exception, were conspicuously and vividly
+youthful, for their ages must have varied between
+eighteen and twenty-one. At the same time, they resembled
+their fellow Atlanteans in that they looked
+utterly wholesome and unworldly, and had the grace
+and beauty of persons whose lives have been unstained
+and whose minds untarnished.</p>
+
+<p>I was just wondering whether these attractive creatures
+were to be my sole companions, when I was surprised
+by the sight of four newcomers—two men and
+two women of somewhat maturer years than the
+others. At the moment of their arrival they were surrounded
+so enthusiastically by the members of the
+party that I had not a chance for a clear glimpse of
+them; but even a partial glimpse was enough to make
+me stop short with a gasp of delight—among their
+number I thought I saw the sparkling blue eyes of
+Aelios! At first I was not sure; but with fast-throbbing
+heart I pressed forward, and to my inexpressible
+joy found that I had not been mistaken.</p>
+
+<p>“Aelios!” I cried, as soon as I could manage to
+draw her to one side. “Aelios—what are you doing
+here?”</p>
+
+<p>She smiled her bewilderingly sweet smile, but did
+not choose to answer directly. “What are you doing
+here?” she countered.</p>
+
+<p>“Why, you should know without asking,” I reminded
+her. “Didn’t I show you my summons from the Committee
+on Selective Assignments?”</p>
+
+<p>“Yes, I remember,” she murmured. “Only, I didn’t
+know you would set out on your travels so soon. But
+I’m really very glad. Now you’ll be a full-fledged
+citizen of Atlantis!”</p>
+
+<p>“But are you going with us, Aelios? Are you going,
+too?” I asked, still unable to credit my good fortune.</p>
+
+<p>“Yes, I am going.” And, observing how quizzically
+I was regarding her, she continued, “You see, three
+or four tutors are assigned to each of the traveling
+parties, for we have made the journey before, and are
+able to explain the sights along the way.”</p>
+
+<p>“But how can you leave so suddenly?” I questioned,
+remembering Stranahan’s daily lessons. “How about—how
+about the work you were doing here?”</p>
+
+<p>“Oh, I am excused, of course, until my return. Some
+other tutor is substituted for me, and everything goes
+along smoothly enough with my students.”</p>
+
+<p>“Their loss is our good fortune,” said I, quite truthfully;
+and Aelios acknowledged the compliment with a
+gracious bow, and then smilingly rejoined the other
+tutors.</p>
+
+<p>A few minutes later we were under way. We
+crossed the Salty River on a long bridge overarched
+with a crystal arcade and lined with friezes representing
+mythological scenes; then on the northern
+bank, we followed a little winding lane westward at
+the base of the marble palaces and towers. Before
+many minutes, we approached the borders of the city;
+and when at length we passed into the open country,
+my companions experienced a rare burst of high spirits.
+Some gave expression to their feelings by low, soft
+cries of joy; some capered, romped and laughed merrily
+along the way; some engaged in loud-pitched and
+enthusiastic discussions; but all looked carefree and
+happy indeed; and I could not help being infected with
+their gay mood. I experienced nothing of the constraint
+that might have been only natural, for my
+companions seemed to accept me frankly as one of
+them, and in consequence I felt hardly out of place.
+Before long I was chatting with several of the young
+men as volubly as though I had known them all their
+lives.</p>
+
+<p>Of Aelios I caught no more than a glimpse on that
+first day. She seemed to be absorbed in her conversations
+with the other tutors; and an occasional smiling
+glance in my direction was all that she would vouchsafe
+me. But I was happy merely to know that she
+was near, and was convinced that succeeding days
+would offer opportunities to strengthen our friendship.
+And at the same time I was so well occupied that I
+had little leisure for thinking of anybody in particular.</p>
+
+<p>To one who has never been underseas and gazed
+at the landscapes of that incredible world, it will be
+impossible to convey any idea of the enthusiasm and
+the wonder I felt. Already I had beheld marvels in
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_337">[337]</span>Atlantis, marvels sufficient to bewilder the most audacious
+imagination; but that which I now observed was
+so unique as momentarily to overshadow even my previous
+discoveries.</p>
+
+<hr class="tb">
+
+<p>For the first hour after leaving the city we pursued
+a little path that ran almost in a straight line
+along the banks of the Salty River. Opposite us,
+across the stream, stretched the long, low contours of
+the colonnades and temples I had inspected soon after
+arriving in Atlantis; and at our feet the waters shot
+swiftly by, with gentle swishing and murmuring, a
+green-gray expanse several hundred yards across, but
+differing from all other rivers I had ever beheld in
+that it was of the same width at all points and flowed
+in a straight and orderly manner without any twists,
+turns or meanderings.</p>
+
+<p>All this, of course, I had already observed; and my
+first surprises were not to come until at length the
+road bent abruptly northward away from the river and
+we entered what was for me a virgin territory. As
+we advanced, the vegetation became denser and more
+curious; tall reeds, bushes and trees began to cluster
+about us until I had the impression of being lost in
+a jungle. But it was a jungle such as no explorer has
+ever viewed in the wilds of Africa, New Guinea, or
+Brazil, for the plants were so fantastic that even the
+strange undersea vegetation I had already beheld
+seemed commonplace by comparison. Here, for the
+first time, the trees were of a vivid green, and a normal
+foliage was abundant; yet there was so much
+which looked abnormal that I could only stare and
+stare in amazement. Some of the trees had branches
+symmetrically woven into the likenesses of great cobwebs,
+and from those cobwebs at regular intervals
+dangled dusters of grape-like fruits; other trees were
+cactus-like and leafless, with huge round protuberances
+at regular intervals along their spiny boles; still others
+were almost concealed amid thick meshes of vines, or
+were adorned with multicolored cup-shaped blossoms
+larger than a man’s head, or dominated by scores of
+succulent-looking stalks like gigantic asparagus. Then
+again some were little more than great rounded and
+compressed masses of leafage, reminding me of ten-foot
+cabbages; and some would have struck me as
+nothing more than ordinary mushrooms, had they not
+reached as high as my waist; and some of the shrubs
+and creepers bore pods resembling those of beans and
+peas, except that they were over a foot in length. But
+the most conspicuous fact about this strange assemblage
+of plants was that the vast majority seemed to
+be fruit-bearing; and on all sides one could observe a
+multitude of green fruits of all sizes and shapes, as
+well as a profusion of the ripening and ripe product,
+some of it small as cherries and some large as watermelons,
+some pale green and some gaudy red, some
+lemon-hued and some a modest pink and some a deep
+purple, but all striking one by a contrast and a variety
+as pleasing to the eye as it was extraordinary.</p>
+
+<p>As we entered this peculiar jungle-like region, I
+noted a marked change in the atmosphere. For the
+first time, I became aware that there could be such a
+thing as climate in Atlantis: the air was growing dank
+and overheated, and I had the impression of having
+entered the tropics. And simultaneously I observed
+an increase of light that for the moment dazzled me,
+and I felt as if a torrid sun were burning directly above.
+Yet the source of the added warmth and illumination
+was in no way a mystery: brilliant white lamps had
+been placed at intervals along the great roof-supporting
+tinted columns, glaring down upon the foliage like
+miniature suns, and combining with the larger golden
+orbs to lend the scene a dream-like and unearthly
+beauty.</p>
+
+<p>Before long I noted that the vegetation was interrupted
+every few hundred yards by a ditch from five
+to ten feet across and filled to the brim with sluggish
+brown water. Had not these trenches invariably been
+of even width and geometrical straightness, I might
+have mistaken them for rivulets; but their precise outlines
+would permit but one interpretation, and they
+brought me remembrances of the irrigation canals I
+had seen on the semi-arid plains of Arizona and California.
+It seemed, however, that they served more
+than a single purpose; for as we crossed a little arching
+bridge over one of the widest of their waterways,
+I saw a long, flat boat anchored just beneath my feet;
+and four or five men, clad in close-fitting gray instead
+of in the usual long-flowing tinted robes, were busy
+loading this barge with newly plucked clusters of blue
+and crimson and orange-colored fruit.</p>
+
+<p>Even had there been no one to enlighten me concerning
+these queer jungles, I would now have understood
+their general nature. Still they seemed to embody
+a multitude of mysteries, mysteries to be explained
+by no known laws of biology; and, accordingly,
+I listened eagerly when one of the tutors, finding himself
+besieged by an enthusiastic, questioning coterie,
+launched forth upon on explanatory discourse.</p>
+
+<p>“From the earliest times, as you know,” said he,
+speaking informally, and yet with something of the
+manner of a professor addressing his class, “We Atlanteans
+have been skilled in horticulture. To begin
+with, nature provided the stimulus, for the flora of
+an island such as Atlantis is apt to be unique, and
+that of our own country was particularly so. But long
+before the Submergence, we had outdone nature by developing
+a multitude of new plants; and since the
+Submergence our botanists have busied themselves incessantly
+with the study of artificial stimulation of
+vegetable life. It is well known how industriously they
+have experimented, trying the effect of new soils and
+environments, grafting the limbs of innumerable
+bushes and trees, cross-fertilizing and encouraging all
+favorable chance growths or ‘sports’; and in these
+pursuits they have been aided by the altered environment
+of Atlantis, which seems favorable to rapid and
+sudden variation, and has given rise to innumerable
+varieties of plants unknown before.</p>
+
+<p>“I do not need to tell you how essential all this
+has been for the maintenance of Atlantean life, for
+our land is limited in extent and much of it is unsuited
+for agriculture; only by the intensive and
+forced development of the rest can we hope to support
+our people. And so it has been necessary to
+evolve food-plants that would produce more prolifically
+than any known before; and at the same time we have
+had to develop a light which would be the chemical
+equivalent of sunlight, and so would stimulate the
+chlorophyl of the leaves, the original source of all
+organic matter. This, to be sure, was accomplished
+even before the Submergence; but since the Submergence
+there has been a constant improvement in
+the quality of the artificial sunlight; and in the
+eleventh century A. S., the great chemist, Sorandos,
+produced a light actually superior to sunlight. At
+least (for some reason that Sorandos himself never
+made sufficiently plain) it stimulates plant life to an
+extraordinarily rapid growth, even though it has the
+compensating fault of inducing rapid decay. It is this
+light which you see shining down upon you now from
+the great stone columns.”</p>
+
+<hr class="tb">
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_338"></a><a id="Page_339"></a>[339]</span></p>
+
+<p>The speaker paused, and I thought the time opportune
+to put a question which had been puzzling
+me. “You tell us that you have need for intensive
+crop production,” said I, “and yet have I not heard
+that you can produce food chemically?”</p>
+
+<p>“Yes, indeed,” admitted the tutor, with a shrug.
+“The same light that develops the chlorophyl in
+plants may be employed for the synthetic manufacture
+of starch and sugar out of charcoal and distilled water.
+But that is an old-fashioned method, and not very successful
+on the whole, for we have found that this
+artificial food lacks some element essential for good
+health.”</p>
+
+<p>“Even so, why rely wholly upon plant life?” I inquired,
+curious to know why my diet in Atlantis had
+been strictly vegetarian. “Do you never—do you never
+eat meat?”</p>
+
+<p>“Eat meat?” The tutor’s tone was one of astonishment;
+and I observed half a dozen pairs of eyes staring
+at me in shocked surprise.</p>
+
+<p>For a moment I felt like one who has urged cannibalism
+or some other barbarous rite. And my discomfort
+was scarcely relieved when my informant
+sternly declared, “There has been no meat consumed
+in Atlantis since the Submergence; flesh-eating has
+been discarded along with the other uncivilized practices
+of the ancients. How could we feel ourselves to
+be superior to the beasts and yet live at the cost of
+blood?”</p>
+
+<p>“But are there no animals at all in Atlantis?” I
+found the courage to inquire.</p>
+
+<p>“Oh, yes, though naturally we couldn’t take care
+of many after the Submergence.” And my companion
+paused, and pointed to a little red-breasted feathered
+thing perched amid the dense green of the foliage.
+“There are birds of course—we could not dispense with
+them. Then there are a few insects, such as the butterflies—and
+the bees, which give us honey and are
+necessary for plant pollenization—though all harmful
+insects were long ago destroyed. Also, there are squirrels
+and chipmunks and other small creatures; and in
+the Salty River and the canals there are numerous
+fish. And in some places along the banks of the Salty
+River there are hundreds of bullfrogs.”</p>
+
+<p>“Bullfrogs!” I exclaimed. “Bullfrogs!” And suddenly
+I understood the meaning of those strange
+noises which had so terrified my shipmates and myself
+during our first night in Atlantis!</p>
+
+<hr class="tb">
+
+<figure class="figcenter illowe33_0625" id="img338">
+ <img class="w100" src="images/img338.jpg" alt="">
+ <figcaption>
+ And along each side of the broad passageway, rising almost to meet the
+ceiling, was a series of what I took to be gigantic boilers. All of
+these were connected with innumerable wires and with pipes thicker than
+a man’s body, while at the further end of the gallery the tubes were
+interwoven in intricate loops, coils and convolutions like the exposed
+entrails of a Titan.
+ </figcaption>
+</figure>
+
+
+
+
+<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop"><div class="chapter"><h2 class="nobreak" id="CHAPTER_XIX">CHAPTER XIX
+<br>
+The Glass City</h2></div>
+
+
+<p>For five or six hours we proceeded through the
+fruit-bearing jungles, which seemed limitless in
+extent and yet constantly displayed new and unexpected
+features. But the journey was by no means
+arduous, for twice we paused for rest and refreshments
+at little open-air inns that fronted the roads; at all
+times our pace was unhurried. And most of the party
+seemed still fresh and energetic when, toward the middle
+of the afternoon, we emerged suddenly from the
+thickets and saw a group of fairy-like towers gleaming
+straight ahead.</p>
+
+<p>“That is the city of Thalos,” I heard one of the
+tutors explaining. “It is there that we stay for the
+night.”</p>
+
+<p>As we approached, I directed my eyes eagerly upon
+Thalos, which even at a distance appeared strikingly
+different from Archeon. Indeed, it appeared strikingly
+different from any city I had ever seen, for no streets
+or thoroughfares of any kind were visible, and, as we
+drew near, the various buildings seemed to merge in
+a long unbroken line dominated by turrets, domes and
+spires spaced at geometrical intervals; and all those
+domes and spires flashed and sparkled with a multi-colored
+light, which changed in hue and intensity with
+every step we took and was elusive and yet vivid as
+the glittering of innumerable gems.</p>
+
+<p>So awe-stricken was I that I scarcely thought of
+questioning my companions, but hastened toward this
+alluring city. And the nearer I approached the more
+dazzled I was. By degrees I came to realize that a
+high wall surrounded the town; but this wall brought
+no reminders of the fortified bulwarks of ancient
+cities, for its outlines were graceful and pleasing, its
+color an agreeable dark blue, and its evident purpose
+ornamental. And when I had come within a few
+hundred yards of the city, I observed that its blueness
+was translucent, indicating that the building material
+was glass!—and, judging from the peculiar glistening
+and glinting of the towers projecting above the
+wall, I wondered whether stained glass were not the
+substance of the entire town!</p>
+
+<p>This, in fact, I discovered was so. Having passed
+through the wall by means of a little arched gateway
+invisible at a distance, I found myself in what might
+have been a city out of the Arabian Nights. I cannot
+say with certainty whether I beheld a single building
+or a hundred, or whether I stood in an open court
+or in a street; for before me spread a wide expanse
+of glass masonry, of arches and covered galleries, of
+steeples and cupolas and winding balconies; and all
+this masonry seemed to be joined in a more or less
+unified whole. There may have been individual edifices,
+but there was no edifice not connected with its
+neighbors by arching walls or overhead passageways;
+there may have been streets winding through this
+wilderness of glass, but it struck me that there were
+only open spaces alternating with twining glass-roofed
+corridors. Yet, however bizarre the total impression
+(and bizarre it was beyond all imagining), there was
+also a certain unity that prevented the city from appearing
+grotesque; and its various segments, in their
+garments of lavender or pale blue or turquoise or
+vivid ruby, fitted together as perfectly as the parts
+of an intricate and beautiful mosaic.</p>
+
+<p>We had barely entered the city when half a dozen
+natives emerged from unseen corridors and greeted
+us. Like the members of our own party, they were
+dressed in exquisite light-tinted gowns; and, like all
+the Atlanteans, they were well built, prepossessing of
+appearance and handsome; and there was a perfect
+natural courtesy in their manner when they assured
+us how welcome we were and bade us accompany them
+to our lodgings.</p>
+
+<p>Still speechless with wonder, I followed my companions
+through long crystal galleries, around the base
+of jewel-like glimmering towers, and across flowered
+parks where iridescent fountains splashed and bubbled.
+“This is typical of the latest in architecture,” I heard
+one of the men saying, as he pointed up at the curving,
+interlinking stained glass porticoes and domes.
+“Thalos in its present form is not more than five centuries
+old, and is exclusively a development of Post-Submergence
+art.”</p>
+
+<p>Almost before these words were out of the speaker’s
+mouth, we were led up a long flight of stairs and
+through an elliptical doorway into a chamber which, to
+my surprise, was walled and roofed not with glass,
+but with marble. Here we were treated to a sumptuous
+repast, consisting of a sort of vegetable steak, native
+cakes and bread, honey and fruit, which already lay
+spread for us on half a dozen little tables. And, after
+we had dined, we were each shown to a room on the
+roof, which was equipped with all articles that necessity
+or convenience could demand, and where, if we
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_340">[340]</span>wished, we might well rest from the day’s exertions.</p>
+
+<p>Some of our party may possibly have availed themselves
+of this opportunity; but, for my own part, I
+was so excited merely at being in Thales, that a rest
+was out of the question.</p>
+
+<hr class="tb">
+
+<p>As soon as I had washed myself clean of the dust
+of the journey, I made my way down from my
+roof-apartment and out of the building. As I stepped
+toward the outer door, I was rejoiced to see a familiar
+blue-clad figure preceding me down the stairs.
+“Aelios!” I cried; and when she turned to see what
+was the matter, I joined her with the breathless suggestion
+that we take a little stroll together. And—quite
+unexpectedly—she obliged me by agreeing.</p>
+
+<p>“Luckily, I’ve been here before, and so know my way
+about,” she said, as we started. “If you went alone,
+you might get lost.”</p>
+
+<p>“I wouldn’t mind—in such a charming place,” I declared,
+with a smile.</p>
+
+<p>And then, as a means of making conversation, I remarked,
+“The people here are exceedingly hospitable,
+aren’t they?”</p>
+
+<p>“Hospitable?” she echoed, as if not understanding.
+“What makes you think that?”</p>
+
+<p>Surprised, I pointed out the self-evident fact that
+they had lodged and feasted us so splendidly.</p>
+
+<p>“Oh, it is not they that have lodged and feasted
+us!” she corrected. “It is the State!”</p>
+
+<p>It was now my turn to look blank, and hers to explain.</p>
+
+<p>“Our complete itinerary has been arranged in advance,”
+she continued, “and all our needs will be provided
+for by the State, just as the State provides for
+us when we’re at home. Obviously, that’s the only
+possible way.”</p>
+
+<p>“Then is there no such thing as private property
+in Atlantis?” I inquired.</p>
+
+<p>“Private property?” She looked puzzled, as though
+trying to assimilate an alien point of view. “What
+would be the use of private property?”</p>
+
+<p>Then, seeing the dull stare with which I replied,
+she proceeded, “Of course, I remember that there used
+to be private property in the old days, before the
+Submergence. But that has all been abolished long
+ago.”</p>
+
+<p>“Is it possible?” I exclaimed, thinking this the most
+incredible statement I had yet heard.</p>
+
+<p>“Well, not quite all abolished,” she amended,
+thoughtfully. “Our clothes and books and personal
+ornaments are still private property, of course.”</p>
+
+<p>“But does the State supply one with everything
+else?”</p>
+
+<p>“Yes, with everything, including one’s clothes. You’ll
+see for yourself when you return from this trip and
+set out as a citizen.”</p>
+
+<p>Thereupon she told me a few more facts about the
+State control of property, and how things such as
+inheritance and taxation were unknown. Then gradually
+the conversation shifted to less impersonal and
+more alluring subjects. She asked me about the world
+I had come from, and whether it had any architectural
+marvels rivalling those of Thalos; and I replied that
+it had not, though the skyscrapers of New York were
+considered wondrous enough. I was reluctant to talk
+about my own world, however; I did not wish to be
+disturbed by remembrances; I desired only to be walking
+with Aelios as I was walking now, and to hear
+her speak, and to be permitted to look into those
+bright and glamorous blue eyes of hers. And so I
+listened like one in a trance as she told me of her
+life, and how she had been the eldest child of two
+celebrated artists and had never lacked anything she
+really wanted, and how from her earliest years she
+had loved music and the dance, but particularly the
+dance, and had followed her childhood inclinations in
+her chosen work for the State, though in her prescribed
+work she was a tutor. All this and much more
+Aelios told me about herself, while I heard her with
+adoration that must have been all too apparent in my
+fascinated gaze. But she seemed without self-consciousness
+and without realization of the tender sentiments
+welling up within me; and she rambled eagerly
+on and on, speaking with animation and vivacity, as
+one speaks to an old and amiable companion.</p>
+
+<p>We must have strolled through the rambling thoroughfares
+for an hour, when we seated ourselves on
+a cushioned marble bench at one corner of a wide
+court. “If we stay here until dark,” suggested Aelios,
+“you will see one of the most curious exhibitions that
+you have ever seen.”</p>
+
+<p>It seemed only a few minutes later when, without
+warning, the golden orbs above us flickered, grew
+dim, and flashed into blackness. Then, while I was
+wondering whether we were to be left in total gloom,
+other lights gleamed from the city’s unseen pinnacles;
+and their rays darted in long streamers against a
+blank glass wall directly across from us, illuminating
+it with fantastic and unbelievable designs. Unlike the
+searchlights that had amazed me at the Pageant of
+the Good Destruction, these lights were not without
+apparent purpose; they shed definite patterns, I might
+almost say pictures, upon the broad glass screen. First
+one could make out the form of a man, life-sized and
+with pale-colored robes, moving in agile cinematograph
+fashion; then a woman or a child would advance
+across the screen to meet him; then the two would
+engage in various significant motions or gesticulations,
+to be joined perhaps by others; and in the swaying
+and blending of the lights, the weird mingling and
+intermingling of a myriad shades and colors, the background
+of shadows and the foreground of lithe and
+active figures, I realized that I was witnessing the
+representation of scenes from Atlantean life!</p>
+
+<p>What those scenes were I cannot recall. But I have
+the impression that they aimed to present life symbolically
+rather than literally; that beauty was their
+purpose rather than accuracy, and that a pleasing
+harmony of color, tone and proportion was deemed
+more important than a stringent realism. I fear that
+I was not sufficiently advanced in the native art to
+appreciate them, for they left little more effect upon
+my mind than an exhibition of mere technique with
+the violin or piano would leave upon one untrained
+in music.</p>
+
+<p>But, at the time, the spectacle certainly did have its
+influence. Although vaguely aware that the seats
+about me were being silently occupied, I could scarcely
+give a thought to my surroundings; and under the
+enchantment of the shifting and pictorial lights, I
+felt as if Aelios and I were alone together; and I
+pressed close to her, until not a fraction of an inch
+divided us and it seemed that we breathed not as two
+persons but as one. Very cautiously, as though it
+were a clandestine and forbidden act, I reached out my
+hand till it touched hers and the palm closed softly
+over her fingers. She did not return the pressure and
+yet did not withdraw her hand, nor even seem to
+notice what I was doing; and, in my confusion, I
+scarcely knew whether to feel encouraged or repulsed.</p>
+
+<p>Then, by that wavering and uncertain light, I caught
+a glimpse of her eyes. They were bright and shining—and
+did they merely reflect her joy at the colored
+display? Not a word was spoken between us, nor was
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_341">[341]</span>I anxious that a word be spoken; I had sudden visions
+of a tomorrow fairer than I would once have dared to
+hope for.</p>
+
+
+
+
+<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop"><div class="chapter"><h2 class="nobreak" id="CHAPTER_XX">CHAPTER XX
+<br>
+Farm and Factory</h2></div>
+
+
+<p>Early the following morning we were again under
+way. Leaving Thalos through a little arched
+gateway under the western wall, we trudged for
+several hours through flat green countryside. Here
+and there, amid breaks in the vegetation, we observed
+edifices which my companions described as “farmhouses,”
+but which, with their statue-lined walls and
+marble columns, seemed to me to be little less than
+palaces. These remarkable dwellings, of which there
+must have been four or five to every square mile, were
+conspicuous from a distance, for there were no obscuring
+trees, and the landscape was dominated by
+a hardy reed that grew shoulder-high in impenetrable
+clusters.</p>
+
+<p>Except for the size of this plant, I might have
+fancied it to be a variety of wheat. Not only were
+its leaves long and grass-like, but it bore a rich crop
+of some grain that closely resembled wheat, although
+each of the seed-clusters were large as ears of Indian
+corn. That it was cultivated for food purposes was
+obvious, for brilliant white lamps were beaming from
+the tinted columns as in the fruit-jungles, and at regular
+intervals we passed irrigation ditches, and now
+and then caught glimpses of gray-clad men at work
+amid the green thickets.</p>
+
+<p>But while this scenery was fairly interesting, it
+was on the whole the most monotonous I had yet
+viewed in Atlantis. Hence I was relieved when the
+landscape showed a sudden change, and the cultivated
+plains gave way to a series of long, low, grass-covered
+hills. From the beginning, I noticed something
+peculiar about these eminences, for their contours were
+rounded with almost geometrical evenness; while beyond
+the furthest heights, a clear, rapid stream flowed
+out of the ground as if forced up from nowhere, and,
+after meandering to the edge of the reed-covered plain,
+divided into half a dozen diverging irrigation canals.
+But all this was less surprising than what I next
+observed; for as I stood staring at the stream in
+wonder, a huge rock at the base of the nearest hill
+thrust itself outward, and a man emerged as if from
+the center of the earth!</p>
+
+<p>Startled, I turned to my companions for an explanation—but
+not a murmur issued from them, and their
+faces showed none of that amazement I might have
+expected. “Here is where we enter,” declared one of
+the tutors, in matter-of-fact tones; and followed by
+the rest of the party, he plunged through the aperture
+made by the dislodged boulder.</p>
+
+<p>Like one in a dream—or rather like one in a nightmare—I
+trailed with the others into that hole on the
+hillside. As I approached the entrance, I found that
+what I had taken to be a rock was not a rock at all,
+but merely a cleverly disguised bit of metal; upon
+reaching the doorway, I was amazed to find, instead
+of the tunnel-like corridor I had expected, a spacious
+and wide-vaulting hall.</p>
+
+<p>With the exception of the Sunken World itself it
+was the largest enclosure I had ever entered; indeed,
+it occupied the entire interior of the hill. Along the
+full length of a half-mile gallery the white-lanterned
+ceiling arched to a height of two hundred feet; and
+on each side of a broad passageway, rising almost to
+meet the ceiling, was a series of what I took to be
+gigantic boilers. All of these were connected with
+innumerable wires and with pipes thicker than a man’s
+body, while at the further end of the gallery the
+tubes were interwoven in intricate loops, coils and convolutions
+like the exposed entrails of a Titan.</p>
+
+<p>As I stepped through the doorway, a warm breeze
+swept my face, bearing to my nostrils the odor of
+oil, and at the same time bringing me reminders of
+the furnace-dry air of steam-heated apartments. “What
+place is this?” I could not forebear to ask; but almost
+instantly I was sorry that I had spoken, for four or
+five pairs of eyes were turned upon me in surprise at
+so obvious a question.</p>
+
+<p>“This is a distillery, of course,” answered one of
+my young companions.</p>
+
+<p>“A distillery?” I echoed, scarcely less astonished at
+his words than at the extraordinary appearance of
+the place. And although the Atlanteans had seemed
+to me to be a sober people, I had visions of the manufacture
+of intoxicants on a scale inconceivable to the
+most bibulous of my own countrymen.</p>
+
+<p>“Yes, this is where we prepare our distilled water,”
+continued my friend, surprised at my surprise.</p>
+
+<hr class="tb">
+
+<p>For a moment I merely stared at him without comprehension.
+“But why so much distilled water?”
+was all that I could gasp.</p>
+
+<p>“That’s easily explained,” said the young man, with
+a smile. “The water piped from our deep wells, which
+serves us for drinking purposes, couldn’t begin to take
+care of our irrigation problems—and without irrigation
+Atlantis would be a desert. The Salty River,
+of course, contains enough for all our needs; but it is
+ocean water, and the brine would kill all land vegetation.
+And so the only possibility was to distill the water.
+This was arranged for long ago by Agripides, when
+he built this distillery and eleven others, which together
+keep the irrigation system of Atlantis supplied,
+and incidentally provide us with all the salt required
+for domestic and chemical purposes.”</p>
+
+<p>“That may be all very well,” I remarked, “but the
+amount of heat necessary to evaporate so much water
+must be tremendous&thinsp;...”</p>
+
+<p>“That is no problem at all,” my companion assured
+me. “By means of intra-atomic energy, we could
+generate power enough to distill the entire ocean.”</p>
+
+<p>I felt certain that this statement was an exaggeration,
+but before I had had time for comment, my
+attention was suddenly diverted. All of our party had
+paused before a circular slit in the floor; and a brown-clad
+workman, stepping forth from amid the boilers,
+applied a key to a little hole near the edge of the slit,
+and removed a steel disk perhaps five feet in diameter.</p>
+
+<p>Instantly we were bathed in a brilliant copper light,
+so dazzling that at first I had to turn abruptly away.
+Then as my startled eyes gradually accustomed themselves
+to the vivid illumination, I peered through a
+glass partition far down into what remotely reminded
+me of a furnace, except that no flames were visible,
+but from the vague fire-bright background great sheets
+and rods of a shining red or a blinding brassy yellow
+stared at me steadily with unbearable incandescence.</p>
+
+<p>“Those are the intra-atomic generators,” explained
+the workmen. “They are constantly liberating energy,
+which is transformed into electrical power by means
+of giant induction coils; and it is this electricity which
+is wired to the boiler-room below and heats the water
+from the Salty River.”</p>
+
+<p>“But how terrible to work down there!” it occurred
+to me to comment. “How can any man—”</p>
+
+<p>“It is not necessary to work down there,” I was
+promptly informed. “The generators continue operating
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_342">[342]</span>automatically so long as they are supplied with
+fuel.”</p>
+
+<p>“What fuel do you use?” I inquired.</p>
+
+<p>The reply was not at all what I had expected. “Any
+of the heavier metals will do,” stated the workman.
+“One of the best of the cheaper fuels is gold, for its
+high atomic weight makes possible extensive dissociation.
+Sometimes, however, we use silver, platinum,
+or lead—although the latter is ordinarily regarded as
+too valuable for such purposes. A supply of lead will
+run the generator for twenty-seven years, one of silver
+for thirty-three, and one of gold for forty-five. When
+new fuel is required, we simply shoot it in through
+the tube over there.” And the speaker pointed to a
+tube of about the thickness of a man’s wrist, which
+projected several feet above the floor between two of
+the boilers.</p>
+
+<p>I thought that I had now seen enough of the distillery,
+and was not disappointed when my companions
+made ready to leave. But there was one problem which
+still troubled me: why did the building look so much
+like a hill from without, and why had such evident
+pains been taken to conceal its existence?</p>
+
+<p>To these questions I found a speedy answer. “If
+this edifice had been erected in the days before Agripides,”
+declared one of my young friends, “it would
+have been nothing more than an ugly mass of steel
+and stone. But Agripides, seeking a way to beautify
+the structure and hide its unavoidable defects, hit upon
+the plan of covering it with a coating of earth and
+sowing the earth with grass, so as to give the appearance
+of a green hill. All our factories, you will find,
+have in some such way been concealed or made
+beautiful.”</p>
+
+<p>This, indeed, I discovered to be the case. We had
+now reached the industrial center of Atlantis; and all
+the rest of that day we were busy inspecting manufacturing
+plants of sundry kinds and sizes. But nowhere
+was the air clouded with that smoke and dust
+which I had come to associate with industrial districts
+in my own land; nowhere was there a dingy or
+soot-blackened building, nowhere were my ears assaulted
+by the shrieking or droning of whistles, or by
+the hammering, pounding, screeching, whirring or grating
+of machines. Instead, we passed through a region
+that might have been recommended to sufferers from
+nervous ailments. In the midst of pleasant, grassy
+lands an occasional tree-bordered building arose with
+glittering steeples or stainless marble facade or august
+columns of granite; and within each building, which
+one might have mistaken for a mansion or a temple,
+electrically driven wheels and levers would be operating
+noiselessly, preparing the food of the Atlanteans
+or weaving their clothes from the fibre of a flax-like
+plant, manufacturing farm implements or fertilizers
+or scientific articles or household wares; and in each
+of these factories a few workers (never more than a
+score) would be calmly and often smilingly tending
+the machines, occupying thus their two or three hours
+of assigned daily service for the State.</p>
+
+<hr class="tb">
+
+<p>The institution that interested me most was the
+building where chemists were at work renewing the
+air supply of Atlantis—or, rather, the oxygen supply.
+Here, in a long hall dominated by great vats connected
+by pipes and wires reminding me vaguely of the distillery,
+a continual stream of water was being disintegrated
+by a process of electrolysis, the hydrogen
+being diverted to enter into various chemical compounds,
+with carbon nitrogen and other elements, the
+oxygen being released into the atmosphere to replace
+that consumed by respiration and combustion. By
+means of the air-gauge, a finely adjusted apparatus
+whose index was a flame that varied in intensity with
+the amount of oxygen, chemists were able to determine
+how much of this vital gas was required at any
+specific time; but some oxygen had to be provided
+continually, for, large as Atlantis was, it was not so
+great that nature would preserve a balance and replace
+the oxygen that was consumed by that freed in
+the course of organic processes of plant life.</p>
+
+<p>But if the Atlantean industries were arranged with
+a regard for the welfare and esthetic sensibilities of
+the people as a whole, scarcely less pains had been
+taken to insure the health and convenience of the
+workers. I will not speak of the safety devices, which
+had been so perfected that accidents were virtually
+unknown; I will not dwell upon the precautions to
+vary the monotony even of the two-or three-hour
+working day, to make possible individual initiative, to
+guard against fatigue and excessive strain, or to render
+the surroundings pleasant to the eye and mind.
+But what I must mention, because it impressed me
+as unique, is the fact that the workers were housed
+in dwellings not less imposing than the most stately
+city homes. The road took us through half a dozen
+villages reserved for the factory workers; and each
+of these seemed to be in itself a work of art, with
+many-columned residences, arches and marble portals
+and connecting colonnades, flowered parks and statuary
+and fountains, all co-ordinated in a tasteful and elegant
+design.</p>
+
+
+
+
+<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop"><div class="chapter"><h2 class="nobreak" id="CHAPTER_XXI">CHAPTER XXI
+<br>
+The Wall and the Wind-makers</h2></div>
+
+
+<p>That evening we were lodged in the city of
+Arvon, a moderately large town which differed
+strikingly from anything we had yet seen. Its
+scattered houses were huddled amid vegetation so thick
+that from a distance it resembled a forest; and even
+at close range one could not lose sight of its sylvan
+aspect, since all the buildings were vine-covered and
+painted a green and brown that harmonized ideally
+with the woodland colors.</p>
+
+<p>But I must not devote too much space to the strange
+appearance of this town—still stranger sights were to
+greet me on the following day. For then I was to
+reach a turning-point in my journey, and to penetrate
+some of the salient mysteries of Atlantis.</p>
+
+<p>Even though I did not know what interesting discoveries
+were before me, I had a hint of something unusual
+very early in the morning. We had hardly left
+Arvon when I observed that the golden-lighted dome
+seemed lower and nearer than usual, and curved gradually
+down to westward until it appeared to merge
+with the ground.</p>
+
+<p>“There’s where the glass wall begins,” said one of
+the tutors, pointing; and I looked eagerly, hopeful that
+we would soon reach the wall itself.</p>
+
+<p>A little further on, the road curved abruptly southward,
+and for several miles we merely paralleled the
+wall. Then, to my joy, a familiar gurgling met my
+ears—we were back again near the Salty River.
+Straight across the stream we passed on an arching
+bridge dominated by a crystalline pale-blue colonnade;
+and, on the further side, we again turned westward,
+and followed the river directly toward the green glass
+wall.</p>
+
+<p>As we advanced, I noticed that the waters were becoming
+white and foamy, with great briny patches as
+if a passing steamer had churned up the waves. Gradually
+these frothy expanses grew wilder and more conspicuous,
+until the entire river was a seething, effervescent
+mass; and troubled waves sprang to life, with
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_343">[343]</span>turbulence that increased as we moved upstream, until
+the bubbling white was mingled with the green and
+gray of leaping surges, and the waters were agitated as
+if by a storm-wind. Yet only the faintest breeze was
+blowing, and I could not understand the source of the
+strange commotion.</p>
+
+<p>At the some time, a disquieting sound came to my
+ears—the continuous and droning sound of thunder,
+dull and muffled but gradually growing louder in spite
+of the clamoring and roaring of the waves. So deep-toned
+and voluminous was it that it reminded me of
+a din I never expected to hear again—the booming of
+the ocean along resisting shores.</p>
+
+<p>All of our party moved without a word now, moved
+rapidly and with faces straining westward, as if eager
+for some rare and long-awaited event. In their very
+speechlessness there was a contagious tension; and,
+responsive to their mood, I too was expectant, though
+I could not imagine what there was to be anticipated.</p>
+
+<p>But I did not have long to wait. “Look! There it
+is!” exclaimed one of the party, suddenly. And he
+paused, and pointed straight ahead; and all his companions
+paused and pointed straight ahead, joining
+in his awed cries of “Look! There it is!”</p>
+
+<p>Of course, I strained my eyes quite as earnestly as
+any of them. But at first I saw nothing to impress
+me. All that was visible was a broad sheet of white
+looming just above the river for almost its full width,
+as though there were a falls a mile or two upstream.
+And, in my ignorance, I accepted this as the explanation.</p>
+
+<p>But I was speedily to discover my error. Suddenly
+the path bent away from the river at an acute angle;
+and as we followed our new course the distant thundering
+grew louder—while a cold wind began to sweep
+over us and the supposed waterfall took on unexpected
+dimensions. By degrees it lengthened until it seemed
+a long jet of water shot horizontally out of some
+colossal hose. Intensely white, with the whiteness
+of foam and edges blurred with spray, it went hurtling
+with the impetuosity and swiftness of an arrow
+from the nozzle of a gigantic pipe, plunging outward
+hundreds of yards in a graceful parabola and giving
+rise to the Salty River.</p>
+
+<p>Almost as remarkable as this torrent of water was
+the tube from which it was discharged. This great
+pipe, which may have been of a steel alloy, was well
+over a mile long, and was a hundred yards across at
+the opening; but it narrowed gradually as it crept
+westward along the ground and disappeared where
+the green horizon met the earth.</p>
+
+<p>Needless to say, I did not have to inquire as to the
+meaning. Only one explanation was conceivable: the
+metallic tube was the valve through which the X-111
+had found entrance to Atlantis, the valve that admitted
+the ocean water and kept the Salty River supplied.
+The aperture at the ocean end was doubtless
+not very wide (I was later told that it was but twenty-five
+feet across); but such was the pressure at these
+depths that the waters burst through with the force
+and swiftness and tremendous volume I had observed,
+and had to be diverted through a long and gradually
+widening tube before their torrents could be controlled
+and safely emptied into the river channel.</p>
+
+<hr class="tb">
+
+<p>As we approached the glass wall, the hoarse and
+resonant roaring was continuously in our ears,
+thudding and crashing with echoes that reverberated
+like the combined monody of a hundred Niagaras. But,
+forgetful of the tumult, I kept my eyes fastened
+straight ahead, where the great green dome sloped
+down to meet the ground in a curve modelled on that
+of the actual heavens. Except for the dark weird
+coloration, I might have fancied that I was staring
+toward an actual horizon on earth; and so close was
+the resemblance that the illusion persisted until I was
+almost within a stone’s throw of the barrier. Only
+then could I persuade myself that I actually beheld a
+solid mass; and, even so, the curvature was so graceful
+and so elusive that I could not feel that a mere
+wall stretched before me; but, rather, I had the sense
+that it was some ultimate boundary, the dividing line
+between reality and infinite nothingness.</p>
+
+<p>This impression was confirmed by the fact that the
+wall at close range looked opaque. Olive-green and
+of impenetrable thickness, it seemed impervious to the
+rays of light; though, remembering my experiences
+on the X-111, I knew that it was really transparent.</p>
+
+<p>All the members of our party approached the wall
+almost breathlessly, then held out their hands and
+touched it in silence—a procedure which may have had
+some ceremonial importance, or may have been akin
+to the actions of persons who, seeing the ocean for
+the first time, gravely dip their hands in the salt
+water. At any rate, I lost no time in following their
+example, and found that the surface of the wall was
+just as I had expected—smooth and polished, and of
+a substance that would have been apparent to a blind
+man.</p>
+
+<p>After the twenty students had duly inspected the
+wall, one of the tutors lifted his voice so as to be
+heard by the entire party.</p>
+
+<p>“My friends,” said he, “we have now reached the
+border-land between Atlantis and the outside world. A
+rim of glass fifty feet thick divides us from the ocean;
+and that glass, as you know, is composed of dozens
+of layers, one above the other, several of them
+strengthened with interwoven strands of fine wire, and
+all composed of a special pressure-resisting glass devised
+at the orders of Agripides. You understand, of course,
+that the wall does not end where you see it, but penetrates
+five hundred feet underground, lest the ocean
+overwhelm us from beneath; you also understand that
+the glass is ribbed with steel, which holds it together
+in a sort of latticed framework, with girders, beams
+and stanchions at measured intervals like the metallic
+skeleton of a great building.</p>
+
+<p>“The erection of the wall represents the supreme accomplishment
+of Atlantean engineering, and required
+the labor of thirty thousand men for thirty-four years.
+But Agripides, with his usual foresight, planned it so,
+that the work, once done, would never require renewal,
+for glass is one of the most durable of substances,
+and is virtually immune to dissolution by the
+ocean waters. We have our immersible vessels, of
+course, which regularly range the seas around the
+glass dome in search of any possible fault or fissure;
+but no serious damage has ever yet been discovered,
+and it is safe to say that the present edifice will serve
+us and our descendants for a hundred thousand generations.”</p>
+
+<p>The speaker paused, as if for effect; then, noting
+that his audience remained silent, he concluded, “Is
+there anyone that would like to ask a question?”</p>
+
+<p>“Yes, I would,” I surprised myself by saying.</p>
+
+<p>All eyes were bent curiously upon me, and I was
+forced to continue, “Glass is, as you say, an exceedingly
+durable substance, but it is also extremely
+fragile. Is there no possibility that the wall will ever
+be cracked?”</p>
+
+<p>“Cracked?” echoed the tutor, with a surprised smile.
+“Do you think that, if there had been such a possibility,
+Atlantis would not have been inundated long
+ago? Granted, if any very heavy object were to collide
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_344">[344]</span>with the wall, it might be broken and we would
+be flooded out like ants. But how could there be any
+such heavy object here in the deep sea? Certainly, the
+fishes couldn’t break through.”</p>
+
+<p>“No, of course not,” I conceded, feeling that I had
+made myself ridiculous—and with that the discussion
+ended. But my words were often to be recalled to me
+in the tempestuous days that followed; and more than
+one of my hearers was to speak of them as strangely
+prophetic.</p>
+
+<p>For the next hour we followed a little path that
+clung close to the glass wall. And, as we proceeded,
+my impression of its opaqueness was dissipated, for
+from time to time a little flickering light was momentarily
+visible beyond the green thicknesses; and I
+had disturbing remembrances of the lantern-bearing
+fishes that had haunted us on our way to Atlantis.</p>
+
+<p>We had covered not more than a mile or two when
+we met with a new surprise. A brisk breeze began
+to blow over us; and the farther we walked the
+sharper the breeze grew, until it assumed the fury
+of a gale, and for the first time since reaching Atlantis
+I felt cold, almost as if I were back on earth.
+Why we continued in the face of this strange blast
+I could not understand, nor whence it proceeded nor
+how it had been produced. But while I was wondering
+and fighting my way through the wind, a singular
+whirring sound came to my ears, a buzzing as of
+gigantic flies; and gradually that sound grew louder,
+until from resembling the murmuring of insects it
+came to remind me of the flapping of colossal wings.
+That this noise was somehow connected with the quickening
+wind was apparent from the first; and the relationship
+became evident when the path swerved
+abruptly away from the wall and I glanced back, to
+behold a series of queer-looking machines supported
+on stone pedestals high up against the glass. It would
+be impossible to say just what the machines were like,
+for they were in such rapid motion that the parts were
+not visible; but there were six or eight of them, and
+they were round, and probably each a hundred yards
+across; and so swiftly were they rotating that they
+formed each a gray blur through which the green of
+the wall was vaguely discernible.</p>
+
+<p>“Those are the electro-intra-atomic wind generators,”
+explained one of the tutors. “By means of these great
+fans and others like them stationed at various points
+around the wall, the atmosphere of Atlantis is kept
+in constant circulation. Without them the air would
+be stagnant and the climate sultry and unhealthy.
+These generators are in action at all times, with great
+air-wheels that make from ten to fifteen revolutions a
+second; and it is estimated that the daily energy consumed
+by each of them would be sufficient to boil a
+thousand tons of ice water.”</p>
+
+<p>We did not linger long in the vicinity of the great
+fans, for the strong wind was most annoying and
+the temperature too low for comfort. But we set out
+at a brisk pace across a moss-covered plain away from
+the wall; and we did not pause again until we had
+reached the city of Lerenon, which was our destination
+for the day.</p>
+
+<p>This town, which was located some miles from the
+wall and yet was constantly fanned by cool breezes
+from the wind generators, had one striking feature
+all its own: it was dominated by two colossal bronze
+figures, one of a man, the other of a woman, which
+reached far above the city domes and towers halfway
+to the green-glass sky. Both these statues were carved
+with an irresistible majesty, the man’s face that of
+an Apollo, the woman’s that of a Diana; and their
+right hands were extended high over the city roofs
+and joined in a firm clasp, so lifelike that I might almost
+have expected them to move and speak. At first
+I thought that they represented mythological characters,
+but an inscription at their base informed me of
+my error, for the man was meant to typify Wisdom,
+and the woman Beauty; and in their union above the
+spires and columns of Atlantis I thought I could read
+the meaning and purpose of the entire land.</p>
+
+
+
+
+<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop"><div class="chapter"><h2 class="nobreak" id="CHAPTER_XXII">CHAPTER XXII
+<br>
+The Journey Ends</h2></div>
+
+
+<p>During the thirty days of our journey, I was the
+witness of marvels so numerous that, if I were
+to dwell upon them all, I might fill hundreds of
+pages. Yet while there is much that cannot be recorded
+and much that I have forgotten, there are some
+observations which have stamped themselves indelibly
+upon my memory, and which are so essential for an
+understanding of Atlantis that I could not well overlook
+them.</p>
+
+<p>Thus, I found that the wall enclosing the country
+formed a vast circle, of a diameter impossible to determine
+precisely but probably in the neighborhood
+of two hundred miles. Thus, also, I learned that the
+glass roof was at an average height of five hundred
+feet above the ground, although the distance varied
+greatly according to the level of the land; and I discovered
+that it was everywhere supported by myriads
+of the huge tinted columns—columns with steel interiors
+and surface of concrete or stone. I ascertained,
+likewise, that the Salty River followed an absolutely
+unbending course, flowing in a straight-line
+and on an even, gradual grade from the western wall
+of Atlantis to the eastern (since it was really a canal
+rather than a river); and I was amazed and dazzled
+at sight of the great intra-atomic pumps which forced
+the torrents back into the sea.</p>
+
+<p>Since they were expected to overcome a pressure of
+many tons to the square foot, these pumps had to be
+very powerful; and powerful they were, with their
+labyrinths of levers and revolving chains, and three-hundred-foot
+pistons and rods that pounded against
+the waters like gigantic pile-drivers, pressing them
+slowly back into the sea to the accompaniment of a
+roaring and thundering that could be heard for miles
+and that proved deafening upon close approach.</p>
+
+<p>The cities of Atlantis, according to the count I made,
+were eighteen in number (exclusive of the smaller
+towns and villages). But an Atlantean city, although
+always occupying considerable space, was what we
+in America should scarcely regard as a city at all,
+since it never had more than twenty or twenty-five
+thousand inhabitants. This insignificant population,
+when considered along with the liberal amount of territory
+allotted each town, accounted for the fact that
+no great crowds were ever to be seen on the streets;
+and it also explained how it was possible for efficient
+popular assemblages to debate and decide public questions.</p>
+
+<p>But the surprising fact about the Atlantean cities
+was not so much their small population as their almost
+unbelievable variety. No town in Atlantis was
+like any other town; the only characteristic possessed
+by them all in common was their unfailing beauty. To
+give some idea of their amazing diversity, I might
+mention the city of Atolis, which, when seen from the
+hill that surmounted it, formed a definite pattern, resembling
+some colossal Grecian temple of which the
+streets and avenues were the columns. Or I might
+picture Aedla, which was built along a series of canals
+connecting with the Salty River, with a lake in the
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_345">[345]</span>center, giving a Venetian effect, except that the palaces
+were more exquisitely designed than any in the
+upper world. Then, again, I might depict the small
+town of Acropolon, in which all the houses were connected
+in an enormous colonnaded quadrangle surrounding
+a vividly flowering park, reminding me of
+some university I had seen long before; or I might
+launch into a lengthy description of Mangona, another
+small town, whose houses were all roofless and collapsible,
+and were generally taken down during the
+day and put into place only at night or when the
+inhabitants desired seclusion.</p>
+
+<p>But more interesting to me than any of these was
+Sardolos, one of the few present-day Atlantean cities
+that had existed before the Submergence. Although
+of course the town was not the same as in ancient
+times, and although its gracefully winding thoroughfares
+and marble friezes and frescoed domes represented
+the work of modern artists, yet some relics of
+the old days had been carefully preserved.</p>
+
+<p>In one corner of the city, concealed from the general
+gaze in a statue-lined bronze enclosure, were the
+remains of buildings said to date from the second century
+B. S. Yet, ancient as these ruins were, my first
+impression was that there was something familiar
+about them. The most conspicuous exhibit was a
+stone wall, five stories high and with gaping rectangular
+holes where the windows had been; and to the
+rear was a mass of rusted and distorted steel, reaching
+the full height of the wall with twisted, spidery
+arms that had once lent it support.</p>
+
+<p>“A splendid specimen of pre-Submergence architecture,”
+stated a placard placed prominently before the
+exhibit. “This was the seat of the Stock Market of
+old Sardolos—a wholesale gambling house abolished by
+the Anti-Corruption Act of the first century A. S. The
+mass of shapeless and desiccated stone opposite is all
+that remains of the Inter-Atlantean Bank, which owned
+a controlling share in this gambling resort; while just
+to the right were the ruins of the shrine in which the
+owners of the bank worshipped, and of the clubhouse
+in which, late in the second century B. S., they
+convened in the interest of their lotteries, and decided
+to declare the fifth Atlanto-Bengenese war.”</p>
+
+<hr class="tb">
+
+<p>But when I looked to see the ruins, all that I beheld
+was a series of irregular stone walls, not
+over two or three feet high and brown with the lifeless
+parchment hue of extreme age. Somehow, it made me
+uncomfortable to look upon these vestiges of the past;
+nor was I relieved when I gazed at a picture of Sardolos
+as it had been, and saw two long opposing rows
+of geometrically regular five-story buildings. To think
+of these, and then to turn to present-day Atlantis,
+was merely to shudder at the contrast; yet all the
+while I could not repress the sense that I was standing
+in the presence of something undefinably familiar.</p>
+
+<p>If it was somewhat irritating to gaze at the ruins
+of Sardolos, the disagreeable moments were few indeed
+during the thirty days of the journey. All in all,
+I have rarely taken part in so thoroughly delightful
+an expedition; and my joy in the trip is not to be explained
+merely by the engrossing sights of Atlantis,
+nor by the companionship of the twenty enthusiastic,
+friendly young students, but rather by the presence of
+one who meant more to me than all else that Atlantis
+contained. My opportunities of speaking with Aelios
+were not plentiful, for she seemed always to be engaged
+in conversation with some member of the party;
+but occasionally I exchanged a few words with her,
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_346">[346]</span>and occasionally she darted a bright smile in my direction,
+thereby reassuring me when at times I gave way
+to disturbing doubts.</p>
+
+<p>It was not until our travels were drawing to a close
+that I had another intimate talk with her. The morning
+of the thirtieth day had arrived, and we had set
+out through wide fields of the wheat-like reed toward
+the city of Archeon, which we hoped to reach shortly
+after noon. But, absorbed in somber contemplation, I
+took no part in the merriment of my companions, and
+almost from the first I lagged moodily behind them.
+Hence it was a relief to hear light footsteps suddenly
+at my side, and to find a flaxen-curled head nodding a
+greeting and a pair of kindly bright blue eyes peering
+at me inquiringly.</p>
+
+<p>“Aelios!” I exclaimed. And I returned her greeting
+in terms that could not half express my pleasure.</p>
+
+<p>She wasted no time about plunging into the subject
+that had brought her to me. “Today our journey
+ends,” she reminded me, almost regretfully. “And tomorrow
+you must take up your duties as a citizen.
+You may find matters a little strange at first. Perhaps
+there are already some things that puzzle you.”</p>
+
+<p>“Indeed there are,” I admitted. “I really have very
+little idea what I am expected to do.”</p>
+
+<p>“Oh, but you must have some idea!” she remonstrated.
+“Why, haven’t you been appointed Historian
+of the Upper World?”</p>
+
+<p>“Yes, that is so,” I murmured.</p>
+
+<p>“Then you must set out at once upon your duties.
+In work such as yours, no record will be taken of
+the hours you employ, but you have a moral obligation
+to work not less than two hours a day.”</p>
+
+<p>“That doesn’t seem excessive,” I stated, with a
+smile.</p>
+
+<p>“Yes, but remember you have also an obligation to
+do some work on your own account for the State. And
+things won’t be any easier, if, as you say, you will
+combine your assigned and chosen work.”</p>
+
+<p>“The real problem,” I acknowledge hesitatingly, “is
+that I don’t know the language well enough to write
+a history.”</p>
+
+<p>Aelios frowned disapprovingly. “Oh, but you have
+already a good speaking command of Atlantean,” she
+pointed out. “And with practice you should be able
+to write passably well. Meanwhile I’d advise you to
+go to the government library, and read up all you
+can to familiarize yourself with our language—and
+with our life.”</p>
+
+<p>I thanked Aelios for the suggestion, and promised
+to visit the library at the first opportunity.</p>
+
+<p>“But don’t forget that mere working and studying
+won’t be enough,” she continued. “I hope you’ll make
+friends of many of our people, and participate in our
+intellectual contests and recreations. You might even
+join one of the political parties.”</p>
+
+<p>“Political parties?” I repeated. “I didn’t know
+there were any parties in Atlantis.”</p>
+
+<p>“Oh, yes, of course there are,” she quickly returned.
+“There are always several parties to present their
+opinions at the Hall of Public Enlightenment.”</p>
+
+<p>“What parties are those?” I inquired.</p>
+
+<p>“Well, let’s see,” she enumerated, reflectively.
+“First of all, there’s the Party of Submergence, so-called
+because it was founded by Agripides and has
+been the ruling group ever since the Good Destruction.
+Then there is the Industrial Reform Party, which
+contends that all machines and in particular intra-atomic
+engines are incongruous in Atlantis and should
+be reduced to a minimum far below the present number.
+Then, again, there is the Party of Artistic
+Emancipation, which is really literary rather than
+political, and appeals for freedom in art. Also, there
+is the Party of Birth Extension, which maintains that
+the government should relax its restrictions on population.
+And, finally, enlarging the principles of the
+Birth Extension Party, there is the Party of Emergence,
+which is the smallest of them all and has always
+been highly unpopular if not actually despised, since
+it holds that we should renounce the principles of
+Agripides, enter into communication with the upper
+world, and send our excess population to live above
+seas.”</p>
+
+<p>“That sounds quite interesting,” I commented, for
+the Party of Emergence seemed to me to be the most
+understandable of the group. “But you say this last
+party has never had much success?”</p>
+
+<p>“Fortunately not. Its members have always been
+looked down upon as anti-social agitators, for they
+have transgressed against that fundamental principle,
+‘Atlantis for the Atlanteans.’ Few self-respecting citizens
+have ever lent them support, and they have never
+been powerful enough to carry any of their proposals.”</p>
+
+<p>“Too bad,” I found myself remarking, with unguarded
+frankness; and the shocked expression on
+Aelios’ face showed me how I had erred.</p>
+
+<p>“At any rate, now that you know something about
+the parties, you will be better able to choose among
+them,” she concluded.</p>
+
+<p>I assured her that I would choose as best I could.</p>
+
+<p>“If there’s ever anything you’re in doubt about,”
+she urged, “don’t be afraid to ask me. I know that
+things aren’t easy here for you, a stranger from a
+strange land, and I’d like to help if I could.”</p>
+
+<p>I thanked her fervently, and declared that I should
+not hesitate to consult her should occasion arise. And
+secretly I was determined that the occasion should
+arise.</p>
+
+<p>“I’m glad to hear you say that,” she returned. And
+her eyes shone with a bright light, and her lips
+quivered sympathetically, and her whole face radiated
+kindliness and warmth.</p>
+
+<p>But at this juncture she saw fit to give the interview
+an impersonal turn. “See, over there!” she exclaimed,
+pointing through a break in the dense green
+foliage. “Those are the towers of Archeon!”</p>
+
+<p>I looked eagerly, and far across the plain I beheld
+a minute glittering spire, more than half obscured by
+the intervening array of tinted columns—the first
+sign of that city which I was this day to enter, and
+where I was to make my home, and seek the fulfillment
+of my love, and undertake my duties as a citizen
+of the Sunken World.</p>
+
+<hr class="tb">
+
+<figure class="figcenter illowe32_2500" id="img345">
+ <img class="w100" src="images/img345.jpg" alt="">
+ <figcaption>
+ &thinsp;... By degrees it lengthened until it seemed a long jet of water
+shot horizontally out of some colossal hose. Intensely white, with the
+whiteness of foam and edges blurred with spray, it went hurtling with
+the impetuosity and swiftness of an arrow from the nozzle of a gigantic
+pipe, a plunging outward hundreds of yards in a graceful parabola and
+giving rise to the River.
+ </figcaption>
+</figure>
+
+
+
+
+<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop"><div class="chapter"><h2 class="nobreak" id="CHAPTER_XXIII">CHAPTER XXIII
+<br>
+Xanocles</h2></div>
+
+
+<p>As an accredited citizen of Atlantis, I was assigned
+to permanent lodgings immediately after
+returning to Archeon. The housing representative
+of the Atlantean government (the only substitute
+in the Sunken World for our “realtors”) accompanied
+me on a leisurely tour of the city, allowing me my
+choice of not less than fifteen or twenty apartments.
+The task of selection was by no means easy, not because
+it was hard to secure suitable quarters but
+because it was difficult to choose among so many desirable
+places. Never before had I realized how utterly
+superior the Atlantean homes were to our own—out
+of all the houses I visited, there was not one that was
+not separated by wide spaces from its neighbors, or
+that did not enjoy a full share of air and light, or
+that did not look comfortable and alluring. The grim
+and musty interiors of many of our own dwellings, the
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_347">[347]</span>furniture-littered rooms, the glaring bad taste of gilt
+and tinsel chairs and adornments, found no parallel
+among the Atlantean residences I visited. Instead,
+each apartment was so artlessly inviting that I might
+have claimed it at once as my home.</p>
+
+<p>The distinguishing feature of most of the Atlantean
+houses was a central court that reminded me of the
+dwellings of the ancient world. Usually the court was
+square or rectangular in shape, though in some instances
+it was hexagonal or round; and more often
+than not it was completely enclosed. Some of the
+courts were surrounded by stalwart columns, but the
+majority were plain. Some had walls of granite, some
+of marble, some of a peculiar bluish stone that I could
+not recognize; some were marked by spangled fountains,
+some by flower-gardens, some by swimming
+pools; and the most distinctive of all was arranged as
+an art gallery, with a dominating statue in the center
+and paintings hung at intervals along the sides.
+But whatever the particular contents of the court, it
+was certain to be accessible by four or five doors
+leading into the several apartments.</p>
+
+<p>After inspecting the various prospective lodgings, I
+finally decided in favor of a little three-room suite
+(three rooms, that is, in addition to the sleeping chamber
+on the roof) which looked out over a tree-lined
+expanse toward the sapphire dome of the Hall of
+Public Enlightenment. I was urged to take these
+quarters largely because of the fascination of the
+frieze-lined adjourning court, whose finely modelled
+images of gods and nymphs and satyrs offered me a
+prospect of fruitful study. But I was also captivated
+by the rooms themselves, which gave a bizarre effect
+with their walls decked with seaweed tapestries, and
+which seemed at once like a home and a temple with
+their high vaulted ceilings, their arching doorways and
+great elliptical windows, and their removable partitions
+capable of transforming the entire apartment into
+a single good-sized hall.</p>
+
+<hr class="tb">
+
+<p>It was fortunate perhaps that I chose these particular
+lodgings, for otherwise I might never have
+known Xanocles. Xanocles was to be my one intimate
+among all the men of Atlantis. It so happened that he—that
+fiery spirit, audacious thinker, and trustworthy
+friend—had chosen his abode in the same building;
+and it also happened (since fate works in inscrutable
+ways even in Atlantis) that he and I were early thrown
+together. It was, indeed, on the very day after my
+return to Archeon that Xanocles and I met. I had
+just settled in my new home, and had gone out into
+the court for my first close inspection of its mural
+decorations, when a door across from me slid open
+and a tall, white-clad figure emerged. A single glance
+would have told me that the stranger was exceptional,
+and a single glance perhaps told him that I was exceptional
+in Atlantis: for he paused in startled surprise,
+and for an embarrassed instant we stood staring
+inquiringly at one another. In that first fleeting
+glimpse I had an impression of a powerful personality;
+a large head poised squarely over a pair of broad and
+capable shoulders; two vivid blue eyes deeply set beneath
+a massive brow; a beardless oval face dominated
+by flowing chestnut locks; classic features, with chin
+and nose consummately modelled. But I did not
+notice then what I was often to observe later: the
+ironic glitter in the alert eyes, the forceful and determined
+lines into which the face would habitually
+settle, the air of overflowing vigor tempered by an
+easy self-command. Judging from the smooth contours
+of the man’s face, I took him to be not over
+thirty years of age; and I was later much surprised
+to learn that he was well past forty (since in Atlantis
+people do not age so rapidly as on earth).</p>
+
+<p>“By Agripides! You must be one of those visitors
+from up above!” exclaimed the newcomer, recovering
+from his astonishment. And he approached me with
+a winning smile, and held out both hands by way of
+greeting. “My name is Xanocles. We seem to be
+neighbors, you and I. Perhaps we can get to know
+each other.”</p>
+
+<p>“I hope we shall,” I seconded, as I took his hands.
+“My name is Harkness. I’ve just finished my tour
+around Atlantis, and now I’m supposed to begin duty
+as a citizen.”</p>
+
+<p>“That’s quick work,” nodded Xanocles, approvingly.
+And then, after an instant’s pause, “So you’re the
+one they’ve appointed Historian of the Upper World?”</p>
+
+<p>I pleaded guilty to the accusation.</p>
+
+<p>“I knew it must be so,” explained my new acquaintance,
+“because only one of the immigrants has
+been admitted to citizenship. Of course, there will
+be others later on.”</p>
+
+<p>“Won’t you come in?” I invited, with a gesture
+toward my new apartments.</p>
+
+<p>Xanocles needed no second invitation. A minute
+later we were seated opposite one another on seaweed
+cushions in the little room that was to be my study.</p>
+
+<p>“It seems to me, Harkness,” he suggested, using
+my name as familiarly as though he had known me
+all my life, “we might as well be frank with one another
+from the beginning. At least, I might as well
+be frank with you. And I’d better start by warning
+you that you’ll not gain much from acquaintance with
+me. I’m none too popular.”</p>
+
+<p>“No?” I demanded, wondering vaguely what offense
+he had committed.</p>
+
+<p>“No,” he confessed. “I’m so very unpopular, in fact,
+that it may reflect upon you even to be seen in my
+company.”</p>
+
+<p>“But what is it that you’ve done?” I asked, thinking
+it strange that this attractive and able-looking man
+should be so disliked. “Surely, you haven’t blown up a
+building, or stolen some one’s jewels, or killed a
+man—”</p>
+
+<p>A frown of disgust passed across Xanocles’ face.
+“Such primitive forms of violence,” he reminded me,
+“are unknown in Atlantis. No, I haven’t stooped to
+anything so low. But I’ve done something bad enough
+in the eyes of the people.”</p>
+
+<p>“I’ll have to give it up,” said I, growing more
+puzzled each moment.</p>
+
+<p>“It shouldn’t be hard to guess—not if you know the
+ways of Atlantis,” he continued, gravely. “I’ve joined
+the Party of Emergence.”</p>
+
+<p>“The Party of Emergence?” I exclaimed, remembering
+what Aelios had told me of this minority group.</p>
+
+<p>“I not only joined the party,” he acknowledged, completing
+the indictment, “but I’ve let them elect me one
+of their Debating Delegates.”</p>
+
+<p>“But I don’t exactly understand—” I admitted, hesitatingly.</p>
+
+<p>“You would understand if you knew more about
+Atlantis. Every people has to have its pet aversion, I
+suppose, and our pet aversion down here is the
+Emergence Party. That’s because it opposes the principles
+of the one hundred per cent Atlanteans.”</p>
+
+<p>“But just what is the Emergence Party?” I inquired,
+still in doubt as to the tenets of this detested faction.
+“Is it anything so terrible?”</p>
+
+<p>“That all depends upon the point of view,” declared
+Xanocles, enigmatically.</p>
+
+<p>He paused long enough to give me an instant’s
+scrutiny with keen and quizzical eyes. “I am not sure
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_348">[348]</span>that you would understand,” he decided, speaking as
+much to himself as to me. “But the main thing is that
+we oppose the compulsory limitation of population.”</p>
+
+<p>“Compulsory limitation of population?” I repeated,
+wondering if I had heard him correctly.</p>
+
+<p>“Most certainly. You’ve heard, perhaps, that our
+population is limited by law to five hundred thousand.”</p>
+
+<p>“But that’s impossible!” I cried, incredulously.</p>
+
+<p>“Experience has proved quite the contrary,” he dissented.</p>
+
+<hr class="tb">
+
+<p>For a moment I did not reply. I merely sat staring
+at my companion, trying to fathom the secret
+hidden in those inscrutable grave eyes of his. And
+though he gave no sign of not being utterly truthful,
+I ended by giving expression to my scepticism.</p>
+
+<p>“What do you do with your extra inhabitants? Do
+they emigrate to the center of the earth? Or do you
+prefer to shoot them or drown them, or perhaps to
+asphyxiate them humanely?”</p>
+
+<p>“There are no extra inhabitants,” was the surprising
+reply. “Do you know nothing of the Milares Compulsory
+Population Law?”</p>
+
+<p>I was forced to confess my ignorance.</p>
+
+<p>“Then let me enlighten you,” volunteered Xanocles,
+with a tolerant smile. “First let me take you back
+a few thousand years, to the days just after the Submergence.
+At that time the population of Atlantis
+was several millions, and the swarms of our people
+were so dense that long hours of labor were necessary,
+living quarters were crowded and unsanitary, and
+there was little time for the creation or appreciation
+of beauty. This state of affairs endured for over a
+century, when, after much discussion, the Milares
+Compulsory Population Law was passed, and the citizenry
+was gradually reduced to its present satisfactory
+numbers.”</p>
+
+<p>“And what was the Milares Population Law?” I
+asked.</p>
+
+<p>“It is the law that is still the backbone of our life.
+According to Milares, a great social philosopher of
+the second century A. S., the most important of public
+questions is that of parentage. He maintained that
+the parents of each generation might either poison or
+uplift the next; and all of his numerous pamphlets
+and books bore the warning that persons congenitally
+deficient in mind or physique should not be permitted
+to breed, while those of the higher physical and intellectual
+qualities should be encouraged.</p>
+
+<p>“In pursuance of these views, Milares proposed a
+basic innovation in social customs; he recommended
+that the institution of marriage be dissevered from
+that of parenthood. In other words, while marriage—and
+likewise divorce—should be permitted to all that
+desired it, parenthood should become a subject of
+drastic state regulation: any young couple wishing,
+children must have their fitness examined by a carefully
+selected State board. Since effective methods of
+birth control were known, this system was wholly
+practicable, and, in fact, has proved—”</p>
+
+<p>“But what if the orders of the Board were disobeyed?”
+I interrupted. “Certainly, the unlawful newcomer
+couldn’t be punished.”</p>
+
+<p>“Certainly not. But a stigma would attach to the
+parents—the stain of illegitimacy.”</p>
+
+<p>“You mean that the parents would be considered illegitimate?”</p>
+
+<p>“Exactly. And the disgrace is so great that few
+persons have ever offended in that way. As a result,
+we have never at any time exceeded the prescribed
+population by more than ten or twelve thousands.”</p>
+
+<p>“Even so,” I contended, rather vaguely, “it seems
+to me that such a system would be altogether too arbitrary
+to succeed.”</p>
+
+<p>“Yet it has succeeded splendidly. The experience
+of nearly three thousand years has vindicated it beyond
+dispute. Do you think that, at the time of the
+Submergence our men and women enjoyed such perfection
+of physical beauty as today? Or do you imagine
+that the intellectual and artistic types were then predominant?
+Far from it! Thousands upon thousands
+were sickly and stunted in body; a myriad were imbecilic,
+weak-minded or insane. But thanks to the
+rigidity of the selection, these types have been entirely
+eliminated; and, owing largely to the same
+cause, the average human life has been lengthened
+from the pre-Submergence figure of sixty-five years to
+a hundred and twenty—which means that the man of
+ability has a whole century of mature service to render
+instead of a mere four, or five decades.”</p>
+
+<p>I had no choice except to admit that the results were
+marvelous. But at the same time I remembered a
+vital oversight in Xanocles’ recitation. “All this tells
+me nothing of the Party of Emergence,” I pointed out.
+“In fact, if the Milares Population Law has worked
+so successfully, I cannot understand why you should
+oppose it.”</p>
+
+<p>“It would not be strictly correct to say that we
+oppose it,” he explained. “We recognize its beneficent
+results, but we believe that the time has come to
+modify it. Not that we would increase the population
+of Atlantis beyond the half million mark, for that
+would be to impose an intolerable burden upon us all;
+but we hold that many deserving persons are being
+deprived of parenthood, and that many more children
+of the highest quality might be born. To furnish a
+simple illustration, the Board seems to believe it unwise
+to perpetuate the radical strains, and so rules
+with suspicious frequency against members of the
+Party of Emergence.”</p>
+
+<p>“Then precisely what is it that your party advocates?”
+I questioned.</p>
+
+<p>“Just what our name implies: to let our surplus
+population emerge into the upper world. That would
+be easily possible, for the submersible repair ships that
+range the ocean about the glass wall would be capable
+of conveying us above seas. Of course, there might
+be no possibility of a return, but a return would not
+be desirable: it would be enough to insure life for
+thousands of our unborn sons and daughters, and to
+remake the upper world by an infiltration of our superior
+blood and standards. Besides,”—here Xanocles
+hesitated perceptibly—“there is another reason.”</p>
+
+<p>“What is that?” I felt bound to inquire.</p>
+
+<p>Xanocles remained silent for a moment, staring abstractedly
+toward the romping fauns and mermaids on
+the seaweed tapestries of the opposite wall. Then
+slowly he resumed, “We hold—and in this we are violently
+combated by our friends of the Submergence
+Party—that there was one minor flaw in the plans
+of Agripides. In a thousand respects his projects
+were perfect; but we believe that in the thousandth
+and first he made an oversight—perhaps an unavoidable
+oversight. He did not leave room enough in Atlantis
+for adventure. Everything here is so well designed
+that there is little chance for daring courage,
+the unknown—little chance for sheer primitive rashness
+and hardihood. Our games and recreations, our
+art, our political contests, of course consume much of
+our surplus energy; but, after all, we are the children
+of savage ancestors, and among our young there
+is a craving for keener experience. And so we of
+the Emergence Party favor the increase of population,
+so that those who wish may enjoy the greatest adventure
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_349">[349]</span>of all—may launch their vessels toward unknown
+worlds!”</p>
+
+<p>“You would find that adventure well worth taking,”
+I commented.</p>
+
+<p>“Then you—you perhaps agree with the Party of
+Emergence?” cried Xanocles, rising and coming toward
+me enthusiastically.</p>
+
+<p>“Perhaps I do,” I admitted, also rising, and taking
+his extended hands. And as I felt his hearty clasp, it
+seemed to me that I had not only gained a friend but
+found my political allegiance.</p>
+
+
+
+
+<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop"><div class="chapter"><h2 class="nobreak" id="CHAPTER_XXIV">CHAPTER XXIV
+<br>
+What the Books Revealed</h2></div>
+
+
+<p>Amid all the excitement of my return to Archeon,
+my establishment in new quarters and my meeting
+with Xanocles, I had not forgotten Aelios’
+advice to visit the library at the first opportunity.
+Nor had I forgotten my official duties as Historian
+of the Upper World, nor the necessity for acquiring
+more, explicit knowledge of undersea customs before
+I could hope to interpret my own country to the Atlanteans.
+Hence I was determined to accomplish a
+double object: to prepare myself for my prescribed
+work and at the same time to gratify my curiosity by
+an extensive course of reading.</p>
+
+<p>As soon as I was fully settled in my new apartment,
+I set out for the main government library—and with
+highly interesting and even startling results. I found
+the building without difficulty: a many-domed edifice
+of granite and white chalcedony, located in a large
+flower-bordered square near the center of town. Had
+I not been able to identify it from the descriptions, I
+might have recognized it by the streams of people
+constantly filing in and out, giving me the feeling
+that it was the business heart of the city.</p>
+
+<p>Yet my first impressions of the library were bewildering
+in the extreme. Not only was the building one
+of the largest I had seen (covering not less than five
+or six acres) but the volumes it harbored were amazing
+in their profusion and variety. My first surprise
+was at the discovery that there were no railings,
+fences or locked doors, as in all other libraries I had
+known. Here the visitor was admitted without question
+to every room and corridor; my second surprise—and
+a far greater one—was caused by the queer
+arrangement of the books. For the volumes were catalogued
+and stocked, not alphabetically, but chronologically;
+there was a gallery reserved for each century
+of Atlantean history, down to the seventh century
+B. S.; and within the galleries, the books were arranged
+by authors and subjects in a way that impressed
+me as utterly novel. In a niche among the
+books, for example, one would observe the bust of a
+stern-browed, bearded man; and, coming close, one
+would note that this was the poet Sargos; and just
+below the bust one would find the complete collection
+of the poet’s works, as well as the commentaries upon
+them. Or, in another corner of the room, one would
+pause to admire the painting of a crowded ancient
+seaport; and the inscription below the painting would
+tell one that this was the vanished maritime city of
+Therion; and just beneath this inscription would be
+the books wherein Therion was pictured and discussed.</p>
+
+<p>In a way, the building reminded me of a museum
+as much as of a library, for, in addition to the paintings
+and statues, each gallery was featured by furniture,
+rugs, vases, tapestries and decorations that corresponded
+with the original date of the books. The
+effect of oddity was enhanced by the fact that the
+volumes themselves, while in many cases modern reprints,
+were not infrequently bound in the style of
+their first editions; and the total impression was most
+curious and interesting, considering the contrasting
+sizes and the numberless shades and colors of the
+books, and the various grades of silk, parchment and
+artificial leather in which they were attired.</p>
+
+<p>Yet the appearance of the books was the least noteworthy
+fact about them. Their sheer abundance was a
+source of unceasing astonishment to me—it seemed as
+if every era in Atlantean history had been a literary
+one. As nearly as I could determine, there had been
+an average of several hundred books a year which had
+been thought worthy of preservation—and the high
+period of productivity had already endured for twenty-five
+centuries! Nor were the favored works merely
+stored up in dusty shelves where they might remain
+forever unnoticed—every book of the scores which I
+opened had been well thumbed, and the crowds constantly
+browsing along the alcoves and aisles gave evidence
+that literary interest was not purely a thing of
+the past.</p>
+
+<p>It was not long before I myself felt inclined to
+emulate those enthusiasts. Seated in company with
+twenty or thirty Atlanteans before the long marble
+table that adorned the most modern of the galleries,
+I began to taste the contents of several books I had
+selected at random; and so delightful did they prove,
+that it was four or five hours before I had any thought
+of leaving.</p>
+
+<hr class="tb">
+
+<p>While all the books which I inspected proved richly
+diverting, the one that interested me most
+was a little volume entitled “Social Life in the Thirty-first
+Century.” When I recall today the unusual size
+of the type and the extreme simplicity of the style, I
+feel sure that the book was designed for an immature
+audience; but this fact did not then occur to me, and
+I found the work admirably suited to my needs.
+Questions that had been perplexing me ever since my
+arrival in Atlantis were now explained, in a manner
+that dispersed all doubts; and I found myself possessed
+of a clearer conception than ever before of
+Atlantean ideas and institutions.</p>
+
+<p>I had been wondering, for example, about the statue-like
+palace wherein Rawson and I had been imprisoned;
+I was now informed that this, “The Temple of the
+Stars,” was among the oldest buildings in Atlantis,
+having been erected just before the Submergence so
+that the people might bring back to mind at will the
+aspect of the skies. I had been wondering, likewise,
+about the “Hall of Public Enlightenment,” that amber-hued
+and sapphire theatre in which I had lately witnessed
+several debates; I now read that such a building
+had been erected centuries before in each of the
+Atlantean cities as a place of popular assemblage, a
+sort of forum, wherein the people might decide upon
+public questions; and I also learned that any citizen
+might attend the meetings there, that any might take
+part in the discussions, and that it was at such popular
+gatherings that the few laws of the country were
+proposed and the most important problems weighed and
+settled.</p>
+
+<p>The discussion of the Halls of Public Enlightenment
+naturally paved the way for a description of the political
+system and government of the Sunken World.
+“The State of Atlantis,” I read, “is neither a monarchy,
+an oligarchy, nor a republic. It is a Commonality,
+which means that all things are possessed in
+common by the people and all activities shared among
+them. At the head of the Atlantean State is the High
+Chief Adviser, whose principle duty is by way of counseling
+the people, but who decides certain specified
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_350">[350]</span>minor questions confronting the Atlantean State and
+is empowered to assume dictatorial authority in case
+of a national crisis (although such a crisis has never
+occurred since the riots of the second century A. S.,
+following the passage of the Milares Compulsory Population
+Law).</p>
+
+<p>“Like all the other officials of Atlantis, the High
+Chief Adviser assumes his position neither by appointment
+nor by heredity nor by election, but by Automatic
+Selection; or, in other words, he has taken
+office after defeating all rivals in a series of debates
+and rigorous competitive examinations. His term of
+office is indefinite, but every three years he is expected
+to prove his fitness by engaging in contests with
+qualified aspirants for the Advisorship; and unless he
+can still outdo all opponents, a new chief executive
+is installed.”</p>
+
+<p>It would have seemed to me that such a system
+would have detracted from the dignity of the High
+Chief Adviser; but the book informed me that, on
+the contrary, it added to his dignity, since he was
+assured of holding office on a basis of merit only. In
+fact, he was bound to keep fit and even to improve
+himself while in office; and most High Chief Advisers
+did actually remain so well qualified that they
+stayed in power for an average term of thirty years.
+Indeed, Icenocles (the incumbent at the time of the
+publication of the book) had already ruled for forty-five
+years, and now, at the mature age of one hundred
+and seven, he still regularly put all competitors to
+shame.</p>
+
+<hr class="tb">
+
+<p>All this, of course, told me nothing about Atlantean
+law-making, law enforcement and the administration
+of justice. Therefore I eagerly read on,
+and found many of my questions speedily answered.
+To my astonishment, I learned that there was no such
+thing as a legislature or a law-making group in Atlantis!—and
+yet such bodies were not unknown to the
+native political theory. “Ancient experience has taught
+us,” said the book, “that representative government
+usually represents only some particular faction. And
+in a community whose members are few and all of
+whose citizens are intelligent, there is no necessity
+for delegated authority. Local statutes and ordinances
+were abolished in Atlantis at the time of the Submergence;
+and the few national laws are proposed in
+any of the cities in the Hall of Public Enlightenment.
+Having been debated and approved by an assemblage
+of a hundred citizens or more, the measure is submitted
+to a referendum of all the Atlanteans after
+the lapse of thirty days—and a majority vote will
+suffice for its passage.</p>
+
+<p>“At the head of each city is a Local Adviser,
+selected in the same manner as the High Chief Adviser;
+and, aided by a corps of from five to fifteen
+assistants also chosen competitively, he decides those
+questions not settled in the popular assemblies,—questions
+such as the amount of energy to be devoted
+to the erection of new buildings, the time and
+nature of local festivals, the regulation of local hygienic
+problems, the number of public physicians required
+to attend the ill and aged, and a dozen other
+matters of practical and artistic concern. Equally
+important theoretically, though in actual practice far
+less so, is the court of eleven judges which presides
+in each town, settling all disputes among citizens and
+reprimanding the law-breakers. No doubt there were
+frequently such persons as law-breakers three thousand
+years ago, when these courts were planned, but today
+such offenders are virtually unknown, for the only
+crimes are those of impulse and passion, and these
+are exceedingly rare—fortunately, the congenital
+criminals have been wiped out along with lunatics and
+morons by our rigorous birth selection. Occasionally,
+indeed, some diseased person will break some unwritten
+rule of society, such as that against trapping or
+slaying fishes or small animals; but the government
+hospitals care for such unfortunates, just as they care
+for the criminals of impulse, and not infrequently
+effect a cure. As for disputes among individuals, they
+are as obsolete as embezzlement or highway robbery,
+for now that the ownership of property has been
+abolished, what is there left to quarrel about? And
+so for the most part our courts endure somewhat as
+the appendix endures in the human body—mere anachronistic
+reminders of an age that is no more.”</p>
+
+<p>At a single sitting I read my book from cover to
+cover. Even aside from what I have already mentioned,
+the facts that it told me were innumerable
+and highly varied: how the great golden lamps of Atlantis
+were electrically lighted and were switched on
+and off at specified intervals by country-wide clockwork;
+how all Atlanteans, old and young, ill and
+healthy, were cared for by the State, so that no man
+was weighed down with dependents; how disease had
+been almost wiped out, since all the commoner noxious
+germs had been conquered; how religion in the organized
+sense had ceased to exist, for the reason that
+each man was expected to arrive at his own philosophy;
+how the temples that littered the country were without
+theological meaning, but were sanctuaries of beauty
+whereto any one might come at any time to worship
+amid the solitude of his own thoughts; how education
+was one of the prime pursuits of the people, and
+was participated in by all from childhood to old age,
+but was never undertaken by the mob method popular
+in the upper world.</p>
+
+<p>From the few pages that the author of the “Social
+Life” devoted to the latter subject, I feel sure that the
+Atlanteans would have been horrified at our system of
+herding forty or fifty children together in subjection
+to a glowering pedagogue: their theory was that personal
+and friendly contact with the teacher was the
+important thing, and so their boys and girls were
+taught in small groups, and never for many hours a
+day, nor with more than a minimum of restraint upon
+their natural spirits, nor in a specified and unvarying
+place, for as often as not their school-room was a
+marble colonnade or the court of a temple or even
+the open fields. And, in the same way, the higher
+education among the Atlanteans (except in the case of
+scientific work requiring laboratory training) was
+much less formal than among us. There were no
+such things as universities or university degrees, but
+men and women of recognized wisdom and learning
+were chosen to commune with the young and discuss
+with them the problems of life, much as Socrates did
+when he presided among his disciples; and these
+“Guardians of the Mind,” as they were called, would
+counsel and direct their young charges, and guide them
+in that reading which constituted their primary source
+of information.</p>
+
+
+
+
+<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop"><div class="chapter"><h2 class="nobreak" id="CHAPTER_XXV">CHAPTER XXV
+<br>
+Duties and Pastimes</h2></div>
+
+
+<p>It is from my first visit to the library that I date
+my real initiation into the affairs of Atlantis.
+From that time forth I was no longer a stranger
+in an unknown world; I became involved in such a
+round of activities that I began to feel almost at home.
+For it was my good fortune to have plenty to do, far
+more to do, in fact, than the average Atlantean; and
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_351">[351]</span>with the demands of the Sunken World calling me on
+the one hand, and my old companions of the X-111
+drawing me on the other, I did not have far to seek
+for an interest in life.</p>
+
+<p>First of all, of course, I was applying myself to my
+“History of the Upper World.” It took me a month to
+plan the book, though meanwhile I devoted hours a
+day to improving my knowledge of the Atlantean language
+and institutions. And when finally I had completed
+my preliminary outline it did not satisfy me
+entirely, and yet seemed adequate as a working basis.
+The introductory section of the book—necessarily a
+lengthy affair—was to be devoted to a description of
+the modern world, to the various nations, their customs,
+languages, social systems, scientific advances and
+wars; and having begun with this grand resume of
+modern achievement, I intended to show the steps by
+which that achievement had been consummated, and
+to picture in general the course of those social fluctuations,
+those invasions, battles, slave-raids, civil conflicts,
+religious persecutions, crusades, economic revolutions,
+industrial tumults and international blood-feuds
+that have brought civilisation to its present proud
+estate.</p>
+
+<p>But while I was planning my book, my thoughts
+were frequently on more personal subjects. And, having
+completed the outline, I could not forget a certain
+invitation made me by the most fascinating woman
+in Atlantis, but wasted no time about seeking her advice
+and approval.</p>
+
+<p>Late one afternoon, when I knew that her tutoring
+would be over for the day, I paid my second visit to
+her home. I went just a little hesitatingly, I remember,
+yet not without some justifiable hope, for our
+interview was to begin most auspiciously. It was
+Aelios herself that came to the door in response to
+my knock; and it was Aelios that escorted me into
+the house, with cordial greetings and delighted smiles
+that reaffirmed my impression of her unrivaled merits.</p>
+
+<p>“Well, my friend, I thought you would be coming,”
+said she, simply, as we took seats side by side on the
+seaweed sofa we had occupied on my first visit.</p>
+
+<p>“But what made you think that?” I questioned.</p>
+
+<p>“Why, didn’t you say you would come?” she returned,
+in unfeigned surprise. “You’re undertaking a
+difficult task, you know—to write a book in a strange
+language. Isn’t it only natural to want advice?”</p>
+
+<p>“It is, indeed,” I confessed, and should have liked to
+add, “when I can have such a charming adviser.”</p>
+
+<p>“I suppose you’ve been working hard,” she continued,
+evidently unaware of what was in my thoughts.
+“And, of course, you’ve brought something with you
+to show me.”</p>
+
+<p>“Yes, I have brought something,” I admitted; and,
+there being no choice, I forthwith unfolded the paper
+that contained my plans for the history.</p>
+
+<p>For several minutes she gazed at it intently, her
+features furrowed with thought, while eagerly I
+awaited her verdict.</p>
+
+<p>“This is going to be very interesting,” she at length
+decided. “As far as I can see, you’ve covered most
+of the important points. You will find it easier than
+I thought to write in our language—your beginning is
+most promising. Of course, you do make some errors
+of style....” And she proceeded to point out my
+mistakes, in such a manner that I felt certain never
+to repeat them.</p>
+
+<p>For possibly an hour—or two—we discussed my outline,
+though all the while I was conscious that there
+was something in Atlantis far more interesting to me
+than my book.</p>
+
+<p>I was still aware of that fact, when, at last, feeling
+that it was growing late, I arose reluctantly to leave.
+As she took my hand, Aelios flashed upon me her
+most genial smile, and requested, “Come again, my
+friend. Perhaps I’ll be able to help you some more.
+Our doors are always open, you know.”</p>
+
+<p>“Well, if it wouldn’t be asking too much of you,”
+I started to reply, fumbling for words, while the
+blood rushed all at once to my head.</p>
+
+<p>“It will be a pleasure. And besides,”—here she hesitated
+momentarily, and her fingers absently toyed
+with the folds of her gown—“besides, if I help you
+with your book, I will also be helping the State.”</p>
+
+<p>“Yes, possibly that’s true,” I conceded. And so
+what could I do but agree to give Aelios a further
+opportunity to help the State?</p>
+
+<p>But if I based any glamorous hopes upon her evident
+friendliness, I was building without knowledge of my
+foundations. Not long after my visit to her, a chance
+conversation showed me how far I was from that goal
+which my more sanguine fancies pictured.</p>
+
+<hr class="tb">
+
+<p>It was Xanocles that unwittingly made me see the
+difficulties. During one of our numerous little
+talks, he touched casually upon the marriage system
+of Atlantis. “The Milares Compulsory Population
+Law,” he chanced to inform me, “is perhaps not the
+only reason for the present superiority of the Atlantean
+stock. Another factor is what I may call the
+marital selection. This is regulated primarily by custom
+and is almost exclusively in the hands of the
+women, yet is so rigid that an inferior man can hardly
+find a mate—indeed, a superior woman would be disgraced
+by linking herself to a weakling.”</p>
+
+<p>“But just what do you mean by a weakling?” I inquired.</p>
+
+<p>Xanocles looked at me in surprise. “A weakling, of
+course, is one with nothing to give to society. A
+great poet, for example, could never be thought of as a
+weakling; nor a competent painter, nor philosopher, nor
+musician, nor biologist. But the man whose contributions
+show no particular skill or individuality is regarded
+as a weakling, no matter what his pursuit.
+Naturally, he is not condemned so long as he does his
+best; but he is not regarded as a fit subject for marriage
+except with another weakling—and, needless to
+say, weaklings are not permitted to propagate.”</p>
+
+<p>If Xanocles noticed that I was moody and silent
+for the rest of the day, the reason would not have
+been hard to find. I do not believe that, in my own
+world, I had ever suffered from what is known as an
+inferiority complex; but among the Atlanteans, with
+their higher standards, mere honesty demanded that I
+question my own qualifications. And what, I wondered,
+had I to offer to a woman such as Aelios?
+Would not my meagre attainments appear childish and
+unattractive to her? Even if I finished my “History
+of the Upper World,” would it not be a second-rate
+affair, altogether incapable of winning her admiration?
+And would I not, by comparison with the natives,
+be considered a weakling, a man whom Aelios
+could not marry without incurring disgrace?</p>
+
+<p>For days and weeks I was harassed by such
+thoughts; and it was to be long before I had wholly
+recovered. Meanwhile, however, I was partially consoled
+by the companionship of Xanocles. The friendship
+begun at our first meeting, was strengthening
+and solidifying in the course of the months; the proximity
+of our lodgings rendered it easy for us to see
+one another, but there also seemed to be a certain
+proximity of mind, which made each of us take pleasure
+in the company of the other; and in spite of the
+gulf of race, training and experience, we found that
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_352">[352]</span>we actually had more in common than many persons
+who have spent all their lives in the same home. And
+so he would often seek me out, and we would spend
+hours exchanging ideas in the dim seclusion of my
+rooms; and often I would seek him out, and we would
+hold friendly debate in the quiet of his rooms; and
+not infrequently we might have been seen strolling
+arm in arm about the city, while I pictured to him
+the wonders and vastness of the upper world, or while
+he in his turn regaled me with colorful reminiscences,
+and told how he was employed by the State as a
+binder and designer of books, but how he spent his
+spare time in writing economic and philosophical treatises
+or delivering lectures in favor of the Emergence.</p>
+
+<p>It was under the pilotage of Xanocles that I was
+introduced to the social life of Atlantis. The Atlanteans
+did not spend all their time in grave and serious
+pursuits, as I had at first imagined; they did not devote
+themselves to art until it palled upon them, or
+seek for beauty until it became blurred and illusory;
+but they knew how to vary their lives and make them
+symmetrical, and they had quite as much time for
+laughter and recreation as for earnest endeavor and
+sober thought. Indeed, they proved to be an unusually
+sociable people; and after I had entered with
+Xanocles into the rare spirit of their life and pastimes,
+I was forced to conclude that a prime reason
+for the success of Atlantean society was the sane
+balance it preserved, and the fact that its more ideal
+aims were tempered by a recognition and a measured
+encouragement of all the normal inclinations of man.</p>
+
+<hr class="tb">
+
+<p>For sheer range and variety, the Atlantean pastimes
+excelled those of any other people I had
+ever encountered. To begin with the simplest first,
+there were athletic games, races and competitions that
+might have been popular even in the upper world;
+and on the outskirts of Archeon were fields where the
+young and even the middle-aged gathered in crowds,
+testing their prowess by boxing and wrestling, by
+hurling round, flat objects like the ancient discus, by
+sprinting along specified race-courses, by engaging in
+a sort of ball game remotely like tennis, or by participating
+in that more popular contest known as “sortos,”
+which reminded me of baseball except for the fact that
+it did not require so many players. I was surprised
+to observe that the Atlanteans could enter into these
+sports with hot enthusiasm; but I also noted that they
+could view their athletics with sanity, and were interested
+in their games only while actually engaged in
+them, and did not come forth in throngs as mere onlookers,
+nor waste time discussing the contests beforehand
+or after they were over, nor prostitute their
+spirit to a professional or commercial outlook.</p>
+
+<p>Not less popular than the athletics—in fact, probably
+much more popular—were the dances that featured
+prominently in Atlantean life. These were of a
+hundred styles and varieties, from the ethereal butterfly
+movements of trained women, such as Aelios, to
+the tripping and capering of children keeping time
+spontaneously to the rhythm of a song. Leaving out
+of account the dances for which unusual skill was
+necessary, the most interesting to my mind were those
+held on the polished floors of the temples, where as
+many as a hundred men and women would gather, all
+swaying synchronously to the subdued beat of the
+music, some in couples holding hands and some singly,
+but all lightly passing back and forth with bird-like
+co-ordinated movements, until as one watched, one lost
+sight of individuals and thought of them all only as
+the parts of some exquisite, ever-varying whole.</p>
+
+<p>It was not surprising to me to observe that the Atlantean
+love of the dance was matched by an equal
+taste for music. Having no technical musical knowledge,
+I cannot comment upon the Atlantean development
+of the art, except to say that its cultivation was
+widespread, that public concerts were held almost daily
+in the halls of Archeon, and that invariably their effect
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_353">[353]</span>upon me was pleasing beyond anything I had ever
+heard on earth. Perhaps it was that the Atlantean
+music possessed in high degree the power of awakening
+ecstasy and visions; perhaps it was that its restrained
+melancholy and plaintive rapture were as keys,
+that unlocked a universe beyond the universe of sense,
+and brought the time-bound spirit into touch with the
+timeless; but, at all events, it possessed a ravishing
+power reminding me of the most consummate violin
+performances, and yet surpassing even the violin in
+the almost complete severance it effected between
+body and soul.</p>
+
+<p>Much the same may be said of the drama in Atlantis—a
+drama almost as popular as the music, and
+built like the music upon that beauty which reaches
+beyond time and space. The prose drama seems never
+to have been introduced; poetry, as the natural vehicle
+for ecstatic expression, was evidently regarded as the
+inevitable substance of all plays; and the playwrights
+were all in a tradition that might have appealed to
+Sophocles and Euripides, although they had never
+heard of those master dramatists. Indeed, Atlantis
+had a score of dramatic writers who in my judgment
+were in no way inferior to any produced by classical
+Greece; and the best works of these authors, staged
+with picturesque simplicity and presented by actors of
+power, afforded me some of the most absorbing hours
+I passed during all my years in Atlantis.</p>
+
+<p>But if delighted by such performances, I was not
+less pleased to note that dramatics flourished also on
+a small scale. In any little social gathering one of
+the most popular diversions would be the improvisation
+and acting of short plays; and the proficiency of
+the Atlanteans in this game seemed almost incredible
+to me, for the actors would not only originate their
+own little dramas, but would speak their impromptu
+lines with feeling and beauty; and so deeply was the
+spirit of poetry engrained that long fluent passages
+of exceptional verse would sometimes be delivered
+spontaneously.</p>
+
+<p>Beyond these dramatic exhibitions, the chief private
+pastime of the Atlanteans was in the art of discussion.
+To say that discussion was an art is not to
+exaggerate; it was believed that the mark of the cultured
+man was his ability to express himself intelligently;
+and themes for consideration in an Atlantean
+drawing room varied from the latest poetry and the
+latest music to the nature of the human personality
+and the ultimate meaning of life. To the self-respecting
+citizen, it would have been an insult to
+suggest that he avoid the boredom of conversation by
+games of dominoes or cards; and it would have seemed
+ludicrous to attempt to gossip concerning one’s food or
+clothes, one’s athletic prowess, one’s neighbor’s idiosyncrasies
+or bad manners, or any of those hundred
+and one subjects that might have proved diverting in
+upper world conversation.</p>
+
+<hr class="tb">
+
+<p>While Xanocles was introducing me to the social
+life of Atlantis, much of my time was being
+taken up by social life of a different type. Now that
+I had been elevated to the dignity of Atlantean citizenship,
+I could not forget that I had thirty-eight comrades
+who aspired to a similar honor. I saw fully as
+much of my former shipmates as before; indeed, I
+saw some of them more than ever, and in particular
+Captain Gavison, who would frequently visit me to
+exchange reminiscences; and I rubbed shoulders with
+the whole crew at the regular bi-weekly meetings of
+the Upper World Club, which were now held in my
+apartment.</p>
+
+<p>These meetings were sometimes exciting affairs, perhaps
+because there was little else in Atlantis which
+offered the possibility of excitement. Looking back
+after the lapse of years, it is not easy for me to
+recall just what there was to be agitated about; but
+it is certain that we would be agitated indeed, and
+that there would be fiery debates and discussions,
+which occasionally became so heated that President
+Gavison would rap and rap with the bit of stone that
+served him as gavel, raising his voice until he almost
+shouted and the sheer awe of his presence would restore
+order. As nearly as I can remember, most of
+the disputes were due to conflicting opinions of Atlantis;
+for frequently one of the club members would
+denounce the Sunken World in the most picturesque
+terms at his disposal; and immediately some champion
+of Atlantis would spring to his feet in disagreement,
+and the debate would wax fast and furious,
+most of the club taking a part, until the imperious
+voice of the President would put an end to the contest.</p>
+
+<p>Sometimes, however, the altercation would be over
+some proposal for improving our status in Atlantis.
+Many and curious were the views as to the drawbacks
+of our lot; and one of our members would be
+likely to suggest that we attempt the construction of
+a motor boat or of an automobile; and another would
+be convinced that a prime shortcoming of Atlantis
+was the absence of the phonograph or of motion pictures;
+and many would toy fondly with the idea of
+escape, and would advocate wild and wholly impractical
+schemes that would foment a tumult in the club.
+As time went by, it became increasingly apparent that
+the majority would never be reconciled to Atlantis;
+they felt estranged by its art, overwhelmed by its
+majesty, irritated by its suave peacefulness; and while
+they still studied the native language for several hours
+a day, and at times derived much satisfaction from
+being allowed a part in the native pastimes and athletics,
+yet on the whole they felt out of place in an
+atmosphere not adapted to them, and were coming to
+look upon the upper world as a sort of lost Elysium.</p>
+
+<hr class="tb">
+
+<figure class="figcenter illowe33_3750" id="img352">
+ <img class="w100" src="images/img352.jpg" alt="">
+ <figcaption>
+ That this noise was somehow connected with the quickening wind was
+apparent from the first; and the relationship became evident when the
+path swerved abruptly away from the wall and I glanced back, to behold
+a series of queer-looking machines supported on stone pedestals high up
+against the glass. It would be impossible to say just what the machines
+were like&thinsp;... so swiftly were they rotating that they formed each a gray
+blur through which the green of the wall was vaguely discernible.
+ </figcaption>
+</figure>
+
+
+
+
+<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop"><div class="chapter"><h2 class="nobreak" id="CHAPTER_XXVI">CHAPTER XXVI
+<br>
+Curiosities, Freaks and Monstrosities</h2></div>
+
+
+<p>Even though my companions felt constantly ill at
+ease in Atlantis, yet as the weeks went by they
+were becoming more proficient in the use of the
+native tongue and were taking their places in the life
+of the Sunken World. One by one they were being
+summoned, as I had been summoned, before the Committee
+on Selective Assignments; and each in turn was
+ordered to perform some specified daily work after
+taking the usual thirty days’ tour around Atlantis.</p>
+
+<p>Captain Gavison, as one of the most adept of all
+in mastering the language, was one of the first to be
+graduated into citizenship. But his advancement
+brought him no great pleasure, since his prescribed
+duty was to spend two and a half hours daily in a
+bureau engaged in compiling statistics of population
+and industry; and his chosen work for the State,
+which was to write a comparison of Atlantean and
+upper world civilization, gave him no end of trouble
+owing not only to linguistic difficulties but to his lack
+of training in authorship.</p>
+
+<p>Meanwhile Stranahan and Rawson had also matriculated
+into citizenship; but their assigned work differed
+strikingly from the Captain’s. Rawson, as a well
+formed and brawny youth, was permitted to exercise
+his muscles for an hour and a half daily in a marble
+quarry some miles to the north of the city; while
+Stranahan, who had been given his choice of several
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_354">[354]</span>occupations, decided that it would suit him best to
+serve three hours daily as doorman at the Archeon
+City Museum.</p>
+
+<p>It seemed almost as if this position had been made
+to order for him; for when he stood at the museum
+entrance, robed in an official red, and politely directed
+visitors to the various aisles and departments, he had
+the dignity of one born to a lofty station. His work
+was not altogether easy, he assured me, for the exhibits
+were many and confusing, and he had difficulty
+in memorizing their names and positions; yet to see
+him as he swayed commandingly from side to side of
+the great arched doorway, with chest thrown well out
+and hands folded sedately behind him, one could
+scarcely have believed that he was troubled by any
+doubts, but might have imagined him to be the owner
+and creator of the building.</p>
+
+<p>Indeed, the interest which he took in the museum
+seemed to be almost personal. He summoned the
+whole Upper World Club to inspect it, as though it
+had been his own handiwork; and he directed us from
+gallery to gallery and from exhibit to exhibit with
+the serenity of perfect knowledge. And while there
+was much about the institution that neither he nor the
+rest of us could understand, yet we had him to thank
+for introducing us to some truly extraordinary displays.</p>
+
+<p>Unquestionably, the museum was one of the things
+best worth seeing in all Atlantis. Not only were the
+contents vivid and remarkable beyond description, but
+the building itself was a never-failing source of wonder.
+The sides and roof were of glass, and on the
+lower levels the walls were colorless and transparent,
+so that passers-by could feast their eyes on the more
+conspicuous displays, just as on earth the passers-by
+may gaze into the shop windows. But above the first
+story the glass was no longer crystal-clear, but was
+frosted and tinted to the semblance of clouds driven
+across a pale blue sky; and over those clouds and down
+from the enormous rounded dome a dim rainbow
+seemed to reach, spreading a web that varied in hue
+and texture with every step one took and every variation
+in the luster of the searchlights that shone faintly
+from above.</p>
+
+<p>To glance at this superb building, one would never
+have guessed what queer objects it concealed. For my
+own part, I was simply astounded—astounded at the
+beauty of some exhibits, at the strangeness and ghastliness
+of others. The department of science and inventions
+(to select merely at random) was a source of
+bewilderment, for it showed the oddest contrivances I
+had ever beheld—machines for preventing earthquakes,
+machines for regulating the undersea temperature,
+machines for detecting and isolating noxious bacteria,
+machines for transforming iron into copper or tin
+into lead, machines for boring through the ground as
+a submarine bores through the water.</p>
+
+<p>But what particularly interested me was the historical
+department. I shall never forget my first visit
+to it; it was one of the most surprising experiences of
+my life. Imagine, for example, a glass case that contained
+nothing but the fragment of a brick wall, a
+perfectly commonplace wall of red brick!—and imagine
+reading that this was a substance employed for building
+purposes in the days before the Æsthetic Renaissance!
+Or, again, picture yourself in contact with
+half a dozen gold coins, larger than silver dollars and
+each worth several days’ wages, yet left unguarded
+where any one might seize them!—and fancy reading
+that these bits of metal had once been considered valuable
+and had even been contended for and hoarded!
+Or, to take still another illustration, conceive of one’s
+surprise at seeing a carefully treasured speck of coal,
+and being informed that this was used for fuel in
+the days before intra-atomic energy; or paint for yourself
+the shock of coming across a case of fine jewelry,
+of rings, earrings, brooches, bracelets, and the like,
+only to find them represented as typical of primitive
+taste!</p>
+
+<hr class="tb">
+
+<p>But while all of the historical department proved
+most diverting to me, there was one section that
+interested me more than all the rest. This was known
+as the “Hall of Horrors.” Once having observed the
+title, I was eager to explore the department in detail—and
+I was not to be disappointed. Somehow, there
+was something about the “Hall of Horrors” that
+seemed familiar, even though a placard at the entrance
+assured one that all the exhibits had been preserved
+from a remote antiquity. Thus, the first thing that
+I noted was a gas masque said to date from the third
+century B. S., but looking as if it might have been
+useful in the present World War. Beside the gas
+masque was a steel helmet reported to be from the
+fourth century B. S.; yet, had it not been for the
+card identifying it, I might have suspected it of
+being taken from the Germans this very year.</p>
+
+<p>This suspicion, however, would not have applied to
+the other military implements ranged about the room;
+most of them were so crude of design as to make me
+positively smile. Even as I write this, I can re-capture
+the mood of exultation I felt at the proof of our own
+superiority: the rifles of the second century B. S. were
+so puny-looking and feeble as to appear worse than
+primitive, and the bayonets were fully half a foot
+shorter than our own; the machine guns of the first
+century B. S. had obviously not half the killing capacity
+of ours, and the cannons were not constructed
+for long distance firing; while the conspicuous absence
+of the armored “tank,” the hand grenade and “liquid
+fire,” showed that the ancient Atlanteans would have
+had much to learn from the sanguinary experts of our
+own day.</p>
+
+<p>From the “Hall of Horrors” Stranahan conducted us
+into another and scarcely less interesting department
+that was apparently nameless, since its miscellany of
+ancient oddities would have defied classification. “Here’s
+where you’ll feel at home,” grunted our guide, as with
+a gesture of welcome he preceded us through the doorway.
+But his remark had been poorly chosen. We
+did not feel in the least at home. In fact, I had never
+had a more distinct reminder of my exile than when
+I gazed at great brick and iron chimneys towering
+within glass cases, and catalogued as typical of “The
+Age of Steel and Fire”; and it made me almost homesick
+to see pictures of long-vanished cities wrapped in
+great clouds of smoke and soot, and described succinctly
+as “Representative of the Tubercular Era in
+Old Atlantis.” But much more surprising to me were
+the huge ancient furnaces, resurrected in detail, with
+puppet stokers in the act of pitching the coal into the
+giant flames. An explanatory card naïvely declared
+that “These were once considered necessary evils, not
+only for industrial reasons, but because the Submergence
+had not yet made possible the automatic
+regulation of the weather.”</p>
+
+<p>But an apparently insignificant object in the same
+department aroused far greater interest among my
+companions. Carefully guarded under a glass cover,
+where it had evidently undergone some special process
+of preservation, was a flat, little rectangle of some
+shrivelled brownish substance, which upon close scrutiny
+I took to be tobacco!</p>
+
+<p>That my guess had been correct was demonstrated
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_355">[355]</span>by a placard that accompanied the exhibit: “This is a
+fragment of a narcotic imported into old Atlantis from
+across the western ocean. It found high favor at one
+time among the women of the country, and to a
+lesser extent among the men, although its use was
+considered a mark of effeminacy. There were several
+common ways of absorbing this drug, the most popular
+being to ignite it and suck the smoke into the
+lungs by means of a little twisted tube. Happily, this
+disgusting habit has long ago disappeared, and the
+elimination of this plant at the time of the Good Destruction
+is not the least of the benefits conferred by
+Agripides.”</p>
+
+<p>I am afraid that few of my companions agreed with
+the latter statement. They cast longing glances in
+the direction of the tobacco; and, had it not been safely
+guarded beneath glass, its career would surely have
+ended then and there.</p>
+
+<p>With the memory of the tobacco still rankling in
+our minds, we were escorted into what was known as
+the “Department of Human Evolution.” Here was depicted
+the rise of man from the lowest savage state
+to the height of present-day Atlantis. A series of
+skeletons indicated the gradual transformation from
+a broad-boned, ape-like thing to a big-skulled modern—and,
+to my great surprise, the large cranial capacity
+was represented as belonging almost exclusively to the
+aboriginal and Post-Submergence eras!</p>
+
+<hr class="tb">
+
+<p>While I was wondering why this should be, I
+chanced to overhear the words of a sagacious-looking
+bearded man, who accompanied a party of
+smooth-faced youths, evidently as their tutor. “Before
+the Submergence,” he was saying, “we were civilized
+in a rude sort of way, and yet were not intelligent.
+That is to say, we were not intelligent as a people,
+for only one man in a hundred possessed any understanding
+of civilization; and it was that one in a hundred,
+or perhaps one in a thousand, who accomplished
+all the changes in science, art and culture. Today,
+however, every normal man is intelligent enough to be
+more than the dead lumber of civilization. You will observe
+this skull here”—the speaker paused, and pointed
+to one of the most ancient of the group—“this is the
+fossil of a paleolithic pre-Atlantean, who inhabited our
+island forty-five or fifty thousands years ago. You can
+see for yourselves how much higher and ampler the
+skull is than that of your own ancestor of thirty-two
+hundred years ago, although of course the latter represented
+the world’s most advanced civilization. Fortunately,
+our intellectual decline was counteracted by
+the vigorous measures of Agripides and his successors,
+and we can now boast of being on the same high mental
+plane as the men of fifty thousand years ago....”</p>
+
+<p>The speaker withdrew with his students toward a
+further exhibit, and I could catch no more of what he
+said. But I had heard quite enough, for it seemed to
+me that his words were not to be taken seriously.
+And I was more interested in browsing about the
+gallery than in listening to his pointless remarks—particularly
+since I had chanced to set eyes on some
+arresting tables of statistics. These figures, which
+dated back more than three thousand years, showed
+how the rise in the appreciation of beauty had been
+almost simultaneous with the growth of intellect; how
+the mental advance and the decline of crime seemed
+likewise to be related phenomena; how the general
+measure of happiness, as indicated by the absence of
+nervous disorders, mental aberrations and suicides, had
+been incalculably increased since the intellectual revival.</p>
+
+<p>Having read to the end of the statistics, I passed
+with my companions down several long corridors to
+the art departments, where some of the more notable
+contemporary paintings and statues were placed on
+exhibition along with a multitude of classic works.
+But if I were to dwell upon the contents of these galleries,
+beyond saying that its art was in that same exquisite
+and original style I had already observed, I
+should have to add chapters to my story; and, likewise,
+I should find my narrative interminable if I were
+to describe the other exhibits: the natural history department,
+with specimens of the flora and fauna of
+old Atlantis, the paleo-botanical department with lifelike
+restorations of long-extinct tree-ferns and gigantic
+palms, the sociological-historical departments, with
+representations of scenes in prisons, poorhouses, orphanages,
+and insane asylums, all of which were declared to
+have been “herding places of the days when unfortunates
+were so plentiful that they had to be dealt
+with by the pack, instead of, as at present, being consigned
+individually to the care of those sympathetic
+men and women who make social work their service
+for the State.”</p>
+
+<p>But while the sheer abundance of the exhibits makes
+it impossible to describe them all, there is one that I
+must not fail to mention, since in some ways it was
+the most remarkable in the museum. We had just entered
+the section ambiguously known as “Curiosities,
+Freaks and Monstrosities,” when Stranahan, with an
+odd twinkling expression, warned us to be ready for
+a surprise. And, certainly, he warned us with good
+reason! As we glanced toward the further wall, we
+were shocked by sight of something dazzlingly familiar—so
+very familiar, indeed, that several of us
+uttered little cries of amazement. Neatly arranged behind
+a glass case, flattened against the rear panels so
+as to afford a better view, were dozens of well known
+blue uniforms! Among them, from the Ensign’s
+stripes, I recognized my own; and among them, also,
+was the decorated uniform of the Captain! And above
+them, on a large-lettered placard, appeared the statement
+that these were the clothes worn by the only aliens
+to enter Atlantis since the Submergence, and that they
+were interesting as showing what grotesque and unsightly
+garments were fashionable in the upper world!</p>
+
+
+
+
+<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop"><div class="chapter"><h2 class="nobreak" id="CHAPTER_XXVII">CHAPTER XXVII
+<br>
+The Warning of the Waters</h2></div>
+
+
+<p>Although at times during my first months in
+Atlantis I may have felt out of place and wished
+that the waters would open above me and bear
+me back to my own land, yet my longings were never
+mixed with misgivings and my regrets never tinged
+with fears. Even in my most pessimistic moments, I
+had no doubt but that the Sunken World was secure;
+that no menace to life or tranquility lurked in its
+well-ordered depths; that I might live out my days
+unmolested and in a peaceful routine. Hence I was
+all the more shocked at discovery of that peril which
+was to give Atlantis the aspect of a beleaguered city,
+and to overcast its beauty with foreboding and horror.</p>
+
+<p>I had been in Atlantis over a year when the crisis
+occurred. It was a crisis as startling and unexpected
+as the flaming of a meteor out of a calm sky; and
+yet, had we but known it, it had been preparing its
+way insidiously during the days of fancied safety,
+like some mortal disease that burrows through tissues
+which are apparently sound. And, like such a disease,
+it might have been checked had it only been discovered
+in time.</p>
+
+<p>I remember that one night, after many onerous hours
+devoted to my “History of the Upper World,” I slept
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_356">[356]</span>but poorly, with an intermittent slumber disturbed by
+nightmares of huge towers crashing to destruction.
+And during the wakeful intervals my thoughts framed
+other nightmares, and I was agitated by a vague
+alarm and excitement, though I could not understand
+why. Not until much later did it occur to me that
+some telegraphic force, akin to the magnetic will power
+of the Atlanteans, may have conveyed to me the deep
+unrest that surcharged the atmosphere.</p>
+
+<p>But whether or not this explanation be valid, I know
+that in the morning, when I had dressed and stood
+in my roof-bedroom gazing down into the streets, I
+became acutely conscious that something was wrong.
+Every few minutes a native or group of natives could
+be seen rushing by at a speed I had never before
+observed among the unhurried Atlanteans; and it
+seemed to me that their faces were convulsed as
+though with pain or fear; while the voices occasionally
+borne up to me had the nervousness, almost the hysteria,
+of men in a panic.</p>
+
+<p>What could have happened? I wondered. Had the
+Atlanteans all suddenly gone mad? Or were they facing
+an insurrection or a civil war? Or had the government
+perhaps been overthrown by a band of insurgents?
+Or had there been an earthquake through
+which I had somehow slept? Or was there an invasion
+from the upper world, and had some of our
+countrymen, seeking for clues of the lost X-111, discovered
+the Sunken World and entered?</p>
+
+<p>All these possibilities, as I turned them over in my
+mind, seemed so fantastic that I had to discard them.
+Yet it still filled me with apprehension to observe the
+natives scurrying about the streets—apprehension that
+was to be speedily justified.</p>
+
+<hr class="tb">
+
+<p>I was just preparing to go out and investigate when
+there came an excited rapping at my door. Unable
+to imagine who might be seeking me at this early
+hour, I cried out sharply, “Come in!”; and the door
+swung abruptly open to admit—Captain Gavison!</p>
+
+<p>He was far from his composed and normal self. His
+pale blue costume was all ruffled, and had been flung
+over his shoulders as though in great haste; his long
+hair hung dishevelled over his narrow bronzed brow;
+his face looked all hot and sweaty; his gray eyes
+burned and sparkled with a vague distress.</p>
+
+<p>He did not wait for a formal greeting. “Have you—have
+you heard the news?” he gasped, as he strode
+into the room.</p>
+
+<p>I confessed that I had heard nothing.</p>
+
+<p>“Don’t see how you could help hearing!” he snapped,
+and began to pace slowly about the floor, with brow
+wrinkled in bitter thought.</p>
+
+<p>“What news is it?” I demanded. “Just what have
+you heard?”</p>
+
+<p>“One of the natives told me strange things last
+night,” he confided, as he continued his restless perambulations
+about the room. “I haven’t slept a wink,
+not a wink!”</p>
+
+<p>“What strange things? We’re not going to be sent
+back home, are we?” I inquired, with an abortive
+effort to be facetious.</p>
+
+<p>“We’ll be sent to a worse place than that!” he
+growled, bristling almost into his old military manner.
+“The glass wall has been cracked!”</p>
+
+<p>“The glass wall cracked?” I cried, stupidly, stunned
+by the terror of the words.</p>
+
+<p>“Yes, the glass wall has been cracked,” the Captain
+affirmed, in a more matter-of-fact manner. “One of
+the patrol boats discovered the damage late yesterday
+afternoon. There’s a dangerous fracture near the
+entrance of the Salty River.”</p>
+
+<p>For reply I could only groan. The glass wall of
+Atlantis cracked!—the whole Atlantic Ocean bearing
+down upon the Sunken World! Too well I understand
+what that meant, too well to require comment! And
+in that first moment of horrible realization I had
+visions of torrents pouring through a gap in the wall,
+flooding over the streets and temples and highest
+towers of the land!</p>
+
+<p>“But how—how under heaven did it happen?” I
+burst forth, when I had half recovered from the first
+staggering blow.</p>
+
+<p>“That is not hard to say,” he declared, slowly and
+in measured tones. “At least, there are suspicions—”</p>
+
+<p>“Suspicions?” I demanded.</p>
+
+<p>“Suspicions that you and I and the rest of us are
+to blame.”</p>
+
+<p>“But how is that possible?” I exclaimed.</p>
+
+<p>“It’s possible, all right. It all happened before we
+got here. The X-111, caught in the whirlpool outside
+the Salty River, was hurled by the force of the
+waters against the glass wall, probably striking with
+its steel prow, which, as you know, was built for ramming
+our foes. The wall, luckily, was too stout to be
+shattered; but it was cracked, and the crack must
+have been growing all this time without being noticed.”
+“Merciful gods!” I cried. “Then if—if anything
+happens to Atlantis, it will be all on account of us!”</p>
+
+<p>But before Gavison had had time to reply, there
+came another rapping at the door. And, hardly waiting
+for my summons, a wild-eyed Xanocles burst in.
+Like my other visitor, he did not waste time on greetings.
+“You—do you know?” he faltered, with a lack
+of self-command most unusual in him.</p>
+
+<p>Solemnly we assured him that we knew.</p>
+
+<p>Without further delay we plunged into the subject
+that had brought him to us. “Maybe you’d like to go
+and see for yourselves?” he suggested.</p>
+
+<p>“But how can we see for ourselves?” I asked.</p>
+
+<p>“The government—that is to say, the High Chief
+Adviser—has ordered the intra-atomic river boats put
+at the people’s disposal. Seven of them are now
+plying back and forth, bearing thousands to the glass
+wall. The Adviser thinks the people should see for
+themselves just what has happened.”</p>
+
+<p>“Very well then, let’s go,” decided the Captain.</p>
+
+<p>Without another word the three of us set out together.
+In silence we strode down the long avenue
+that meandered toward the river. And as we sped
+along we encountered dozens of the natives, all of
+them in as great a hurry as we; and all had faces
+flushed and excited, or fearful and drawn, or pale as
+though with apprehension.</p>
+
+<hr class="tb">
+
+<p>Upon arriving at the piers, we found that hundreds
+of Atlanteans had preceded us, most of them
+so transformed that I could hardly recognize them as
+citizens of the Sunken World; for they were chattering
+wildly, or pacing distractedly back and forth, or
+uttering half-hysterical exclamations; and one or two
+were mumbling and muttering to themselves, or moving
+their lips silently in what might have been prayer.
+But they did not fail to notice our arrival; angry
+exclamations broke forth at sight of us, and several
+of the men and women withdrew visibly from us;
+and, in my surprise, I did not know whether to
+ascribe their hostility to the unpopularity of Xanocles
+or to the part that Gavison and I had played as unconscious
+agents of disaster.</p>
+
+<p>To calm the excited multitude, a vigorous-looking
+young man ventured to raise his voice, and proclaim,
+“Friends, there is still no reason for alarm. We do
+not yet know how serious the damage may be, but the
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_357">[357]</span>glass wall still holds; not a drop of water has broken
+through.... There is reason to believe that the
+break will be speedily repaired, and that we will go
+on living as happily as ever....”</p>
+
+<p>These words, I was glad to see, had a soothing effect
+upon the crowd. Yet I was relieved when at last the
+boat hove into view, a slender affair as long as the
+longest river vessel, but not more than twenty-five
+feet from rail to rail. I did not then give any attention
+to its details, though I did note how low-lying
+it was, with but one visible deck, one small cabin and
+no smokestack or mast. But after it had drawn up
+to the pier and the gangplank was flung down, I wasted
+no time about boarding it with my two companions.
+Benches and chairs were strewn liberally about the
+deck, sufficient to accommodate the entire crowd; and
+we had hardly taken seats when the boat commenced
+to shiver and throb, and we started upstream with
+the velocity of an express train.</p>
+
+<p>So rapidly did we move that in less than an hour
+we were approaching the head of the Salty River. And
+during the interval I only once ventured to break the
+moody solitude of my own thoughts.</p>
+
+<p>“When did you find out about all this?” I asked
+Xanocles, who like the rest of us seemed to be absorbed
+in bitter reveries.</p>
+
+<p>“Last night,” he returned, in an abstracted manner.
+“I chanced to be in the Hall of Public Enlightenment,
+and heard the news over the Autophone.”</p>
+
+<p>“The Autophone?” I demanded.</p>
+
+<p>“Well, naturally, you wouldn’t know what that is,”
+explained Xanocles. “We get our ordinary news by
+wireless telegraph, of course, and it is then reported
+by speakers at the various public meeting places. But
+the Autophone is more effective, and is used only on
+rare and important occasions. It operates instantaneously,
+and consists of a tube and electrical attachment,
+enabling one to hear a speaker miles away.”</p>
+
+<p>“I understand,” said I, for, after all, the Autophone
+did not impress me as unfamiliar.</p>
+
+<p>And with that we lapsed again into silence, a silence
+shared by all the hundreds of passengers. For now
+that they had actually embarked upon the voyage,
+their excitement seemed to have died down to a mood
+of solemn waiting, a tense and painful waiting all too
+apparent in the rigid, staring faces of the men and
+the women’s pale cheeks and frightened eyes.</p>
+
+<p>It was with relief that at length I saw the river
+growing white and agitated ahead of us, and knew
+that we were not far from the valve where the torrents
+were hurled in from the sea. Yet I was filled
+with impatience before we swerved finally into a little
+side canal and our boat came to a landing before a
+long granite dock whence a sister ship was just leaving.
+I need hardly state that I lost no time in stepping
+across the gangplank, as soon as the crowded
+state of the deck permitted; and though we were still
+three or four miles from the glass wall, I was thankful
+to be able to walk the distance.</p>
+
+<hr class="tb">
+
+<p>To watch my two companions and myself set out
+along the clay footpath toward the wall, one might
+have thought that we were athletes training for a
+race. But if we moved rapidly, we were in no way
+exceptional, for there were scores who easily kept
+pace with us.</p>
+
+<p>For many minutes we hastened parallel to the Salty
+River. We passed the long, white rapids; we passed
+the spot where the gigantic jet of water shot thundering
+out of the pipe-like valve; we saw the wall itself
+sloping down before us, and near the wall we could
+make out a long, black mass which ultimately resolved
+itself into a multitude of humans.</p>
+
+<p>This multitude, as we drew near, showed itself to
+be in a wildly agitated condition. Men and women
+were pacing frantically to and fro, swarming and
+squirming like worms or ants; some were gesticulating
+vehemently, some speaking in high-pitched tones audible
+from afar, some merely standing petrified like men
+dealt a blow too great to bear.</p>
+
+<p>Yet, as we took our places among them, we could
+observe nothing that gave cause for alarm. To our
+right loomed the elongated, steely gray valve, a great
+tube as high as a three-story building, which narrowed
+as it approached the wall, and passed through it on
+a level with the ground. And just before us sloped
+the wall itself, now roped off so that we could not
+come within a stone’s throw, but apparently still the
+same smooth, dark greenish barrier I had viewed
+months before. No sign of any break or crack was
+visible, and it was almost with disappointment that I
+noticed how flawless it seemed.</p>
+
+<p>But while I stood there watching I heard a faint
+swishing sound, like the lapping of sea-waves against
+the rocks. I may have been mistaken, for amid the
+chattering and shouting of the mob and the distant
+roaring of waters from the valve, it was difficult to be
+sure just what one heard. But Gavison and Xanocles
+seemed to note that same ominous noise, and both
+paused to listen, while the anxious expression on their
+faces did not relieve my misgivings. “It’s the water
+working through the inner layers of the glass,” I
+thought I heard Xanocles remark; but here again I
+could not be sure, for even as he spoke a tumult of
+shouts burst forth, and I turned in sudden fright to
+see what was the matter.</p>
+
+<p>This time I did not have long to wait. On one of
+the great roof-supporting stone columns a searchlight
+had been mounted; and I observed that it was slowly
+swinging round, casting a piercing illumination upon
+the wall from a bright, yellow eye glaring like the
+headlight of a locomotive. For a moment it shook and
+wavered as if it could not find a focus; then it became
+rigid and still, and a circle of the wall, many yards
+across, stood out in brilliant relief.</p>
+
+<p>Instantly the people began to press forward. So
+excited were they that for a moment I almost lost
+touch with Gavison and Xanocles, and could catch no
+glimpse of the illuminated patch of wall. And at the
+same time shrill cries of terror and dismay broke
+forth. A man just to my rear groaned as if in pain;
+a woman gave a half suppressed sob; somewhere from
+the rear came a hysterical wailing. Then, when the
+circle in the wall again became visible, I was wedged
+in so tightly that I scarcely gave it any attention. It
+was only by degrees that I made out its features, and
+saw what resembled an enormous piece of cracked
+crockery. From an amorphous central blur several feet
+across, great seams and fissures ran in a hundred
+directions, with long, spidery arms that reached out
+like the roots of a tree, gradually growing thinner till
+they vanished in vacancy. It seemed a miracle that
+the water had not already burst through, for each of
+the scores of diverging cracks were rods long and
+must have been many feet deep.</p>
+
+<hr class="tb">
+
+<p>I do not know how long I stood staring blankly at
+that tragic break in the glass. I was as one
+divested of power of thought or movement; I merely
+hovered there transfixed, listening to the muttering
+and sighing of the multitude. Strangely enough, it
+did not occur to me to ask whether the damage could
+be repaired; it was as though I had known all the
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_359">[359]</span>while that it was beyond remedy&thinsp;... and for the
+moment my attitude was strangely detached, almost
+impersonal, as though I were the external witness of
+melancholy and inexorable things....</p>
+
+<p>Yet it was a highly personal thought that startled
+me back to myself. Somehow, out, of some dim subconscious
+depth, there swept across my mind the vision
+of two bright, blue eyes—and, with that vision, acute
+fear seized me, and longing, and despair. That Atlantis
+should be in danger was fearful enough—but
+that Aelios should be imperiled was a thought almost
+too terrible for belief. And, accompanying that first
+wild stab of alarm for her, there came a sharp desire
+to see her, to be with her, to speak with her now; and,
+hopeful that she might be somewhere in this crowd,
+I began to search all about me, and then to thread
+my way at random through the dense ranks of people,
+scanning all the faces in my anxiety, until Gavison
+and Xanocles, following me with difficulty, began to
+ask irrelevantly whether the cracks were in the wall
+or in my head.</p>
+
+<p>But no Aelios was to be seen; and at last I was
+forced reluctantly to abandon the quest. A dull and
+settled sadness had fallen over me; and, depressed for
+no reason that I would have acknowledged, I expressed
+my purpose of returning at once to Archeon, saying
+that I had already seen everything there was to be
+seen.</p>
+
+<p>“But you haven’t seen a thing yet,” demurred Xanocles,
+who seemed determined that I should remain.
+“The submersible repair ships have not yet arrived—and
+when they come, they should be a sight worth
+watching.”</p>
+
+<p>And he slipped his arm about mine, and drew me
+with him toward the wall, while I still protested that
+it would be better for me to return to Archeon.</p>
+
+<p>No doubt in the end I should have had my way,
+had not another hubbub arisen to distract my attention.
+Once more the thousands of voices, were lifted
+in excitement; but this time a note of joy was manifest,
+and even seemed to predominate. At the same
+time, many hands pointed eagerly toward the illuminated
+circle in the glass; and from just behind me I
+heard a thankful murmur that sounded encouragingly
+like “The repair ships; They’re here! They’re here!”</p>
+
+<p>Indeed, the repair ships had arrived. Even through
+the darkest sections of the wall, half a dozen faintly
+phosphorescent cigar-shaped forms were dimly apparent.
+They were all rather small, scarcely more
+than a third of the size of the X-111; but they seemed
+to be exceedingly agile, and were darting lithely back
+and forth like great fishes, or else were whirling or
+pirouetting or standing almost on end, as though
+stricken with giddiness and unable to control their
+movements.</p>
+
+<p>“They’re having the devil’s own time!” muttered
+Xanocles, as he stood watching. “That’s the worst
+danger-spot in all the ocean, for the waters are constantly
+in a whirlpool because of the torrents emptied
+into the Salty River. But our men are brave, and
+somehow they’ll manage it.”</p>
+
+<p>“But how can they set about it?” I inquired, unable
+to imagine any way of making repairs.</p>
+
+<p>“It’s far from easy, but it can be done,” continued
+Xanocles. “One of the ships will have to press itself
+against the wall, so closely that there is no space
+between. Once all water has been excluded between the
+vessel and the wall, you understand, the pressure on
+the ocean side will keep the ship in place. And after
+the ship is in the proper position, a porthole will be
+opened, and through this the men will pour cement
+into the crack.”</p>
+
+<p>Even as Xanocles explained, an anchor was dropped
+from one of the ships into the rocky sea bottom; and
+the vessel, having steadied itself, began to drift slowly
+toward the wall, so that at length its side was pressed
+tightly against the cracked glass. Then a little circle
+of light seemed suddenly to open on the ship’s side;
+and in that circle I could make out the rigid, determined
+faces of half a dozen men, while in their
+hands I could observe a variety of strange rods, tubes,
+and lantern-like contrivances.</p>
+
+<p>Pessimistic as I had been before, I could not but
+feel a burst of hope when I watched the capable,
+courageous way in which these men set to work. And
+evidently the waiting throng had become hopeful too,
+for murmurs of admiration and approval were repeatedly
+on their lips; and as they saw tube after
+tube of cement poured skilfully into the cracks, they
+became almost mad with relief; and some began to
+clap their hands and caper childishly, and some sighed
+in thanksgiving, and some wept silently, for, after all,
+Atlantis seemed to have been saved!</p>
+
+<p>Then, with the suddenness of a thunderbolt, all their
+hopes were dashed out. So swiftly did disaster descend
+that none had a chance to say how or whence
+it came—but it was disaster complete and irretrievable.
+Perhaps it was that the anchor-chain holding
+the submarine had snapped, or that some water had
+seeped in between the side of the vessel and the
+glass wall. At all events, the submarine was plainly
+visible one moment, the men pumping the viscid
+cement through long tubes to the very extremities of
+the crack; and the next moment there was only a dim
+shadow flitting away into a watery obscurity.</p>
+
+<p>For an instant there was an awed silence. Then,
+as comprehension dawned upon the crowd, a convulsive
+shudder swept it through and through, and a howl of
+horror and dismay rang forth. Men glanced askance
+at their neighbors, blank terror gaping from their
+eyes; and all at once, as by a common impulse, hundreds
+pressed confusedly toward the wall, as though
+they might succor thus those unfortunates lost in the
+briny wastes. But many, conscious of the futility of
+all action, sadly remained in their places, and mutely
+bowed their heads—a tribute of respect for the
+drowned.</p>
+
+<hr class="tb">
+
+<figure class="figcenter illowe33_9375" id="img358">
+ <img class="w100" src="images/img358.jpg" alt="">
+ <figcaption>
+ It was only by degrees that I made out its features, and saw what
+resembled an enormous piece of cracked crockery. From an amorphous
+central blur several feet across, great seams and fissures ran in
+different directions with long spidery arms&thinsp;... one of the ships pressed
+itself against the wall, after which the port hole was opened and the
+men poured cement into the cracks.
+ </figcaption>
+</figure>
+
+
+<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop"><div class="chapter"><h2 class="nobreak" id="CHAPTER_XXVIII">CHAPTER XXVIII
+<br>
+The Waters Retreat</h2></div>
+
+
+<p>The eight days that followed the discovery of the
+crack were among the most harrying I had
+ever spent. Indeed, they were among the most
+harrying that any resident of Atlantis had ever spent.
+That the peril was acute became more and more apparent
+as the days went by and the damage was not
+repaired—the submarine disaster which I had witnessed
+was but the precursor to other and not less
+frightful disasters. Vessel after vessel battled with
+the swirling waters in the effort to force itself against
+the wall and cement the crack; and vessel after vessel
+was shaken away like a twig by the fury of the
+maelstrom. Sometimes, fortunately, the portholes were
+shut in time and the crew managed to save their lives;
+but on other occasions the maddened waters snatched
+their prey; and before a week had gone by Atlantis
+was mourning for seven lost parties of rescuers.</p>
+
+<p>All the country was now in a tumult, I might almost
+say in a delirium. The regular currents of life had
+stopped short; men no longer went about their daily
+duties; the libraries and art galleries were deserted;
+the young were without tutors, the governmental departments
+without clerks; and the cities would have
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_360">[360]</span>been without bread, had it not been for the drastic
+orders of the High Chief Adviser. But citizens who
+once had been amply occupied would loiter aimlessly
+about the streets, or would flock to the Hall of Public
+Enlightenment to hear the latest report over the Autophone;
+or else they would pace nervously along the
+colonnades, or stand discussing in small groups, nerve-racked
+and bewildered as men under sentence of death.
+Though I never heard them mention the fear that must
+have been uppermost in their minds, yet their pale
+faces and shuddery manner gave proof of the dread
+that was preying upon them; and my former shipmates
+and I had reason to know how overmastering was their
+terror, for that aversion I had already noted was deepening,
+and the people would glance at us with hostility
+and even accusation in their eyes, looking mute reproach
+at us, as though our coming had been responsible
+(as indeed it had been) for the threatened
+end of their world.</p>
+
+<p>Every morning five or six of the little intra-atomic
+submarines would leave Atlantis through the valve in
+the eastern wall, where the waters of the Salty River
+were forced back into the sea. And in the evening
+(if they survived till evening) they would return
+through the valve in the western wall, where the
+waters of the Salty River found entrance. In the interval,
+their occupants would work as courageously as
+I had ever known men to work, warring against odds
+that were apparently insurmountable; while all Atlantis
+would stand watching, or waiting at the Autophone
+for news of their progress. It seemed wrongful
+to my comrades and me that these men, brave and willing
+as they were, should risk their lives to repair
+an injury which we had caused; and so at Captain
+Gavison’s suggestion several of us volunteered to join
+the rescuing forces. But the High Chief Adviser,
+although expressing his gratitude, refused our offer in
+terms that could admit of no reply; for the repairing
+crews, as he explained, consisted of skilled mechanics
+especially trained for their duties and therefore irreplaceable.</p>
+
+<p>Fortunately, our assistance was not necessary. On
+the eighth day, the officials in charge of the repairs
+decided upon a change of tactics; and then it was
+that the “Acrola,” a specially equipped submarine provided
+with five anchors and an extra battery in intra-atomic
+engines, made its way out of the Salty River
+and around the glass dome to the scene of the damage.
+Truly, it was time that something desperate was done,
+for, according to official measurements, the crack had
+expanded between nine and ten inches since its detection.
+Thanks to its unusual powers of resistance, however,
+the “Acrola” withstood the buffeting of the waters
+and remained pressed against the wall while Captain
+Thermandos and his crew pumped the cement into the
+innumerable fissures. Except for the extraordinary
+courage of the men, it is probable that they too would
+have failed, for the task occupied them for more than
+six hours, any moment of which might have been their
+last; and they not only had to fill the cracks, but had
+to hold to their post till the cement had begun to
+harden and was no longer in danger of being washed
+away.</p>
+
+<p>But the notable fact is that they succeeded. Though
+they were worn and haggard from their exertions, yet
+they had succeeded magnificently. They had saved
+Atlantis! After all, the flood-gates would not burst!—the
+devouring waters would never race along the streets
+and colonnades! The people might return calmly to
+their work, certain that tomorrow would bring no
+new menace.</p>
+
+<hr class="tb">
+
+<p>Such, at least, was the general impression. And so
+great was the public relief that the pendulum
+swung violently from a crisis of despair to an extreme
+joy. Like men newly awakened from a nightmare, the
+Atlanteans refused to believe that the peril had not
+been utterly wiped away; and so great was the force
+of the reaction, so sudden the snapping of the tension,
+that for a while their emotions controlled their heads,
+and their desire to feel safe became converted into a
+conviction that they were safe. Later, many of them
+were to awaken from their self-hypnosis; but during
+the celebration that followed the repairs, the people
+almost without exception, acted as if convinced of their
+rescue; and all the speakers at the great public gatherings
+referred in positive terms to the deliverance of
+Atlantis; and the songs that were sung were songs of
+thanksgiving, as of triumphant escape from a foe;
+and the games and dances and festive processions were
+those of a people wild with joy of new-won salvation.</p>
+
+<p>Yet even at the time there was at least one dissenting
+voice. Like most dissenting voices at a moment
+of popular emotion, it was but little heard, and then
+was heard contemptuously; yet it was often to be remembered
+in later days, when the occasion called for
+little beyond regret.</p>
+
+<p>Among the seven governmental experts sent to investigate
+the repairs and report on their soundness,
+there was one who strenuously challenged the views of
+his colleagues. While the other six agreed that the
+damage had been remedied beyond possibility of a
+further disturbance, the seventh (Peliades by name)
+brought in a vigorous minority report in which he
+contended that the relief was only temporary.</p>
+
+<p>His plea, as I remember it, ran somewhat as follows:</p>
+
+<p>“For four or five years—possibly for ten—the repairs
+will prove adequate; but after that period the
+damage will re-appear in a much more aggravated
+form than before. For the cement constitutes a foreign
+element in the glass, and produces an abnormal
+bulge, so placing an exceptional strain upon those portions
+which are still sound. For a while the wall may
+be able to endure the strain, but in the course of time
+the additional tension will become too great for the
+brittle material of the wall to resist; and first small
+cracks will appear, and then larger, growing by inches
+and by fractions of inches, until the break spreads
+towards the surface, and the tremendous pressure of
+the ocean shatters the remaining barrier. This effect,
+of course, will take years before it begins to be noticeable;
+but when finally it becomes apparent, the crack
+will have spread so far that only heroic measures will
+be able to save Atlantis.</p>
+
+<p>“The remedy, therefore, is to undertake the immediate
+erection of a new glass bulwark against the
+affected portion of the wall. Prodigious though this
+effort will necessarily be, we will probably be able to
+complete the work in time. But unless we do complete
+it, we will find ourselves within a hair’s breadth of
+catastrophe.”</p>
+
+<p>Unfortunately—most unfortunately, in view of what
+ensued—Peliades’ warning was scarcely heeded. In
+some quarters he was denounced as a crank, a mad
+alarmist; in other quarters he was openly laughed at,
+or derided as the victim of hysteria; while the majority
+paid no attention to him at all. Least sympathetic
+of his hearers were his fellow specialists; for
+these, in response to an inquiry by the High Chief
+Adviser, testified at length as to the scientific unsoundness
+of Peliades’ theories, and disproved his views to
+their own satisfaction and that of the people.</p>
+
+<p>And so the dissenter’s motions were quietly tabled,
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_361">[361]</span>and Atlantis returned to its normal duties with confidence
+in the future.</p>
+
+
+
+
+<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop"><div class="chapter"><h2 class="nobreak" id="CHAPTER_XXIX">CHAPTER XXIX
+<br>
+The Party of Emergence</h2></div>
+
+
+<p>Although all Atlantis resumed its normal aspect
+soon after the wall had been repaired, things
+were never again to be quite as before. It was
+as though there were some unseen fissure in the life
+of the Sunken World as well as in its glass boundary;
+as though the people realized, subconsciously, that they
+hovered on the rim of a smoldering volcano. Something
+seemed to be lacking that had been there before,
+perhaps because something was present that had never
+been there before; and the corrosive effects of fear,
+injected for the first time during all the centuries of
+the Submergence, seemed to dissipate the charmed
+tranquility of Atlantis and to suggest that inimical
+and even treacherous forces lurked beyond the marble
+fountains and palaces and the weird green-golden dome.</p>
+
+<p>But the one tangible result of the discovery of the
+crack was the rise of the Party of Emergence. This
+despised minority group, whose very name had been
+a phrase of contempt, now burst into a prominence
+as surprising to its members as to the people as a
+whole, and for the first time in history, threatened to
+become a power in Atlantean politics. Perhaps it was
+that there were thousands who, beset by a secret dread,
+looked to the Party of Emergence as their only salvation;
+perhaps it was merely that they had been
+shocked into a more liberal-minded attitude, and could
+view the policy of Emergence with wide-open eyes.
+At all events, a host of disciples flocked voluntarily to
+the Emergence banners; and among these were many
+persons of influence and position, including Peliades,
+the engineer who had declared the wall unsound, and
+Chorendos, the Local Adviser of Archeon.</p>
+
+<p>And now began a heated and aggressive campaign,
+conducted incessantly and not without success in the
+Hall of Public Enlightenment of every town and village
+in Atlantis—a campaign that threatened to develop
+into a life-or-death struggle between the regenerated
+Emergence Party and the more venerable
+Submergence group. It happened that I myself took
+an active, if minor part in that contest; and it also
+happened that the entire Upper World Club was implicated,
+for we all realized that the cause of Emergence
+offered us our only opportunity of returning to
+the upper world.</p>
+
+<p>Innumerable were the meetings that we attended,
+and innumerable the pleas that we made. To give a
+complete account of all our activities would be impossible,
+even if I could recall them all; and so I will
+have to confine myself to describing a particular meeting,
+which stands forth in my mind as typical.</p>
+
+<p>One afternoon, many months after the crack in the
+wall had been sealed, Xanocles and I found ourselves
+preparing for a strenuous session at the Hall of Public
+Enlightenment. It had been rumored that the day’s
+meeting was to be unusually interesting, and Xanocles
+and I were secretly determined to make it so; hence,
+when we arrived at the sapphire and amber theatre
+and found almost all the seats occupied, we felt that
+we had every reason to congratulate ourselves.</p>
+
+<p>We took chairs in the rear, and quietly awaited our
+turn. A discussion was in progress regarding the
+award of honor to be made to a certain lyric poet. (I
+do not know quite what the issue was, for I did not
+listen attentively.) But everyone understood that this
+was not to be the topic of the day; and after the
+question had been settled, a momentary hush came
+over the audience and many pairs of eyes were bent
+toward us inquiringly.</p>
+
+<p>Then it was that Xanocles arose. At a gesture from
+that same broad-browed elderly woman who had presided
+when Gavison and his crew had been brought
+to trial long before, my friend stepped out into the
+aisle and down to the central platform or stage, while
+all eyes followed him intently and a speechless lull
+dominated that great assemblage.</p>
+
+<p>“Fellow citizens,” he said, not taking time even for
+an instant’s pause after reaching the foot of the
+stairs, “I am here today to make one of the most
+momentous proposals ever presented since Agripides
+pleaded for the Submergence. But it is not a proposal
+that has never been put forth before; it is merely
+one that has never been endorsed. It has been, indeed,
+at the very backbone of the Party of Emergence, and
+will continue to be argued and preached until it meets
+with that success which it merits. For it is impossible,
+my friends, that Atlantis should retain its age-old
+isolation; modern progress makes such backwardness
+inconceivable, as the arrival of thirty-nine men
+from outside has demonstrated. I am certain that if
+Agripides himself were here now he would agree that
+our policies must be revised.”</p>
+
+<p>Here Xanocles paused as if for emphasis; but the
+audience remained intently silent, and with increased
+forcefulness he continued, “The question of emigration,
+my friends, is one of the most important that can
+confront any land. Never in the last three thousand
+years has Atlantis had an adequate law on this subject;
+our prohibition of emigration has been a form
+of intolerance unworthy of the high traditions of our
+people; and free emigration, if forbidden by the
+arbitrary conventions of society, is justified by the
+mandates of nature and the normal human craving
+for romance and adventure.</p>
+
+<p>“Therefore I suggest that the fundamental law of
+Atlantis be modified. But for the sake of those who
+fear to be too radical, I recommend that we proceed
+cautiously at first; let us begin by allowing three or
+four of our people to visit the upper world; and let
+these, having made their investigations, return with
+their reports, so that then, on the basis of definite
+knowledge, we may decide on the advantage of further
+emergence.”</p>
+
+<hr class="tb">
+
+<p>“No, no, no!” rang forth half a dozen voices in
+sharp disapproval; and, as Xanocles gracefully
+resigned the floor, one of the dissenters—a tall, stooped
+man with sallow face, fringed with a white beard—stepped
+down to express his views.</p>
+
+<p>“Citizens of Atlantis,” he declared, in a voice surprisingly
+resonant and vigorous for one of his age, “I
+have lived long enough to follow the debates of a hundred
+years, but never have I heard such folly as has
+just been advised. Under the influence of Agripides,
+Atlantis has been beautiful, and it has been happy—and
+what more can life give us than happiness and
+beauty? Would you let yourselves be stampeded by
+the ravings of these modernists, who would trample
+on every sacred thing, seeking a panicky escape from
+some imaginary peril, or misled by a childish lust
+for adventure or romance? Take an old man’s word,
+in all the upper world there can be no romance like
+that spread beneath our green-glass dome, and no
+adventure like that of our golden-illumined ways.
+Agripides was right, my friends, perhaps more marvelously
+right than even he could have known; for
+Atlantis can remain Atlantis only so long as the corrupting
+influence of the world is excluded; only so
+long as we are protected from those bickerings, greedy
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_362">[362]</span>strivings and ruinous stupidities that must beset all
+men on an earth, which are things too vast to control
+and too diversified to understand. Need I do more
+than to remind you that already the first shock of contact
+with the upper world has almost shattered the
+foundations of Atlantis, and left us all momentarily
+in acute danger and fear?”</p>
+
+<p>And the old man ceased, and stalked majestically
+back to his seat, while the nods and murmurs of approval
+showed how favorably he had been received.
+Evidently the Submergence Party had scored, and
+scored heavily; and therefore the time seemed ripe
+for the address which I had prepared.</p>
+
+<p>I had no difficulty in gaining the floor; and after
+a few remarks expressing my sympathy with the ends
+if not with the methods of the Submergence Party,
+I launched into the main body of my speech.</p>
+
+<p>“You are all building without ample knowledge,”
+said I. “And that must necessarily be so, for what
+can you have learned of the upper world? But it
+happens that I, thanks to some years of experience,
+do know a little of the upper world; and it is because
+of this that I venture to address you on behalf of
+the policy of Emergence.”</p>
+
+<p>I paused momentarily, to pave the way for my next
+point; and I observed that hundreds of pairs of eyes
+were straining toward me, in a silence so intense that
+one might have heard the dropping of the proverbial
+pin.</p>
+
+<p>“I shall not dwell upon the merely physical advantages
+of my own world,” I continued. “I shall not
+describe its wide spaces and splendid vistas, its tree-mantled
+valleys and sun-burnished lakes, its uproarious
+white-splashed oceans and billowy mountains, dark
+with forest or glittering with the snow. I shall not
+linger over the tingling freshness of starry winter
+nights, the feathery softness of the spring, the enchantment
+of firefly-haunted glades or of the ever-shifting
+skies, with their fragile blue or gray or burning
+sunset red. I shall not discourse upon these sights,
+for even in the upper world they are but little noted,
+save by an occasional nature crank or poet.</p>
+
+<p>“But what I shall strive to make plain are those
+advantages familiar to every thinking citizen of the
+earth. Let me begin, for example, by picturing the
+life of the typical dweller in our greatest city. Not
+only in his home but in his work he enjoys the benefits
+of the most progressive civilization ever known.
+To begin with, his dwelling may be of any type that
+accords with his means and capacity, for if he likes
+high places and can afford them, he may enjoy the
+privilege of looking down upon his neighbors from the
+eleventh story; or, if he prefers exercise, he may
+walk up to the sixth floor whenever he goes home; or,
+again, if he be of a sluggish disposition, he may take
+lodgings at street level—and all without extra charge.</p>
+
+<p>“Now let me depict the daily routine of such a
+man. After being aroused in the morning by a wonderful
+little clock that is almost human in its faithfulness
+to habit, he slips hastily into his clothes and
+consumes a breakfast perhaps featured by refrigerated
+beefsteak grown half a world away, and by coffee
+mixed with the condensed milk of cows that lived far
+away and long ago. Having thus fortified himself
+against the day’s exigencies, he loses no time about
+leaving the house; and, in company with thousands
+as fortunate as himself, he enters a little hole in the
+ground, and twenty minutes or half an hour later
+emerges from another and precisely similar hole five
+or ten miles away. But this is the least of his conveniences.
+After climbing from the second hole, he
+wedges his way into a little movable electric box in
+any of our downtown buildings, and promptly finds
+himself delivered opposite his office on the fifteenth or
+twentieth floor. He is now ready for the day’s duties;
+and so marvelously simple is modern civilization that,
+no matter what those duties be, they are always the
+same.</p>
+
+<p>“For there is only one task that seems worth while
+to the modern man, and that is the making of money.
+Just why money-making is so important is a question
+that I personally cannot answer; but it must be important
+indeed, for every one becomes involved in it,
+especially those who have more already than they
+know what to do with; and this is doubtless why
+modern civilization runs so smoothly, why the wheels
+turn so regularly in so many mills, the shafts are sunk
+so deeply in so many mines, the forests are cut so
+completely from so many mountain sides, and men
+continue to spread out and multiply despite battles,
+pestilences, labor wars, earthquakes, and explosions.”</p>
+
+<hr class="tb">
+
+<p>In the latter part of my address I had rather lost
+control of myself, saying things I had not intended
+to say, things I did not exactly mean. But my enthusiasm
+carried me along irresistibly, and it was not
+until I was launched into mid-channel that I paused
+for a glimpse of my audience and observed the stares
+of amazement the nods of incredulity and the frowns
+of repulsion with which my words were received. Then
+suddenly I was sorry, for now I remembered how once
+before I had damaged my own cause by dwelling
+indiscreetly upon the merits of the upper world. But
+though I was following the wrong track I did not
+know how to find the right one—for unless I described
+our industrial and mechanical progress, what was there
+for me to boast about? And so, face to face with an
+impassable barrier, I faltered midway in my address,
+hastily summarized, led up to a feeble peroration, and
+confusedly took my seat.</p>
+
+<p>As I returned to Xanocles’ side, a strained silence
+filled the air; and the shocked and even hostile glances
+of the audiences showed how gravely I had harmed the
+cause of Emergence.</p>
+
+<p>But though I personally had failed, Xanocles was
+equal to the emergency. Springing to his feet during
+the momentary lull that followed my fiasco, he caught
+the attention of the chairwoman, and for the second
+time was accorded permission to address the meeting.</p>
+
+<p>“Fellow citizens,” he began, while the full attention
+of the assembled hundreds was focused upon him, “it
+deeply grieves me to hear of the deplorable state of
+affairs in the upper world. No doubt our friend has
+unconsciously exaggerated, for it is incredible that,
+after all these thousands of years, the unsubmerged
+races should still be so primitive as he has indicated.
+Yet we must accept his picture of conditions; we must
+reluctantly admit that our fellows on earth are still
+groping in the semi-savagery of the Age of Smoke and
+Iron, from which we Atlanteans escaped three thousand
+years ago.</p>
+
+<p>“But does that mean that we should ignore the upper
+world? Does that mean that we, in the consciousness
+of our superiority, should not reach out a helping
+hand to our brothers? To forget them in their need
+would be unworthy of the disciples of Agripides! Indeed,
+it is because of the very limitations of the upper
+world that we must emerge!—it is because the people
+are so deeply in need of assistance! Let us show them
+the folly of their ways! Let us convert them to
+the wisdom of Atlantis! Let us teach them that steel
+and gold are but frail things after all! Let us send out
+our missionaries among them, and bring them the
+creed of Agripides! Do you not realize, fellow citizens,
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_363">[363]</span>that such an opportunity has never before been thrust
+at your door? For not only may you deliver the upper
+world from its barbarities and teach it a true culture,
+but you may show its peoples how to build glass walls
+and submerge as we have submerged!”</p>
+
+<p>And in this wild vein Xanocles rambled on and on,
+while his hearers followed him with enthusiasm that
+seemed gradually to mount to the point of conviction.</p>
+
+<p>Other arguments followed, which I will not weary
+the reader with repeating; and after all who desired
+it, had had their say, a vote was taken on Xanocles’
+emergence proposal.</p>
+
+<p>To our great joy, the motion carried—carried by
+the decisive ratio of almost two to one! The moment
+of triumph, however, had not yet arrived; for, before
+the measure could become operative, it had to be approved
+by a referendum of all the Atlanteans.</p>
+
+<p>That referendum, according to the law, could not
+be held for at least thirty days, the interval being
+considered necessary for discussion. Hence there ensued
+a most exciting thirty days for Xanocles and
+myself, as well as for all members of the parties of
+Emergence and Submergence. Never in the past three
+thousand years had so fundamental an issue been
+brought before the people; for the first time since
+the Good Destruction, the basic principles of Agripides
+were at stake!</p>
+
+<p>Since there were no newspapers in Atlantis, at least
+one agency of political excitement was lacking. But
+there were other agencies in abundance. Never—with
+the exception of those dreadful days following the discovery
+of the crack—had I seen the Atlanteans so agitated.
+In all the houses and meetings that I visited,
+the chief topic of conversation was the proposed
+“Emergence Act”; every one was anxious to deliver
+his opinion, and every one——man and woman alike,——seemed
+to have an opinion, which he was capable
+of expressing in apt and pointed terms. But the desire
+for discussion was particularly in evidence at the great
+assemblies held daily at the Hall of Public Enlightenment;
+and it was there that Xanocles and his fellow
+“Debating Delegates” of the Emergence Party made
+some of the most forceful and eloquent pleas I had
+ever heard; and their rivals of the Submergence group
+were scarcely less fervid in appealing for the time-honored
+policies. These activities, I need hardly point
+out, were not confined to one city, but were participated
+in by all the eighteen cities of Atlantis; and numerous
+speakers from outside points would arrive to address
+the gatherings in Archeon, while occasionally Xanocles
+or some other leader would leave to speak in neighboring
+towns.</p>
+
+<p>Not least eager among the fighters for Emergence
+were the thirty-nine members of the Upper World
+Club. Indeed, it is certain that none of the older
+members could have outdone us in enthusiasm or determination.
+For we had more than an abstract principle
+at stake—our entire future lay in the balance.</p>
+
+<p>And while I personally was not eager to return to
+earth just now (being detained by thought of a certain
+fair-haired, blue-eyed woman), yet most of my
+comrades were almost passionately anxious to escape,
+for as time went by they found themselves more and
+more out of place in this too-perfect land, and increasingly
+unable to perform the duties required of
+them as citizens of Atlantis.</p>
+
+<p>But if they were dissatisfied with the Sunken World
+and incapable of making any contribution to Atlantean
+culture, they proved very competent when it came to
+helping the cause of Emergence. Few of them were
+sufficiently skilled in the language to speak in public
+(Captain Gavison was an exception, and several times
+expressed himself forcefully and to good effect); but
+they were all adepts at private electioneering; and they
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_364">[364]</span>would stop every Atlantean they could inveigle into
+conversation and plead the cause of Emergence. Frequently,
+indeed, they did more harm than good; and
+I remember that Stranahan repeated my own error,
+and frightened away several prospective emergionists
+by boastfully describing the magnitude of wars in the
+upper world; and once I overheard Rawson draw an involuntary
+cry of disgust from a hearer, when he tactlessly
+decanted upon the advantages of airplanes as
+bomb throwers. But on the whole the men were well
+coached by members of the Emergence party, and knew
+enough to confine themselves to describing the beauty
+of the upper world! Partly because of their aid, but
+chiefly by virtue of the vigorous campaign being conducted
+in all the four corners of Atlantis, we had
+hopes that our revolutionary measure was to become
+law.</p>
+
+<hr class="tb">
+
+<figure class="figcenter illowe33_5000" id="img363">
+ <img class="w100" src="images/img363.jpg" alt="">
+ <figcaption>
+ And the utter helplessness of their plight—and of ours—became
+tragically apparent when suddenly a great elongated gray mass came
+flying in with the torrents from the sea—a rescuing submarine that had
+been hurled in through the gap in the wall!
+ </figcaption>
+</figure>
+
+
+
+
+<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop"><div class="chapter"><h2 class="nobreak" id="CHAPTER_XXX">CHAPTER XXX
+<br>
+Crucial Moments</h2></div>
+
+
+<p>An election in Atlantis was seldom accompanied by
+intense excitement. There was no registration,
+for all citizens were permanently enrolled with
+the population bureau; on election day all the men
+and women of voting age (which means all who had
+passed their High Initiation) appeared quietly at the
+designated polling places to cast a secret ballot, or else—if
+they preferred—they sent in their vote in writing
+two or three days earlier. The election boards then
+slowly counted the votes, and the fate of the measure
+(for laws were the only things passed on by the voters
+of Atlantis) was disclosed at the Hall of Public Enlightenment.</p>
+
+<p>But the Emergence proposal proved an exception to
+the rule. Not a little agitation was apparent among
+the men and women thronging to the election chambers;
+and this agitation was heightened by the members
+of the Upper World Club, who used earthly political
+tactics by accosting the voters before they reached
+the polls and showering them with final arguments
+and pleas. It is doubtful whether these eleventh hour
+efforts had any effect, and, indeed, the results showed
+that they might have been spared; but at the time we
+felt that our exertions had not been in vain, and during
+the election and the days of suspense that followed,
+we remained unwarrantedly hopeful.</p>
+
+<p>Then came the disillusioning blow. After three days,
+the election results were announced in the Hall of
+Public Enlightenment. Out of more than a third of
+a million votes cast in all Atlantis, our party had
+polled nearly a hundred and fifty thousand—yet had
+failed by many thousands to equal the Submergence
+total.</p>
+
+<p>Even so, we were not wholly discouraged. As
+Xanocles pointed out, the cause of Emergence had
+never before been able to attract one-tenth as many
+voters; and we had reason to hope that we would
+eventually bring the majority to our side. And no
+sooner had the news of our defeat reached us than
+we began to plan for further campaigns, for we were
+determined not to abandon the fight so long as we
+had breath with which to wage it.</p>
+
+<p>Yet in one respect I was already regretting my
+connection with the Emergence Party. My regrets, to
+be sure, arose from purely non-political motives, and
+could not make me alter my allegiance; but they were
+none the less deep-rooted. To my surprise and chagrin,
+I found that my campaigning activities were bringing
+me into disfavor with Aelios. As one of Agripides’
+staunch admirers and a devoted member of the Party
+of Submergence, she looked with growing disapproval
+upon my association with Xanocles and his kind; and
+during those little conferences, which we had for the
+supposed purpose of discussing my “History of the
+Upper World,” she would take occasion to reprove me
+mildly and even to suggest that my conduct savored of
+disloyalty.</p>
+
+<p>Of course, I would plead my right as a citizen to
+espouse any political cause that appealed to me; but
+she would nod gravely with dissent. “Theoretically
+you may have the right,” she would remind me, “but
+don’t you think you are showing remarkably bad taste?
+Remember, you came into our land uninvited, and have
+been freely received as one of us, and given citizenship
+and all the privileges of a native. And how do
+you show your appreciation? By taking sides with
+the party that would undermine our institutions; by
+doing all you can to wreck the very country that succored
+you.”</p>
+
+<p>To this I would reply that I had no intention of
+wrecking the country; that I was trying to further
+its interests according to my own lights. And Aelios,
+while not convinced that my own lights were the right
+ones, would at least admit that my motives were sincere;
+and having reached this halfway point of agreement,
+we would invariably turn to less provocative
+subjects.</p>
+
+<p>But despite her disapproval of my Emergence views,
+I had reason to be encouraged by her attitude toward
+me. I saw her, while not often, at least often enough
+to be assured of her friendship; and now and then I
+caught in her eyes a bright, warm light which intimated
+that what she felt might be more than friendship.
+Yet it may merely have been that my desires passed
+judgment for me, for not by a word or a gesture did
+she give evidence that she regarded me otherwise than
+as one kindly disposed human being may regard another;
+and the occasional hints of some gentler emotion
+were so rare and so fleeting that I could not be
+sure. And so, as best I could, I restrained my impatience,
+at first never seriously believing that I could
+aspire to her height, then gradually fanning faint
+hopes that remained concealed beneath the mantle of
+my diffidence. It was long before we even approached
+the subject of love; and meanwhile, we would speak
+of impersonal things, or personal things securely buried
+in the past, and nothing in my words would give hint
+of the passion flaming to life within me, while in her
+words I saw the traces only of a vivid and beauty-loving
+mind serenely unconscious of sex.</p>
+
+<hr class="tb">
+
+<p>But even in Atlantis it was impossible that we
+should continue to see one another and yet retain
+a merely placid brother-and-sister attitude. How it
+was with her I do not know, but I was the son of a
+world whose passions burn gustily and strong; and I
+was becoming almost painfully obsessed with the
+thought of her, and would be given to long fits of
+melancholy in her absence, while at times in her presence
+I would be tantalized by her passionless calm, and
+would feel the old sweet primitive prompting to slip
+my arms about her, and enfold her as one might
+enfold the Ultimate. But always I would restrain myself,
+for how be sure of the reaction of this daughter
+of an alien civilization? How be sure that embraces
+and caresses would not be repulsive to the Atlanteans?
+And so, though possessed by the thought of her, as
+by some exquisite perfume that provokes and allures,
+I repressed my eagerness for many, many months,
+awaiting that opportunity which in the end, I felt
+sure, time and circumstance must provide.</p>
+
+<p>And in the end my patience was rewarded, and I
+was favored unexpectedly by one of those occasions
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_365">[365]</span>which life, if left quietly to itself, seems usually to
+offer to lovers.</p>
+
+<p>It was after one of my rare and delightful afternoons
+with Aelios, that the supreme event occurred.
+We had been strolling together about the city, and
+had gone for a moment’s rest into the “Temple of the
+Stars,” that majestic edifice in which Rawson and I
+had been trapped so long before. Seated on a stone
+bench in the darkness, we gazed awe-stricken at the
+spectacle above us—the whole glittering panorama of
+the night-skies, almost as I had beheld them so many
+times on earth. And as I peered up at the image of
+those heavens I could hardly hope to see again, a sad
+and reminiscent mood came over me; I could fancy
+myself once more on earth, and was wistful for all
+that earth contained; I missed the friends I had
+known, the sparkle of the sunshine, the magnificence
+of white-throated mountains: I longed for the bluster
+and cannonade of tempests, the icy tingling of the
+snow, the splashing and foamy turbulence of the
+ocean. And Aelios, although she had never known
+these things and could scarcely imagine what they
+meant, was strangely responsive to my mood, and
+seemed even to feel my melancholy. She asked me
+gently about the world I had left, and how it felt to
+wander among the great cities of the earth, and how
+it felt to hear the purling of mountain brooklets or to
+sit on a grassy knoll with the great sun blazing in the
+blue above. And, remembering all that I had seen and
+heard before my captivity in Atlantis, I described to
+Aelios what my life had been, and told of my adventures
+and wanderings, my happy childhood and youth
+and early manhood; and I drew upon my imagination
+for gorgeous pictures of the upper world, and painted
+the home I had lost as little less than a Paradise.</p>
+
+<p>“Ah, now I see why you’ve joined the Emergence
+Party,” Aelios remarked, her face glowing dimly in
+the near-starlight, and her eyes soft with a kindly
+luster. “Of course, you must sometimes wish yourself
+back among all those wonderful scenes you left.”</p>
+
+<p>“Sometimes, indeed, I am sorry,” said I, in low
+tones and reminiscently. “Sometimes I almost wish
+to be again in my native land. But there are other
+times when I am glad, very glad to be here, and when
+I would not go back to my own country if I could—not
+if you offered me the whole world.”</p>
+
+<p>“And when is that?” asked Aelios. “When you are
+in the beautiful buildings here, or look at the exquisite
+statuary?”</p>
+
+<p>“Yes, sometimes then,” I replied. “But not only
+then. There are other exquisite things that make me
+wish to stay.”</p>
+
+<p>“Yes, I can understand,” she declared, apparently
+still innocent of the trend of my remarks. “The paintings,
+for example, or the colonnades, or——”</p>
+
+<p>“No, not only that,” I interrupted. “There is something
+more personal, more human—something that—”
+Here I hesitated, hardly able to proceed, for I realized
+that I was approaching an embarrassing climax.</p>
+
+<p>“You mean then, that you like the people here?” she
+volunteered, still with perfect candor.</p>
+
+<p>“Yes, indeed I like the people!” I vowed, fervently.
+“And one person in particular!”</p>
+
+<p>If this remark had been intended to evoke a telltale
+reply, it was to fail signally. “Oh, I am glad you
+are so attached to your friends!” she responded,
+whether innocently or with calculating cleverness I
+could not say, since the darkness concealed any blush
+that may have suffused her face.</p>
+
+<p>“But don’t you understand, Aelios?” I persisted.
+“Don’t you know whom in particular I mean?”</p>
+
+<p>The note of surprise in her answer was either genuine
+or else was born of remarkably skilful acting.
+“How should I know whom you mean? Am I with you
+often enough to know all your friends?”</p>
+
+<p>She was making matters difficult for me. But, having
+reached this tactical position, I was determined
+not to surrender. “Why, Aelios,” I countered, “whom
+should you imagine that I have for my particular
+friend? Whom but yourself?”</p>
+
+<p>“Myself?” she repeated, in sheer astonishment.
+“Myself?”</p>
+
+<hr class="tb">
+
+<p>For a moment there was silence; but this time I
+felt that there could be no doubt about the blush
+that mounted to her face. And at length she turned to
+me with softly, smoldering eyes and the assurance of
+victory entered my heart and then swiftly receded as
+she murmured, bashfully, “I am pleased, very much
+pleased, to know you feel that way. It is a great
+compliment to me, and I am very proud—for nothing
+in Atlantis is held more precious than friendship.”</p>
+
+<p>“Oh, but it is not only friendship!” I remonstrated,
+wondering if it were possible that she still misunderstood.
+“It’s not only friendship, Aelios! It is love!”</p>
+
+<p>“Love?” she echoed, in low tones of surprise; and
+another long silence followed, while I waited eagerly
+for the words that did not come, and she averted her
+head so that not even the dimly glowing eyes were
+visible. Then, when the suspense was becoming embarrassing,
+I found hesitating speech, which gradually
+grew more fluent and assured; and all the pent-up emotions
+of months welled forth and forced a passionate
+torrent from my tongue, so vehement as to surprise
+even myself. I told her how immeasurably dear she
+had become; how she had been for me the central
+light of all this strange world; how she had soothed
+my loneliness, dispersed my despair, and given me
+hope and a reason for living; how my life could have
+meaning and beauty only if she had a share in it, while
+without her all things would be desolate and blank.
+All this and much more I poured forth in an eager
+rhapsody, not pausing to reflect that I was but repeating
+the sentiments of a million lovers; and the
+strength of my feelings perhaps lent wings to my
+commonplace words, and gave them a power that no
+analysis could reveal. Or perhaps it was that Atlantean
+lovers never expressed themselves as do lovers
+on earth; for even in the darkness I was aware
+that Aelios was listening, listening intently, listening
+almost with a breathless interest, as though she had
+never heard or imagined words such as mine.</p>
+
+<p>After I had finished, she seemed still held in some
+spell of speechlessness. For several tense seconds,
+slow-dragging portentous seconds that seemed minutes
+long, I waited for her to brook silence. But when her
+response came, it was in passionless tones that contrasted
+oddly with my emotion; and with an accentuation
+so feeble as to resemble a whisper, she declared,
+“All this that you say seems strange to me, very, very
+strange. You speak of love, but I fear I do not understand.
+Perhaps love in your land is not the same as
+here, for I am sure that what you speak of is not what
+we would call love.”</p>
+
+<p>“And what would you call love?” I asked.</p>
+
+<p>“It is something that hardly needs a name. It is
+like none of those momentary attachments that men
+and women sometimes feel. It is something that wraps
+one’s whole being in a mighty flame, and is born
+chiefly of a kinship of the mind and heart; and when
+it comes, it need not be much spoken of, but can never
+be forgotten or lost.”</p>
+
+<p>“That’s just what I feel toward you, Aelios!” I assured
+her, fervently.</p>
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_366">[366]</span></p>
+<p>“But I do not know if it is what I feel toward
+you,” she returned, simply. “I do not know—I cannot
+yet be sure.”</p>
+
+<p>“But you think that perhaps—that perhaps sometime—”
+I gasped, wild hope springing to life within
+me.</p>
+
+<p>“Yes, perhaps sometime—I cannot say,” she murmured,
+slowly.</p>
+
+<p>But in her tones was the assurance of that which
+her expressed words denied; and, with the exultation
+of unlooked for success, I at last flung myself free
+of restraint, and my arms found their way about her
+slim, resisting form.</p>
+
+<p>But somehow she slipped free of my clasp, and
+stood dimly outlined before me in the shadows, herself
+no more than a shadow in this unreal world.</p>
+
+<p>“Not yet, my lover, not yet,” she forbade, in gentle
+tones that gave no indication of the hurt feelings I
+had feared.</p>
+
+<p>“But when, Aelios?” I demanded, baffled, but far
+from discouraged. “When—when may we get married?”</p>
+
+<p>“Not yet, not yet for a while—if ever,” she decided.
+“We must wait, we must wait until we are both quite
+certain.” She paused, then added casually, “Besides,
+remember, you have a duty to perform—an all-important
+duty with which neither your own pleasure
+nor your love must interfere.”</p>
+
+<p>“But what after I have performed that duty? What
+after my work is completed? Will you then—”</p>
+
+<p>“I will then be willing to listen to you again,” was
+all she would vouchsafe. “Come, let us be going
+now.”</p>
+
+<p>And she started for the door, while I followed awkwardly,
+since she knew the way much better than I.
+And, once outside, she began speaking impersonally
+about the art of the colonnades and marble galleries,
+and seemed to have forgotten entirely the subject
+that had been absorbing us. But in her eyes was an
+unusual sparkle, and in her cheeks an unwonted glow;
+and after I had left her and she had gone tripping out
+of sight, I pursued my way thoughtfully homeward,
+my steps made buoyant by a hope I once would not
+have dared to entertain.</p>
+
+
+
+
+<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop"><div class="chapter"><h2 class="nobreak" id="CHAPTER_XXXI">CHAPTER XXXI
+<br>
+“The History of the Upper World”</h2></div>
+
+
+<p>I had been in Atlantis two years before I had completed
+my “History of the Upper World.” Considering
+the magnitude of the task, it surprises me
+now to remember that I finished it so quickly, for not
+only was it longer than three average-sized volumes,
+but I was retarded by writing it in an adopted tongue
+and by having to work exclusively from memory and
+without reference books other than the Atlantean dictionaries.
+But six or seven hours of daily application
+is certain to show results even though one works
+slowly.</p>
+
+<p>It was indeed a proud day, and yet a day of many
+doubts, when I bore the finished manuscript to the
+office of the Literary Registrar. This official, assisted
+by a board of fifteen recognized writers and critics,
+passed upon all literary works submitted by the
+authors of Atlantis; and all books found worthy of
+perpetuation were published under his direction, while
+unstinted advice and criticism was given to promising
+aspirants. In the case of my own book, there could
+be no doubt as to publication, for not only had I been
+specifically directed to write it, but all Atlantis was
+eagerly awaiting the information it was expected to
+convey. None the less, it had to undergo the regular
+procedure of inspection by the Registrar; and, as it
+happened, this was more than a fruitless formality.
+Before the manuscript was given to the press a trained
+essayist was appointed to help me reconstruct the
+style; and, thanks to his assistance, my writing attained
+a dignity and polish I myself could never have
+supplied.</p>
+
+<p>But when at last the publication of the book was
+ordered, I had good reason to be gratified. An edition
+of fifty thousand was to be issued—an edition of phenomenal
+size considering that the population of Atlantis
+was only half a million.</p>
+
+<p>Naturally, I sought to know the reason for this
+enormous printing; and I learned much as to book
+distribution in the Sunken World. Publication, like
+all other activities, was solely in the hands of the government;
+and copies of all the hundreds of books
+issued each year were sent as a matter of course to
+every library in the land. Moreover, every citizen
+was permitted his choice of any fifty of the year’s
+books, the receipt of which was considered not a privilege
+but a right; and men and women engaged in research
+work were allowed in excess of fifty if they
+made plain their need of the additional volumes. In
+the case of my own book, public interest was at such
+a pitch, that a large percentage of the people were
+certain to include it among their chosen fifty; and
+the first edition was therefore regarded as conservative
+in size rather than excessive.</p>
+
+<p>So, in fact, it proved. The book was hardly off the
+press when orders began to pour in so rapidly that
+a second edition of fifty thousand had to be prepared.
+For it was literally true that every one was reading
+“The History of the Upper World”; and when I say
+every one, I do not mean one man out of every hundred,
+as might be the case were I writing on the earth;
+I mean that there was actually not a person of reading
+age who did not feel bound to acquaint himself with
+the contents of my book.</p>
+
+<p>In consequence, I found my life taking on a tinge
+of unwonted excitement. The notoriety of successful
+authorship was mine—and the satisfaction of one who
+finds himself the center of a storm of his own creation.
+For it was with a start of surprise, a gasp of
+incredulity and a wail of horror that Atlantis read
+the news of the upper world. Previously, when I had
+let loose a few hints as to life on earth, I had witnessed
+some curious reactions; but the former bewilderment
+and disgust of the people now seemed
+insignificant by comparison. It would be impossible
+to convey any idea of their repugnance to earthly life
+as I portrayed it; it was almost as if they had learned
+that we had gone back on all fours, or had joined the
+orang-utan and the gibbon in the trees; and the dozens
+of letters I received, the dozens of visitors that poured
+in upon me, and the dozens of inquiries addressed to
+me at public meetings, all gave evidence of a single
+but profound emotion: a sense of wonder and of revulsion
+at the degeneracy of the upper world.</p>
+
+<p>Perhaps the clearest proof of the general attitude
+was to be seen in the reviews of the book—reviews
+which, unlike earthly criticism, were not printed, but
+were delivered orally before gatherings at the Hall of
+Public Enlightenment.</p>
+
+<hr class="tb">
+
+<p>Let me quote, for example, from a typical address.</p>
+
+<p>The speaker was Thermanides, a well known
+writer on social and philosophic questions; and his
+views regarding the upper world were milder in many
+ways than those of his audience. Speaking before an
+assemblage of four or five hundred, he showed himself
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_367">[367]</span>to be precise and thorough in his acquaintance
+with my book.</p>
+
+<p>“Since we have no reason to believe that the author
+has deliberately exaggerated,” he declared, after summarizing
+the contents, “we must accept the picture of
+upper world life as he presents it. And what, therefore,
+must we conclude? That Agripides was wise,
+wonderfully wise, when he urged us to submerge.
+There can hardly be any more distressing subject
+than the history of the earth; even the most daring
+satirist, playing upon his imagination to expose the
+stupidity of the human race, could not offer a blacker
+picture of follies, crimes and inanities than Anson
+Harkness has painted for us in all seriousness. For
+what do we find to be the outstanding historical facts
+as he depicts them? Has the human race gone continuously
+forward, forgetting its savage instincts in
+perfecting a civilization at once beautiful and secure?—has
+man come to look on man otherwise than as
+beast looks on beast?—or has society come to be composed
+of nothing more than a clothed jungle pack?
+No, my friends—unfortunately no, if we would believe
+the volume before us. Slave-raids and wars; rebellions
+and murders; conquest and persecution; treachery
+and rapine and wholesale exploitation; dynasties that
+crumble and empires that decompose—these are the
+sign-posts of the past three thousand years; and evidently
+there has been no concerted or intelligent effort
+to create other and less revolting landmarks.</p>
+
+<p>“Yet though the darkness seems impenetrable, I can
+see one faint glimmer of hope. In the self-satisfied
+blindness of the upper world reposes the possible solution.
+It is not a solution altogether pleasing to contemplate,
+but it is the sort of cleansing remedy that
+nature will sometimes provide when a wound has festered
+beyond possibility of healing. For if no ordinary
+cure be attainable, life will sometimes take the
+sword into her own hands, and with one blow wipe
+out all her old mistakes, and with one blow bring annihilation.
+It is that stroke which, it seems to me,
+is about to fall upon the upper world man, smiting
+his rancorous and lopsided civilization, and turning
+against his own throat that knife with which he
+thinks to gouge out the eyes of his foe. And this is
+perhaps well, my friends, for after earthly man has
+committed suicide, the world will be ready for a population
+of less shortsighted and quarrelsome creatures,
+be they only beetles or ants!”</p>
+
+<p>And with a thankful gesture, as of one who lectures
+on the impending extinction of cannibalism, the speaker
+returned to his seat; while, much to my chagrin, I
+noted that his words had apparently found high favor
+with his audience. And those that arose in the ensuing
+discussion were not less narrow-minded than the
+principal reviewer himself; they seemed to imagine
+that my book had been intended as a sort of catalogue
+of horrors instead of as a restrained and veracious
+history; and either they suggested that I must
+have exaggerated hopelessly, or else they agreed that
+the upper world was so decadent that a second “Good
+Destruction” would be desirable. “Blood-curdling,”
+“Sepulchral,” “An able story of depravity and crime,”
+“The last word in thrills and terror”—these were some
+of the expressions used by the various commentators;
+and, to judge from their remarks, one might have
+thought that I had written a popular novel of mystery
+and murder instead of a sober history.</p>
+
+<p>But while all Atlantis was reading the book and
+being provoked and shocked by my most commonplace
+statements, I was surprised to observe one effect which
+I deplored even more than the gross misunderstanding
+of upper world standards and ideals. For the “History”
+had acted like a bombshell against the Party of
+Emergence! Deserters from our standards were now
+legion, and in a few weeks we had lost all that we
+had gained following the discovery of the crack in the
+wall. It was as if the people had been frightened by
+my picture of the lands above seas, frightened so that
+they wished to shun all contact with the earth as
+they might shun things unclean and evil; and despite
+all that Xanocles and the other Emergence leaders
+could do, it was impossible to shake the masses free
+of this ridiculous attitude. At a test vote of an
+Emergence measure two months after the appearance
+of the “History of the Upper World,” we were defeated
+more decisively than even our foes had predicted, defeated
+by the overwhelming ratio of ten to one!—And,
+in my disappointment and self-accusing despair, I bitterly
+regretted that I had not written my book from
+a less realistic point of view, for I knew that nothing
+short of a catastrophe or a miracle could now open
+up the lanes back to the earth.</p>
+
+
+
+
+<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop"><div class="chapter"><h2 class="nobreak" id="CHAPTER_XXXII">CHAPTER XXXII
+<br>
+A Happy Consummation</h2></div>
+
+
+<p>Not many months after the publication of the
+“History of the Upper World” there occurred a
+vastly more important event. At least, it was
+vastly more important to me, and constituted the most
+fortunate episode of all my life in Atlantis. Ever
+since that encouraging talk with Aelios in “The Temple
+of the Stars,” I had been drawing gradually nearer to
+her; and by slow and unconscious degrees, so subtle
+that we ourselves could hardly note the change, we
+seemed to be entering upon the rôle of lovers. There
+was no emotional demonstration, and no deliberate
+reference to love, for in Atlantis it was considered undignified
+to express any casual amorous sentiments;
+but at times, in her eyes I would catch that reassuring
+look I had noted at rare intervals before, and in our
+increasingly frequent meetings, her manner seemed to
+be tinged by something indefinably wistful and yet indefinably
+gentle, that I had not previously observed.</p>
+
+<p>It might be imagined that the appearance and wide
+discussion of my book would have had an adverse
+effect upon her; but, fortunately, I had shown her
+many chapters before publication, and the contents
+were no surprise to her. And while she was at one
+with her people in loathing the upper world, she could
+hardly blame me for the conditions I depicted. Indeed,
+she was soon to give proof that she did not consider
+me in the least a partner in the supposed backwardness
+of my race.</p>
+
+<p>I do not now recall the precise circumstances that
+led up to the climax; I only know that it was on one
+of my numerous visits to her home, when we were
+alone together in the tapestried room of the pale blue
+lanterns. Nothing had suggested to me in advance
+that our interview today was to differ from our previous
+interviews, and certainly nothing could have suggested
+such a thought to her; but somehow the conversation
+drifted into unexpected channels, and we
+found ourselves provocatively near the subject of love;
+and somehow her words (though I cannot now remember
+their trend) stirred up all my checked and
+slumbering emotions, forced down the barriers of my
+reserve, filled me with a sudden and unlooked-for
+courage, and urged my lips to frame words that I
+had not premeditated then. And almost as much to
+my own surprise as to hers, I found myself proposing
+that she marry me!</p>
+
+<p>But was my rashness appropriately punished? Far
+from it. What was my amazement, and what my
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_368">[368]</span>delight, when she looked up at me with trustful, grave
+blue eyes and quietly consented!</p>
+
+<p>And yet it all seemed so simple that it might have
+been an everyday occurrence! She had taken my proposal
+almost as a matter of course, almost as if she
+had expected it; but at the same time the exalted and
+happy light in her eyes showed that she was far from
+indifferent.</p>
+
+<p>“I was not sure before,” she murmured, simply,
+after my first rapturous exclamations. “But now I
+am quite certain. We will be all in all to one another,
+will we not, my beloved?”</p>
+
+<p>I forgot just how I replied; I have an impression
+that my arms performed some lively antics, with
+Aelios as their goal, and that anything I said must
+have been merely incidental.</p>
+
+<p>“When shall the day be, Aelios?” I asked, when I
+was again in a mood for discussion. “When do you
+say?”</p>
+
+<p>“When do you want me to say?” she returned, as
+though surprised at my query. “If we are both sure,
+what is the use of delaying?”</p>
+
+<p>And, by dint of further questioning, I learned that
+long engagements were unknown in Atlantis. Although
+usually so slow-going and leisurely, the natives seemed
+to me singularly hasty in this one regard; and once
+two people had decided upon marriage, it was not
+customary to allow more than the few days’ interval
+necessary for the preparations. It had always been
+so in Atlantis, Aelios explained, and she could not
+imagine how it could be otherwise, for why subject
+the young couple to the unnatural tension of waiting,
+and why make love ridiculous by arbitrarily starving
+it?</p>
+
+<p>Previously, when I had dared to think of the possibility
+of marriage with Aelios, I had half reconciled
+myself to the prospect of a long engagement, since
+observation had taught me nothing of Atlantean marriage
+customs, and I had imagined that an interval at
+least of months, might be considered proper. And so I
+was a little bewildered by the unexpected imminence
+of our union; I was like a man who, long blind, has
+suddenly beheld a flash of light; and it took me a
+little while to adjust myself to the startling new unfolding
+vistas.</p>
+
+<hr class="tb">
+
+<p>To begin with, I was not sure quite what was expected
+of me. Should I present Aelios with a
+ring or similar trinket such as was customary on
+earth? or was some more elaborate gift deemed necessary?
+In my perplexity, I consulted Xanocles, who
+merely smiled at my doubts. “Marriage with us,” he
+explained, “is not treated as a form of barter; nor
+is it a bargain wherein precious articles must be given
+as sureties. We have long ago stamped out of our
+marriage system all traces of its primitive origin—all
+traces of that old custom which regarded it merely
+as a contract of sale, and which in the beginning demanded
+the parental receipt of cattle or other material
+property, and later required rings or similar baubles
+as a tender of the purchase price if not as a pledge
+of good faith. When two of our people are married,
+they would consider it degrading to be expected to give
+anything beyond themselves.”</p>
+
+<p>But even after I had been relieved on this important
+subject, there was still much that troubled me. Aelios
+had decided that but eight days were to intervene before
+the ceremony (this being about the usual time);
+and, despite all my joyous anticipations, I trembled
+just a little at the thought that I was so soon to exchange
+my known if monotonous bachelor life for an
+unknown career as Atlantean husband. But, fortunately,
+my hours were so completely occupied that I
+had little chance to be disturbed by doubts. For one
+thing, I spent a great deal of time with Aelios; for
+another thing, I was much entertained by my friends,
+who were astonished and yet loudly congratulatory
+upon hearing the news, and insisted upon putting me
+through long ordeals of questions, laughter, and amiable
+chaffing remarks. An entire meeting of the Upper
+World Club was given over to a celebration alleged to
+be in my honor; and President Gavison, after unbending
+from his official sternness to wish me luck in terms
+that I thought just a little wistful and a little reminiscent
+of his own lost happiness, was followed in quick
+succession by the various other club members, all of
+whom strove to express themselves with appropriate
+levity. Had there been such a thing as an intoxicant
+in Atlantis, I am sure that we would have had a merry
+old time; but, for lack of the proper stimulants, the
+men had to be content with their questionable jests,
+with poking me mirthfully in the ribs, with slapping
+me heartily on the back, with expressing the wish
+that they might be in my shoes (or, rather, sandals,
+since these were the only footwear in Atlantis), and
+with laughing and guffawing in a generally irresponsible
+and uproarious manner.</p>
+
+<p>But as the few remaining days slid by, did I have
+no thought of her whom I had left on earth? Did I
+not think of Alma Huntley, she to whom I had once
+pledged devotion? Perhaps I should be ashamed, but
+I am not, to say that the memory of her scarcely entered
+my mind. She was no more than a shadow in
+a world that was daily growing more shadowy, in an
+existence I had outlived and could not expect to reenter;
+and if at times she would obtrude herself
+before me like a dim melancholy presence without
+color or form, such occasions were growing increasingly
+rare; and now that Aelios seemed so near and
+our two lives were so soon to be fused, Alma was obscured
+as a pale star is obscured by the sunlight;
+and all the torrents of my being welled up tumultuously
+toward Aelios, and it seemed as if her companionship
+and her love were the only love or companionship
+I had ever known or desired.</p>
+
+<p>And how near I was to enjoying that companionship
+for life became vividly apparent to me about three
+days after we had reached our decision. Then it was
+that Aelios and I, in accordance with the custom of
+the land, visited the local housing bureau, which was
+to assign us to our new lodgings. After we had duly
+placed our names side by side in a great venerable-looking
+ledger wherein all the wedded couples of the
+past hundred years were enrolled, we passed an exciting
+afternoon in the company of the chief housing
+representative, who showed us all the available dwelling
+places with the same obliging courtesy as when I
+had selected my bachelor quarters. As on the former
+occasion, there were so many desirable locations that
+the choice was difficult; and on passing each new
+threshold, Aelios would pause with a little cry of
+wonder or surprise, and would point in admiration to
+some distinctive feature of arrangement or decoration.
+Needless to say, I too was dazzled and delighted;
+particularly since I had previously seen only apartments
+designed for single people. None of these homes
+were very large; indeed, most of them had but three or
+four rooms in addition to the roof sleeping chambers
+and the almost invariable central court; but they were
+the most home-like little nooks one could imagine,
+and were made attractive not only by the lawns and
+flowering gardens that surrounded them, but by their
+tastefully furnished rooms, whose lamps and tapestries
+and statuary were never too lavish or ornate and yet
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_369">[369]</span>always gave an effect at once picturesque and cozy.</p>
+
+<p>Our choice was in favor of a little butterfly-shaped
+dwelling, with silvery walls inlaid with mother-of-pearl
+and high-arched windows surrounded by vivid
+bands of stained glass. The interior appeared entrancing
+to us both, for not only were the walls and ceilings
+frescoed as though by a master hand, but the painted
+designs were matched by the very rugs on the floor
+and the draperies that screened the doorways; while
+a little statue-lined fountain that bubbled perpetually
+in the court fascinated us both by its rainbow glimmering
+showers of spray.</p>
+
+<p>“You may move in any time after your names are
+registered in the Marriage Book,” said the housing
+representative, when we had notified him of our decision
+and he had duly recorded it. “But if ever you
+should find this house unsatisfactory, you have only
+to enter your complaint, and if possible we will provide
+you with another dwelling. But meanwhile this
+will be regarded as your official residence.”</p>
+
+<hr class="tb">
+
+<p>And with these words the housing representative
+bowed a gracious retreat, while Aelios and I
+were left to inspect the home that was so soon to be
+ours.</p>
+
+<p>With the enthusiasm of children we examined every
+nook and corner, growing constantly more excited as
+our search proceeded; Aelios was radiant; I had never
+seen her eyes sparkle more brightly, her cheeks glow
+more vividly; and I realized as never before how
+extraordinarily fortunate I was.</p>
+
+<p>And it seemed as if her emotions corresponded with
+mine! “Is it not the strangest whim of fate,” she
+asked, “that you have come down here to me, my beloved?
+How easily I might have missed you! How
+easily we might each have gone through life not knowing
+that the other existed!”</p>
+
+<p>“So it has been with all lovers since the world began,”
+I returned. “Even in Atlantis, love must always
+seem a miracle.”</p>
+
+<p>“Even in Atlantis, it always is a miracle,” she
+amended; and she looked up at me with a smile so
+luminous and trustful, so kindly and so tinged with a
+rapturous emotion, that I could not but admit that
+she was right.</p>
+
+<p>The days that followed this delightful interview are
+but a blur in my memory. Although every hour was
+slow-footed with the suspense and the waiting, it
+seems to me that but a moment elapsed between our
+departure from our chosen home and our happy return&thinsp;...
+the intervening events are all obscured by that
+never-to-be-forgotten morning when Aelios and I entered
+the office of the Local Adviser and were officially
+united.</p>
+
+<p>The actual ceremony was insignificant—indeed, there
+was no ceremony at all. We had merely to record our
+names for a second time, writing them in the Marriage
+Book which the housing representative had mentioned—an
+enormously thick volume bound in blue and
+gold, with thousands of pages, of which one was devoted
+to the history of each marriage. There were
+no questions asked us; there were no high-sounding
+formulas to be spoken by clockwork; there were no
+official representatives of saintliness to offer dogmatic
+advice; there were no vows to be taken, no promises
+to be made, no witnesses to gape or snicker, no pompous
+giving or receiving of the bride. We merely furnished
+the State with that record which it required,
+and did so without having to purchase a preliminary
+printed tag by way of permission; and after we had
+entered our names in the book, we were not insulted
+with any attempt to sanctify proceedings with words
+of antique witchcraft, nor humiliated by any implication
+that our own feelings would not amply solemnize
+the day.</p>
+
+<p>Of course, if we desired to celebrate our nuptials
+with a festival of any sort, that was our privilege—a
+privilege which the State would recognize by providing
+an appropriate hall for the day. And, as it happened,
+most bridal couples availed themselves of this right.
+We were no exception, for when our marriage had
+been officially recorded, we repaired to a flower-decked
+chamber where a few of Aelios’ friends and relatives
+were awaiting us. And after receiving greetings and congratulations,
+we did not pass our time in feasting or
+drinking, nor in making merry nor in riotous jests; but
+we danced for a while a sedate dance timed to ethereal
+strains of music; and later we all sat quietly about
+the room, Aelios at my side and the others on mats
+and sofas opposite, while the lights were subdued, and
+we listened to a still more ethereal music, which rose
+and quavered in a voice of joy like the notes of melodious
+birds, then faintly trilled like a far-off elfin call
+or throbbed and sang in an organ-burst of ecstasy,
+until one was moved almost to tears by the revealed
+poignancy and beauty of life, and came to look upon
+love with a new reverence and a new wonder.</p>
+
+
+
+
+<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop"><div class="chapter"><h2 class="nobreak" id="CHAPTER_XXXIII">CHAPTER XXXIII
+<br>
+The Flood Gates Open</h2></div>
+
+
+<p>When I look back now upon my life in Atlantis,
+my sojourn there seems to divide itself into two
+periods, of which the longer and by far the
+more tranquil, dates from my union with Aelios. In
+the new-found contentment of our marriage—and ours
+was no exception to the rule—we seemed to lose track
+of time; and months and years began gliding by at a
+smooth and even pace that was particularly deceptive
+because there were no seasons to mark the change and
+there were no outstanding events to serve as landmarks.</p>
+
+<p>Perhaps the secret lay in the fact that Aelios and
+I were both amply occupied; for in the hours when
+we were not together, we each had our own work to
+keep us busy. Aelios still tutored for several hours a
+day, and still led in the dances at public festivals; for
+in Atlantis no distinction was made between a married
+and a single woman, except in the event of
+motherhood; and even a mother, while released from
+her prescribed duties, was expected to keep alive a
+broad interest in life, by performing some optional
+services.</p>
+
+<p>For my own part, I was no less busy than Aelios,
+for after I had completed my “History of the Upper
+World,” I had again been summoned by the Committee
+on Selective Assignments, and had been directed
+to write a treatise on “Social Traditions and Institutions
+in the Upper World,” wherein I might describe
+conditions above seas in greater detail than in my
+previous book. This task, although far from uncongenial,
+was proving both lengthy and laborious, for I
+tried to cover every modern country; and the further
+I proceeded the harder the work became, for the more
+I learned of Atlantis the more difficult it appeared
+to represent the earth in a light that was not merely
+pitiable.</p>
+
+<p>I was now quite reconciled to passing my remaining
+days in Atlantis. Although Xanocles and his colleagues
+persisted with their agitation, the cause of
+Emergence was dwindling in my mind to an impossible
+dream; and, had it not been for the cataclysm which
+aroused us all to frenzied action, I might have been
+content to grow gray and wrinkled in the Sunken
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_370">[370]</span>World. For now that Aelios was mine, I found that
+life was far richer than ever before; that not only was
+I steeped in pleasurable activity amid a delightful environment,
+but that there was an almost charmed absence
+of strain and hurry, and a leisure and serenity
+that would once have seemed the attributes only of a
+Nirvana.</p>
+
+<p>It is true, of course, that I could not escape all the
+ordinary physical ills of life. Once, for example, when
+my awkwardness betrayed me in an athletic contest
+and I suffered a broken arm, I was conducted to a
+State hospital, where a State physician skilfully treated
+my injury; and once when the incessant golden glare
+began to tell upon my eyes, I had to visit a State occulist,
+who relieved the strain by prescribing a pair of
+wide-rimmed amber-tinged glasses.</p>
+
+<p>My appearance was changing, moreover, in other
+ways than the mere addition of glasses. I was acquiring
+a long beard, largely owing to the habit formed
+during my first days in Atlantis; and my complexion
+was taking on a curious greenish tint, due to some
+peculiar action of the Atlantean light—an action to
+which the Atlanteans themselves had inherited immunity.
+But I was not alone in my queer pistache complexion;
+there were exactly thirty-eight others who
+could show the same distinctive pigmentation; and so
+marked was the coloration that, as the men sometimes
+declared, our origin was “written on our skins.”</p>
+
+<p>My fellow members of the Upper World Club meanwhile
+did not share my liking for Atlantis. As time
+went by, in fact, they seemed to care less and less
+for their adopted country. With the exception of
+Gavison, who had written a brief but popular treatise
+on “Navigation on Upper World Waters” and a not less
+popular “Comparison of Upper and Lower World Civilizations,”
+there was not one of my former shipmates
+who was adapting himself to life in Atlantis or who
+was not remiss in his obligations as a citizen. While
+they had all acquired at least a rudimentary knowledge
+of the language and were all reasonably successful in
+performing some prescribed mechanical task for two
+or three hours a day, yet none of them had accomplished
+anything in any of those artistic or intellectual
+pursuits which alone were considered worth while in
+Atlantis. For how, indeed, could they hope to conform
+to the standards of a world that had so little
+in common with their own? Apparently the natives did
+not even expect them to conform, and tolerated lapses
+that would have been considered disgraceful in born
+Atlanteans; but they themselves appeared to feel that
+they were somehow inferior, somehow out of place;
+and much of their restlessness, and much of their
+longing to escape, is to be explained by the desire for
+a less ideal but more familiar mode of life.</p>
+
+<hr class="tb">
+
+<p>Considering the eagerness with which my companions
+would have exchanged the ease of Atlantis
+for even the most strenuous labors and hardships
+of the earth, it seems ironic that the man ultimately
+chosen to emerge, was he whose marriage to an Atlantean
+had made him more than resigned to the
+Sunken World. My sole excuse is that the choice, when
+it fell upon me, was made wholly upon the suggestion
+of others, and occurred at a time of such acute public
+peril that the happiness or fate of individuals was
+as nothing.</p>
+
+<p>For the hour was to come—and to come with startling
+suddenness—when a fateful writing was to glare
+from the walls of Atlantis. I had been in the Sunken
+World seven full years when the menace burst forth,
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_371">[371]</span>and I was not there seven days after it appeared....
+But in the interval I was a witness to scenes of such
+havoc, such horror, confusion and despair as I had
+never seen before and fervently hope I shall never
+see again.</p>
+
+<p>It torments me now to recall that all that terror
+and all that irremediable loss might have been avoided,
+had we but heeded the advice of Peliades, Peliades
+who insisted that the crack in the wall had not been
+adequately repaired....</p>
+
+<p>But let me not anticipate. I must describe as dispassionately
+as I can those overwhelming events which
+descended like lightning to blast Atlantean life, and
+which are so disturbing even in memory that my pen
+trembles and my startled mind takes fresh alarm.
+Merely to try to record those distracting days and
+nights is to be obsessed as by an old madness; I can
+feel a paralyzing dread spreading once more through
+all my nerves; I can feel my brain grow numb, my
+eyes grow strained and distended, my arteries throb
+with delirious haste. And all the while confused
+visions come swarming across my mind—visions of
+roaring vigils by lamplit walls of glass, visions of
+huddled faces, weeping or praying or with terror-stricken
+eyes, visions of thundering waters, panicky
+flights, submerged temples and inundated plains; and
+it all seems like some nightmare I dreamt long ago,
+yet more vivid than any nightmare, for there are sobs
+and lamentations that echo even now in my memory,
+and pleading lips that shall never stir again, and
+agonized eyes that peer at me like phantoms which
+will not be exorcised.</p>
+
+<p>Long before, in moments of aimless fancy, I had
+sought to picture to myself the end of the world; to
+imagine the consternation and horror of an earth maddened
+by dread of impending doom. But I had never
+thought that I myself would be the spectator of a
+crumbling universe....</p>
+
+<p>As in the case of the crack in the wall years before,
+the danger appeared with devastating suddenness. One
+moment, all was tranquil; the next moment, the Sunken
+World was in a frenzy. I remember that one afternoon
+Aelios and I had gone to the Agripides Theatre
+to witness a performance of some sort (its precise
+nature has slipped from my mind); and it was at the
+close of the first act that the warning came. From
+the unexplained absence of the chorus that usually
+sang during intermissions, I might have suspected
+that something was wrong; but actually I was without
+misgivings until suddenly a great burnished, silvery
+horn—the horn of the Autophone!—was lifted quietly
+on the stage.</p>
+
+<p>At this unexpected sight, a stab of alarm darted
+through me; Aelios seized my hand and held it as if
+for reassurance; the audience sat rigid and tense, like
+persons who behold a ghost. For an instant we heard
+no sound, except for the quick breathing of our neighbors;
+then the strained silence was broken by an uncanny
+hollow voice that issued sonorously as if from
+nowhere.</p>
+
+<p>“A great misfortune has befallen,” announced the
+unseen, in tones that sounded almost sepulchral. “The
+crack in the glass wall has re-appeared, but this time
+it is of more serious proportions than before.”</p>
+
+<p>The voice faltered for an instant and halted, while
+murmurs of dismay, terror and unbelief shuddered
+through the audience.</p>
+
+<p>And in a more deliberate and even graver manner
+the speaker continued: “Late last evening our navigators
+observed that the Salty River was higher than
+usual; and an investigating party sent out today by
+the High Chief Adviser has discovered that the wall
+has actually given way at one point, and that the water
+is pouring in through a fissure several feet across.
+There is as yet no cause for despair, for the surplus
+water, while highly inconvenient, can be disposed of
+by the reserve capacity of our intra-atomic pumps,
+which are equipped for all ordinary emergencies and
+can discharge fifty per cent more than their usual
+delivery. But there is danger that the break will expand
+before repairs can be made; and for this reason
+the High Chief Adviser requests that you try to meet
+the situation courageously, and freely enlist your
+brains and your services till the peril is overcome.”</p>
+
+<hr class="tb">
+
+<p>It would be impossible to convey any idea of the
+commotion which these words created. The people
+did indeed follow the High Chief Adviser’s advice to
+be courageous, for there was no more than a hint of
+that panic which one might have expected. But there
+could be no further thought of the performance in
+the theatre. After an instant’s chill silence, the audience
+arose with one accord; and men’s faces were
+blanched and women could be heard muttering in fear
+as the crowd began pushing toward the exits. In
+their excitement, the people had forgotten their usual
+courtesy; and Aelios and I were shoved and jostled
+in a way that reminded me of the New York subways.
+It was all I could do not to lose track of her amid the
+mob; yet both of us were anxious not to be separated,
+particularly since the speechless eagerness of the
+throng, the sighs of women, the rapid breathing of men
+and our own fast-beating hearts, all served to fill us
+with grim forebodings.</p>
+
+<p>Once out of the great theatre, the people were driven
+as by a common instinct toward the river. All seemed
+fearful of even a second’s delay, as though our haste
+might repair the fractured wall!—and in a long, swiftly
+moving column, constantly augmented as we advanced,
+we followed the winding avenue that curved
+toward the waterfront. None of us spoke more than
+an occasional word; even Aelios was silent, but she
+clutched my arm with unwonted firmness, and looked
+up at me with eyes wherein apprehension alternated
+with a reassuring courage.</p>
+
+<p>But there was no prop for courage in the sight
+that greeted us at the river bank. The stream, which
+previously had flowed five or six feet beneath the
+docks, was now not more than eight or ten inches
+below the level.</p>
+
+<p>In speechless dismay we watched that broad, greenish-gray
+torrent go swishing and gurgling past. But
+what was there that we could do? Nothing—except
+to stand and gape helplessly at that swift-flowing,
+swollen stream. Indeed, we seemed worse than merely
+helpless, for as I stood there with Aelios amid that
+horror-faced crowd, I became conscious—as during
+that other crisis years before—that I was arousing a
+singular repulsion. My neighbors were edging away
+from me visibly; some were pointing toward me, or
+uttering half-suppressed oaths; I thought I heard some
+one ruefully mumbling something about “That foreigner”
+and something else about “The cause of all our
+troubles.”</p>
+
+<p>I would quickly have withdrawn with Aelios from
+that hostile throng, had I not chanced to observe a
+slim, gray form approaching from far upstream. With
+the speed of the swiftest racing craft it drew near,
+and in a few minutes was recognizable as an intra-atomic
+boat, akin to the one I had boarded years before.
+Much to my relief, it came to a rapid halt,
+drew up at the dock, and let down its gangplank. And
+as the crowd forced its way on to the docks, Aelios
+and I was not slow in finding seats for ourselves
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_372">[372]</span>for what was sure to prove an extremely exciting trip.</p>
+
+<p>And exciting it was—far more exciting than we
+could have desired. We had been under way only a
+few minutes when the aspect of the river began to
+change disquietingly. Except for the current, it lost
+the character of a river entirely, and took on the appearance
+of a long lake! On both sides the water
+spread in a smooth-flowing sheet two or three miles
+broad; and above the surface in places stared dumps
+and dusters of vegetation, with here and there a miniature
+island; while several temples and colonnades stood
+with marble bases buried in the water, like the palaces
+of some aquatic goddess.</p>
+
+<p>But if this overflow was alarming, the full extent
+of the disaster was not evident until we approached
+the glass wall itself. This time it did not require any
+searchlight to reveal the nature of the injury; our
+ears might have told us if our eyes had not—but our
+eyes had sufficient to report. As we strode along the
+little, clay path toward the wall, we became aware of
+a broad, gleaming, greenish expanse between—a sheet
+of water where all had been dry land! And into that
+sheet of water, with a continuous thunder equal to
+that of the floods from the river valve, a long, white
+torrent spurted in a gracefully curving jet, shooting
+outward hundreds of yards from the glass bulwark,
+and descending with a splashing as of some gigantic
+fountain. It was impossible to estimate the volume,
+except to say that it was enormous; nor could we
+see the nature or extent of the leak, since the intervening
+water forbade our close approach. But we
+observed how the overflow worked its way circuitously
+into the Salty River in a sort of channel of its own
+choosing; and occasional swift-moving lights, which
+even from our distance we could see flashing from
+beyond the glass, showed us that the repair ships were
+busy trying to seal up the crack. But from the beginning
+we knew how hopeless were their efforts—with
+their midget vessels and midget tools they were
+like ants trying to stem the flood of a Niagara. And
+the utter helplessness of their plight—and of ours—became
+tragically apparent when suddenly a great
+elongated, gray mass came flying in with the torrents
+from the sea, and fell with a splash and a clatter in
+a battered heap projecting above the waters—a rescuing
+submarine that had been hurled in through the
+gap in the wall!</p>
+
+<hr class="tb">
+
+<figure class="figcenter illowe33_3125" id="img370">
+ <img class="w100" src="images/img370.jpg" alt="">
+ <figcaption>
+ Almost before I realized that the ultimate moment had come, I found
+myself assisting Aelios up the half-submerged gangplank and on to the
+deck of the grim, low-lying, shadowy ship&thinsp;... we mounted to the deck,
+cast a last glance at the darkness that hid the marble temples
+of Atlantis, and waved for the last time to the dim watching figures.
+ </figcaption>
+</figure>
+
+
+
+
+<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop"><div class="chapter"><h2 class="nobreak" id="CHAPTER_XXXIV">CHAPTER XXXIV
+<br>
+Swollen Torrents</h2></div>
+
+
+<p>It was five days later that I received the summons
+from the High Chief Adviser&thinsp;... and made ready
+for the most extraordinary of all my adventures.</p>
+
+<p>In the interval, all Atlantis was in a state verging
+upon madness. The commotion created by the original
+discovery of the crack was insignificant beside the
+terror that now dominated every inhabitant. To say
+that the country seemed stricken with paralysis would
+be to understate the conditions; rather, it was driven
+to a dumb distraction, like some great beast that feels
+its foot in a trap. Only one thought was in anyone’s
+mind, only one topic on anyone’s lips; the people
+drifted hither and thither like phantoms, rushing back
+and forth between the cities and the spurting leak
+in the wall, sometimes engaged furtively in whispered
+discussions, on other occasions muttering half-audible
+prayers or withdrawing into themselves like men
+brought face to face with Fate. Some would hover
+near the offices of the High Chief Adviser, awaiting
+hopeful news that did not come; some would haunt
+the river banks, watching the swelling torrents go murmuring
+and whirling past; some would huddle together
+in small family groups, as though mortally
+afraid to lose sight of their dear ones; some would
+merely go pacing around like rats in a cage, scarcely
+heeding where they went, their white faces and harried
+eyes expressive of a dread they dared not mention.</p>
+
+<p>But none—none who were not driven by the most
+stringent orders—were heeding their daily duties. For
+the first time in history, the cities were inadequately
+supplied with food; the official producers and distributors
+shared the general inertia, and the people
+had to clamor at the doors of the great municipal
+warehouses for their meager rations; and actual starvation
+seemed certain unless the workers could be
+urged back to the fields.</p>
+
+<p>But more appalling to my mind—vastly more appalling,
+since it seemed like the overthrow of the very
+order of nature—was the laxity with regard to the
+golden orbs that ruled the Atlantean day. Owing no
+doubt to the negligence of the official in charge, the
+clockwork that controlled these artificial suns ran down
+on what should have been the third night, and the
+luminaries continued in full blaze after the usual
+hour of darkness. But few seemed even to notice the
+change, and most continued frenziedly watching the
+waters or awaiting encouraging reports; while those
+that could, snatched a few hours of troubled sleep during
+the continuous daylight, and many still kept their
+useless vigils with drawn faces and weary eyes.</p>
+
+<p>Meantime the Salty River continued to rise. Slowly
+and insidiously, by inches and by half inches, it crept
+up and up, up and up, until after two days not more
+than a hand’s breadth separated it from the top of
+the embankment. And after three days it had not
+more than a finger’s breadth to go, while on the fourth
+day we could see thin, sparkling streams flowing down
+the more low-lying street, not deep enough to make
+them quite impassable, but lending to the columned
+thoroughfares the aspect of some pathetic Venice.
+Simultaneously the Autophone brought news that the
+small towns of Malgos and Dorion had been inundated
+and that their inhabitants had fled for higher ground;
+that the larger cities of Atolis, Lerenon, and Aedla
+were rearing embankments to keep out the waters, and
+that the farm lands of eastern Atlantis were flooded
+as far as the eye could see. But little that was even
+mildly hopeful was reported. It was stated that the
+repair ships were still trying to cope with the leak,
+though without success; that the intra-atomic pumps
+were disposing of most of the surplus water, but were
+being taxed to capacity; that in several places huge
+electric shovels were at work, digging out great hollows
+into which the floods might be drained; that
+efforts were being made to freeze huge masses of
+water, and force the ice against the wall, in the attempt
+to stem the torrents.... But all the while the
+river continued to rise, and nothing short of a miracle
+seemed likely to check disaster.</p>
+
+<p>After five days the water was flowing to a depth
+of many inches through half the streets of Archeon;
+and only the rapid erection of earthworks had saved
+the other half. And it was after five nerve-racking
+days that—as I have stated—I received the summons
+from the High Chief Adviser.</p>
+
+<p>The messenger—a wan-faced old man who seemed to
+be in a breathless hurry—was waiting for me when I
+returned home with Aelios after strolling aimlessly for
+hours through the unflooded portions of the town.
+From the grave attitude with which he greeted me, I
+knew at once that something was amiss; but he had no
+explicit information to offer. “The High Chief Adviser
+wishes to see you without delay,” was all that he
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_373">[373]</span>would report. And having uttered these words, he
+began edging away as though he had immediate business
+elsewhere.</p>
+
+<p>There being nothing else to do, I accompanied this
+singular messenger after hastily assuring Aelios that
+I would return as soon as possible.</p>
+
+<p>As I might have anticipated, our walk turned out to
+be far from pleasant. The old man had evidently been
+long trained in diplomacy, for I could not induce him
+to speak except non-committally and in monosyllables.
+And all the way to the office of the Adviser I was
+left to my own conjectures, while we skirted public
+squares that looked like lakes or waded ankle-deep
+through the salty water.</p>
+
+<hr class="tb">
+
+<p>Arriving at the many-domed sandstone edifice
+where the Atlantean government had its headquarters,
+my companion bade me wait in a book-lined
+anteroom, and went to notify his chief of my arrival.
+It was as though my coming had been awaited, for
+the old man had hardly left me when he reappeared
+and motioned me to follow him.</p>
+
+<p>I have a vague remembrance of accompanying him
+through long, arched galleries; but of these my mind
+retains no definite impression, and the next thing I
+dearly recall is that I stood in a little blue-walled
+room before an impressive-looking elderly man whose
+picture I had often seen. His long, furrowed, sagacious
+features were manifestly those of a scholar, but
+there was a squareness about the jaw that marked him
+also as a man of action; while at the same time there
+was a patriarchal benignity about the sympathetic
+lines of the face. But one quality there was which
+dominated him now, and which none of the pictures had
+shown: an air of utter fatigue, of melancholy, almost
+of despair, all too plainly written in the hollows that
+underlined the weary, gray eyes, in the pale cheeks
+almost totally drained of blood, and in the haggard
+expression as of one who has not slept for days.</p>
+
+<p>To the right of the High Chief Adviser was seated
+a man whom I recognized with surprise. It was
+Xanocles, also looking pallid and worn—and as he rose
+to greet me I began to conceive some faint idea why I
+had been summoned.</p>
+
+<p>The Chief Adviser gravely motioned me to a seat at
+his left; and as I sank into the cushioned chair he
+plunged without formality into an explanation.</p>
+
+<p>“I need hardly tell you,” he commenced, speaking
+rapidly but in dull, sober tones, “how serious is the
+crisis that confronts Atlantis. But perhaps no one—except
+those of us who are on the inside of affairs—realizes
+quite how acute the danger is. Frankly speaking,
+we are incapable of dealing with the emergency.
+The intra-atomic pumps have been working to capacity
+for five days, forcing out fifty per cent more
+than their usual volume; but, even so, the water is
+pouring in at the rate of several tons a second faster
+than we can drive it out. This in itself would indicate
+a grave enough peril; but this is not the worst.
+Our engineers tell us that the crack is extending to
+portions of the wall previously unaffected, and that
+new sections may give way at any time. When this
+happens, it will be—the end.”</p>
+
+<p>The High Chief Adviser paused, bleakly frowning;
+then, with a piercing glance at me, as if to see whether
+I had anticipated his meaning, he continued, “It is apparent
+that Atlantis cannot save itself. We are facing
+a peril unique in history, and have not the weapons
+with which to combat it. If help comes, it must come
+from outside. And that is why I have summoned
+you.”</p>
+
+<p>“But I don’t exactly see—” I began.</p>
+
+<p>“Let me explain,” the official continued, impatiently.
+“You yourself of course can do nothing. But you come
+from a people who, to judge from your writings, have
+developed remarkable engineering and mechanical skill.
+I am hopeful that their science may be able to devise
+some means of saving us, and for that reason I am
+planning to send you above seas for help. What do
+you think of the idea?”</p>
+
+<p>“Why, I—I think it might be worth trying,” was all
+I was able to gasp in reply.</p>
+
+<p>“Your friend Xanocles also thinks it worth trying,”
+proceeded the Adviser suavely. “Now I personally
+have always been against the policy of Emergence;
+but it is imperative to try new measures; and at a
+time like this, fortunately, the law empowers me to
+take any action on my own initiative. And so I sent
+for Xanocles today as one of the most prominent local
+members of the Emergence Party, and when I asked
+whom he would advise me to appoint as special envoy
+to the upper world he had no hesitation about mentioning
+you.”</p>
+
+<p>“But why me?” I demanded, doubtful of my qualifications
+for so high an office.</p>
+
+<p>“Well, to be sure, you were not the only one,”
+stated the Adviser. “He also recommended a certain
+Gavison, but we have decided to hold him in reserve,
+and if you do not return in a few days we will send
+him out with a second submarine. Meanwhile, if you
+would care to accept—”</p>
+
+<p>“Why, of course—of course I’ll accept—if it is for
+the good of Atlantis,” I declared. “But just what
+would you expect of me?”</p>
+
+<p>“One of our submersible vessels, with a crew of
+four men, will be in readiness at the docks early tomorrow
+morning. You will board it, and it will bear
+you out through the eastern valve and to any part of
+the upper world you may direct. But you are to
+waste no time about informing your fellows of the
+menace that confronts Atlantis. They too have submersible
+vessels, as your arrival here proves—let them
+send some of their ships down here, if they can, with
+materials to repair the wall. But above all things,
+you must remember not to delay, not to delay!”</p>
+
+<p>“I will do my best,” I promised. “But let me not
+hold out any false hopes—I am not sure that the upper
+world will be able to assist.”</p>
+
+<p>“At any rate, you can try,” sighed the Head of the
+Atlantean government. “It is a chance worth taking.
+We lose nothing by the attempt.”</p>
+
+<p>And then, fixing on me that powerful magnetic
+glance common to all the Atlanteans, he demanded,
+“You will spare no effort?”</p>
+
+<p>“I will spare no effort,” I solemnly vowed.</p>
+
+<p>“Then the fates be with you!” And the High Chief
+Adviser rose and firmly took both my hands; and I
+thought that just a trace of emotion dimmed his eyes
+as he fervently continued, “I need say no more. You
+know as well as I how much depends upon this.
+Above all things, Harkness, you will make haste, you
+will make haste, will you not? Good-bye—and good fortune
+will be yours!”</p>
+
+<p>And the next moment, accompanied by Xanocles, I
+was passing through the outer galleries. The last
+glimpse I caught of the High Adviser showed me
+the great head wearily sagging, the lids drooping over
+the melancholy gray eyes as if in utmost renunciation
+or despair.</p>
+
+<hr class="tb">
+
+<p>From the Adviser’s office I hastened straight home,
+leaving Xanocles, after being assured that he would
+come to me early in the morning.</p>
+
+<p>I found Aelios impatiently awaiting my return. “You
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_374">[374]</span>have been long,” she murmured, although it seemed to
+me that I had come back very quickly. And the big,
+blue eyes looked up at me inquiringly, and I had to
+explain at once the meaning of the Adviser’s summons.</p>
+
+<p>She followed my recital without a word; but heavy
+furrows began to appear upon her brow when I told
+her how serious was the plight of Atlantis; and a big
+limpid teardrop flowed unheeded down her cheek.</p>
+
+<p>“You did right to accept the commission,” she said,
+coming to me when I had finished my story, and resting
+one hand affectionately upon my shoulder. And
+a deep melancholy made moist her eyes as she continued,
+“I am glad that the choice has fallen upon
+you. When do we start on our voyage?”</p>
+
+<p>“We?” I repeated, staring at her in surprise.</p>
+
+<p>“Yes, we. I intend to go with you, of course.”</p>
+
+<p>“But, Aelios, that’s impossible!” I exclaimed, springing
+up and drawing her closely to me. “You know
+how much I’d like to have you with me. But you
+don’t seem to realize the peril.”</p>
+
+<p>“Peril?” She laughed disdainfully, as she withdrew
+from me. “Do you think I’d have you submit to a
+peril I wouldn’t share in? Besides, is it not in the
+interest of my own country? Should I stay here
+doing nothing when I might help to save Atlantis?”</p>
+
+<p>“But, even so, would you be permitted—” I started
+to protest.</p>
+
+<p>“Of course I’d be permitted! The High Chief Adviser
+would be more than willing—only, of course, he
+wouldn’t ask me to take the risk.”</p>
+
+<p>“And neither would I ask you—” I objected; but
+she cut me short by demanding, sharply, “Do you
+think it’s any greater than the risk of staying here?”
+And, with the air of one whose mind is made up and is
+not to be questioned, she reminded me, “We better be
+getting ready, for I don’t suppose we’ll have any time
+to waste.”</p>
+
+<p>And thereupon, the question having been settled, we
+began our meager preparations. But we found that
+there was not much to prepare, for of course the submarine
+would be well provisioned; and, except for a
+few personal trinkets, we could think of little to take
+away with us. But it occurred to me to bring a copy
+of Homer’s lost masterpiece, the “Telegonus,” which
+might convince the upper world of the truth of my
+reports about Atlantis. And it also occurred to me to
+pay a pilfering expedition to the museum, which was
+now untenanted even by the doormen; and, when I
+returned, my pockets were weighed down with several
+pieces of gold, and my arms were laden with a large
+amorphous bundle, whose contents might have been
+identified as an Ensign’s uniform.</p>
+
+<p>Of the night that followed I have only the most confused
+and disturbing remembrance. I know that I did
+not sleep, except to drowse away by brief, nightmare-haunted
+spells; and I also know that Aelios did not
+sleep, for her mind like mine was busy contemplating
+the adventure before us. Yet we were both too weary
+for connected thought; and jumbled visions were all
+that greeted us as we lay there speechless in the
+blackness.</p>
+
+<p>The moment the lights were flashed on again we renounced
+our futile attempts at slumber. And we had
+hardly risen and made ourselves presentable when we
+began to receive visitors. Not only did Xanocles arrive
+as he had promised, but the entire Upper World
+Club appeared in a group, for I had notified Gavison
+of my prospective departure and had expressed my desire
+to see all the men again before I left.</p>
+
+<p>Since all our visitors insisted on seeing us off, it was
+a good-sized company that attended us as we bade
+farewell to the butterfly-shaped building that had
+housed us so long, and set off through the streets of the
+stricken city toward the river. Yet our escort, while
+large, was far from merry, for the strain of the past
+few days was written upon us all, and the pale cheeks
+and weary looks of my companions matched their listless
+manner and their silence. One or two—and among
+them the unquenchable Stranahan—did indeed attempt
+to be jocular; but their efforts were half-hearted and
+flat, and their laughter rang thin and hollow like
+mockery; and as we drew nearer our goal and saw
+the flood rippling through the streets ahead, we heard
+no more of their jests, but all of us plunged onward
+speechlessly and with stern, set faces, oppressed as
+though by the shadow of some solemn and awful
+presence.</p>
+
+<hr class="tb">
+
+<p>When we reached the inundated districts, I of
+course urged my companions to turn back. But
+they paid no heed, and pressed gravely on their way,
+first wading ankle-deep, then halfway to their knees,
+while strung out in a long line among scattered houses
+that looked like lake dwellings. Here a marble edifice,
+there a colonnade, yonder a cluster of statues, projected
+above the deluge, whose green-gray current went
+swishing past as though from an inexhaustible source.
+Amid those fluid wastes, which had obliterated all familiar
+landmarks and gave to well known things a new
+and terrible majesty, it was impossible to be sure of
+our way; and once one of the men slipped into a depression
+so deep that he had to swim to save himself;
+and more than once some one tripped over some
+buried obstacle, and went floundering at full length
+into the water, thereby provoking a short-lived outburst
+of mirth. So great were the dangers that we
+had to move very slowly; but we also moved with
+grim regularity, and our progress was without sound
+other than the monotonous splash, splash of our advancing
+feet.</p>
+
+<p>Yet it was not only our own plight that made us
+moody and sad. As we plodded through the flooded
+districts, we had continual glimpses of the inhabitants—and
+in their aspect and manner there was nothing
+to reassure us. Here, through an open window, we
+would catch sight of several agile figures straining to
+bind some huge collection into a bundle; there we
+would observe a man descending from his doorstep
+into the enveloping waters, his back bent down with a
+great pile of household articles, a wan-faced woman
+clinging nervously to him or turning back with moist
+eyes to the home they were leaving. And we passed
+not one or two such refugees but scores, literally
+scores. One would have a three-year-old perched securely
+on his shoulder, another would be trying to
+soothe a crying babe or leading by the hand a frightened
+lad of five; some would be bearing off great
+heaps of clothing or huge cans and boxes that looked
+like food containers, and a few were puffing and panting
+to save their books, rugs and paintings.</p>
+
+<p>Meanwhile the eyes of all the people were baleful
+with a wild, unnatural light; their features were assuming
+a furtive, hunted expression; their voices had
+lost their music, and had grown nervous and shrill.
+And all were looking bloodless and bedraggled; ominous
+hollows were forming in their cheeks and beneath
+their eyes; their clothes were soiled and untended,
+their beards scraggly and untrimmed; and many had
+lost their normal restraint, so that we passed a woman
+who sobbed and sobbed quite regardless of our approach,
+an old man who growled and gibbered insanely
+to himself, and more than one that did not even seem
+to see us, but stared upward intently with imploring
+face, while mumbling incoherent melancholy phrases.</p>
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_375">[375]</span></p>
+<p>When finally we drew near our destination, the water
+reached to the knees of the tallest of us, and our
+progress was more laborious and slower than ever. I
+now began to fear that we would not be able to locate
+the river bank, for how tell where the shallow water
+ended and the deep began? At length, however, I
+was relieved to observe a wide, unbroken flowing expanse
+several hundred yards ahead, and to note that
+a long rope, stretched in the water between improvised
+wooden supports, marked the river’s theoretical edge.</p>
+
+<p>It was just when we came in sight of our goal that
+the supreme horror befell. Even to this day I can
+recapture the amazement and alarm of that dread
+moment; and the abruptness of it all and the terror
+overwhelm me anew. Had the waters swelled and
+swept over us in a tidal wave, I would have been
+panic-stricken and yet halfway prepared—but I could
+not have anticipated that the blow was to strike from
+above rather than from beneath.</p>
+
+<hr class="tb">
+
+<p>Suddenly—although this was only the beginning
+of the Atlantean day—the golden lights of the glass
+dome began to waver and flicker, then paled to a twilight
+glow, then (in less time than it takes to state)
+snapped into blackness.</p>
+
+<p>So startled were we that we stood there transfixed;
+scarcely an oath issued from our petrified lips. The
+darkness was absolute; we could not see our nearest
+neighbors; we seemed walled in by oblivion. For a
+moment there was silence; then came a light splashing
+to my left, and simultaneously dozens of voices
+burst forth bewilderingly in terror and dismay.</p>
+
+<p>And when that first horrified outburst was dying
+down, there crept over us from a distance other cries—confused
+cries as of many voices sighing and wailing
+in chorus. And all those voices seemed to form
+into one, and to grieve and drone in a single long-drawn
+sob, with echoes reminding me uncannily of
+lost souls mourning in the dark.</p>
+
+<p>But soon that melancholy tumult passed away; and
+we were aware only that we stood there knee-deep in
+the flood, in a silence unbroken except by the gurgling
+waters.</p>
+
+<p>Then it was that the most quick-witted of us all
+came to his senses. Suddenly a vivid light stabbed
+the gloom just to my left; and by its glaring yellow
+illumination I could make out the tall form of Xanocles.</p>
+
+<p>In his hands was a good-sized pocket flashlight. “I
+was a little afraid this might happen,” he declared,
+trying to be matter-of-fact, and speaking loudly enough
+for us all to hear. “Lucky I had these lanterns with
+me.” And, to our surprise, he calmly drew several
+more flashlights from the folds of his garments, and
+passed them to his nearest neighbors.</p>
+
+<p>“The High Chief Adviser warned me yesterday that
+this was possible,” he explained. “And so I thought
+it best to be prepared.”</p>
+
+<p>And then, while we all stood gaping at him like
+men with paralyzed minds, he continued, soothingly,
+“There is really nothing to be alarmed about. The
+water must have gotten into the electric power generators—that
+is all. In a few hours the lights will no
+doubt be shining again.”</p>
+
+<p>But his words did not carry conviction. In his voice
+was a note of concern that he could not wholly exclude;
+and as we glanced nervously into the gloom—a gloom
+that was all-enveloping except for our flashlights and
+an occasional firefly flicker in the far distance—we
+could not believe that the golden luminaries would soon
+beam upon us again.</p>
+
+<p>It was a solemn procession that started splashing
+once more toward the river bank. Guided by the
+sallow illumination of the flashlights, we could barely
+find our course; and step by step, with laborious slowness,
+we plodded through the unrelenting flood. None
+of us could find the heart to utter a word; and from
+time to time, among my shadowy attendants, I caught
+glimpses of lips rigidly compressed and faces firmly
+set, as among men who go forth to meet the Ultimate.
+All the while Aelios was at my side, hovering close
+as if for shelter; and when I could I helped her over
+the more difficult places, though she too was speechless,
+like one whose thoughts are too appalling for expression.</p>
+
+<p>Then, for an instant, hope came flashing back. A
+sudden radiance burst upon us from above; the great
+luminaries were once more touched with light, which
+fitfully expanded from a pale red glow almost to the
+normal golden—and then fitfully died out into utter
+gloom.</p>
+
+<p>And our cries of rejoicing were frozen on our lips,
+and the darkness that ensued seemed more intense than
+ever. And once more there was only the silence, the
+wavering flashlights and the whirling floods.</p>
+
+<p>Groping and floundering and sometimes sinking almost
+up to the hips in water, we at last found ourselves
+near the rope that marked the river’s verge.
+And by turning upstream toward a dim but steady
+yellow light, we managed to locate the docks and the
+submarine, which we recognized by the radiance filtering
+through the portholes.</p>
+
+<p>Then, almost before I realized that the ultimate
+moment had come, I found myself assisting Aelios
+up the half-submerged gangplank and on to the deck
+of the grim, low-lying, shadowy ship. The next that
+I remember is that I was back again in two feet of
+water, and that a multitude of hands clasped mine, a
+multitude of voices were lifted simultaneously, first
+the voices of a mob attempting a cheer that died
+prematurely, then the voices of individuals, shouting
+out advice and farewells, wishing me a safe voyage,
+entreating me to make haste for the good of Atlantis.
+I have a recollection of seeing the earnest, grave face
+of Gavison by the uncertain, shifting illumination of
+the flashlights; the elongated, intellectual face of
+Xanocles; the youthful but sad-eyed and frightened
+face of Rawson, and Stranahan’s droll countenance now
+furrowed almost into a tragic severity.</p>
+
+<p>But in an instant all these faces—so familiar to me,
+and so well liked—had drifted out of view. I too
+stood upon the gangplank, lightly waving although my
+heart seemed dull and dead within me. Then I
+mounted to the deck, cast a last glance at the darkness
+that hid the marble temples of Atlantis, and
+waved for the last time to the dim watching figures.
+And as the flashlights began slowly to retreat, I descended
+a narrow stairway, heard an iron door clatter
+to a close above me, felt a jolt and a shudder that
+were followed by a regular, incessant quivering—and
+knew that I was on my way back to the earth.</p>
+
+
+
+
+<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop"><div class="chapter"><h2 class="nobreak" id="CHAPTER_XXXV">CHAPTER XXXV
+<br>
+The Return</h2></div>
+
+
+<p>The facts of my return from Atlantis have been
+reported so widely that it would be futile for
+me to dwell upon them. It is generally known
+how, having crossed the ocean at the sixty-knot speed
+made possible by our intra-atomic propellers, our submarine
+found its way to the mouth of the Potomac and
+almost up to Washington; how, after it had anchored
+obscurely some distance below the city, I donned my
+old uniform and made my way out under cover of
+night; how I hastened the next day to the offices of
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_376">[376]</span>the naval department, disclosed my identity, and met
+with ridicule not only at my incredible tale, but at
+my strange appearance, my long beard, my goggles
+and my greenish skin.</p>
+
+<p>Unfortunately, in the haste and confusion of my
+departure from the Sunken World, I had made one
+oversight. I had forgotten the copy of Homer’s lost
+“Telegonus,” which I had hoped to exhibit in verification
+of my story! Scattered lines of the poem, to be
+sure, did keep trailing through my mind with a wild,
+ringing majesty—but they were the merest fragments,
+and to recite them would have been to brand myself as
+a madman. Yet I had little other evidence to display.
+Aelios could not help me, for she could not
+speak English; and in spite of her exceptional beauty,
+there would have been nothing to prove that she had
+not been born above seas. And as for the four members
+of the submarine crew, they refused stanchly to
+leave the vessel; and, besides, they likewise could not
+speak English, and their fantastic Atlantean garb
+would no doubt have marked them also as lunatics.</p>
+
+<p>And so there was nothing to do but wait, wait for
+days and days, haunting the naval offices, making
+myself a laughing stock and a nuisance, yet repeating
+my pleas so insistently that in the end they had to
+be heeded. But meanwhile I was losing time—time
+which I knew to be all-important. Even now Atlantis
+might be in a death-grip with the waters; and the
+difference of a few hours might bridge the gap between
+safety and disaster. Would not my fellows
+make haste? was the question I kept asking and asking;
+and all the while they remained inactive and unmoved.
+Every day, with tears in her eyes, Aelios
+would inquire when the rescuing expedition was to set
+out; and every day I would nod sadly, and sigh, “Perhaps
+tomorrow.” But tomorrow would bring little
+hope; and even when at last an investigation was undertaken,
+it was careless and dilatory—and it was
+long before I could convince the bewildered inspectors
+that I was actually one of the company of the lost
+X-111.</p>
+
+<p>It was long, indeed, before I could even find any
+one to identify me. In a land where my acquaintances
+had been legion, I was apparently unknown;
+and my old friends had either been dispersed or else
+I had slipped out of their minds. Even Alma Huntley
+failed to reply to my letters; and it was months before
+I learned that, having long given me up as lost,
+she had left two years before for the Pacific Coast
+as the bride of the Reverend David Mosely.</p>
+
+<p>But though my messages to Alma never reached their
+destination, a letter to my old friend, Frank Everett,
+survived many forwardings and found its goal; and
+not only did Everett hasten to me from New York,
+but he summoned others of our former group, whose
+testimony combined with the evidence of finger-prints
+and handwriting to identify me beyond dispute.</p>
+
+<p>Matters now began to move more quickly—in fact,
+with a rapidity that was bewildering. Almost overnight
+my story was flashed from end to end of the
+land, and I found myself a public figure. Newspaper
+headlines flaunted my name, and the word Atlantis was
+on every one’s lips; interviewers came swarming to
+see me, scientists with their demands for information,
+the heads of lecture bureaus and of motion picture corporations
+with their golden offers. But all that really
+interested me were the offers of assistance for the
+Sunken World. Several men of means became interested,
+and placed large funds at our disposal, so making
+possible the Harkness Institute for Marine Research;
+half a dozen engineers volunteered to accompany
+me back to Atlantis, and with their aid we secured
+implements and chemicals capable of sealing wide
+breaches in a glass wall. But we could produce no
+vessel other than that in which we had left Atlantis,
+for the naval submarines were not equipped for the
+deep waters of the Sunken World; and so when finally
+the rescuing party set off down the Potomac from
+Washington, its members numbered only six in addition
+to Aelios and myself and the original crew.</p>
+
+<hr class="tb">
+
+<p>The small size of this expedition and its limited
+equipment would alone have made us doubtful of
+success; but we remembered with acute misgivings that
+two full months had passed since we left Archeon, and
+that during all this time the flood waters must have
+been rising. We were particularly uneasy because of
+the failure of Gavison to appear in a second submarine,
+as the High Chief Adviser had promised; and, brooding
+upon his absence, we would recall how we had
+bidden farewell to Atlantis, and would think with a
+shudder of the bleak confusion of the people and the
+swelling torrents swishing through the darkness.</p>
+
+<p>To make matters worse (if they could possibly be
+worse) our voyage back to Atlantis was beset with
+unforeseen difficulties. Owing to the absence of definite
+charts and our uncertainty as to the latitude and longitude
+of the Sunken World, we were lost for several
+days amid the wildest wastes of the Atlantic. At
+times we would dive to the sea bottom, or to such
+depths that Atlantis could not conceivably be beneath
+us, and would go cruising for hours amid that black
+infinity or along the shell-strewn or bouldery floor
+of the ocean, staring through the portholes at the
+luminous-eyed creatures that flitted ghost-like about
+us, and here and there gaping horror-stricken at some
+contorted but strangely eloquent rusty iron mass. But
+of Atlantis itself there was no sign, and we had the
+queer impression that it had dissolved bubble-like amid
+the watery immensity.</p>
+
+<p>And so at length our expedition converted itself into
+little more than a random questing after what did not
+appear to exist. Should we ever again catch a glimpse
+of the green-golden walls of our lost universe? There
+were moments when I was given to curious doubts,
+and felt that Atlantis, once lost, could never be found
+again; that the billows would cover it as completely
+from our sight as from the sight of the ages. But
+all the time, while we kept dashing at prodigious speed
+through the vacant waters, we were given to strange
+fits of hope that alternated with spells of despair,—hope
+when we would descry a far-off light that would
+turn out to be merely some elusive fishy lantern,—despair
+that our help, already too long delayed, was
+being retarded to the point of impotence.</p>
+
+<p>The final discovery came with startling suddenness.
+One day, gliding slowly downward at a considerable
+depth, we were stopped by a hard, flat barrier that
+spread beneath us like the sea bottom. But as we
+began to drift horizontally, we observed that the surface
+was smooth and ominously light-reflecting—and
+with a gasp of despair we recognized that the substance
+was glass!</p>
+
+<p>The surprise and horror of that moment are still
+vivid in my memory. “Turn the searchlights down,
+down!” muttered the leader of our crew, in a voice
+that trembled perceptibly; and as the great water-piercing
+streamers began to quiver and shake and then
+slowly descended in long, rambling curves, Aelios came
+rushing to my side like a child who fears to be alone,
+and clung closely to me while we both stared through
+the portholes with faces rigid and eager.</p>
+
+<p>But at first we saw nothing. All was dark beneath
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_377">[377]</span>us—not a gleam, not a flicker, broke the blackness of
+the Sunken World.</p>
+
+<p>Then, as the searchlights swayed and shifted till
+they swept the depths directly beneath, we began to
+make out familiar objects amid the obscurity. Dimly,
+strangely, as though draped in a fog, the outlines of
+great domes and arches and colonnades began to
+emerge, interspersed by Titanic columns and statuesque
+temples that appeared to waver uncannily.</p>
+
+<p>“See! See! It is still there!” Aelios cried, frantically,
+as she pressed more closely to me; and with the agony
+of despair in her voice was mingled just a tinge of
+hope.</p>
+
+<p>I took her hand and sought to console her; but
+even as I did so her whole body began to shake
+spasmodically, and her sobbing throbbed from end
+to end of the ship. For many minutes she seemed unable
+to speak.</p>
+
+<p>Yet, even while the long-drawn, heartbreaking sobs
+panted forth, she began to point, to point distractedly
+downward, with blind, quivering fingers that called
+with frenzied urgency, forcing me to peer again
+through the porthole.</p>
+
+<p>With my arms still about her, I scanned the dim,
+ghostly twilight. But for a moment I observed nothing
+alarming. Then, as my gaze became focused upon
+a gray dome just below, I too cried out in dread
+realization.</p>
+
+<p>Those glass-covered depths were not without sign of
+life, as I had thought; but here and there a lantern-bearing
+object, with flapping finny body, went wavering
+through the windows and above the temple roofs!</p>
+
+<p class="center" style="margin-top:2em"><span class="smcap">The End.</span></p>
+
+
+
+
+<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop"><div class="transnote"><h2 class="nobreak" id="Transcribers_note">Transcriber’s note:</h2>
+
+<p>This etext was transcribed from <i>Amazing Stories Quarterly</i>, Summer 1928 (vol. 1, no. 3, pp. 292–377).</p>
+
+<p>The following additions to the text have been made: the titles “Foreword” and “Introduction”, and the Table of Contents section.</p>
+
+<p>Obvious errors in spelling, hyphenation and punctuation have been
+silently corrected in this version, but minor inconsistencies and
+archaic forms have been retained as printed. Some illustrations
+have been moved to the nearest chapter break.</p>
+</div>
+
+<div style='text-align:center'>*** END OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK 77257 ***</div>
+</body>
+</html>
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+This book, including all associated images, markup, improvements,
+metadata, and any other content or labor, has been confirmed to be
+in the PUBLIC DOMAIN IN THE UNITED STATES.
+
+Procedures for determining public domain status are described in
+the "Copyright How-To" at https://www.gutenberg.org.
+
+No investigation has been made concerning possible copyrights in
+jurisdictions other than the United States. Anyone seeking to utilize
+this eBook outside of the United States should confirm copyright
+status under the laws that apply to them.
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+Project Gutenberg (https://www.gutenberg.org) public repository for eBook #77257
+(https://www.gutenberg.org/ebooks/77257)
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+*** START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK 77257 ***
+
+ Transcribed from _Amazing Stories Quarterly_,
+ Summer 1928 (vol. 1, no. 3, pp. 292–377).
+
+
+
+
+ The SUNKEN WORLD
+
+ By Stanton A. Coblentz
+
+
+[Illustration: Then, as the searchlights swayed and shifted till they
+swept the depths directly beneath, we began to make out familiar
+objects amid the obscurity.... For a moment I observed nothing
+alarming. Then, as my gaze became focused upon a gray dome just
+below, I too cried out in dread realization.... Here and there a
+lantern-bearing object, with flapping finny body, went wavering through
+the windows and above the temple roofs!]
+
+
+
+
+ FOREWORD
+
+
+ _The world of literature is full of Atlantis stories, but we are
+ certain, that there has never been a story written with the daring
+ and with such originality as to approach “The Sunken World.”_
+
+ _Science is pretty well convinced today, that there was an Atlantis
+ many thousands of years ago. Just exactly what became of it, no
+ one knows. The author, in this story, which no doubt will become a
+ classic some day, has approached the subject at a totally different
+ angle than has ever been attempted before; and let no one think
+ that the idea, daring and impossible as it would seem at first, is
+ impossible. Nor is it at all impossible that progress and science
+ goes and comes in waves. It may be possible that millions of years
+ ago, the world had reached a much higher culture than we have today.
+ Electricity and radio, and all that goes with it, may have been
+ well known eons ago, only to be swept away and rediscovered. Every
+ scientist knows, that practically every invention is periodically
+ rediscovered independently. It seems there is nothing new under the
+ sun._
+
+ _But the big idea behind the author’s theme is the holding of
+ present-day science and progress up to a certain amount of ridicule,
+ and showing up our civilization in a sometimes grotesque mirror,
+ which may not be always pleasing to our vanity and to our appraisal
+ of our so-called present day achievements._
+
+ _The point the author brings out is that it is one thing to have
+ power in science and inventions, but that it is another thing to use
+ that power correctly. He shows dramatically and vividly how it can be
+ used and how it should be used._
+
+ _From the technical standpoint, this story is tremendous, and while
+ some of our critics, will, as usual, find fault with the hydraulics
+ contained in this story, the fact remains they are not at all
+ impossible._
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+
+
+ INTRODUCTION
+
+
+It was in the spring of 1918 that the United States submarine X-111
+was launched upon its adventurous career. The German commerce raiders
+had now reached the height of their effectiveness; almost daily
+they were taking their toll of luckless seamen and provision-laden
+steamers; and the United States government, in alarm that was never
+officially admitted, had resolved upon desperate measures. The result
+was the X-111. The first of a fleet of undersea craft, this vessel
+was constructed upon lines never before attempted. Not only was it
+exceedingly long (being about two hundred feet from stem to stern), but
+it was excessively narrow, and a man had to be short indeed to stand
+upright within it on its single deck without coming into contact with
+the arching ceiling. The ship, in fact, was nothing more nor less than
+a long pipe-like tube of reinforced steel, able to cleave the water at
+tremendous speed and ram and destroy any enemy by ramming it with its
+beak-like prow. But this was only its slightest point of novelty. At
+both ends and at several points along the sides it was equipped with
+water-piercing searchlights of a power never before known (the creation
+of Walter Tamrock, the Kansas inventor who lost his life in the
+war); and it was provided with a series of air-tight and water-proof
+compartments, any one of which might be pierced without seriously
+injuring the vessel as a whole. Hence the X-111 was generally known as
+unsinkable, and upon it the American officials fastened their hopes of
+abating the nuisance of the enemy “U-boat.”
+
+The sinking of this “unsinkable” vessel is now of course a matter of
+history. Close observers of naval events will recall how, in May, 1918,
+the newspapers reported the disappearance of another United States
+submarine. All that was known with certainty was, that the ship had
+been commissioned to the danger zone; that it had failed to return to
+its base at the expected time, and that the passing days brought no
+news of it; that wireless messages and searching expeditions alike
+proved unavailing, and that it was two months before the only clue as
+to its fate was found. Then it was that a British destroyer, on scout
+duty in the North Sea, picked up a drifting life preserver bearing the
+imprint “X-111.” For strategic reasons, this fact was not divulged
+until much later, and for strategic reasons it was not made known
+that the missing submarine was of a new and previously untried type;
+but the mystery of the X-111’s disappearance weighed heavily upon the
+minds of naval officials, and secretly they resolved upon immediate and
+exhaustive investigation. All in vain. Not a trace of the lost ship or
+of the thirty-nine members of its crew could be found; not a scrap of
+the usual drifting flotsam or wreckage could be picked up anywhere on
+the sea; and at last it was admitted in despair that the waters would
+perhaps guard their secret forever.
+
+Seven years went by. Peace had long since returned, and the X-111
+and its tragedy had been forgotten except by a few relatives of the
+unfortunate thirty-nine. Then suddenly the mystery was fanned into
+vivid life again. A bearded man, with a strange greenish complexion and
+eyes that blinked oddly beneath wide, colored glasses, appeared at the
+offices of the Navy department at Washington and claimed to be one of
+the company of the X-111. At first, of course, he was merely laughed at
+as a madman, and could induce no one to listen to him seriously; but
+he was so persistent in his pleas, and so anxious to give proof of his
+identity, that a few began to suspect that there might be some shadow
+of truth to his claims after all. Half-heartedly, an investigation was
+undertaken--and with results that left the world gaping in amazement!
+The testimony of a dozen witnesses, as well as the unmistakable
+evidence of finger-prints and handwriting, proved that the wild-looking
+stranger was none other than Anson Harkness, Ensign on the ill-starred
+X-111, long mourned as dead. Now, for the first time, the truth about
+the disappearance of that remarkable vessel was to be made known; and
+the eager public was treated to a story so extraordinary that only
+irrefutable evidence could make it seem credible. It is safe to say
+that never, since Columbus returned to Spain with the news of his
+discoveries in seeking a western route to the far East, had any mariner
+delivered to his people a revelation so unexampled and marvelous.
+
+But while numerous accounts of the great discovery are extant, and
+while the furore of discussion over the newspaper articles and
+interviews shows no sign of waning, the public has yet to read the
+tale in the words of Harkness himself. And it is for this reason that
+the accompanying history, to which Harkness has devoted himself ever
+since his return from exile, possesses a peculiar and timely interest.
+Harkness has described, unaffectedly and sincerely, the most perilous
+exploits which any man has ever survived. Hence the following pages
+should prove entertaining not only to the student of world events, but
+to that larger public which finds value in a rare and stirring bit of
+autobiography.
+
+ STANTON A. COBLENTZ,
+ (New York, 1928.)
+
+
+
+
+ CHAPTER I
+
+ Harkness Explains His Disappearance
+
+
+The maiden voyage of the X-111 was ill-fated from the first. Perhaps
+the new inventions had not yet been perfected, or perhaps, in the haste
+of wartime, adequate tests had not been made; at any rate, the vessel
+developed mechanical troubles after her first half day at sea. To begin
+with, the rudder and steering apparatus proved unmanageable; then,
+after hours spent in making repairs, the engines showed a tendency
+to balk under the tremendous speed we were ordered to maintain; and
+finally, when we had about solved the engine problem, we had the
+misfortune to collide with a half-submerged derelict, while running on
+the surface, and one of our water-tight compartments sprang a leak.
+
+Immediately following the accident, we had risen to the surface, for
+the break was about on a level with our waterline, and the compartment
+could not be completely flooded so long as we did not submerge. Yet
+Captain Gavison warned us not to waste a moment, and the men worked
+with desperate speed to repair the damage, for we knew that we were in
+the zone of the German U-boat, and that any delay might prove perilous,
+if not fatal. Unfortunately, the sea was unusually calm and the day was
+blue and clear, so that even our low-lying hulk could be sighted many
+miles across the waters.
+
+I do not know precisely at what position we were then stationed,
+except that it was somewhere in the Eastern Atlantic, and at a point
+where, according to the warnings of our Secret Service, a concentration
+of German submarines was to be expected. At any other time we would
+have welcomed the opportunity to come to grips with the foe; but now,
+in our disabled condition, we kept a lookout with grave misgivings,
+and silently prayed that the damage might be repaired before the enemy
+slunk into view. Yet it was slow work to man the pumps and at the same
+time to weld a strip of metal across the jagged gap in our side; and
+hours passed while we stood there working thigh-deep in water, our
+heads bent low, for there was but two or three feet of breathing space
+beneath the curved iron ceiling. Suppressed growls and curses came
+from our lips each time a sudden surge of the waters interfered with
+the welding. Meanwhile all was in confusion; the men worked with the
+feverish inefficiency of terror, scarcely heeding the orders of the
+officers; the chief contents of the compartment floated about almost
+unnoted. I distinctly remember that several articles, including a life
+preserver which one of the recruits had unfastened in his fright, were
+washed overboard.
+
+Still, we did make some progress, and after four or five hours, and
+just as the blood-red sun was sinking low in the west, we found our
+task nearing completion. A few more minutes, and the welding would
+be accomplished; a few more minutes, and darkness would be upon us,
+leaving us free from fear of attack for the next eight or ten hours.
+
+It was just when we felt safest that the real danger presented itself.
+A swift trail of white shot across the waters far to westward, and,
+advancing at full speed, vanished in a long, frothy furrow just in
+our wake. “A German U-boat! A U-boat two points off the port bow!”
+frantically cried the watch; and we scrambled from the flooded
+compartment as the Captain gave the order “Submerge!” Now we heard the
+rapid churning of our engines as we went plunging into the blackness
+beneath the sea; now we made ready to launch a torpedo of our own as
+our periscope showed us the disappearing tip of an enemy submarine;
+now we were hurled into an exciting chase as our prodigiously powerful
+searchlights illumined whole leagues of the water, even revealing the
+dark, cigar-shaped hulk of the foe. Had we not been impeded by the dead
+weight of a compartment full of water, we would unquestionably have
+overtaken the enemy, rammed it and ended its career; even as it was, we
+seemed to be gaining upon it, and we had hopes of shooting up unseen
+and bullet-like from the dark, and with tremendous impact smiting it in
+two. Not even the unexpected appearance of a second submarine altered
+our plans. Handicapped as we were, we would show our superiority to
+both the enemy craft!
+
+But it was at this point that mechanical troubles again betrayed us.
+Overworked by our excessive burst of speed, our engines (which were of
+the super-electric type recently invented by Cogswell) gave signs of
+slowing up and stopping; and so dangerously overheated were they, that
+our Captain had to halt our vessel abruptly, almost within striking
+distance of the foe. Our position became extremely precarious, for at
+any moment the German searchlights might spy us out, and a few undersea
+bombs might send us to the bottom.
+
+As our own equipment had purposely been made as light as possible, we
+were provided with no explosive shells other than torpedoes: hence we
+were compelled to rise to the surface in order to attack. This, we
+realized, was a hazardous expedient, since both the enemy vessels were
+already in a position to answer our bombardment, volley for volley.
+But trusting to the gathering darkness and to our aggressive tactics
+to win us the advantage, we unhesitatingly rose to the level, and,
+with as little delay as possible, discharged a torpedo toward the dim,
+low-lying form of the foe.
+
+Whether that projectile reached its goal, none of us will ever be able
+to say. From the sudden, furious eruption of spray in the direction
+of the enemy craft, I am inclined to believe that this was among the
+U-boats later reported missing; yet, the torpedo may merely have
+struck some floating object and so have lost its prey. Whatever the
+results, we were unable to observe with certainty, for at the same
+moment a gleaming streak shot toward us across the dark waters, and
+the next instant we went sprawling about the deck as a dull thudding
+crash came to our ears and the vessel shook and wavered as though in
+an earthquake’s grip. Half dazed from the shock, we gathered ourselves
+together and rose uncertainly to our feet, staring at one another in
+dull consternation. And at the same moment one of the seamen burst
+wildly into the cabin, despair and terror in his maddened eyes. “The
+central compartment!” he cried. “The central compartment. It’s flooded,
+all flooded!” And as if to prove his words, we felt ourselves sinking,
+sinking slowly, though we had not been ordered to submerge; the
+darkness of the twilight skies quickly gave way to the darkness beneath
+the ocean.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+It was some minutes before we quite realized what was happening.
+Accustomed as we were to undersea traveling, we did not at first
+understand that this was an adventure quite out of the ordinary. Even
+when the waters had lost their first pale translucency and had become
+utterly black and opaque, we did not realize our terrible predicament.
+Only after our vessel began listing violently, and we felt the deck
+sloping at an angle of forty-five degrees, did we recognize the full
+horror of our position. Although we could see not one inch beyond
+the thick glass portholes, I had an indefinable sense that we were
+sinking, sinking down, down, down through vague and unknown abysses;
+and the stark and helpless terror on the assembled faces gave proof
+that the others shared my feelings. Not a word did we utter. Indeed,
+speaking would not have been easy, for a low, continuous roaring was
+in our ears, a hoarse, muffled roaring reminding me of the murmuring
+in a sea-shell. At the same time, a strange depression overwhelmed my
+senses; it seemed as though the atmosphere had suddenly become thick
+and heavy, too heavy for breathing; it seemed as though an unnatural
+weight had been piled upon me, threatening to crush and stifle me.
+Yet I did notice that the vessel quivered violently and lunged upward
+every few seconds, in a furious effort to right itself and rise to the
+surface. I did fancy that I heard the buzzing of the engines at times,
+an intermittent buzzing that was most disquieting; and I found myself,
+like the others, hanging to the brass railings to steady myself when
+the ship heaved and shuddered, or to keep my footing when we slanted
+downward.
+
+Perhaps five minutes passed when the door leading forward was thrust
+open, and Captain Gavison climbed precariously into the room. All
+eyes were bent upon him in silent inquiry; but his grim, stoically
+firm countenance was far from reassuring. It was apparent that he had
+something to say, and that he did not care to say it; and several
+anxious moments elapsed while he stood glowering upon us, evidently
+undecided whether to give his message words.
+
+Yet even at this crisis he could not forget discipline. His first words
+brought us no information, and his first action was to station us about
+the room in orderly fashion, assigning each to some specific duty.
+
+“I will not keep the facts from you,” he declared, with slow,
+deliberate accentuation, when finally we were all in position. “Three
+of our compartments are flooded. The other compartments seem to be
+holding out as yet, but the great mass of water in our hold is bearing
+us rapidly downward, and the engines seem unable to neutralize the
+effect. At the last reading, we were nine hundred and twenty-seven feet
+below sea level.”
+
+“Great God! What are we to do about it?” I gasped, in biting terror.
+
+“Suggestions are in order,” stated the Captain, laconically.
+
+But no suggestion was forthcoming.
+
+“Of course, we are in no immediate danger ...” he resumed. But he
+might have spared his words. Most of us had had sufficient experience
+of undersea travel to know that the danger was real enough. Barring
+the remote contingency that the engines would be brought back into
+efficient working order, there were only two possibilities. On the one
+hand, we might reach the bottom of the sea, and, stranded there, would
+perish of starvation or slow suffocation. Or, in the second place, we
+might continue drifting downward until the tremendous pressure of the
+water, proving too strong even for the stout steel envelope of our
+vessel, would bend and crush it like an egg-shell.
+
+Although we could no longer guide our course, our gigantic searchlights
+were at once brought into play, piercing the water with brilliant
+yellow streamers. Yet they might have been searchlights in a tomb,
+for they showed us nothing except the minute wavy dark shapes that
+occasionally drifted in and out of our line of vision. There was
+something ghastly, I thought, about that light, that intense unearthly
+sallow light, which glided slowly in long curves and spirals about the
+thick enveloping darkness. And the very penetrating power of the rays
+served only to accentuate the horror. For the illumination ended in
+nothingness; nothingness seemed to stretch above us, beneath us, and
+to all sides of us; we were enfolded in it as in a black mantle; it
+seemed to be stretching out long arms to fetter us, to gather us up, to
+strangle us slyly.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Slowly, with agonizing slowness, the moments crept by; slowly we
+continued sinking, down, down, down, ever down and down, with movement
+gradual and constantly diminishing, yet never ceasing. Never before in
+history, we told ourselves, had living men been plunged so far beneath
+the ocean. Our instruments recorded first twelve hundred feet, then
+fourteen, then sixteen, then eighteen hundred feet below sea level!
+
+And as we sank downward, we became aware that we were not the only
+living creatures in these depths. Our searchlights made us the center
+of attraction for myriads of scaly things; whole schools and squadrons
+of fishes were gathering moth-like in the vivid illumination thrown
+out by our vessel. Some were long, snaky monsters, with thin heads set
+with rows of spike-like teeth, and tiny eyes that gleamed evilly in
+the uncanny light; some were lithe sea dragons, with wolfish mouths
+and sabre-like bony appendages projecting from low foreheads; some
+were many-colored, rainbow-hued or streaked with black and golden,
+or red and azure, or yellow and white; some had chameleon eyes that
+flashed first green and then blue, according to the play of the light
+about them; many were flitting to and fro, circling and spiralling
+and doubling back and forth at incredible speed; and not a few,
+unacquainted with the ways of submarines, collided full-tilt with the
+thick glass of our portholes.
+
+But as our depth gradually increased, our finny visitors began to
+give way to others stranger still. When we were twenty-two hundred
+feet below the surface, the searchlights were no longer necessary
+to reveal the denizens of the deep, for the inhabitants of those
+unthinkable regions carried their own lamps! And how they amazed us
+and startled us!--how, in our shuddering nerve-racking terror, they
+appeared to us as ghosts or avenging fiends, or struck our overworked
+imaginations as approaching foes or rescuers! Suddenly, out of the
+deathly blackness, a spurt of green light appeared, swiftly widening
+until it seemed an unearthly searchlight--and, from a narrow focus of
+flame, two huge burning green eyes would shoot forth, darting cold
+malice at us through the glass port, until the yellow electric light
+would seem tinged with an emerald reflection. Or else a tiny flattened
+disk, softly phosphorescent throughout and marked on one surface by two
+bright beady eyes, would come floating in our direction like a pale
+apparition; or, again, a long dark rod, brilliantly white like a living
+flashlight, would dart curving and gleaming toward us out of the remote
+gloomy depths. But more terrifying than any of these were the nameless
+monsters with invisible bodies and lidless, fiery yellow eyes of the
+size of baseballs,--eyes that stared in at us, and stared and stared,
+as though all the concentrated horror of the universe were glaring upon
+us, seeking to ferret us out and mark us for its victims.
+
+And still we were sinking, unceasingly sinking, till the last faint
+hope had died in the heart of the most sanguine, and in despair and
+with half-mumbled phrases we admitted that there could be no rescue
+for us. When we were twenty-five hundred feet below the surface, the
+fury of expectation had given place to a blank and settled despondency;
+when the distance was twenty-eight hundred feet, each was striving in
+his own way to prepare himself for the fate which all felt to be but a
+question of hours. In our panic-stricken horror, we had all long ago
+forgotten the positions assigned us by the Captain; and the Captain
+himself did not appear to notice where we were. Young Rawson, the
+newest of the recruits, had gone down on his knees, and with tears in
+his eyes was murmuring half audible prayers; Matthew Stangale, one
+of the oldest and most hardened of the seamen, was pacing restlessly
+back and forth, back and forth, in the narrow compartment, clenching
+his fists furiously and muttering to himself; Daniel Howlett, veteran
+of many campaigns, contented himself with a suppressed growling and
+profanity, and his curses were echoed by his companions; Frank Ripley,
+a college gridiron hero, enlisted for the war, buried himself in a
+corner of the room, his face covered by his hands, the very picture of
+dejection, though every once in a while, wistfully and half-furtively,
+he would let his gaze travel to a little photograph he guarded close
+to his bosom. And as for Captain Gavison, on whom we had fastened our
+last fading hope of escape--he merely stood near the porthole with arms
+clenched behind his back and thin lips tightly compressed, peering out
+into the black waters as though he read there some secret hidden from
+the obtuse gaze of his followers.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+We were below the three thousand foot level when fresh cause for
+anxiety appeared. “The holy saints have mercy on us!” suddenly
+exclaimed James Stranahan, one of the common seamen, as he crossed
+himself piously. And pointing in awe-stricken amazement through one of
+the glass spy-holes which led from the deck, down through the bottom
+of the ship, he called attention to a dim shimmering luminescence far
+below. Excitedly we crowded about him, almost tumbling over one another
+in our eagerness and terror, but for a moment we could see nothing.
+Then, slowly, as we stood straining our eyes to fathom the blackness,
+we became aware of a vague filmy, widespread sheet of light twinkling
+faintly beneath us, and remote as the stars of an inverted Milky Way.
+
+A sheet of light beneath us, at the bottom of the sea! In incredulous
+astonishment, we turned to one another, scarcely able to believe our
+senses, our horror written plainly in our gaping eyes! And in silence,
+and with fear-blanched faces, half of the company made the sign of the
+cross.
+
+“Sure it’s a ghost, a deep-sea ghost!” ventured the superstitious
+Stranahan.
+
+“It’s where the sea serpents have their home!” put in Stangale, with
+an abortive attempt to be jocular. “There’s ten million of them down
+there, with devil’s eyes of fire!”
+
+“Maybe it’s the Evil One himself!” suggested Stranahan, not content
+with a single guess. “What if it’s the very throne-room of Hell, and
+them are the flames of Old Nick!”
+
+These words did not seem to reassure the rest of the crew. Several were
+trembling visibly, and several continued to cross themselves in silence.
+
+Meanwhile the Captain had ordered the searchlights turned downward, and
+in long loops and curves the cutting light swept the darkness beneath.
+But not a thing was visible, except for a few flapping fishy forms; and
+our lanterns served only to conceal the mysterious luminescence.
+
+Yet, when the searchlights were again directed upward, that
+luminescence became more distinct and seemed to stretch to infinite
+distances on all sides. But it was still incalculably remote, and still
+filled us with alarm and foreboding. Whatever it was (and we could not
+help feeling that it was evil), we knew that it was a thing beyond the
+reach of all human experience; whatever it was, it was a monstrous
+thing, possibly malevolent and terrible, and not inconceivably ghostly
+and supernatural.
+
+But as we continued to sink, I began to doubt whether any of us should
+live to solve the mystery. The air in our overcrowded compartments was
+becoming oppressively heavy and vitiated; we were like men locked in
+sealed vaults, and there was no possibility of renewing our exhausted
+oxygen supply. Already I was beginning to feel drowsy from the lack of
+air; my head was aching dully and I had almost ceased to care where we
+went or what befell us. Today, when I look back upon the racking events
+of those terrible hours, I feel sure that I was not far from delirium;
+and when I recall how some of my comrades reclined drunkenly on the
+floor, with half-hysterical mumblings and wailings, I am certain that
+there were but few of us, who retained our right senses.
+
+There is, indeed, a blank space in my memory concerning what occurred
+at about this time; I may have fallen off into a doze or sodden slumber
+lasting for minutes or even for hours. I can only say that I have a
+recollection of coming abruptly to myself, as from a state of coma;
+and, with a sudden jolt of understanding, I realized where I was, and
+observed with a shock that half a dozen of my comrades were gathered
+together in a little group, pointing downward with excited exclamations.
+
+Staggering to my feet, I joined them, and in a moment shared in their
+agitation. The lights beneath us were now far brighter--they no longer
+formed a vague shimmering screen, but were concentrated brilliantly
+in a score of golden globes of the apparent size of the sun. “Could
+it be that the ocean too has its suns?” I asked myself, as when one
+asks dazed questions in a dream. And looking at those spectral lights
+that wavered and gleamed through the pale translucent waters, I felt
+that this was surely but a nightmare from which I should soon awaken.
+Fantastic fish, with triangular glowing red heads and searchlight eyes
+projected on slender tubes, darted before our windows in innumerable
+schools; but these seemed almost familiar now by comparison with those
+eerie golden lights below; and it was upon the golden illumination that
+my gaze was riveted as we settled slowly down and down. Soon it became
+apparent that the great central globes were not the only source of the
+radiance, for smaller points of light gradually became visible, some
+of them moving, actually moving as though borne by living hands!--and
+even the spaces between the lights seemed to wear an increasing
+golden luster! Yet with the golden was mingled a singular tinge of
+green, a green that seemed scarcely of the waters; and the mysterious
+depths were no longer black, but olive-hued, as though the light came
+filtering to us through some solid dark-green medium.
+
+But a more imminent peril was to distract our attention from the weird
+lights. For some minutes I had been vaguely aware of something peculiar
+in the aspect of our compartment; yet, in my stupefied condition, I had
+not been able to determine just what was wrong. But full realization
+came to me when Stranahan, pointing upward, wide-eyed with horror,
+suddenly exclaimed, “Heaven preserve us, look at the ceiling!”
+
+We all looked. The ceiling was bulging inches downward, as though the
+terrific pressure of the waters were already bursting the tough steel
+envelope of the X-111. And at the same time we observed that the deck
+we stood on was bulging upward, and that the bulkheads were being
+twisted and distorted like iron rails warped by an earthquake.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+But now came the greatest surprise of all. “By all the saints and
+little devils!” burst forth the irrepressible Stranahan, pointing
+downward and forgetting the aspect of the bulkheads and deck. “There’s
+a city under the sea!”
+
+“A city under the sea!” we echoed, in stupefied amazement. And from one
+corner of the room came a burst of hysterical laughter, which wavered
+and broke and then died out, sounding uncannily like a fiend’s derision.
+
+“But I tell you, there is a city under the sea!” insisted Stranahan,
+noting the incredulous stares with which we regarded him. “The Lord
+strike me dead if I didn’t see its streets and houses!”
+
+Though none of us doubted but that the Lord would indeed do as
+Stranahan suggested, we interpreted his remarks as mere delirious
+ravings, and continued to stare at him in petrified silence.
+
+“You see, there she is!” persisted the seaman, still pointing downward
+regardless of our disbelief. And, crossing himself piously, he
+continued, in awed tones, “May the Virgin have pity on us, if that
+don’t look like a church!”
+
+Stranahan’s last words had such a tone of conviction that, though our
+doubts were still strong, we could not forebear to look. And, after
+a single glance, our scepticism gave place to dumbfounded amazement.
+For was this not a city staring up at us from the green-golden depths?
+Or at least the ruins of what had been a city? In outlines wavy
+because of the dense, shifting waters, and yet as definite of form as
+reflections in a still pool, half a dozen great yellow-white temples
+seemed to glimmer beneath the brilliant lights, with massive columns,
+wide-reaching porticoes and colonnades, and gracefully curving arches
+and domes.
+
+Was this but a mirage? we asked ourselves. Or were these the remains
+of some submerged, ancient town? Never had we heard of mirages beneath
+the sea--but if this were a dead city, then why these vivid lights?
+And, certainly, no living city could be imagined in these profound
+watery abysses.
+
+Even as we wondered, we seemed to note a gradual change in our
+movement. We were no longer sinking; we were drifting with slow motion,
+almost horizontally; and just beneath us appeared to be an impenetrable
+but transparent dense, greenish wall, a wall that--had the idea not
+been too preposterous--we might almost have imagined to be of glass.
+Beneath this wall gleamed no lantern-bearing, fishy eyes, but the
+dazzling golden orbs and the smaller scattered lights shone steadily
+with piercing radiance; and beneath us, at a distance that may have
+been five hundred feet and may have been a thousand, the vaults and
+domes and columns of innumerable stone edifices shone palely and with
+sallow luster. Surely, we thought, this was some unheard-of Athens,
+doomed long ago by tidal wave or volcano.
+
+Gradually, for some reason that we could not quite explain, our
+horizontal motion seemed to be increasing; and, caught apparently by
+some rapid deep-sea current, we drifted with appreciable velocity above
+those dim realms of green and golden. Palace after magnificent palace,
+many seemingly modelled by architects of old Greece, went gliding by
+beneath us; countless statues, tall as the buildings, pointed up at us
+with hands that were uncannily life-like; wide avenue after wide avenue
+flashed by, and one or two colossal theatres of old Grecian design; but
+no living thing was to be seen, or, at least, so it seemed, for though
+we strained our eyes, we could discern only shadows moving in those
+uncertain depths, only shadows and an occasional firefly light which
+zigzagged fitfully among the buildings and which we took to be some
+strange illuminated finny thing.
+
+Then suddenly, for no apparent reason, fresh terror seized us.
+Perhaps it was because we realized abruptly the full eerie horror of
+floating thus above a city of the dead; perhaps it was that the whole
+unspeakable ghastliness of the adventure had again flashed upon us. Be
+that as it may, we began to shake and shiver once more as though in the
+grip of a mastering emotion, or as though obsessed by forethought of
+approaching disaster; and muttered prayers again were heard, and more
+than one silent tear was shed.
+
+But the time for tears and prayers was over. Our motion, gradually
+increasing for some minutes, was suddenly accelerated as if by some
+gigantic prod; we seemed caught in some mighty movement of the waters,
+some maelstrom that whirled us about and buffeted us like a feather;
+a hoarse, continuous thunder dinned in our ears, and we went shooting
+forward with prodigious speed. Then came a violent jerk, and we found
+ourselves tossed pellmell to all corners of the room; then another
+jerk, and we were flung back again like dice shaken in a box; then
+still another jerk, more vehement than the others, and our terrorized
+minds lost track of events as our vessel lunged and heaved, then veered
+and stood almost on end, then began to spin round and round, like a
+swift gyrating top ... And in that whirling confusion our senses reeled
+and grew blurred, and darkness came clouding back, darkness and sleep
+and nothingness ...
+
+ * * * * *
+
+[Illustration: Our searchlights made us the center of attraction
+for myriads of scaly things; whole schools and squadrons of fishes
+were gathering moth-like in the vivid illumination thrown out by our
+vessel ... flitting to and fro, circling and spiralling and doubling
+back and forth at incredible speed.]
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+
+
+ CHAPTER II
+
+ Untraveled Depths
+
+
+How any of us chanced to survive is more than I can say. In the
+turbulence and vertigo of that last blind roaring moment, I had vaguely
+felt that we had reached the end of all things; hence it was almost
+with surprise that I found myself hazily regaining consciousness, and
+discovered that I could still move my limbs and open my eyes. At first,
+indeed, I had the dim sense that I was dead and embarking upon the
+Afterlife; and it was only the definite sensation of pain in my bruised
+arms and legs, and the definite sight of my comrades tumbled about in
+ungainly attitudes, which convinced me that I was still on the better
+known side of the grave.
+
+“Sure, and I thought we went through the very gates of Hell!” came a
+familiar voice; and Stranahan rose unsteadily to his feet, lugubriously
+nursing a sprained wrist. “By all the saints in heaven, we must be a
+devilish lot! The devil himself didn’t seem able to get us!”
+
+Cheered by sound of a human voice, I followed Stranahan’s example, and
+slowly and painfully arose. I was thankful to learn that, although
+badly battered, I had suffered no broken bones; and as my comrades one
+by one staggered up from the deck, I was glad to observe that none were
+gravely injured.
+
+Our vessel had assumed a horizontal position again, but I felt that
+our surroundings were strangely altered. While a pale luminescence
+seemed to transfuse the waters on both sides and above us, yet below
+us the golden lights were no longer visible, and everything seemed
+impenetrably black.
+
+Of course, the Captain again ordered the searchlights turned on--and
+this time with extraordinary results. Just beneath us, actually in
+contact with the bottom of the X-111, a flat, sandy reach of ground
+was visible--certainly, the bottom of the sea! But this fact was the
+least remarkable of all. On both sides of us, at distances possibly of
+two hundred yards, a high and geometrically regular embankment shot
+up precipitously, ending in a yellow illuminated patch of water whose
+nature we could scarcely surmise. The one thing apparent was that we
+were in a submarine channel, a sort of river bed in the bottom of the
+sea. This fact was made evident by a current which sent us skimming
+along the soft sands although our engines had long since ceased to
+supply us with power.
+
+“I can’t understand it!” sighed Captain Gavison, shaking his head
+dolefully. “I can’t understand it at all! For twenty-five years I’ve
+studied the ocean currents, but I’ve never before heard of anything
+like this!”
+
+Just at this point our searchlights showed us a long, lithe dark form
+gliding rapidly by through the waters perhaps fifty feet above. It was
+as large as the largest known shark, but was shaped like no fish I had
+ever seen, tapering to a slender, canoe-like point at both ends; and,
+as it passed, the water seemed to foam and bubble strangely in its wake.
+
+“Perdition take me, if it ain’t a sea dragon!” ventured Stranahan, who
+had to have his say.
+
+“Stranahan, be silent!” snapped the Captain, in high irritation.
+“You’re always saying the wrong thing at the wrong time!”
+
+“Yes, sir,” admitted Stranahan, meekly, a grave expression in his pale
+blue eyes.
+
+“If you want to make yourself useful, Stranahan,” continued the Captain
+severely, although with less asperity than before, “go forward, and
+find out how far we are beneath sea level.”
+
+“Aye, aye, sir,” agreed Stranahan, remembering to salute.
+
+“How far below were we at the last reading, sir?” I inquired of the
+Captain, after Stranahan had vanished through the small compartment
+door.
+
+“Thirty-seven hundred feet,” returned the officer, abruptly. “But we’ve
+sunk considerably since then.”
+
+It was at this juncture that Stranahan reappeared in the doorway, a
+stare of blank, incredulous astonishment on his lean, hardened face.
+
+“Well?” the Captain demanded. “How far below are we now?”
+
+Stranahan mopped his brow as if to wipe off an invisible perspiration.
+But he answered not a word.
+
+“Stranahan,” growled the exasperated officer, somewhat after the manner
+of a schoolma’am to an unruly pupil, “do you hear me? I’m asking to
+know how far below we are now.”
+
+“Well, sir,” drawled Stranahan, saluting mechanically, “wouldn’t I be
+telling you if I knew? But, saints in heaven, sir, that machine must be
+bewitched! Else I’m seeing things!”
+
+“Didn’t you notice the reading?” bawled the Captain.
+
+“Yes, sir,” Stranahan replied, humbly. “That’s what the trouble is,
+sir.”
+
+“Then how far below are we?”
+
+Stranahan hesitated as though he would rather not speak. “Forty-four
+feet,” he muttered, at length.
+
+A murmur of suppressed excitement passed from end to end of the room.
+“Forty-four feet!” yelled the Captain. “You mean forty-four hundred!”
+
+“No, sir,” maintained Stranahan, quietly. “I mean forty-four.”
+
+ * * * * *
+
+The Captain’s anger became uncontrollable. “Stranahan, you must take me
+for a fool!” he shouted. “This is not the moment for practical jokes!
+At any other time I’d have you thrown in the brig!”
+
+“But, sir----” Stranahan started to protest.
+
+“That’s enough!” roared the officer, fairly shaking with fury. And,
+turning to one of the younger men, he commanded, “Ripley, see how far
+below water level we are!”
+
+“Aye, aye, sir,” assented Ripley, and left the room.
+
+A moment later he returned with a sheepish grin on his face.
+
+“Well, how far below are we?” demanded the Captain.
+
+But Ripley, like Stranahan, seemed reluctant to speak. He coughed,
+gasped, stammered out an unintelligible syllable or two, cleared his
+throat, stood gaping at us stupidly while we looked on expectantly, and
+finally blurted out, “Forty---- forty-three feet, sir!”
+
+“Forty-three feet!” bellowed the Captain. “Has the whole crew gone
+crazy?”
+
+And, without further ado, Gavison himself went lunging toward the door,
+and disappeared in the forward compartment.
+
+It was several minutes before he returned. But when he rejoined us,
+his face wore a look of undisguised amazement. Furtively and almost
+shamefacedly he peered at us, like one who fancies he is losing his
+wits.
+
+“Well, sir, how far below are we now?” I questioned.
+
+The Captain cleared his throat, and hesitated perceptibly before
+replying. “I---- I really don’t know. I can’t understand---- I can’t
+understand it at all. If the instruments aren’t out of order, we’re
+exactly forty-two feet below!”
+
+I gasped stupidly; then suggested, “No doubt, sir, the instruments are
+out of order.”
+
+“They are not!” denied the Captain. “I’ve tested them!”
+
+Again the Captain hesitated briefly; then abruptly he resumed,
+“Besides, as you know, there are two instruments. They both record
+forty-two feet. Surely, they can’t both be wrong in exactly the same
+way.”
+
+There ensued a moment of silence, during which we stared dully at one
+another, filled with mute questionings we would not dare to put into
+words.
+
+“But how do you explain----” I at length started to inquire.
+
+“I don’t explain at all!” interrupted the officer. “We’re simply
+running counter to all natural laws! According to all estimates, we
+should be nearly a mile deep by now!”
+
+And the Captain stood stroking his chin in grave perplexity. Then
+turning suddenly to us all, he remarked, “I can’t see how it can be
+true, boys; but if we’re only forty-two feet deep, then maybe the
+engines will have life enough in them to pull us out. At least, it’s a
+chance worth taking.”
+
+Half an hour later, after a few instructions and the assignment of the
+crew to duty, we had the pleasure of hearing once more the churning
+and throbbing of the engines. At first it promised to be a barren
+pleasure indeed, for the abused machinery gasped and sputtered as
+though determined upon a permanent strike; but finally after many vain
+efforts, we were greeted by the continuous buzzing of the motors. Then
+we found ourselves slowly moving, at first scarcely faster than the
+current, but with gradually increasing velocity; and by degrees we
+felt the deck taking on an upward slope as the nose of the vessel was
+pointed toward the surface of the waters. It was not an easy pull,
+for our three flooded compartments were powerfully inclined to hold
+us to the bottom; and in the beginning we made very little progress;
+several times we felt our hull scraping the ocean floor. Eventually,
+the engines, waxing to their full power, began to cleave the water at
+gratifying speed, and we found that we were moving definitely, though
+slowly upward.
+
+Of course, hope came to us then in a powerful wave, accompanied by
+black flashes of despair, for what if impassable thousands of feet
+of water still rolled above us? Impatiently we fastened our eyes on
+the pressure gauges, and impatiently watched the registered distance
+dwindle from forty feet to thirty-five, from thirty-five to thirty,
+from thirty to twenty-five, and from twenty-five to twenty! And now, in
+a sudden wild burst of joy, we realized that probably we were saved! A
+pale but unmistakable radiance was seeping in through the glass ports,
+a radiance far more distinct and reassuring than the eerie luminescence
+we had noticed before. Certainly, this was the sunlight--and in a few
+moments we might bask again in the warmth of day!
+
+And as we rose from twenty feet to fifteen, and from fifteen to ten,
+our hopes found increasing fuel. The light filtering in through the
+windows brightened at a rate that was more than heartening--and through
+the clear waters, even without the aid of the searchlights, we could
+distinguish a steep embankment, perhaps fifty or a hundred yards away.
+And just above us, almost within grasping distance, we thought we could
+notice the line where water met air!
+
+But we had no intimation of the surprise that lay in store for us.
+Today, as I look back upon those events with clear perspective, it
+seems incredible to me that we could actually have expected to escape
+at once to the upper world. But hope had doubtless blinded our eyes and
+suffering blunted our perceptions, so that we could not understand that
+we were at the beginning, rather than at the end of our adventures.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Suddenly, with a furious lunge and an unwonted, violent burst of
+speed, we found ourselves launched upward toward the wavy, light-shot
+level that was our goal; and now a blinding brilliance was upon us,
+and for a moment we had to shade our eyes to shield them from the
+dazzling change. Then, when by degrees we were able to glance again
+about us, we found that we were on the surface of the waters, actually
+on the surface!--but where was this that we had come up? and in what
+strange and unmapped continent? There was scarcely one of us that
+could suppress a cry of astonishment--we were afloat, not upon the
+ocean, as we had expected, but rather on a wide and rapidly flowing
+river--a river that washed no shores, ever described by human tongue!
+Altogether, it was one of the weirdest and most magnificent lands
+imaginable; on both sides of the stream spread a flat plain, dotted
+with great sea shells and greenish boulders, which in their turn were
+interspersed with a mossy brown vegetation and pale, graceful flowers
+like waterlilies on solitary stalks. At measured intervals, as far as
+the eye could reach, were colossal stone columns, enriched with pastel
+tintings of pink and blue; and these shot upward hundreds of feet
+as though supporting some titanic dome, ending, unaccountably, in a
+dark, green sky from which glared several sun-like, golden orbs, which
+suffused the scene in a mellow, unearthly luster that was beautiful,
+yet terrifying and ghostly.
+
+Rubbing our eyes, like children still not half awake, we gazed at this
+fantastic, lovely spectacle. Not a word did we speak; we could not have
+found language to voice our amazement. Only the Captain, out of the
+whole thirty-nine of us, retained some measure of self-possession; and
+though, as he afterwards confessed, he was so dazzled that he spoke and
+acted mechanically, he did retain the presence of mind to order our
+vessel steered to shore and anchored.
+
+It is still a marvel to me that we had the energy to carry out these
+commands. Somehow we brought the X-111 to land; and somehow, after
+several false starts, we managed to moor the ship to a large boulder in
+a sort of miniature bay.
+
+And then Stranahan proved again that he possessed an original mind. Not
+only was he the first to force himself out of the opening door of the
+submarine, but he carried out a large American flag, which he planted
+in the ground among the brown weeds between the boulders, while with
+sedate and ceremonious gestures, he proclaimed, “In the name of the
+United States of America, I take possession of this land!”
+
+But the rest of us gave no heed to his words. We were taking deep,
+refreshing breaths of the pure, clean air, which came to us almost like
+a mercy from heaven after the suffocating atmosphere of the submarine.
+And before we had had half the needed time to revive our starving
+lungs, an astounding phenomenon, as unexpected as the very discovery of
+this spectral region, was to drive Stranahan from our thoughts at the
+same time that it flooded our minds with terror. For the golden lights
+above suddenly flickered, gave out a fugitive spark or two, and with
+meteor swiftness went out. We found ourselves mantled in a starless and
+impenetrable blackness, more mysterious and dreadful than the loneliest
+watery abysses from which we had just escaped.
+
+
+
+
+ CHAPTER III
+
+ On Unknown Shores
+
+
+No sooner was the darkness complete than it seemed to be populated
+with all manner of weird and terrible things. The disappearance of
+the light seemed to be the signal for the approach of a host of evil
+monsters. A chorus of hoarse, unearthly voices, loud as the bellowing
+of a bull, resounded about us in a deep, continuous bass; and throaty
+gruntings and savage snorts and howlings echoed and droned as though
+they issued from ten thousand pairs of giant lungs. Dazed with horror,
+we stared into the unbroken gloom like doomed men; I had visions of
+colossal eyes smoldering from the blackness, and jaws that struck and
+tore, and gnashing teeth that rent and shattered.
+
+But it was not a moment before our dumbfounded inaction was over.
+Pellmell we flung ourselves toward the submarine, almost failing to
+find it in the darkness, and tumbling tumultuously over one another in
+our haste to crowd through the narrow door. Several of the men were
+shoved accidentally into the water, and Stranahan came in dripping from
+an unexpected swim; while the Captain walked with a slight limp, newly
+acquired.
+
+At length, however, we were all safely within the ship, and the doors
+were barred against the unknown peril. Several of the men, still
+trembling with terror, were eager to get under way directly; but this
+idea the Captain emphatically vetoed, declaring that the X-111 was no
+longer seaworthy. All that we could do now was to try to locate the
+danger with our searchlights; and accordingly, we wasted no time before
+switching on our powerful lanterns and revolving them in slow circles
+that illumined by turns every inch of the boulder-strewn, weedy plain.
+All in vain. Although the unearthly chorus could be heard even through
+the closed doors and showed no sign of diminishing, our searchlights
+revealed nothing that we had not already seen.
+
+For some time we watched and waited--but nothing happened. And at
+length, turning to us all with a smile, the Captain advised, “Well,
+boys, we’ve all had a pretty hard time of it. Suppose we just forget
+about that racket out there and try to take a little rest.”
+
+We were all glad enough to follow the Captain’s suggestion. Several of
+the men were commissioned to take turns standing watch; and the rest of
+us were not long in seeking much needed sleep. Within a few minutes,
+the deep and regular breathing from the nearby bunks informed me that
+my companions had temporarily forgotten the day’s adventures.
+
+For my own part, exhausted as I was, I could not so readily find
+relief. The events not only of the past few hours, but of many months,
+came trooping before my mind in continuous blurred procession; I was
+obsessed by my own imaginings, and from a dim half-consciousness, I
+would awaken time after time to a vivid re-experiencing of some almost
+forgotten episode. And, strangely enough, my reveries were concerned
+mainly with a single phase of my life--the phase I was now living. My
+youth and early manhood might almost not have existed, for all that I
+remembered of them now; but I did sharply recall how, at the outbreak
+of war more than a year ago, I had decided abruptly upon the action
+that had plunged me into my present plight. Resigning my position
+at Northeastern University, where I had been serving as instructor
+in classic Greek, I had enlisted in the navy, and had promptly been
+sent to an officers’ training school, from which I had emerged as
+Ensign. Friends had commended me upon my patriotism, yet it was not
+patriotism, but rather the greed for adventure, that had motivated my
+decision; and now, as I looked back, it seemed ironic to me that my
+previous uneventful days had been so much more pleasant than any of my
+adventures. There was, however, one factor which had served to make
+those days enjoyable, a factor without which even the most active life
+would be barren indeed--and that factor was one which could have no
+place in wartime. Frequently, as I tossed and struggled fitfully on
+my narrow bunk, there flashed before me out of the darkness the blue
+eyes and laughing face of one whom I could scarcely recall without a
+pang; and I lived again with Alma Huntley those sparkling days among
+the Vermont hills, when she was to me all that life was, and I won
+her promise of devotion among the scented pines and to the music of
+rippling waters ... That day was long past, yet how actually it came
+back to mind! And how acutely memory brought back a later day, when
+her cheeks were moist and I held her in a minute-long embrace, and
+mutual vows and soft murmurings were exchanged, and then there came
+the sharpness of “Farewell!” and she was gone, lost amid a blur of
+faces, and I marched sedately on while the world was blotted out in
+loneliness and grief ... Oh, why had I left her, plunging thus among
+these unknown horrors?... Fervently, as I lay there listening to the
+uncanny bellowings from the ghostly world without, I longed to reach
+out my arms to her, to hold her warmly, to speak to her, and to hear
+her speak, if only one loved word....
+
+But even the most intense yearning may be blotted out by sleep. And
+at last, after hours, I lost my memories in unconsciousness--an
+intermittent unconsciousness, broken by disturbed dreams and vague
+images of death and disaster....
+
+ * * * * *
+
+I opened my eyes to find a bright, golden light pouring in through the
+unshuttered windows. Surprised, I leapt to my feet, and discovered that
+the great mysterious golden orbs were shining as before from far above,
+the boulder-strewn plain glimmered as clearly as at first, the massive
+columns were still fairy-like in their tints of pale pink and blue,
+while the hideous bestial noises had unaccountably ceased.
+
+Hastily I dressed and rejoined my companions. I found them gathered
+about in a little circle, earnestly talking; and they welcomed me
+gladly into their discussion, the subject of which I at once surmised.
+For what but our mysterious plight could now occupy our minds and
+tongues? None of us, as yet, had more than the faintest inkling of
+where we were or what had befallen us. That we were in some sort of
+cavern beneath the sea was the belief of the Captain and several of
+the men, but this region seemed so oddly unlike a cavern that the
+explanation was not generally accepted; and the more superstitious
+were inclined to hold that we had been bewitched into some sort of
+supernatural, goblin realm. For my own part, I could hardly understand
+how we could be in a submarine cavern without being completely flooded;
+and much less could I understand how we could be in any known land
+above seas.
+
+Obviously, the only likely source of information was through
+exploration. And since it was not possible to conduct any explorations
+with the aid of the disabled X-111, the Captain took the only other
+available course--which was to order some of the men to set forth into
+the Unknown on foot, determine the lay of the land and return as soon
+as possible with whatever tidings they might gather.
+
+Stangale and Howlett, being the most experienced veterans, were
+selected to make the initial attempt. In a few minutes, they set off
+cheerfully together, equipped with firearms and a day’s supply of food
+and drink, with instructions to return within twenty-four hours at the
+latest.
+
+Twelve or fifteen hours went by while we waited impatiently; the great
+golden orbs flashed out as mysteriously as before, and for eight or ten
+hours we slept; then, upon awakening, we found the lights still shining
+as brightly as ever, and noted that it was time for the return of our
+two scouts. We watched in vain for their arrival. Not a moving thing
+greeted us from the unchanging, bouldery plain; hours went by; excited
+speculation gave way to more excited speculation, and wild rumor to
+still wilder rumor; the suspense became tantalizing, and yet there was
+nothing to do but wait. Had the men lost their way? or had they met
+with some disastrous adventure? or had the savage inhabitants of these
+wild realms seized and imprisoned them? To these questions there was
+no answer, though many were the conjectures. When the darkness had
+fallen upon us once again, and once again we had slept and awakened to
+find the golden light restored, we knew that it was time to set out in
+search of the missing ones.
+
+This time the Captain called for volunteers to invade the Unknown,
+which, as he warned us, might be dangerous beyond all expectations;
+and after half the crew had offered themselves for the adventure, his
+choice fell upon Ripley and Stranahan.
+
+It was with genuine regret that I watched these two gallant seamen set
+forth amid the reeds by the river’s brink, to disappear at length among
+the boulders and behind the great stone columns. Somehow, as I lost
+sight of them, I had a sense that we might not see them again so soon.
+I was sad as though with a forewarning of disaster; and, as I reflected
+upon the pitfalls and dangers they might have to face, I experienced
+more than one twinge of vicarious fear.
+
+Worst of all, my misgivings seemed to be justified by time. Twelve
+hours passed, and the explorers had not returned; twenty-four hours,
+and there was still no word from them, though they had been given
+explicit orders to be back. With grim, set eyes, the Captain stood
+alone by the river bank, gazing sternly into that wilderness which
+had already engulfed four of his men; and the rest of the crew stood
+chattering fearfully among themselves, declaring that this land was
+“haunted,” “spooky,” and “thick with devils.”
+
+It was curious to note how, in these weird, unknown domains, outworn
+superstitions were being reborn; how ready the men were to believe in
+goblins, dragons, sea serpents, werewolves and all manner of fantastic
+monsters. Even the more enlightened of us seemed about to forget all
+that civilization had taught us; and, in the failure of all that we had
+been accustomed to cling to, we were clutching at a savage, terrorizing
+faith in incredible and ghostly things.
+
+By the time that Stranahan and Ripley had been absent forty-eight
+hours, the crew was in a state of impatience verging upon madness. The
+fluttering of a feather would have sent them scampering like frightened
+horses; the buzzing of a bee might have been the signal for spasms
+of dread. On one occasion, indeed, the chirping of some cricket-like
+insect did put half a dozen of the men into a panic; and on another
+occasion three or four of them turned pale merely upon hearing the
+swishing and flapping of a small fish in the river.
+
+It was when the excitement was nearing its highest that the Captain
+called once more for volunteers to search for the missing men. But
+so deep-rooted and paralyzing was the general alarm that only two of
+us offered our names--young Phil Rawson and myself. I do not know
+what strange wave of courage had suddenly emboldened this timorous
+recruit while less callow men held back. For my own part, I must admit
+that I volunteered from the mere desire to escape from ennui and the
+half-frenzied rabble of my comrades. But, whatever our motives, we were
+promptly to be launched into adventures that were not only to test
+our hardihood, but to prove interesting beyond anything we could have
+imagined.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+[Illustration: --and from a narrow focus of flame, two huge burning
+green eyes would shoot forth, darting cold malice at us through the
+glass port.... Or else a tiny flattened disk, softly phosphorescent
+throughout and marked on one surface by two bright beady eyes, would
+come floating in our direction like a pale apparition....]
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+
+
+ CHAPTER IV
+
+ A Tour of Exploration
+
+
+Rawson and I had been gone not half an hour when the aspect of the
+country began suddenly to change. It was as though we had passed some
+indistinguishable boundary, for the boulders were rapidly becoming
+less numerous, and at length disappeared entirely, while at the same
+time the odd, mossy vegetation became astonishingly rich and profuse.
+Or, to be precise, it gave place to a different vegetation entirely,
+an unearthly vegetation, almost too strange for belief. At the risk
+of being accused of fabrication, I must describe those incredible
+plants: the creepers with long leaves of lace-like brown, which twined
+in dainty wreaths and veils about the olive-green boles of limbless
+trees, the bushes, shaped like starfishes, and of the hue of dried
+grass, with diaphanous flowers that a breath might have blown away; the
+cinnamon-brown reeds that rose to double a man’s height, ending in a
+profusion of cucumber-shaped fruits; the peculiar, abundant growth that
+looked at a distance like a great earthen jar, but proved upon closer
+examination to be the hollow container of a species of milk-white down
+that grew in long and silken strands like untended hair.
+
+So dense was the foliage that we would not have been able to force
+our way through it, and would not have dared to make the attempt, had
+it not been for a sharply cut path which wound in leisurely curves and
+undulations close to the river’s brink. It was not like one of those
+paths which nature occasionally plans, or which are due to the tracks
+of wild beasts, for it had a regularity of design and an evenness of
+width that proved it to be unmistakably the work of man. Yet what man
+could have penetrated before us into these uncanny sunless depths? At
+the mere thought that others might have preceded us we involuntarily
+shuddered; we were half convinced that we were intruders into a tomb
+closed ages ago. But despite this conviction, we kept a constant,
+half-terrified outlook for sign of human presence.
+
+It was not long before our vigilance was rewarded. Abruptly the path
+before us widened, until it was of the size of a broad highway; and
+above the dense masses of vegetation, we beheld in astonishment the
+looming marble pillars of a Grecian colonnade. Toward this the road
+led in long and graceful curves; and it was but a few minutes before
+we found ourselves at the entrance of a covered walk or “stoa” that
+brought back to me vivid memories of “the glory that was Greece.” On
+both sides of us the palely-tinted Ionic columns rose to a majestic
+height, daintily ornamented at the base with the acanthus design, and
+curving in symmetrical proportions that brought to mind the perfection
+of the Parthenon; while the marble floor on which we walked and the
+marble ceiling above us were frescoed with figures that seemed drawn
+bodily from the romance of the ancient world. They were not wholly
+Greek. I knew these pictures of sportive mermaids and lightning-hurling
+gods and dragon-slaying heroes and misty caves of twilight and the
+throbbing lyre; but there was something suggestively Greek about them
+all; and steeped as I was in the lore of ancient Hellas, I had the
+singular feeling that the hand of time had been turned backward two
+thousand years or more.
+
+This feeling was accentuated when, having followed the covered walk
+for a distance of several hundred yards, I observed that it led to a
+magnificent, many-columned edifice which could pass for nothing if not
+for a temple of the ancient gods. It was a structure of solid marble,
+white marble artistically varied with veilings of black; its pillars
+were massive as the trunks of the giant redwoods I had seen in the
+California forests years before, and like those redwoods, produced an
+effect of solemnity and awe; but all was so perfectly designed and
+proportioned that, while the building occupied an area perhaps as large
+as the average city block, it gave an effect less of magnitude than of
+artistic completeness and beauty. No living thing was visible about
+the precincts of this amazing temple, nor would I have expected any
+living thing in what I had come subconsciously to regard as a realm of
+the dead; but I was overawed at thought of this abandoned loveliness,
+and paused at some distance to regard it reflectively, mentally asking
+whether it was some still undiscovered survival from classical times or
+whether I was but seeing a vision.
+
+A suppressed exclamation from young Rawson brought me back to
+reality--or, at least, to the unbelievable thing that passed for
+reality. In the very center of the swift-rolling river, the banks
+of which paralleled the colonnade at a distance of a dozen paces,
+I observed a low-lying, gliding form, gracefully elevated at both
+extremes, which at the first terrified glimpse I took to be some
+fabulous monster, but which I soon recognized as some sort of boat or
+canoe. Before I had had time for a half-composed glance at it, it had
+gone speeding out of view; but in its fast-moving frame, I thought I
+could distinguish half a dozen dusky bobbing shapes, and half a dozen
+pairs of oars that reached out rhythmically, and noiselessly clove
+the dark waters. Later, when I had had time for reflection, I was to
+recognize this strange craft as akin to the shadowy apparition, the
+unknown sea monster which had so terrified us in the submarine; but at
+present I was overwhelmed by the knowledge that this weird place was
+actually peopled, peopled by living men whom at any moment we might
+meet face to face!
+
+ * * * * *
+
+We had scarcely recovered from this surprise when an even greater
+surprise flashed upon us. Out of the windows of the temple, which we
+had believed long closed to human sound, a strange, thin music began
+to float, serenely beautiful and of elfin remoteness and charm....
+And while, entranced, we listened to those magical strains, there
+came the fluttering of a butterfly gown, and from the temple doors
+issued a shimmering, dancing form, followed by a score of other
+dancing, shimmering forms--scarcely human, we believed, so ethereal
+did they seem in the flashing and waving of arms, the swift rhythm
+of feet, and the play and interplay of pale blue and gold and pink
+and lavender and white from their flowing and multi-colored robes. A
+singular iridescence seemed to overspread them, almost a halo such as
+may envisage a goddess; and, gaping and enthralled, we gazed on them
+as men might gaze on Venus were she to return to earth. Now down the
+long colonnade they started, tripping toward us with birdlike gestures
+and the airy unreality of perfect time and movement; and, fearful to
+disturb the vision by our gross presence, we hid ourselves behind the
+great stone columns, peeping out furtively as though they might vanish
+bubble-like at our gaze. But, apparently absorbed in their dance, they
+continued gracefully toward us, not glancing to right or to left, and
+catching no hint of our intrusion--until, as the procession drew more
+near and the charm of the music more compelling, I peered out too
+incautiously from behind my marble bulwark, and found myself staring
+full into the face of the most ravishingly beautiful woman I had
+ever beheld. There was a quality about her face that seemed to mark
+it as not of the earth, the Madonnas of old paintings have something
+of that look; and the most perfect womanly bust that sculptor has
+ever conceived; but there was also a vividness and an animation that
+no mere painting or statue has ever shared, together with an air of
+such innocence, such candor and kindliness of soul that, had I been a
+believer in angels, I might have gone down straightway upon my knees.
+
+But all this I beheld in the space between two heartbeats. Even as
+the vision greeted me it vanished; the beautiful clear eyes were
+distended with terror upon their first contact with mine; there came a
+scream of fright, followed by a chorus of screams; then a scurrying of
+fast-retreating feet, and the bright, fairy-like shapes had vanished;
+and the empty river flowed silently past the empty colonnade and temple.
+
+
+
+
+ CHAPTER V
+
+ The Mysterious City
+
+
+The next few hours showed us a continuous amazing panorama. The
+marble temple proved to be but one of a series connected by long and
+graceful colonnades; and in the central structures, the Ionic and
+Doric architecture were curiously mingled with a type that seemed
+scarcely Grecian at all, since it admitted of all variety of arches and
+curves unknown to the builders of classical Hellas. Most remarkable
+of all, perhaps, were the gorgeously ornamented vases--some of them
+six or eight feet in height--which were of a style akin to those
+excavated from the ruins of old Ilium. But what caught my eye even more
+strikingly were the statues that occasionally appeared in niches along
+the marble galleries or in alcoves of the temples--statues that would
+surely not have been unworthy of a Praxiteles, since even Praxiteles
+could not have surpassed the symmetry of form and the unstrained
+reality of pose and expression with which these unknown artists had
+depicted their wrestling heroes and dancing fauns and stern-browed
+old men and queenly maidens and gracious youths. For one who had been
+nurtured on modern art, these busts and marbles were as old paintings
+would be to him who had known only sketches in black and white; there
+was none of that snowy coldness or bronze severity of hue which are so
+common in sculpture today, but all of the statues had been skilfully
+tinted with the complexion of life, and such was the verisimilitude,
+that several times I started in surprise on beholding what I took to
+be a living man but which proved to be only an image of stone. I was
+interested, moreover, to note that none of the sculptured features had
+that peculiar hardness and selfish keenness so common among the men
+I had known, but that all seemed suffused with a clear and tranquil
+spirituality; and every lyric impulse within me was awakened when I
+observed on many of the faces of the women that same unearthly Madonna
+look which had graced the butterfly-gowned dancing maiden.
+
+But, of course, Rawson and I did not allow our pleasure in the
+statuary to keep our minds from more vital subjects. Above all, we
+maintained a constant lookout for the inhabitants of these queer
+regions, for we could no longer suppress the suspicion that unseen
+furtive eyes were peeping out at us from behind every pillar and
+wall. For my own part, I had more than one qualm that I did not care
+to admit, and secretly wished myself back on the X-111; and as for
+Rawson--I found that youth afflicted with far too much imagination for
+an adventurer, and repeatedly begged him to keep his fantastic fears to
+himself.
+
+But there was no repressing the excitable young Rawson. When he was
+not drawing pictures of the serpents and wild beasts that probably
+infested the thickets beside the temples, he would be diverting me with
+the most grewsome ghost stories I had ever heard; and he went so far
+as to suggest that the dancing girls had been only airy apparitions,
+while the brilliant golden lights above us had no more reality than a
+will-o’-the-wisp. Evidently he had been too much nurtured on fiction
+of the blood-and-terror variety, for only a devotee of the most hectic
+adventure tales could have imagined, as he did, that our pathway was
+beset with robbers’ lairs, pirates’ dens, scorpions and crocodiles,
+head-hunting cannibals, siren women luring us to destruction, and
+murderous desperadoes of a thousand ilks and guilds.
+
+Fortunately for my peace of mind, I heard not half of Rawson’s ravings,
+for my interest in the wayside architecture served as a distraction.
+For two or three hours I was occupied with inspecting the gracefully
+connecting galleries of five or six temples; and, having passed the
+last of the group, I was absorbed in my observations of a long, marble
+colonnade which extended apparently for miles in a straight line amid
+the gray and brown fantastic vegetation.
+
+And now it was that I made the most startling discovery of the day.
+At intervals along the floor of the colonnade, which was of a red
+and yellow mosaic of baked and hardened clay, appeared deeply-graven
+inscriptions which I paused eagerly to survey. At first I thought
+that they were in no known language, but it was not long before I had
+detected a certain resemblance between the characters and those of
+the ancient Greek. Profiting from my collegiate study of that tongue,
+I puzzled over the words while Rawson stood by impatiently urging me
+to be off; and one by one I succeeded in identifying the letters with
+those of the Greek alphabet! Not every one of the characters, it is
+true, could be recognized with assurance, but enough of them were
+unmistakably Greek to give me a clue to the whole; and at length I
+found myself making a translation that might solve the entire mystery
+of this extraordinary land.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+But the process was a slow and plodding one, and I did not make the
+progress I had expected. Even though the letters were clear enough,
+the meaning of the words was not. Evidently this was not the Greek
+of Plato or Thucydides, in which I had been thoroughly schooled; but
+rather it was a language that was to classical Greek what Chaucer is
+to modern English. Still, I was not completely discouraged, for I did
+manage to make out an occasional word, though not at first enough to
+give meaning to any passage. All in all, considering the limited time
+at my disposal, my efforts seemed futile; and I was about to yield to
+Rawson’s importunities and give up this diverting study for further
+exploration, when suddenly I made a successful discovery. I must have
+come upon a passage simpler than the rest, for unexpectedly half a
+sentence flashed upon me with clear-cut meaning at once so striking and
+so enigmatical that I stopped short with a little cry of surprise.
+
+“Placed here in the year Three Thousand of the Submergence,” ran
+the words, which occurred in large lettering at the base of a statue
+of a strong man trampling down the ruins of what looked like a steel
+building. “Placed here ...” at this point were several words that I
+could not make out--“in celebration of the Good Destruction.”
+
+“In celebration of the Good Destruction!” I repeated, after translating
+the words aloud. “Sounds as if written by a madman!”
+
+“Maybe you didn’t read it right,” commented Rawson.
+
+This suggestion, of course, I ignored. “Wonder what the Submergence can
+mean,” I continued, meditatively. “That doesn’t seem to make sense,
+either.”
+
+“No, it doesn’t,” Rawson admitted, with a thoughtful drawl. “Everything
+down here seems sort of topsy-turvy. Suppose we go on and see what else
+we can find out.”
+
+I nodded a hesitating assent, and we proceeded on our way in silence.
+But, though we did not speak, our thoughts were active indeed, for
+more than ever I was convinced that somehow, unaccountably, we were
+amid the remains of a Grecian or pre-Grecian countryside. Had Socrates
+or the radiant Phobus himself stepped out of the grave to greet me, I
+would not have been surprised; and I more than half expected to catch a
+glimpse of Athena’s robe from behind the dark shrubbery, or to see the
+winged feet of Hermes or hear the clear notes of Pan.
+
+But neither Pan nor Hermes nor any of their famed kindred presented
+themselves upon the scene. And after walking at a good pace for more
+than an hour along the marble colonnade, I forgot those interesting
+individuals in contemplation of a scene that left me gaping in greater
+astonishment than if I had invaded a council of the high Olympian gods.
+For some minutes a series of huge templed domes and columns, dimly
+visible through rifts in the vegetation, had attracted my attention and
+aroused Rawson’s misgivings; but neither of us had had any intimation
+of the sight that was to greet us when at length we came to the end of
+the colonnade.
+
+Suddenly we saw a clay road sloping down sharply beneath us, and
+found ourselves gazing out over a valley more dazzling than we had
+ever before known or imagined. Through its center flowed the great
+river, with gentle loops and twinings; above us, as before, reached
+the dark-green sky illumined with the golden suns; and an innumerable
+multitude of palely tinted columns, like the tree trunks of some
+colossal forest, shot upward to that sky as though to support it. But
+what were truly remarkable were the buildings that adorned the plain.
+On both sides of the river they stretched, far to the distance and out
+of sight, palaces of white marble and of black marble, of jade and of
+alabaster, some with an elegant symmetry of Greek columns, some with
+a solidity of masonry that seemed half Egyptian, some with an almost
+Oriental profusion of spires and turrets, of porticoes and balconies
+and arches and domes. But all alike were reared in perfect taste, and
+with perfect regard to the style of their neighbors; all alike faced
+on wide avenues, flowery lanes or lawny and statue-dotted parks; all
+appeared but parts of a single design which, when seen from above, was
+like some consummate tapestry patterned by a master artist.
+
+As Rawson and I stood staring at this matchless scene, I suddenly
+recalled the steeples and towers of that city we had seen beneath us in
+the submarine. A strange similarity in the outlines of the buildings
+impressed itself upon me--then in a flash it came to me that the two
+cities were one and the same! And at that instant I shuddered, amazed
+and horrified at the abrupt solution of the mystery ... It was as the
+Captain had suggested; we were indeed beneath the ocean, thousands
+of feet beneath the ocean, in some cavern inexplicably spared from
+the waters and haunted by the ghosts and relics of some ancient and
+vanished race!
+
+
+
+
+ CHAPTER VI
+
+ The Temple of the Stars
+
+
+Far from echoing the agitation I felt, Rawson seemed actually pleased
+at the turn of events. It piqued his imagination to think that we
+should be so far beneath the sea; and he conjured up all manner of
+alluring possibilities that testified more to his youth than to his
+common sense. He suggested that we were the discoverers of a great
+and magnificent empire which we should explore, conquer and then
+annex to the United States; and he formed his plans regardless of
+the probability that we should never see the United States again,
+and almost as though there were regular transportation facilities
+to the upper world. The sheer scientific difficulties--the apparent
+impossibility that a cavern free from water could exist beneath the
+ocean, the even more striking impossibility that human beings could
+inhabit such a cavern--seemed to make little impression upon the
+illogical mind of Rawson; and he was convinced that only by the rarest
+good fortune had we been entombed in these fantastic and dream-like
+depths.
+
+So intense was his enthusiasm, that he urged me to descend at once with
+him to the many-templed city. But I did not willingly accede; I pointed
+out that it would be wiser to hasten back to the submarine, inform
+Captain Gavison of what we had seen, and return here--if we returned at
+all--in greater numbers than at present. Besides, as I reminded Rawson,
+the Captain had ordered us back within twenty-four hours; and, if we
+dallied, some mischance might delay us until too late.
+
+Had Rawson but had a dim prevision of the black hours ahead, he would
+certainly have accepted my suggestions. But, perversely enough, he
+seemed to be almost without his usual fears just when those fears might
+have proved most useful. And since of course I could not allow myself
+to be outdone in bravery by a mere boy, I had to signify a grudging
+assent to his proposal. I must confess, however, that my motives were
+not unmixed, for pictures of the iridescent dancing girl kept flitting
+before my mind and would give me no peace; and I may have had hopes (I
+will not say that I did) of meeting her again in this city of fountains
+and palaces.
+
+But not a living creature could be seen stirring in the avenues of that
+strange town as Rawson and I began our slow descent. Once or twice we
+thought we saw the glimmer of a light or the flash of some moving thing
+in the far distance, but we could not be sure; and the silence and the
+immobility gave the general effect of a city of the dead. There was
+something ghostly about that calm, still atmosphere, something that
+might have made me turn back in alarm had it not been for the presence
+of Rawson; but there was also something soothingly peaceful, a charmed
+quiet that brought to mind the fairy tales I had heard in childhood,
+and in particular that enchanted palace where the Sleeping Beauty had
+slumbered for a hundred years. Here, I thought, one might dream away
+a hundred years or a thousand, and never know that time had passed at
+all; here, conceivably, the ancient world might lapse into the modern,
+and the modern into the far future without apparent change.
+
+My reveries were interrupted by our arrival at the gates of the city.
+We passed beneath a high arch almost Roman in style, with marble base
+and facade ornamented with strange blue sea-shells; then, proceeding
+along a winding cement walk inlaid with mother-of-pearl, we approached
+the most stately palace of all. In architecture, it was totally
+dissimilar to anything we had ever before observed: although perhaps
+five hundred feet in length, it was as much like a great statue as
+like a building; it had none of those features common in edifices for
+the shelter of man and his works, but seemed to have been erected
+exclusively as a piece of art. Its form was that of a woman, a woman
+reclining at full length, her breast to the ground, her head slightly
+elevated, propped meditatively upon her palm; and the structure as
+a whole had been planned with such subtlety and skill, with such
+consummate attention to every detail of the woman’s position, form and
+garments and to the beatific and yet lifelike expression of the face,
+that Rawson and I could only pause in bewildered silence and stare and
+stare as though this work had been created through no human agency but
+by some superhuman master hand.
+
+In that first spellbound moment, it did not occur to us that there
+might be an entrance to the palace. But at length, where a lock of
+the woman’s dark, sculptured hair fell across her breast, we noted a
+little doorway so skilfully concealed that it had originally escaped
+our attention. Since the gate swung wide upon the hinges, curiosity,
+of course, prompted us to glance within--and with results that proved
+but a further spur to curiosity. All that we could see was a pale,
+golden glitter against a background of black; but imagination supplied
+that which our physical sight could not reveal, and we had visions of
+gorgeous halls and corridors which we longed to inspect.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Had our courage been sufficient, we would have entered at once. The
+idea, in fact, came to both of us simultaneously, but at first neither
+of us could summon up the requisite boldness. There seemed to be
+something mysteriously, almost irresistibly, attractive about that
+twinkling darkness, something that held us fascinated and forbade us to
+leave; and for several minutes we stood hesitating, and straining our
+eyes, yet making no motion to invade the unknown.
+
+Then, when the suspense had become so protracted as to be ridiculous,
+Rawson surprised me by exclaiming, suddenly, “I’m not afraid!” And at
+the same time he slapped his sides energetically as though to prove
+to himself that he had no fears. “I’m going right in!” he announced,
+with what I thought to be unnecessary loudness. And, feeling for
+his revolver with a hand that trembled perceptibly, Rawson strode
+resolutely into the building.
+
+There was nothing for me to do but follow. But, somehow, I could not
+help wishing that my friend had not been so rash; and, somehow, I
+foresaw that we might not be able to leave this strange edifice so
+easily as we had entered.
+
+But, once within, we forgot our misgivings in contemplation of
+the magnificent scene around us. I had been in luxurious galleries
+before; I had seen the most ornate salons of the Old World, and the
+most lavishly bedecked of mosques and cathedrals; but never had I
+viewed or imagined so utterly sublime a hall. Here was a new art of
+the interior decorator, an art that seemed wholly without parallel in
+human experience; I was scarcely conscious that I was indoors, but
+rather felt myself to be in the open, in the open at night, under
+the wide and glittering heavens, with the light of innumerable stars
+above me, and the dim cloudy arch of the Milky Way. How the artist had
+produced his effect was more than I could say, but somehow, in his
+limited space, he had given the impression of vastness and distance,
+of the mystery and infinite silence of the starlight; and as I stood
+there entranced, I could almost imagine that I was back again on
+earth, gazing out into the night-skies as I had gazed so often from
+the Vermont hills with Alma Huntley.... And yet, perfectly patterned
+as they were, these skies were not the skies I had known. As I stood
+there watching, I became aware that certain of the constellations were
+slightly, almost indistinguishably out of position, the stars not quite
+in their proper relations to one another--and why this was, I could
+not attempt to say. But more striking was another alteration that had
+been wrought deliberately and with subtle artistry: above the stars,
+and about the thin girdle of the Milky Way, were filmy formations of
+light, which--perhaps it was only my imagination--gradually resolved
+themselves into tenuous human figures. One, an exquisitely graceful
+woman, seemed to be playing upon some lyre-like instrument; another,
+a youth with head uplifted as though in enraptured contemplation,
+impressed me as the spirit of all human aspiration; and still others,
+no less consummately outlined, appeared to represent the hopes and
+loves and immortal yearnings of man.
+
+But while I remained rooted there in ecstatic contemplation, filled
+with wonder at the paradox of beholding the stars thousands of
+feet beneath the sea, there occurred one of those changes by which
+occasionally a beautiful dream becomes distorted into a nightmare.
+Imagine the consternation of one who, while gazing at the cloudless
+night-skies, finds blackness suddenly sweeping all about him--a
+blackness that has quenched the stars as a storm might quench a candle
+flame. Such consternation was ours, and even greater horror, for
+without so much as a flicker of warning, the lights of the seeming
+heavens flashed out, and darkness stretched above us and all about
+us, a darkness so all-consuming that not even a shadow remained. With
+half-suppressed cries of terror, Rawson and I turned to one another,
+each totally invisible in the blank night; and before we had had time
+for coherent speech, there came a rattling and a slamming from behind
+us, and we knew that the one possible exit had been closed and that we
+were prisoners in this unknown place.
+
+
+
+
+ CHAPTER VII
+
+ Trapped
+
+
+For a moment we were like rats newly trapped. All trace of reason
+left us in our sudden furious terror; we began to scurry blindly to
+and fro, to and fro in the darkness, panic-stricken in our frenzy to
+escape. Where we were dashing we did not know, nor whether we might not
+be rushing into greater peril still; we collided more than once with
+the unseen walls, stumbled over invisible objects on the floor, and
+went fumbling about in long loops and circles--but all to no avail.
+The marvel is not that we accomplished nothing, but that we did not
+break our necks, for so utterly fear-maddened were we that it was
+minutes before we had any thought of ceasing our mad perambulations and
+considering our predicament calmly and rationally.
+
+If I can judge aright from my confused memories of those terrible
+moments, it was the sound of a heavy body falling that shocked me
+back to my senses. The fall, which was thudding and resonant, was
+accompanied by a suppressed oath, which seemed to issue from far to my
+rear, but which none the less sounded familiar.
+
+“Rawson!” I cried, stopping short, and forgetting caution in my alarm.
+“Are you hurt?”
+
+“No, I’m not hurt,” came the drawled reply, as though from a tremendous
+distance. And then, after a groan, “No, I’m all right.”
+
+“Where are you?” I yelled back. “How can I get to you?”
+
+Rawson shouted directions, and I went groping toward him. The process
+was by no means easy, for I was guided wholly by the senses of touch
+and hearing, and more than once I came into painful contact with some
+unforeseen obstacle. But after some minutes I found myself grasping a
+solid, yielding mass which I recognized as the arm of my friend.
+
+Rawson was as glad as I of our reunion. Somehow, now that we were
+together again, we both felt much stronger and the unknown foe seemed
+less redoubtable. Yet that foe seemed terrible enough as we sat there
+on the floor conversing in whispers. Although we had regained some
+slight composure, the falling of a pin might have sent us off into
+convulsions; and our imaginations were busy painting grotesque and
+shadowy horrors.
+
+“What can it mean?” murmured Rawson, as he sat with his hand upon my
+knee, as though to reassure himself by the mere physical fact of my
+presence. “What do you think it can mean?”
+
+I declined to venture any direct reply, although suggestions
+sufficiently dreadful were piling up in my brain.
+
+“Remember how Stranahan and the others were lost,” continued Rawson,
+solemnly, as if the explanation of their disappearance were now
+self-evident.
+
+“I don’t see what that has to do with us,” I argued. And then, with a
+forced attempt at bravado, “Don’t worry, Rawson. Chances are everything
+will turn out all right.”
+
+“I hope so,” conceded Rawson, in a tone indicating that he rather
+wished things would turn out badly. And, by way of fanning my
+courage, he entertained me with the most ghastly stories he could
+imagine--stories of men trapped in coal mines, men lost in labyrinthine
+caves, men entombed in deep pits or immured in lightless dungeons. To
+all these tales I listened with growing uneasiness, meanwhile racking
+my mind to remember a parallel to our own predicament. But I could
+think of nothing that even remotely resembled it; and, having nothing
+to say, I answered Rawson only in monosyllables.
+
+Perhaps owing to the terseness of my replies--or perhaps because of the
+terror of our plight--his loquacious mood soon deserted him. It was
+not long before we had lapsed into silence; and it was minutes before
+either of us spoke again. Meantime the darkness was so intense, the
+silence so complete and the stillness so absolute that I was persecuted
+with all manner of fantastic fears. What unknown horrors were brewing
+in these serene depths? What grotesque or malevolent or even murderous
+things? In my anxiety, I peopled the gloom with monstrous shapes of
+a thousand varieties, with slimy, crawling serpents, with lithe,
+crouching panthers, with great apes, whose brawny arms could strangle a
+man, and--worst of all--with slinking, barbarous humans that crept up
+slyly to seize and stab one in the dark.
+
+By degrees my imaginings were becoming so grewsome that I could
+no longer endure them. And, merely to find relief from myself, I
+whispered, “Come, Rawson, it’s senseless to sit here doing nothing.
+Maybe we can find some exit, if only we look carefully enough. What do
+you say? Shall we try anyhow?”
+
+“I say it’s a good idea,” assented Rawson, rising cautiously to his
+feet.
+
+Without a word I followed his example, and for the next half hour we
+groped laboriously along the walls, which we found to be of an ice-cold
+stone, as smooth as polished marble, absolutely perpendicular and
+apparently without a flaw or break. Our movements were slow and even
+agonizing, for the blackness was still unbroken, and in that hushed,
+mysterious place, the slightest sound would send sharp tremors running
+down our spines. Even the grating of our own echoes against the floor
+seemed to take on a sinister, uncanny meaning; the whispered tones of
+our own voices seemed unhallowed and ghostly; while the occasional
+rapping of our fists against the walls or our clattering contact with
+some unseen obstacle sent the echoes ringing and reverberating with
+unearthly, hollow notes until our overwrought nerves quivered at the
+rustling of our clothing or at the sound of our own breath.
+
+Possibly two or three times we encircled that great hall--in the
+darkness it was impossible to tell where our starting place had
+been--but we could find no indication of any passageway or door. And
+at length, exhausted by the strain, we crouched on the floor near the
+wall and waited miserably for something to happen. Almost anything that
+could have happened--no matter how grim and terrible--would have been
+a relief; but the quiet was undisturbed, while we sat tense and alert,
+with fast-throbbing hearts, and eyes that searched and searched the
+gloom in vain. Neither of us spoke now; and the garrulous Rawson seemed
+wrapped up in his own dismal thoughts. How long a period passed thus I
+cannot say; my watch may have recorded whole hours, but certainly my
+thoughts recorded whole years, for I have lived years that knew less of
+suspense, uneasiness and dread.
+
+But at last, after endless waiting, relief came with disconcerting
+suddenness. As though by the turning of an electric switch, a
+dazzlingly brilliant light flashed into view above us--a light that
+contrasted strangely with the stars of some hours before, and that
+shone blindingly in a pale blue field like the sun in the cloudless
+heavens. Then, while we stood shading our eyes from the glaring
+illumination, we observed just opposite us, the gate through which we
+had doubtless entered. And with surprise we noted that it moved slowly
+upon its hinges; that slowly and as if by magic it made clear the way
+of escape!
+
+“The place is enchanted!” muttered Rawson, in dazed fascination. “Come,
+let’s get out of here!”
+
+But when, overjoyed at our rescue, we started toward the gate, an
+unexpected obstacle intruded. Half a dozen of the queerest beings
+we had ever seen came crowding into our path--tall, butterfly-like
+creatures with faces almost waxen pale and long capes and robes of pink
+and blue and lavender and yellow pastel tints. All had long, flowing
+light red or golden hair which reached at least to the shoulders; one,
+apparently the oldest, wore an ample beard, but the majority were
+smooth shaven; none had headgear of any type, and all were shod with
+sandals covered with green moss, above which for several inches the
+unclothed legs were visible. From the blank, amazed stares with which
+they greeted us, it was evident that our appearance was as much a
+surprise to them as theirs was to us. But from a certain sternness and
+resolution which invested their faces following the first speechless
+astonishment, we concluded that they had probably seen others of our
+kind, and were not disposed to treat us leniently.
+
+We noted also that, though quivering with dread, they kept the exit
+firmly blocked. And in the long, staring silence that ensued, we felt
+in dismay that at last we had met the masters of this strange land; and
+with sinking hearts we realized that our chances of escape had vanished.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+[Illustration: ... We all looked up. The ceiling was bulging inches
+downward, as though the terrific pressure of the waters were already
+bursting the tough steel envelope of the X-111.]
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+
+
+ CHAPTER VIII
+
+ Sapphire and Amber
+
+
+It may have been no more than thirty seconds before the silence was
+broken, though it felt like many, many minutes. But at length one of
+the newcomers, turning to his companions, the while keeping his eyes
+still fastened upon us, began to speak in low, rhythmic tones that
+were singularly musical and pleasant. I could catch not one syllable
+of what he said, though I strained my ears in the attempt; nor could
+I understand any syllable of what his fellows spoke in reply, though
+their voices too were so soft and sweet-sounding that they might have
+been intoning poetry. Yet, in spite of the gentleness of their voices,
+I could detect a certain excitement in their manner; and, from their
+casual nods and gestures in our direction, I was only too certain of
+the theme of their discussion.
+
+After several minutes of whispered conversation, one of the strangers
+stepped toward us and raised his voice as if addressing us. As might
+have been foretold, I understood nothing of what he said; and, as this
+was no doubt what he expected, he did not look surprised, but after a
+moment ceased speaking and motioned us to follow him.
+
+Since there was manifestly nothing else to do, we obeyed readily
+enough, and were glad indeed to find ourselves stepping once more
+through the doorway and out into the street, even though the half
+dozen strangers had grouped themselves on all sides of us as a sort of
+bodyguard. We knew, in fact, that we were virtually prisoners, and yet
+were no longer alarmed, for no imprisonment could be worse than that
+which we had already suffered. Also we had an intuitive sense that
+we should not be badly treated; whether out of consideration for our
+feelings or merely because they were afraid of us, our attendants did
+not attempt to lay hands on us or to coerce us in any way. Yet when
+they indicated by gestures the direction in which they desired us to
+walk, we had no thought of objecting, but obeyed as docilely as though
+they were our acknowledged masters.
+
+For a distance of possibly two or three miles they led us with them
+through the city streets; and far from brooding over our predicament
+(which was manifestly serious), we amused ourselves with observing the
+sights of the town. Dozens of the inhabitants had come out to peer at
+us as we strode past; and, though they kept at a cautious distance, we
+could see them clearly enough: their slender, graceful forms and blond
+features, their amiable blue eyes and rippling, unbound hair, their
+loose-hanging, light-tinted robes, variously colored from buff and
+lilac to azure and pale rose, gave them the appearance less of human
+beings than of walking butterflies or flowers.
+
+But even more interesting to us than these humans was the architecture
+of the town. We were fascinated, first of all, by the very pavement
+beneath us, which was of baked clay worked into a multihued and
+picturesque mosaic; we were still more fascinated by the buildings,
+which on close observation proved to be even more artistically designed
+than we had imagined, for exquisite little statues abounded in
+niches between the columns or under the domes and spires, and superb
+frescoes decorated the ceilings of the numberless colonnades and the
+outside walls of temples, and curving walks wound gracefully between
+terraces adorned with a lovely waxen flower or around the brink of
+the shimmering rainbowed fountains. I particularly noted the width
+of the avenues, in whose spacious reaches and wide adjoining courts
+the bright-robed children laughed and played; and I was surprised to
+observe that the buildings, instead of being jammed together in the
+modern box-like fashion, were each separated from their neighbors by
+broad paved ways or wide patches of vegetation, so that the whole gave
+an uncrowded and leisurely and yet skilfully patterned effect.
+
+But magnificent as were the edifices in their garb of sandstone or
+granite or many-hued marble, the most extraordinary by far was that
+to which our guides ultimately led us. It was not the size of the
+structure that distinguished it, since the city boasted far larger
+buildings, and size in itself did not seem to have been an object
+with the builders; but the quality of the masonry and the style of
+the workmanship had surely no parallel in human experience. For the
+walls and the interior circles of columns were not of any material
+ever employed before, not of steel or of stone, of brick or of clay,
+or gold or of ebony; they were of a translucent yellow hue, the hue of
+amber, and seemed to be composed, if not actually of amber, at least
+of glass tinted amber color. This, however, was scarcely the most
+remarkable fact, for the floor was likewise translucent, and shone with
+an entrancing blue, the blue of sapphire; and sapphire seemed also the
+substance of the fretted and vaulted ceiling, from which hung images
+of great birds with wide-spread wings, giving a startling illusion of
+flight. Three successive circles of columns, each more massive than the
+last and all adorned at the base with bas-reliefs of strange fishes and
+stranger sea plants, supported the great arching expanse of the roof;
+and completely enclosed by the columns, on a steep and curving incline
+of the sapphire floor, were row after row of amber seats grouped in a
+half circle about a flat open space, and forming--so it seemed to me--a
+Grecian theatre of unique design.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+As Rawson and I accompanied our guides into this queer building, we
+were so captivated by the architecture and so enthralled by the silence
+and the weird half-light of sapphire and amber that we did not at first
+observe that other human beings had preceded us into the place. It was
+long, indeed, before we could recover from the awed sense of entering
+some cathedral where all is reverential and unworldly; and it was long
+before, turning our eyes upon the theatre with its rows and rows of
+seats, we observed that not all the chairs were vacant as we had at
+first assumed. In the front tiers sat perhaps a hundred light-gowned
+individuals whose sedate and earnest faces proclaimed that they were
+convened for some solemn purpose.
+
+Our arrival was greeted by a sudden murmuring of low, musical voices,
+but by nothing more demonstrative; and our presence was doubtless
+explained by our attendants, who spoke a few words to the assembled
+group, after which they took seats to one side and motioned us to do
+likewise. We obeyed readily enough, but as I crossed the room to take
+my designated place, I received a sudden shock, an electrical shock of
+pleasure, such as one experiences upon meeting a friend unexpectedly
+in a strange city. In the foremost row, staring up at me with a most
+curious and kindly air, sat that enchanting woman whom I had seen
+dancing along the colonnades! As a sober and practical man, and one
+already in love with the gracious Alma Huntley, I should no doubt have
+regarded her with a wholly aloof and impersonal air; but I was sadly
+impressionable, alas! and was almost transfixed with joy at sight of
+those shining Madonna features and clear magnetic, great blue eyes.
+For an instant, indeed, I actually stopped short in my tracks, until,
+regaining my presence of mind, I hastened toward my seat shamefaced at
+having so betrayed myself. It was several minutes before I ventured
+again to glance toward the fair one, and then she was looking in an
+opposite direction; and, stare at her as I might, she seemed totally
+oblivious of my existence.
+
+I am afraid that, in the ensuing hour, my thoughts were more on her
+than on proceedings in the theatre. I was aware, indeed, that some sort
+of debate was in progress, a discussion in which most of the spectators
+took part and during which Rawson and I were more than once pointed
+out with significant gestures. But, since I could understand not one
+word of what was spoken, I let my imagination travel to the beautiful
+unknown, and tried to fancy how it would feel to be befriended by so
+fairy-like a creature. Even to speak a word with her, I thought, would
+be a delight, and to hold a conversation with her would be the rarest
+of good fortune. Of course, her face might belie her character, and she
+might be unintelligent as she was beautiful; yet I was convinced that a
+rare soul shone out of the calm seductive depths of her eyes, and was
+more than willing to believe that she combined the wisdom of a Socrates
+with the charms of an Aphrodite.
+
+So pleasantly was I occupied in contemplating this fascinating being
+and her scarcely less fascinating fellows, that it seemed but a
+moment before the debate was over and the assembled men and women
+rose from their seats and began to depart. With a start I sprang to
+my feet, suddenly realizing that the assemblage had perhaps reached
+some critical decision regarding me. And when four or five of the men
+approached Rawson and myself and motioned us away, I had the feeling
+of a captive being led back into imprisonment. The loveliest of all
+women had now been lost to view amid the crowd, and I was sadder at
+her disappearance than at thought of my personal sufferings; but as I
+walked slowly out of that sapphire and amber palace, gentle strains
+of music began to play on unseen instruments, rippling delightedly as
+waves on a calm sea; and gradually and insensibly I was comforted,
+and somehow I was convinced that I should see that glorious womanly
+apparition again.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Once more we were escorted through the city streets, but this time had
+only a few hundred yards to walk. After a minute or two we were led up
+the steps of a many-columned marble mansion, and into a long hall whose
+stained glass windows cast a subdued illumination upon a score of vivid
+paintings. We were wondering what to do, when our guides motioned us
+to cushioned seats that seemed made of woven seaweed; and after we had
+settled ourselves at ease in the great sofa-like chairs, two of the
+men disappeared momentarily and returned with a feast of some singular
+substance reminding me of mushrooms flavored with a sprinkling of
+honey. At first we were suspicious and reluctant to eat; but the honest
+and frankly puzzled faces of our hosts convinced us of our folly; and
+we found the dish, while strange to our palates, not only appetizing
+but invigorating after our long fast.
+
+After we had eaten and the remains of the meal had been borne away, we
+were treated to a still greater surprise. A man came stalking in laden
+with five or six variously colored cloths, which I recognized as the
+native costumes; and, having spread these out before us, he motioned us
+to discard our own clothing and take our choice of the local apparel.
+Our attendants then politely withdrew, leaving us more perplexed than
+ever.
+
+But it was long before we could make up our minds to array ourselves
+in the native garb. And while we stood hesitating, casting occasional
+disdainful glances at the colored garments before making the decision
+which we knew we ultimately must make, our attention was distracted
+by the paintings that adorned the walls. Although all were executed
+with the deft and flawless hand of a master, they were in a sense
+different from any paintings I had ever seen before; and what struck
+me in particular was not so much their peculiar style of art, which
+combined a minute realism with an almost cosmic suggestiveness, as
+their arresting and unparalleled subject-matter. Half of them were
+of a marine type, and depicted ocean caves where the giant squid or
+octopus wavered through the gray depths, or gardens of the ocean floor
+where the many-branching coral was the playground for shimmering blue
+and yellow fishes; the other half, and the most remarkable by far,
+portrayed scenes of ruin and destruction on a scale that might have
+staggered the most daring imagination. One of them, for example,
+pictured a city with slender skyscrapers not unlike those of modern New
+York, but all the skyscrapers were crumpled and toppling as though from
+some titanic blast; another, which likewise represented a many-spired
+city, showed the ocean rolling up in one colossal wave and battering
+and washing away the buildings as a rain storm may wash away a child’s
+sand castles; while a third, and by all odds the most ghastly of the
+group, depicted a sea bottom strewn with the wreckage of great stone
+edifices, in whose vacant towers and windows and among whose shattered
+courts the sword-fish and the eel sported and slunk and the fanged
+shark pursued its prey.
+
+“Strange!” I remarked to Rawson. “What peculiarly morbid people is this
+that its artists should delight in scenes of flood and ruin? Or is it
+that its painters are striving to represent some actual disaster, some
+overwhelming ancient catastrophe unheard of on earth?”
+
+Hoping to find an answer to these questions, I strained my eyes
+over the inscriptions that marked each picture--inscriptions in the
+near-Greek characters I had already tried to decipher. As before, I
+had at first no success in translation; but, having nothing else to
+do, I persevered; and once again I ended by construing two or three
+words--words that left me only more deeply mystified. “After the
+Submergence,” was the legend that explained the picture of the ruined
+town at the sea bottom; and, noting how closely this phrase resembled
+those I had previously interpreted, I was forced to conclude that “The
+Submergence” was indeed some definite historical event. But when it had
+occurred or how was still a question as unanswerable as though it had
+concerned the planet Mars.
+
+“It is possible that we will never be able to solve the problem.” I
+was observing to Rawson, when suddenly I heard that which made me stop
+short in amazement, momentarily forgetting all about tidal waves and
+sunken cities.
+
+“Saints in heaven, that’s a good one! That’s the time I put one over
+on you, boys!” came to me in indistinct tones, accompanied by a loud
+guffaw; and Rawson and I stared at one another in astonishment,
+bewildered as men who have seen a ghost.
+
+“Stranahan!” we cried in one voice; and the tears were ready to flow at
+the thought that we had found our lost companion.
+
+A moment later, having made our way through a columned hallway into an
+adjoining room, we were met by the strangest sight we had yet seen in
+this land of many wonders.
+
+Sprawled haphazard on the floor, absorbed in the distribution of a
+pack of cards, were our four lost fellow seamen, all of them looking
+grotesque indeed in their colored native garments, and Stranahan
+appearing particularly outlandish in his gown of pale green, his
+trouser legs showing from beneath, his blue sailor’s blouse conspicuous
+through the open neck in front!
+
+
+
+
+ CHAPTER IX
+
+ The Will of the Masters
+
+
+“Lord have mercy on me, if it ain’t Harkness! And Rawson, too!” cried
+Stranahan, leaping to his feet, and seizing our hands in a hearty grip.
+“By all things holy, I thought I’d never see you again!”
+
+For a moment we were unable to reply, so great was the confusion of
+shouts, greetings, and excited questionings from our four new-found
+companions. Though we were fully as delighted as they, our first words
+came in inchoate, mumbled phrases, for our surprise was apparently even
+greater than theirs.
+
+“Well, and what are you doing in this part of the country?” Stranahan
+at length inquired, with a smile. “I thought you were safe in the old
+X-111.”
+
+“Nothing is safe in the X-111,” I replied. “Captain Gavison sent us out
+after you when you didn’t come back.”
+
+“I’m sorry to hear that,” declared Stranahan, ruefully. “You know I
+hate to disobey orders, but I’m afraid I’ll have to. We won’t be coming
+back just yet.”
+
+“What makes you think that?” I demanded, with sudden misgivings.
+
+“I don’t think it--I know it,” he maintained, with an air of certainty.
+And, leaning on one foot against a marble column while his brawny hand
+stroked his chin, he continued, ruminatingly, “Suffering sea snakes, do
+you take me for a fool? Do you think I’d be here if I could find a way
+out?”
+
+“But can’t you?” I questioned, innocently.
+
+“No, by the devil, I can’t!” he swore. “Neither can you! We’re all
+prisoners here!”
+
+“What? Prisoners in this building?” I gasped.
+
+“No, not in this building! In this town!” corrected Stranahan.
+
+“In this town?” Despite my agitation, I began to laugh. “This town
+makes a fair-sized jail.”
+
+“You won’t think so for long!” warned Stranahan, with all the fury of
+conviction. “The Lord strike my heart from my breast if I ever saw a
+deader place--except maybe my own home town on Sunday afternoons!”
+
+Following this outburst, Stranahan recounted his recent experiences,
+which were not altogether different from our own. Like us, he and
+Ripley had reached the city following an ambling excursion among the
+outlying colonnades and temples; but unlike us, they had not been so
+unfortunate as to be trapped in one of the buildings. In fact, they
+had suffered a different misfortune entirely. Upon entering the city,
+they had been confronted by several of the natives; and, surmising that
+these strange beings were hostilely disposed, the terrified Stranahan
+had whipped out his revolver and fired toward the crowd. So far as was
+known, no one had been injured, but all had been badly frightened by
+the report; and for a while, the two seamen had had the freedom of the
+town.
+
+They were ultimately stopped, however, by a band of determined-looking
+natives. Though apparently unarmed, and though they used no violence,
+these men overpowered the intruders in some inexplicable way. Not only
+were Stranahan and Ripley deprived of their pistols, but they were
+rendered docile as children, and were conducted, as we had been, to the
+place of amber and sapphire, where a hundred pale-robed individuals
+debated and passed on their fate. Next they were brought to their
+present dwelling, where they were clothed and fed, and where they were
+reunited with Stangale and Howlett, who had preceded them to the city.
+They had now been living here for several days, and during that time
+had been treated with unexpected civility and kindness and even allowed
+to roam at will through the city; but whenever they had approached
+the boundaries of the town, they had encountered a band of citizens
+who, by shouts and gestures and a mysterious but irresistible power of
+suggestion, had given them to understand that they were not to leave.
+
+Stranahan was approaching the end of his recital, and was telling
+us how he had been compelled to wear the native costume and how his
+meals had been brought to him regularly twice each day, when he was
+interrupted by the entrance of several natives, who had been looking
+for us in the adjoining room and seemed a little annoyed at our
+disappearance. Unceremoniously they led us back to the other apartment,
+where the half dozen robes were lying in wait for us; and, perceiving
+from their gestures that we would do well to don the native garb,
+I promptly arrayed myself in a gown of pale lavender, while Rawson
+exchanged his sailor’s suit for a costume of daintiest yellow. Both of
+us had difficulty in adjusting the garments, which were fastened at the
+shoulder by a fish-bone device resembling a safety-pin; and we had our
+hesitation about the sandals, which were slipped on at a stroke and
+yet were held firmly in place by inconspicuous cords. But though we
+puzzled over our new apparel for many minutes, Rawson found in the end
+that he had his on inside out, while the front of mine was where the
+rear should have been. Of course, we did not discover these mistakes
+for ourselves. Our attendants, on returning to see us fully attired,
+indicated the errors with smiles and suppressed laughter; and with
+their aid, we managed to array ourselves almost like self-respecting
+natives.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Fortunately, we had little time just then to notice how ridiculous
+we looked in our colored gowns. As soon as the perplexing business
+of dressing was settled, one of the men motioned me to a sofa in a
+corner of the room, where he took a seat beside me as though for some
+important purpose; and a second similarly led Rawson to an opposite
+corner, while the other natives unceremoniously took their leave. My
+particular attendant, who was a tall man, neither young nor old, with
+classic features and keen but kindly gray eyes peering from beneath
+a wide expanse of forehead, now began to go through a series of
+apparently meaningless gestures, accompanied by no less meaningless
+words. First he would tap his head while emitting a peculiar sound;
+then he would tap his breast while emitting another peculiar sound;
+then he would touch his arm, his knee, his foot, always slowly and
+carefully pronouncing one or two unintelligible syllables. In the
+beginning, I was inclined to wonder whether he was not mad, but this
+view was not furthered by the discovery that Rawson’s attendant
+was conducting a similar performance. It was doubtless only my own
+stupidity that prevented me from grasping the truth immediately. At
+length my companion drew a small pad of paper from his pocket and began
+to write upon it with an instrument resembling a fountain pen, and
+I understood clearly enough then that he was trying to teach me his
+language; so I gave him my undivided attention, noting carefully each
+object he touched and the corresponding sounds, and noted particularly
+the characters he jotted down upon the paper.
+
+Then suddenly I saw light amid the darkness! Although this was but my
+first lesson, I was making faster progress than either of us could have
+anticipated--my knowledge of ancient Greek was proving invaluable!
+At the first glance, I observed the resemblance between the letters
+my instructor was inditing and those of the old Greek, even as I had
+noticed the resemblance on the stone inscriptions; and it was not many
+minutes before I discovered that some of the words, although not to be
+recognized when pronounced, were written in a style closely similar to
+the Greek, and were obviously built upon Greek roots. This was not true
+of all the words, but it was true of such a large percentage, that I
+had hopes of soon being able to speak the language and so to solve the
+mystery of this fantastic deep-sea people.
+
+After about two hours, my instructor rose from his seat, shoved the pad
+of paper back into his pocket, and indicated that our lessons were over
+for the day. But he smiled upon me graciously, as though to indicate
+that I was a not unpromising pupil; and he spoke a word which I thought
+I recognized as “Tomorrow,” after which he saluted me with a courteous
+wave of the hand, and joining Rawson’s instructor, went ambling
+leisurely out of view.
+
+It was with a wry smile that Rawson rejoined me. “Say, did you get
+anything out of it at all?” he inquired. “I just couldn’t make head or
+tail of it. Heavens, at this rate it would take me ten years to learn
+my A, B, C’s!”
+
+I did not confide that I had private reasons for feeling more
+optimistic than my friend. But, after I had offered to help and was
+rejected, I was content to let the conversation drift to other subjects.
+
+Rawson was now annoyingly given to useless lamentations. Hotly he
+deplored our plight; he declared that he no longer saw anything
+romantic about it, and least of all perceived anything romantic about
+being made to go to school again; and he reminded me time after time
+of Captain Gavison and the crew, whom we had last seen stranded in the
+wilderness with the disabled X-111, and who were no doubt awaiting
+our return in hope that was fast giving way to despair. Though I did
+not share in Rawson’s dislike of our present quarters, and though I
+was deterred from leaving, not only by hopes of learning the language
+but by thoughts of the nameless fair one, yet I had to listen when
+Rawson spoke of our duty to our waiting comrades; and, in spite of
+the forbidding precedent set by Stranahan and Ripley, I could not but
+consent to try to return to our shipmates.
+
+As the doors of our dwelling were wide open and there was no one to
+interfere with us, we sauntered forthwith into the streets. As usual,
+we found them almost deserted, and so had no hesitation in proceeding
+along the winding walks and broad avenues and past the innumerable
+terraces, courts and temples in the direction from which we had entered
+the city. As the various distinctive gardens and palaces constituted
+unmistakable landmarks, we were seldom at a loss as to our route, and
+in little more than half an hour we found ourselves at the threshold
+of the town, before that odd statue-like edifice where we had been
+imprisoned. The path of escape now seemed open, and our flight appeared
+so easy that we paused momentarily, almost with misgivings at having
+encountered no obstacles. But not a person was in sight, and no sign of
+any impediment was visible, and so in surprise we started up that slope
+which led to the colonnades and outlying temples.
+
+We had almost reached the top, and I was already deep in regrets at
+leaving this charming city just as it was becoming so interesting,
+when half a score of pale-gowned individuals suddenly appeared from
+above the ridge, their vociferous cries and commanding gestures warning
+us back. They carried no weapon, yet they could not have been more
+imperious had they borne loaded rifles; there seemed almost to be some
+hidden compulsion, some irresistible magnetism about them, so that our
+weak wills quailed and bowed to theirs, and we retreated before them
+as impulsively as a singed animal retreats before fire. I do not know
+why it was, for they surely would not have set violent hands upon us;
+but we no more thought of disobeying them than a trained dog thinks of
+disobeying its master; and back to the city we hastened, while they
+followed on our heels with faces stern and set; and, having re-entered
+the town, we made our way directly to the building we had just left,
+as though some superior mind controlled our movements and we were no
+longer free.
+
+Upon our return, we met with another surprise. Naturally, we were
+prompted to seek Stranahan and our three other shipmates again; but we
+had expected that they would be occupied, as before, by cards or some
+other time-killing game. Instead, we found them seated in the four
+corners of the room, each with a companion (needless to say, a native);
+and from the peculiar gestures of those companions and their habit of
+writing occasionally on pads of paper, we recognized that they were
+giving instructions in the language of the land. But this in itself
+was not the surprising fact. Two of the four newcomers were ladies,
+one of them being of matronly years; but the other, who sat opposite
+Stranahan, smilingly making notes with her pen, was not only in the
+full bloom of youth, but had that singularly sweet cast of countenance,
+those singularly clear and magnetic large blue eyes, which could belong
+to only one woman in the world!
+
+ * * * * *
+
+[Illustration: ... Beneath us, at a distance that may have been five
+hundred feet and may have been a thousand, the vaults and domes and
+columns of innumerable stone edifices shone palely and with sallow
+luster. Surely, we thought, this was some unheard-of Athens, doomed
+long ago by tidal wave or volcano ... Palace after magnificent palace,
+many seemingly modelled by architects of old Greece, went gliding by
+beneath us; countless statues, tall as the buildings, pointed up at us
+with hands that were uncannily life-like; wide avenue after wide avenue
+flashed by, and one or two colossal theatres of Grecian design ...]
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+
+
+ CHAPTER X
+
+ Discoveries
+
+
+Great as was my joy upon observing that the entrancing mysterious
+lady was Stranahan’s tutor, it was to be some time before her daily
+proximity had any effect upon my life. And meanwhile I was resigning
+myself to a regular routine, a routine only partly of my own choosing,
+and largely prescribed by those whom I had come to consider my masters.
+Each night (and by night I mean the period of eight or ten hours when
+the golden orbs were quenched and the city was in total blackness)
+I would sleep with Rawson and Stranahan on screened open-air rooms
+on the roof. And each day I would live almost as though by formula.
+Aroused by the burst of light that marked the queer underworld dawn,
+I would take a plunge in a salt-water swimming pool in a court of
+our apartment. A few minutes later I would join my companions in a
+repast of some fragile little native cakes and of some queer fruit
+like a cross between the apricot and peach, which were brought to us
+regularly by well-laden carriers whom I observed likewise supplying
+neighboring houses. Breakfast over, we were free for a while; and then
+I would usually go rambling about the city with Rawson or Stranahan, or
+sometimes with all my five former shipmates; and we would have a merry
+time laughing and chatting, inspecting the various palaces, colonnades
+and gardens, and poking fun at any object that happened to strike us as
+curious or absurd.
+
+After an hour or two we would return to our apartments, to await the
+arrival of our tutors, who had a habit of appearing in a band of six
+(one for each of us) sometime toward the end of the morning. Stranahan
+was still the most fortunate of us all, since for many weeks his tutor
+continued to be that woman of the Madonna features and magnetic large
+blue eyes; but the rest of us were also fortunate in a way, for she
+would always beam upon us with bright “Good morning” in the native
+tongue; and I personally had hopes that the time was not far-off when
+we should be better acquainted.
+
+At the end of perhaps two hours, the tutors would leave for the day;
+but they would always provide us with ample work in the shape of simple
+exercises to be written or of passages to be deciphered in textbooks of
+the kind evidently used for six-year-olds. This “home-work” (as Rawson
+designated it) would keep us busy until late in the afternoon, when a
+native would arrive with a tray containing various savory viands: a
+gray bread made from a grain with a flavor like walnuts; a succulent
+vegetable like French toast well browned; a spiced, starchy food
+reminding me vaguely of baked potatoes; cakes of a hundred varieties,
+and fruits shaped like tomatoes and tasting like muscat grapes, or
+elongated like cucumbers and flavored as oranges, or round and large
+as cantaloupes and substantial as bananas. But while we were of course
+delighted at the abundance of these appetizing unfamiliar foods, we
+were not a little surprised--and not a little disappointed--at the
+absence of much that we would once have considered essential; and we
+constantly wondered why it was that no meat nor fish nor any other
+animal product found its place on the bill of fare.
+
+After this meal (the second and last for the day) we were once more
+free to do as we wished; and we would ordinarily spend the time until
+dark in strolling around the city, or in sitting about in a little
+circle exchanging anecdotes, or in propounding theories as to where we
+were and how we had arrived, or in playing cards or any other little
+game that we could devise. Except for our tutors, we came into contact
+with none of the natives; we were too ignorant of the language to speak
+with the occasional few whom we passed on the streets; and as yet we
+knew virtually nothing of how they lived.
+
+But we were much less concerned about the natives than about our
+comrades of the X-111. We were still restrained in the city by the
+mysterious, irresistible power of compulsion exercised by our hosts;
+and though the days were lengthening into weeks, no word of Captain
+Gavison and our absent shipmates had reached us. For all that we could
+say, they might have perished of starvation or fallen through a black
+hole in the ground--or, more plausibly, they might have been discovered
+by the natives, and led as captives to lodgings miles away. Should we
+see them soon, or at least have news of them? or should we never learn
+what had befallen them? There was no way to decide except to wait--and
+the process of waiting was distressingly slow.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+But I was secretly determined to do everything possible to hasten
+events. Obviously, the first necessity was to understand the native
+language--hence I put forth every effort to learn to read and write.
+Less because of my natural linguistic tendencies than because of my
+acquaintance with ancient Greek, I was making more rapid progress
+than any of my fellows, and was acquiring the rudiments of a speaking
+and reading knowledge. Not only did my own ears tell me so, but my
+instructor admitted as much by his occasional nods of approval, and
+now and then even by a “Very Good” or “Excellent” when I was speaking
+or reciting to him. But not content with my normal rate of advance,
+I was fortifying myself with much secret practice. Often I would
+refrain from joining my comrades in their morning and evening strolls
+and pastimes, and would remain quietly in my room with a pad of paper
+and a pencil supplied me by my tutor. I would devote hours to writing
+in the native alphabet, until I could employ it with facility and
+assurance; or I would jot down a list of words and phrases and repeat
+them aloud time after time, trying to imitate the peculiar accentuation
+of my instructor. The latter task in particular was difficult and even
+painful, and subjected me more than once to ridicule, when Stranahan
+or the others entered the room unexpectedly and found me apparently
+talking to myself. But I persisted in spite of discouragements, and
+had hopes that, instead of commanding but a few scattered words and
+phrases, I would shortly be able to conduct an extended conversation.
+
+It was only natural, however, that I should be able to read the
+language before I could speak it. Not more than two or three weeks
+had passed before I felt capable of deciphering any average native
+document. But, unfortunately, I had little opportunity to practice my
+talents, for the only written material I saw was in the shape of the
+simple exercise books lent me by my instructor. These, while admirably
+adapted for clarifying grammatical problems, were entirely devoid of
+vital information; and when I asked my instructor for more edifying
+works, I did not seem able to make him understand, for what he brought
+me was merely a more advanced exercise book.
+
+Consequently, I had every reason to be grateful for that chance which
+put me in possession of several volumes designed for adult readers. For
+lack of better occupation, Rawson and I were minutely inspecting our
+apartments one afternoon, scrutinizing in particular the picturesque
+patterns of the veined marble walls, when suddenly I stopped short with
+a cry of surprise, startled at sight of a little rectangle faintly
+although unmistakably engraved in otherwise unbroken surface of the
+marble.
+
+Promptly I informed Rawson of my discovery. He shared in my surprise,
+and excitedly suggested that this was some mysterious trap-door.
+
+Although I saw no reason to agree with him, I approached the
+rectangular patch to examine it more closely, and in so doing rested my
+hand appraisingly on the marble surface.
+
+To my utter amazement, a portion of the wall gave way, swinging inward
+as if on noiseless hinges!
+
+But if Rawson had had visions of secret corridors and darkened
+chambers, he was to be disappointed. The displaced rectangle revealed
+not a mysterious passageway, but a little closet or vault possibly
+three feet deep--a vault filled to the brim with treasure! At least, it
+was filled with what I regarded as treasure, for within it were piled
+scores of books!
+
+Hastily I reached for the nearest volume--a heavy tome bound in what
+I took to be a sort of artificial leather. The title filled me with
+rejoicing: it was a “Lexicon of the More Commonly Used Words.”
+
+Aided by the bewildered Rawson, I at once examined the entire
+collection. Although he could decipher not a word, Rawson feigned the
+profoundest interest; and, indeed, he may well have been interested,
+for, as I read and translated the titles, I was making discovery after
+extraordinary discovery. Not that any of the books were those works
+of sheer information which I most desired, but that they all embodied
+significant hints and clues. Some, like the inscriptions I had observed
+among the colonnades, seemed to refer to some great disaster, as in
+the case of one entitled, “Artistic Progress Since the Destruction”;
+another, which was called “Speculations Concerning the Supermarine
+World,” fortified my impression of being in some inexplicably buried
+land; while several were treatises on such difficult subjects as
+“Intra-Atomic Engineering,” “Marine Valves and Their Construction,” and
+“The Creation of Artificial Sunlight.”
+
+But the book that caused me the greatest surprise--a book that struck
+me as at once a priceless find and an insoluble mystery--was the
+well-thumbed yellowing little volume at the very bottom of the heap.
+Even today, when all that passed in those enigmatic realms is an old
+and oft-repeated story, I have difficulty in repressing my astonishment
+at that discovery. Imagine the bewilderment of one who, having voyaged
+to another world, suddenly receives news of familiar things, and at the
+same time learns unsuspected facts about the familiar! Imagine this,
+and you will have only a vague notion of the amazement I felt when,
+turning the pages of the book in that unknown cavernland, I recognized
+the name of--Homer!
+
+And not only did I recognize the name of Homer, but I found it affixed
+to a work not previously catalogued among the productions of the great
+Attic bard! “Telegonus” was the title--and instantly I recalled that
+there had been a legend among post-Homeric writers of one Telegonus,
+the son of Odysseus and Circe, who had been sent by his enchantress
+mother in search of his father, and had slain his sire without
+realizing his identity.
+
+One may be sure that I wasted no time about plunging into the book.
+One may be sure that I took no heed of the surprised exclamations of
+Rawson, nor even paused for more than a word of explanation, but read
+and read as fast as my knowledge of the language would permit. Truly,
+the poem was Homeric in quality!--I recognized at once the swing of
+the inimitable hexameter, handled with masterly craftsmanship; and the
+opening passages, executed with epic dash and sweep, simplicity and
+power, convinced me that here was a work worthy of standing side by
+side with “The Iliad” and “The Odyssey.”
+
+But how came the poem to be here in this weird undersea realm? How
+came these submerged people to possess an Homeric work unknown to the
+modern world? These were the questions that perplexed me as I excitedly
+followed stanza after noble stanza; and ponder the problem as I might,
+debate it as I would with myself or the eager Rawson, I could conceive
+of no explanation, but was as mystified as if I had traveled to Mars
+and found the people addressing me in English or presenting me with
+copies of Shakespeare.
+
+
+
+
+ CHAPTER XI
+
+ Questions and Answers
+
+
+The chief effect of the discovery of the books was to make me doubly
+anxious to speak the native tongue. Not one of the score of volumes
+cast any light on the problems that bewildered me, and least of all
+on the mystery of Homer’s “Telegonus”; and it was apparent that I
+should remain in ignorance until I could converse with the natives.
+Accordingly, I had need of that rarest of all qualities, a virtue in
+which I am almost wholly lacking--patience. Stifling my eagerness
+and curiosity as best I could, I had to plod away for days and days
+in acquiring new native words and phrases and in practicing speaking
+in the solitude of my own rooms. The task was far from pleasant, and
+the suspense and the waiting were harrying; but I was like a traveler
+following a trail through an unfamiliar jungle; and, feverish as I was
+to escape, I had no choice except to persist on the one visible course.
+
+But had I not been so eager to batter down the mystery, I would have
+found abundant cause for encouragement. I was still progressing,
+progressing rapidly, attaining a speaking knowledge of the language
+with a speed possible only for one long trained as a linguist. And,
+as the result of many a secret conversation, which I held with myself
+by way of practice, I advanced swiftly to the point of being able to
+exchange ideas with the natives. At least, I felt that I had advanced
+to that point, and awaited only opportunity to test my new-won powers.
+
+The obvious course would have been to address myself to my tutor, and
+several times I was on the point of doing so, but on each occasion he
+seemed so absorbed in the day’s exercises, that I decided to postpone
+the experiment. In the end, however, I should no doubt have opened my
+mind to him--had not chance intervened and sent me a more charming
+informant.
+
+I had of course not forgotten that entrancing Madonna-like woman who
+was Stranahan’s tutor. Indeed, I could not easily have forgotten
+her, for her exquisite features and bright eyes kept flashing before
+me at all hours of the day and night; and already I felt myself as
+completely subject to her spell as Dante to the spell of a Beatrice.
+Under the witchery of her influence, Alma Huntley was becoming no more
+than the figment of a remote and misty past--and yet I was not even
+acquainted with the fair unknown, I had never exchanged more than a
+formal greeting with her. I scarcely knew how to sow the seeds even for
+a casual friendship, and what she was like at heart and how she would
+react to my advances, were matters of pure conjecture.
+
+But the time was to come when she would be more to me than one to be
+admired at a distance. She was, in fact, to serve in a double rôle: for
+not only was she to fascinate me with her companionship, but she was to
+cast light upon those problems which were tantalizing me.
+
+Although I caught glimpses of her almost every morning when she came
+as Stranahan’s instructor, yet I would have had little chance to speak
+with her even had I chosen, since (as I have already related) she
+ordinarily arrived and left in the company of the other tutors. But one
+day--perhaps because she had some particularly difficult bit of grammar
+to explain--she lingered over her work much longer than usual, and was
+so absorbed in it that she did not appear to notice that her fellow
+teachers had left. At the moment I did not perceive that this was my
+opportunity; but good fortune was to be with me, and when she emerged
+from the marble doors of our home, I happened to be strolling along the
+colonnade not a hundred yards away.
+
+At first it was almost a shock to me to see her come unaccompanied
+toward me--a shock in which intense pleasure was mingled with something
+akin to dread. For a moment I had an impulse to hide behind one of the
+great stone columns; fortunately, I thrust this foolish desire from me,
+and, after a few seconds, had almost regained my composure.
+
+As she approached, I could scarcely take my gaze from her. Upon her
+face was a serene, placid expression, such as she almost always wore;
+but the shadow of a smile flickered about her lips, and her great blue
+eyes were withdrawn as if they saw not the world wherein she walked but
+only some calm and perfect inner vision.
+
+Slowly I advanced; and diffidently placed myself in her path. At first
+she did not seem to see me, but in an instant, almost as though she
+had been expecting some one, her gaze was lifted to meet mine; and
+no surprise was marked there, nor any trace of annoyance, only an
+unlooked-for pleasure. In low, musical tones, and with grace that to me
+seemed goddess-like, she murmured “Good morning,” while such a lovely
+and unmatched light shone in her eyes and such transfiguring inner
+radiance illumined her features, that I felt that I had encountered an
+immortal.
+
+“Good morning,” I replied, in the native dialect, and at the cost
+of greater effort than I would have cared to admit; and I shuddered
+inwardly lest I give her cause for laughter.
+
+She smiled charmingly, and was about to pass on, when in desperation I
+strove to detain her. “I beg your pardon,” said I, stiffly, speaking
+almost by rote in phrases I had memorized days before. “I beg your
+pardon, but have you a minute to spare? There are one or two questions
+I should like very much to ask you.”
+
+ * * * * *
+
+For an instant she stared at me in transparent surprise. But a smile
+played lightly about the corners of her mouth, and apparently she was
+not offended. “Why, of course, you may ask any question you want,” she
+replied, more puzzled than annoyed. And, pointing down the colonnade
+to a circular marble bench enclosed by a ring of slender columns, she
+continued, “Let us go over there. Then we can talk, if you wish.”
+
+In silence we traversed the intervening two or three hundred yards. My
+heart was so full that I could not have spoken had I desired; I could
+scarcely credit my double good fortune in having won this lady’s good
+will and in speaking well enough to be understood by her.
+
+And when at length I found myself seated at her side, her vivid blue
+eyes looking inquiringly and yet kindly into my own, I felt as one
+who enters the land of dreams come true. It was with difficulty that
+I answered when, in low, sweet tones, she asked me what it was that I
+desired to know; and when the first words came to me, they were forced
+out only by an effort of the will, for I should much have preferred to
+sit there in silence, staring and staring at her animated lovely face,
+her sharp-cut classic profile and symmetrically modelled features.
+
+But, unfortunately, the laws of human intercourse demanded that
+I do more than gaze at her in speechless rapture. And I answered
+her question, therefore, with one or two commonplace remarks which
+expressed nothing of the exaltation within me, and which could have
+conveyed no high opinion of my intelligence. “I am a stranger in this
+land,” said I, picking my words with a translator’s care, “and so
+find many things here which perplex me. I was wondering whether you
+would not be good enough to help me. Am I imposing too much upon your
+kindness?”
+
+“Oh, no, of course not,” she murmured; and as she spoke I noted that
+her upper lip trembled slightly, as though from extreme sensitiveness
+and sympathy. “Do you not know that it would be a pleasure to be of
+aid?”
+
+I was enchanted by this reply, for there could be no doubting the utter
+candor and sincerity in her earnest blue eyes, which were glowing with
+a softness equal to the magnetism they sometimes displayed.
+
+Encouraged to the point of boldness, I decided upon a daring step.
+“Before I ask any other question,” I ventured, “might it not be well
+for us to know each other’s names?”
+
+“Why, of course,” she agreed. “My name is Aelios.”
+
+“Aelios!” I repeated, charmed by the sound. “What a delightful name!
+And what is your other name, may I ask?”
+
+“My other name?” she echoed, astonished. “What other name do you mean?”
+
+I saw that somehow I had made a mistake. “Why, haven’t you another
+name?” I inquired, with distinct loss of confidence.
+
+“Another name?” She tittered delightedly, as though enjoying a rare
+joke. “Well, if that isn’t the most outlandish idea! What do you think
+I’d do with another name?”
+
+“Why, that--that’s not for me to say,” I stammered. “Only, where I come
+from, every one has at least two or three names.”
+
+“Oh, how perfectly ridiculous!” she exclaimed. “Just as if we haven’t
+enough to remember one name apiece!”
+
+She paused momentarily, and I was too much embarrassed to resume the
+conversation. Fortunately, she continued without my aid. “How many
+names have you?” she inquired; and the playful light in her eyes told
+me that she could not have been more amused if asking how many hands or
+feet I had.
+
+“Only two,” I admitted, glad that I had not to confess to three or
+four. “I am called Anson Harkness.”
+
+“Anson Harkness,” she repeated, slowly, as if savoring the peculiar
+sound. “Why, if that isn’t the strangest name I ever heard!”
+
+“Where I come from it isn’t considered strange,” I assured her. “Of
+course, in my country everything is very different--”
+
+“Yes, I know,” she interposed. “You come from above the sea.”
+
+“How do you know?” I cried, astonished.
+
+Again she peered at me in surprise, and almost, I thought, with
+something of that puzzled air with which one regards a child who
+persists in asking the ridiculous. “Why, of course you must come from
+above the sea,” she explained. “Where else is there to come from?”
+
+“And do the people here all know we come from above the sea?”
+
+“Yes, indeed,” declared Aelios, a naïve seriousness replacing the
+frolicsome air of the moment before. “That’s what we’ve all been
+worrying about. We thought we were proof against invasions from above,
+and we simply can’t understand how you got here. Why, for three
+thousand years the upper world doesn’t seem even to have suspected our
+existence.”
+
+“Three thousand years?” I burst forth. “Three thousand years? Then, for
+God’s sake, how old is this land of yours? And, in heaven’s name, what
+country is this, anyway?”
+
+“Why, I thought you knew,” murmured Aelios, with a look of surprise.
+“This is Atlantis, of course.”
+
+“Atlantis!” I ejaculated, in overpowering amazement. “Atlantis!” And
+confused visions of a lost continent swarmed through my mind, and I
+wondered whether this could be the sunken world described by Plato.
+
+But before I could utter another word, my attention was diverted by
+an unpardonable intrusion. “Great shades of Alexander, having a nice
+little tête-a-tête, are you?” came a familiar voice from the rear; and
+Stranahan, stalking up uninvited, deposited himself on a seat just to
+the left of Aelios, and grinningly requested us not to heed him, but to
+go right on with our little talk.
+
+
+
+
+ CHAPTER XII
+
+ The Submergence
+
+
+The arrival of Stranahan, of course, had its effect. Not only did he
+interrupt my conversation with Aelios at a crucial point, but he made
+it impossible for the discussion to take a personal turn. I realized,
+to be sure, that he was actuated by motives of good fellowship, but I
+felt that he exhibited remarkably poor sense; and I am afraid that I
+displayed not a little of my displeasure in the forced welcome that I
+frowned upon the intruder. But Stranahan appeared to be afflicted with
+no foolish sensitiveness; and, having decided to join us, he seemed not
+to notice the frozen reception I accorded him.
+
+And like one determined to see things through to the end, he remained
+resolutely with us. He seemed scarcely discouraged by his limited
+knowledge of the language, which made him a total stranger to most of
+what we were saying; and for a good part of our conversation, he sat
+by in gaping ignorance, venturing an occasional remark with such poor
+display of grammar and pronunciation that I could only smile.
+
+Yet our discussion was so engrossing that for minutes at a time I quite
+forgot the existence of Stranahan. Even the bright sparkling eyes of
+Aelios had for the moment no more than an impersonal interest for me,
+for I found myself making a discovery so strange, so amazing and so
+utterly unprecedented as to upset my conception of human history.
+
+“Can this really be Atlantis?” I heard myself inquiring, once the
+disturbance created by Stranahan’s arrival had subsided. “Can this
+really be the famous lost Atlantis?”
+
+“The lost Atlantis?” repeated Aelios, looking perplexed. “I didn’t know
+there was any lost Atlantis.”
+
+I explained as briefly as possible the legend of the ancient continent
+that was said to have sunk beneath the sea. “If there’s any truth
+in the story, that was one of the greatest disasters in history,”
+I remarked, trying to lend importance to what I felt to be but the
+flimsiest of myths.
+
+“Disaster!” echoed Aelios, her perplexity deepening. “Disaster! This
+is the first time I ever heard any one call the submergence a disaster!”
+
+“Do you mean, then, that there actually was a submergence?” I demanded.
+“That a whole continent sank beneath the waves?”
+
+“Why, of course!” she exclaimed, astonished at so self-evident a
+question. “How else do you think we got here beneath the sea?” And she
+pointed significantly to the great greenish roof and the bright, golden
+orbs above us, while into her eyes came a wonderfully sweet, indulgent
+light, as into the eyes of one who delights to teach children the
+obvious.
+
+“Where did you suppose we could be now,” she continued, “except in
+Archeon, the Capital of Atlantis?”
+
+It was at this point that Stranahan thought it time to let himself
+be heard. He drew his lips far apart as if to speak, uttered an
+inarticulate syllable or two, and then stopped abruptly short, as
+though unable to frame the desired words.
+
+“What is it, my friend?” asked Aelios, turning to Stranahan with a
+gracious smile. But since Stranahan could only gape idiotically in
+reply, I thought it my duty to answer for him.
+
+“What I cannot understand,” I said, returning to the question that had
+been puzzling me most of all, “is that you say there was a submergence,
+and yet seem to think it was not a disaster. Surely, if the whole
+continent of Atlantis was lost--”
+
+“What makes you think the whole continent was lost?” demanded Aelios, a
+quizzical, almost amused light in her great blue eyes. “Why, the better
+part of Atlantis is safe here beneath the sea!”
+
+“Safe here beneath the sea?” I cried, in growing confusion. “Why, how
+is that possible?”
+
+“That is a long story,” she started to explain. “It goes back very far,
+thousands of years, in fact--”
+
+“And cannot you tell me that story?” I proposed, eagerly. “Cannot you
+tell me from the beginning? Remember, I am a stranger here and find
+everything very confusing. What is this Atlantis of yours? And how old
+is it? And how large? And how did it come to be submerged? And how does
+it happen that you are living here now beneath the ocean?”
+
+“Whole volumes have been written in answer to those questions,”
+declared Aelios, with a winning smile. “But I’ll try to explain
+everything as best I can.” And she paused momentarily, while Stranahan
+craned his long neck far forward, as if to take in all that she had to
+say.
+
+“It is perhaps the most romantic tale in history,” she resumed,
+speaking almost with exaltation, while her eyes took on a far-away
+dreamy look that I thought most becoming, and her upper lip twitched
+with the same sympathetic quivering I had noted before. “Atlantis is
+one of the most ancient republics in the world, and at one time was
+the most populous and powerful of all countries. Our history goes back
+more than seven thousand years, four thousand above the sea and three
+thousand beneath--four thousand years of growth, tumult and conquest,
+and three thousand years of maturity and peace. At a time when Egypt
+and Babylonia were still unheard of, our engineers reared monuments
+more massive than the pyramids; and when Babylonia and Egypt were in
+the full pride of their renown our people regarded them contemptuously
+as the merest barbarian tribes. Our accomplishments were to them what
+theirs were to the unclothed blacks of the south; and our country
+surpassed theirs as a marble palace surpasses a clay hut.”
+
+ * * * * *
+
+“But what was the precise location of your country? And how large was
+it?” I interposed.
+
+“It was in an isolated position a full day’s sailing west of the
+Pillars of Hercules. As for its size, it was large, and yet not
+overwhelmingly so; a swift runner might have traveled around it between
+full moon and full moon. But today you might took vainly for its plains
+and snow-tipped mountains, for above all but its highest peaks, the
+unbroken waters foam and toss.”
+
+Aelios paused momentarily, and a melancholy reminiscent light came into
+her eyes, while her long, lithe fingers toyed absently with the folds
+of her lavender gown.
+
+“Ah, how sad!” I could not forebear murmuring. “What a ghastly tragedy!”
+
+“No, not a tragedy,” she quickly denied, regarding me again with a
+peculiar surprise that I could not understand. “There is no tragedy in
+the history of Atlantis, though of course there might have been.”
+
+“No tragedy?” I cried, wondering vaguely if Aelios could be trying to
+make sport of me. “Is it not tragedy for a whole great country to be
+submerged?”
+
+“It may be, or again it may not be,” she replied, enigmatically. “In
+this case, it was not.”
+
+Noting my quizzical silence, she continued, with a reassuring smile,
+“No doubt you will find this difficult to understand. In your world
+above seas, conditions are perhaps very different from those of old
+Atlantis. Certainly, you are spared the perils which we faced, and
+which compelled us to submerge our continent.”
+
+“Compelled you to submerge your continent?” I repeated, growing more
+amazed each instant. “Do you mean to say you submerged it deliberately?”
+
+“Yes. How else?” she returned, in matter-of-fact tones. “The
+Submergence--or the Deliverance, as it is sometimes called--was the
+most fortunate event in our history. We celebrate it annually at our
+great festival, the Festival of the Good Destruction.”
+
+Again she paused, as if uncertain how to proceed, while I was forced to
+join Stranahan in a bewildered silence.
+
+“In order to make things clear,” she continued at length, with upper
+lip still fluttering and eyes that smiled with kindly good will, “I
+suppose I will have to describe Atlantis as it was in the old days,
+the days before the flood. Thirty-one hundred years ago, or at the
+time when the Submergence was first proposed, we were in possession
+of secrets which the upper world has perhaps not rediscovered even
+today. I will not speak of our art, literature and philosophy, which,
+though advanced for their day, were incomparably inferior to what we
+have since produced; it was in scientific spheres that our progress
+was most pronounced. From the beginning, our science was a strangely
+lopsided growth; it was most developed on the purely material side;
+and while it could tell us how to compute a comet’s weight and enabled
+us to communicate with the people of Mars, still on the whole it
+was concerned with such practical questions as how to produce food
+artificially or how to utilize new sources of energy. And in these
+directions it was amazingly efficient. We had long passed the stage,
+for example, when we needed to rely upon steam, gasoline or electricity
+to run our motors or to carry us over the ground or through the air;
+we had mastered the life-secret of matter itself, and by means of the
+energy within the atoms could produce power equal to that of a tornado
+or of a volcanic eruption.”
+
+“Marvelous!” I exclaimed, enthusiastically. “Marvelous! What
+magnificent opportunities that gave you!”
+
+“Yes, that was just the trouble,” pursued Aelios, the trace of a frown
+darkening her lovely cheeks and eyes. “There are some opportunities
+that no men should have. What would be the gain in giving a wasp the
+power of a bull? It was not a mere coincidence, for example, that
+the decline of art was simultaneous with the rise of science. After
+thousands of years in which the pursuit of the beautiful had been
+one of the objects of life, men began to be bewildered by the idea
+of their conquest over matter; they came to apply themselves to the
+construction of huge and intricate machines, of towering but unsightly
+piles of masonry, of swift means of locomotion and of unique and
+elaborate systems of amusement. And at the same time they devoted
+themselves extensively to destruction. Not to the destruction of
+their own monstrous contrivances, alas! but to the undermining of
+human happiness and human life. In our isolated position, we had had
+comparatively little intercourse for centuries with other lands; but
+now that we possessed lightning means of travel and lightning weapons
+of aggression, our citizens began to swoop down occasionally upon a
+foreign cast, picking a quarrel with the people and finding some excuse
+for smiting thousands dead. At first, of course, our enemies had no
+means of retaliation, but it was certain that in the end they would
+have imitated our methods and singed us with our own fire.”
+
+“And is that what actually happened?” I asked, fancying I saw a trace
+of light at last. “Is that why you had to submerge your land?”
+
+“No, that is not what happened,” said Aelios, smiling at my naïveté,
+while a half-suppressed yawn from Stranahan gave her but little
+encouragement to continue. “Not all our people were savages, and
+not all approved of our policy of international murder; nor were
+all content to see art and beauty trodden down by the twin hoofs of
+mechanism and multiple production. Of course, the protestants were at
+first mere voices wailing against the waves, and more than one was
+jeered as a maniac; but the protest continued and grew through many
+decades; and though there were thousands that continued to appraise the
+cities by their size and scientific accomplishment by its deadliness,
+the time came when the party of rebellion was almost as numerous as the
+conservatives or ‘Respectables,’ and when the limitation of mechanical
+power became an issue that threatened the very life of the State.
+
+“I will not trouble you with the details of that struggle, or with the
+powerful cause made out by the enemies of Super-Science--for of this
+you shall hear more later. For the present it is sufficient to state
+that the climax arrived in the year 56 B. S.----”
+
+“What does B. S. mean?” I interrupted.
+
+“Before the Submergence, of course!” explained Aelios, with a slight
+frown that instantly made way for a broad and glowing smile.
+
+“It was in the year 56,” she proceeded, “that the Agripides ministry
+came into office. Following the open insurrection of beauty-lovers
+against the ‘Respectables,’ the Anti-Mechanism party triumphed in a
+general election; and Agripides, known by his friends as ‘Savior of the
+World’ and by his foes as the ‘City-Wrecker,’ began to carry out the
+revolutionary policies he had been advocating for years.
+
+“These policies, which were perhaps the most daring ever conceived
+by the human mind, contemplated nothing less than the overthrow of
+existing civilization and the substitution of something better suited
+to endure. It was Agripides’ contention--and a contention established
+by the researches of the very scientists he opposed--that the State of
+Atlantis, under current conditions, had a potential life of not more
+than five hundred years; that it was burning away its energies with
+profligate abandon, and would soon droop withering and exhausted into
+permanent decay. Its best human material was being used up and cast
+aside like so much straw; its best social energies were being diverted
+into wasteful and even poisonous channels; its too-rapid scientific
+progress was imposing a wrenching strain upon the civilized mind and
+institutions. There was only one remedy, other than the natural one of
+oblivion and death; and that remedy was in a complete metamorphosis, a
+change such as the caterpillar undergoes when it enters the chrysalis,
+a transformation into an environment of such repose that society might
+have time to recover from its overgrowth and to evolve along quiet and
+peaceful lines.”
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Another half-unconscious yawn from Stranahan imposed a brief
+interruption at this point; but Aelios had now thoroughly warmed to her
+theme; and, disregarding Stranahan’s rudeness, she continued almost
+without delay.
+
+“The proposal which Agripides had to make, and which he had been
+advocating eloquently for years, was one that caused even the
+liberal-minded to gasp and shake their heads doubtfully. He declared,
+in a word, that Atlantis was not sufficiently isolated and enisled;
+that it would never be safe while exposed to the tides of commerce
+and worldly affairs; that the only rational course was for it first
+to destroy whatever was noxious within itself, and then to prevent
+further contamination by walling itself off completely from the rest
+of the planet. And since no sea however wide and no fortress however
+strong would be efficacious in warding off the hordes of mankind, the
+one possible plan would be to go where no men could follow; to seal
+Atlantis up hermetically in an air-tight case--in other words, to sink
+the whole island to the bottom of the sea!”
+
+“Good Lord!” I exclaimed, horrified at so strange a suggestion.
+“Sounds just like a lunatic’s ravings!”
+
+“No, quite the opposite,” replied Aelios, with an indulgent smile. “I
+see you don’t understand at all. Agripides was not a lunatic; he was
+the greatest man that ever lived.”
+
+“I thought he must be either a madman or a genius,” I returned, dryly.
+
+“Look, I’ll show you!” she flung out, almost as a challenge, since I
+did not seem convinced of her hero’s greatness. And rising hurriedly
+and flitting a dozen paces down the colonnade, she pointed to a
+life-sized marble bust on a panel between the columns. “See! That is
+Agripides! Does that look like the face of a lunatic?”
+
+Hastily I had followed Aelios, with Stranahan at my heels; and he
+joined me in surveying the bust with a show of interest, though his
+puzzled expression showed that he did not know and much less cared
+who Agripides may have been. “The glorious saints have mercy on us,
+if he hasn’t a beard like a goat!” was his one and only comment. But
+I did not deign to reply, and fixed my eyes sternly and appraisingly
+upon the countenance of Agripides. The hair and beard were perhaps a
+little long, I thought, unconsciously agreeing with Stranahan; but the
+features were the most striking I had ever seen in any human being.
+Like many of the faces which have come down to us from classical times,
+this countenance combined intellect and beauty to a singular degree.
+The brow was broad, as in the representations of Homer, but it also
+rose to a majestic dominance; the eyes were large and alert, the lips
+thin and compressed, the cheeks long and firmly modelled, while the
+features were furrowed with deep lines of sympathy that reminded me
+of Lincoln, and at the same time were marked with a wistful, dreamy
+expression that contrasted strangely with a savage, almost tigerish
+determination more implied than clearly graven on the even contours of
+the face.
+
+“Agripides was a remarkable orator, and at the same time a writer
+of force,” stated Aelios, as we returned to our seats. “Hundreds of
+his essays and addresses have been preserved, and they show such
+brilliance, vehemence, and wit, and at the same time such clarity and
+logic of presentation, that it is little wonder that he converted
+all Atlantis to his way of thinking. Or perhaps it would not be fair
+to say that he converted all Atlantis--there was plenty of wordy
+opposition to his schemes, as well as several little armed revolts and
+insurrections that had to be suppressed. But Agripides was not a man
+to be easily daunted, and in spite of the strenuous objections of the
+‘Respectables,’ the year 49 saw the publication of his complete plans
+for the Submergence.
+
+“Those plans were more daring than the worst enemies of Agripides
+could have anticipated. He proposed, in a word, to cover a large part
+of Atlantis with an enormous glass wall, reaching like an artificial
+sky, hundreds of feet above ground, and thick enough to withstand
+the pressure of unthinkable tons of water. Near the base of this
+wall should be two great valves, one through which the ocean might
+be admitted into a broad canal or artificial river, and a second
+(at the opposite end of Atlantis) through which the waters might be
+forced out again by means of gigantic intra-atomic pumps. I need not
+mention, of course, that deep wells and distilled sea water would
+serve for domestic and drinking purposes; that decomposed water would
+provide sufficient oxygen for breathing; and that artificial sunlight,
+synthesized chemically so as to produce the life-giving elements of
+the original, would not only supply illumination but would support
+vegetation and human life as well.”
+
+“Yes, yes, that is all very good,” said I, feeling that Aelios had not
+yet touched upon the most essential fact of all. “But how did Agripides
+propose to sink the island beneath the sea?”
+
+“That is a difficult question,” she murmured, with a smile that was
+worth more to me than volumes of knowledge. “It involves technical
+questions of engineering with which, I must confess, I am very poorly
+acquainted. But, as I understand it, what Agripides proposed was
+that enormous tank be buried under the sea bottom far to the west of
+Atlantis, and that, at a given signal, the water should be raised to
+boiling point by an application of intra-atomic heat. The resulting
+tons of steam, in their fury to escape, would create an explosion that
+would burst the very floor of the sea; in one direction there would be
+a gigantic upheaval, and a lifting of the ocean bed; and in another
+direction, by way of reaction, there would be a sinking of the ocean
+bottom in an effort of the strata not directly affected, to fill in the
+gap left by those displaced. And while a whole vast area would rise
+thousands of feet (although not to the level of the water), another
+area would be forced downward an equal distance; and that area, which
+would be of enormous extent, would include the island of Atlantis. To
+use a crude illustration, one may think of a common plank, balanced on
+its center, of which one end cannot be tilted upward without causing
+the other end to slant down; and one may imagine Atlantis as reposing
+on the lower slope of such a plank.”
+
+ * * * * *
+
+“But that is all mere theory,” I pointed out. “Certainly, Agripides
+wouldn’t dare to sink the island merely on the basis of such unproved
+calculations.”
+
+“Oh, no, of course not. The computations were all verified by actual
+experiment. With the aid of two accomplished engineers, Agripides made
+a small model of the continent and the surrounding ocean, accurately
+reproducing every detail; and, having stimulated an explosion under the
+proper conditions, he found that the miniature island sank precisely as
+he expected the real island to do.”
+
+“Even so,” I argued, “would not the explosion have shattered the entire
+crust of the earth? And would not the great glass dome have been split
+and ruined even if the ground beneath it remained firm?”
+
+“All that was duly provided for,” explained Aelios. “The submergence
+was to be so gradual as to require several hours; and since the
+explosion was to occur under the sea rather than under the island
+itself, it would shatter the crust of the earth only in remote
+localities, and the shock would not be severe enough to affect the
+glass wall. In other words--to make another comparison--the island was
+to be like a ship that sinks in its entirety after striking the reefs,
+although only the prow is damaged and the rest remains uninjured.”
+
+“Yes, I understand perfectly,” said I, recalling my recent experiences
+in the X-111. “But even assuming that the experiment was perfectly
+safe, how did Agripides ever persuade the people to sink their homes
+beneath the sea?”
+
+“It was precisely there that he proved his greatness,” said Aelios,
+casting an admiring glance in the direction of Agripides’ statue. “Well
+knowing that imagination is the most powerful force in human life, he
+began to work upon the imagination of the masses to show the dangers
+of civilization. Simultaneously with the publication of his plans for
+the Submergence, he opened to the public an enormous exhibition palace
+in which he presented the most ghastly display in history. With the
+vision of the social philosopher and the intuition of the prophet, he
+had constructed in miniature the Atlantis of the future as he conceived
+it would be--and no man could gaze upon that Atlantis without heartily
+praying for the Submergence. The landscape had been blasted, muddied
+and made black, and scarcely a green leaf could be seen; steel towers
+and smokestacks dotted the island until it looked like a range of
+artificial hills; great wheels and chains whirled and rattled in the
+dark interiors of the buildings, and to each wheel and chain a man was
+tied; and the huge engines and motors were fed with the blood of men,
+and watered with their tears. Innumerable multitudes--not only of men
+but of women, and of sickly, pinch-faced children--were bound as slaves
+to the machines, and responded to automatic orders that the machines
+flashed forth; and after they had served long and their limbs were
+growing frail, they were crushed and mangled by the very masters they
+had served, or else were cast out to perish like frost-bitten flies.
+But the great wheels never ceased to turn or the levers to clatter, and
+their steel jaws gnashed the gouged-out hearts and brains of men, and
+their dust and cinders clouded the fields and forests, and their poison
+fumes invaded the lungs of the people, blunting their minds and making
+them droop and die by the million.”
+
+“What a hideous picture!” I cried, with a shudder. “But certainly,
+certainly it was an exaggeration!”
+
+“No, Agripides had no need to exaggerate. He merely showed the logical
+advance upon existing advances. But this was the least grewsome of the
+exhibits. One half of the display, which he entitled ‘The Triumph of
+Science,’ was devoted to the supreme horror. Here again he depicted
+artificial landscapes and many-towered cities; but the wheels of those
+cities were not revolving, though smoke was indeed in the air. At first
+sight, they might hardly have been recognized as cities at all; they
+were really little more than chaotic heaps of iron and stone; many of
+the buildings had been blasted to fragments, some had toppled over,
+others were mere mangled frameworks of steel. Scarcely more than an
+isolated wall remained standing here and there to show that this had
+been the home of men; but of the inhabitants themselves there was
+indeed an occasional sign: here one was futilely gasping for breath,
+writhing on the ground like a tormented worm; there one was groping
+crazily through the ruins, with torn breast and blinded eyes; yonder
+a family group was lying sprawled at all angles, with pale faces
+convulsed with their last agony.
+
+“But had one looked for the source of the destruction, one would not
+easily have found it--except that far above, so remote as scarcely to
+be visible, a fleet of mosquito-like flying craft were buzzing on their
+way like stealthy marauders.”
+
+Aelios paused, a deep seriousness darkening her fair features; and as
+I sat there regarding her in silence, I could not but reflect what
+unspeakable distances separated the bloody picture she described from
+the enchanting scenes among which she dwelt.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+“Naturally,” she continued, “the people were not captivated with the
+thought of the future depicted by Agripides. And, Agripides, acting at
+the psychological moment when all Atlantis was most aroused, convened
+the National Assembly, and polled a majority of--three to one in favor
+of the Submergence! This majority being confirmed by a referendum of
+the people, the great leader took immediate steps toward carrying out
+his revolutionary project.
+
+“Nearly forty-eight years were consumed in the necessary preliminaries,
+and in that time Atlantis found itself forced halfway toward the
+realization of Agripides’ direct prophecies. The island of Antiles, a
+small republic located far to westward, had spied out the aggressive
+schemes of the Atlantean military experts, and enlarging upon them,
+had manufactured a fleet of poison-bearing aircraft capable of
+smiting whole cities with death and ruin. That they were aimed for a
+contemplated conflict with Atlantis there could be not a doubt; that
+such a conflict could not be averted by diplomacy was too self-evident
+to require demonstration; and that there was no resisting the
+destructive airships was generally, although unofficially, admitted.
+Conceivably, it was the dread of imminent disaster that restrained
+the minds of the people from vacillating at the last moment and that
+brought the plans of Agripides to their triumphant issue.
+
+“Agripides, unfortunately, did not survive to see the consummation of
+his plans. Such a happiness was more than he had hoped for; the years
+were already heavy upon him when his revolutionary ideas first won
+approval. But, dying peacefully at an advanced age in the year 15 B.
+S., he yet lived long enough to supervise the more important details of
+the project and to be assured of its eventual success.
+
+“In accordance with Agripides’ directions, a reinforced glass
+wall many layers thick was erected over the most picturesque part
+of Atlantis, for it was agreed that the rest (which included the
+site of many cities) was not worth saving. I shall not describe the
+steps taken to insure the health and comfort of the people after the
+Submergence, to rear elegant palaces and mansions, to duplicate the
+sunlight and to produce food chemically; I shall not even dwell upon
+the Good Destruction, except to say that all save the most essential
+of power-driven tools were piled up in the doomed part of the island,
+to be buried on the day of the Submergence together with the towers
+of the deserted cities. But what I must mention--and this is most
+important--is that not all our people were content to be submerged;
+that about one-third, irreconcilable to the last, emigrated eastward in
+a great body a few months before the Submergence. It was this that made
+us most sad when Agripides’ plans were fulfilled and we sank at last to
+the bottom of the sea.”
+
+“Have you ever heard what happened to them?” I inquired, marveling at
+this extraordinary migration.
+
+“No, how could we? We have never since established communication with
+the earth. But I was thinking that perhaps you, who are from the upper
+world, could give us some tidings of our lost fellow men.”
+
+“I am not sure but that I can,” I replied, slowly, thinking of the
+ancient Greeks and their striking resemblances to the Atlanteans and
+wondering whether the immigrants from the sunken island might not have
+been among the original settlers of Athens and Corinth.
+
+And then, recalling the mystery of the “Telegonus,” that powerful lost
+Homeric epic, I perceived a possible clue. “Tell me,” I asked, though
+the question was apparently irrelevant, “what do you know about Homer?”
+
+“Homer?” she echoed. And then, with the ease of perfect familiarity,
+“Why, Homer was one of the greatest poets we know of--almost equal to
+the best that have arisen since the Good Destruction. He lived at about
+the time of the Submergence in a country far to the East, with which
+we had trade relations in spite of its half barbarous condition. It
+was, in a way, a sort of dependency, a ward of Atlantis; and it was
+from us that its people derived their alphabet as well as much of their
+language and many of their institutions. Possibly it was there that the
+Atlantean migrants settled.”
+
+“Ah, I see,” said I, with a flash of understanding. “Then you mean--”
+
+But before I could utter another word, interruption came from an
+unexpected quarter. And with a jolt I returned from ancient Atlantis
+to the realities of my own life. “Hello, boys! Hello! Hello! There
+they are, there they are!” came in loud familiar tones from our rear,
+followed by a salvo of cheers; and before Stranahan and I could quite
+realize what was happening, we felt our hands grasped in a multitude of
+hands, and found ourselves surrounded by dozens, literally dozens, of
+well known faces. The first I recognized was that of Captain Gavison,
+who grinned happily in welcome; then I distinguished one after one
+the faces of my fellow seamen, apparently all of them, and all of
+them talking, laughing, crowding about, slapping us on the back, and
+shouting out greetings in tumultuous chorus.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+[Illustration: ... although perhaps five hundred feet in length,
+it was as much like a great statue as like a building; it had none of
+those features common in edifices for the shelter of man and his works,
+but seemed to have been erected exclusively as a piece of art. Its form
+was that of a woman, a woman reclining at full length ...]
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+
+
+ CHAPTER XIII
+
+ Trial and Judgment
+
+
+To our disappointment, we received no immediate explanation of the
+arrival of Captain Gavison and his men. A score of the natives, who
+stood frowning in the background, appeared disinclined to permit any
+extended conversation; and it was but a minute before they motioned the
+newcomers to follow them. I was interested to observe that all, from
+the Captain down to the humblest recruit, obeyed as readily as though
+in response to an absolute master, marching not in military formation
+and yet at a regular pace and with every appearance of discipline.
+
+Having nothing better to do, Stranahan and I trailed in their wake,
+for at their first appearance Aelios had murmured a hasty “Good-bye”
+and had gone tripping out of sight around a bend in the colonnade.
+
+In a few minutes we saw our comrades entering a building we well
+knew--the palace of sapphire and amber. Although expecting to be
+ordered out, we made bold to follow, and to our surprise passed through
+the gates of the building and into its gorgeous interior without
+attracting any noticeable attention. Arriving at the great central
+theatre, we observed that hundreds of the natives were assembled as
+though in solemn debate. Many an eye was turned upon the newcomers
+in curiosity and amazement; but there was no audible murmur at our
+entrance. And when Captain Gavison and his followers were motioned to
+seats, Stranahan and I had no hesitation about joining them.
+
+But the unlucky Stranahan was doomed to still further boredom. For
+nearly an hour he was compelled to listen to a discussion of which he
+understood scarcely a word. Certainly, he had cause to envy me, for I
+easily followed the greater part of what was said--and most unusual and
+absorbing I found it!
+
+The leader of the debate was a broad-browed woman, with a firm and
+distinguished manner, and more than a trace of beauty in spite of her
+graying hair. But she spoke comparatively little; and six or eight of
+the audience took turns in standing in the open space in front and
+delivering brief addresses. Their theme was not at first apparent
+to me; I thought that they were perhaps discussing some question of
+politics, or pleading the merits of some new law; and I was surprised
+to discover that what they were arguing was no mere practical matter,
+but concerned the architecture of a new building, to be known as the
+“Palace of the Ten Arts.” One, there was that suggested a lagoon
+fronting the edifice, a second who recommended rainbow fountains, and
+a third who favored an arcade of multi-colored crystal; and all the
+proposals were heard with equal respect and duly noted down by the
+leader of the debate, who smiled benignantly upon all the speakers and
+refrained from obtruding her personal preferences.
+
+I was relieved when at length all who desired to speak had had their
+say. The leader now declared the meeting open for further business;
+and now it was that a tall young man, whom I recognized as one of the
+attendants of Captain Gavison and his men, rose quickly to his feet and
+advanced with a determined air toward the speaker’s space. A hush of
+expectation had come over the gathering; all eyes were fastened upon
+the tall young man as though he had a message of rare importance.
+
+His first words were to justify this impression. “Fellow citizens,”
+said he, speaking in a deep-toned voice which had something of that
+musical quality common to his people, “I have to bring to your
+attention today a matter unique in the history of Atlantis. First,
+however, let me recall to your minds several facts with which you
+are no doubt familiar. Two months ago we were astonished to find in
+our midst two creatures whose sallow complexion, grotesque costume
+and still more grotesque features, proclaimed them not to be natives
+of Atlantis. How they had penetrated beneath the secluded dome of
+our country we could not imagine, but it was decided that the best
+course would be to educate them in our language, and, after they
+were thoroughly conversant with the tongue, to question them in the
+attempt to solve the mystery. This decision was only reinforced by
+the appearance of two more of the queer creatures a day or so later,
+and then again by the arrival of a third strange couple. While it
+was feared that our age-old seclusion had been broken and that we
+were being invaded by the upper world, still it was decided that for
+the present the best course would be to maintain an unperturbed but
+vigilant silence.”
+
+The speaker paused, and cleared his throat as though the important
+part of his address were to follow. “Only yesterday, fellow citizens,”
+he continued, “you heard the startling sequel. A field naturalist,
+roaming along the Salty River in the wilderness beyond the furthest
+colonnades, made the most surprising discovery of his life--a peculiar
+ugly rod-like ship of unknown type, a ship that seemed to be fairly
+swarming with uncouth humans! Naturally, the scientist was alarmed;
+and, having made his escape, he hastened back to the city to secure
+aid in capturing the aliens. As he described them, they were in every
+respect like the barbarians of which ancient annals tell,--great,
+brawny humans of unkempt and ferocious appearance. But we knew that
+they could be no more redoubtable than their kindred who were already
+among us; we knew that they would be easily subdued by the superior
+minds and irresistible magnetic wills with which nature and a select
+inheritance have endowed our race. And when the twenty men of the
+searching expedition set out early this morning, we had reason to
+believe that the aliens would be present by evening to face trial
+before this assemblage.
+
+“As you observe, we have not been disappointed. But now, fellow
+citizens, the great problem arises. The prisoners appear to be unclean
+as well as wanton and unprincipled men. Contrary to all regulations,
+they have been catching fish from the Salty River and using them
+for food. They have been slaying unoffending crabs and turtles,
+and--disgusting though the idea be--frying and eating them! They have
+been polluting water of the stream; they have been trampling down the
+rarest seaweeds, and beating to death the daintiest of water-flowers;
+they have been scrawling all sorts of crude and outlandish designs on
+the delicate pink and blue of the roof-bearing columns.
+
+“But all this--criminal though it be--we may overlook for the moment.
+The chief problem presented by the arrival of these aliens is of such
+wide-reaching social consequence that their minor transgressions pale
+into insignificance. For the first time in more than three thousand
+years, the principles of Agripides have been violated. Visitors
+from outside have at last appeared; at last we are in danger of
+contamination by the passions and vices of the upper world. Whether the
+invasion was deliberate is not definitely known, but how it was made is
+sufficiently clear: the barbarian ship, which was equipped to travel
+under the sea, was sucked into the whirlpool at the ocean entrance of
+Atlantis and forced into the valve through which the waters of the
+Salty River find admittance. Of course, this trespass may have been
+merely accidental; but remembering the warlike and unfriendly ways of
+the upper world, I personally suspect that the intrusion was planned
+with cunning design, and that other invading craft--possibly a whole
+invading fleet--may be expected to arrive. Fellow citizens, what is
+your opinion?”
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Amid general silence the speaker took his seat--applause was apparently
+unknown among the Atlanteans. But this fact did not then enter into my
+thoughts; I was too much enraged at the tall young man’s misstatements.
+With a lack of self-consciousness that I can explain only by my
+blinding fury, I found myself doing the unprecedented.
+
+Springing excitedly to my feet, I demanded, hotly, in the native
+tongue, “Friends, may I say a word?”
+
+Instantly hundreds of pairs of eyes were turned upon me in surprise; I
+saw that I had no more been expected to speak than if I had been a tree
+or a stone. But the glances that were darted at me were not unfriendly,
+and as yet I was too much incensed to regret my words.
+
+“Certainly, you may say all you wish,” rang out the clear, well-rounded
+tones of the lady leader of the debate. “This is the Hall of Public
+Enlightenment, you know, and any person with anything to say will
+gladly be heard.”
+
+“Go on, old sport, give it to them good!” whispered Stranahan into my
+ear, although he could not have caught the drift of what was happening;
+and, with his words rankling in my mind, I started toward the speaker’s
+space.
+
+But as I took my place before that silent, staring multitude, I wished
+that I could have been safely back in my seat. Something suspiciously
+like fear overcame me--what right had I to be addressing this strange
+assemblage? What reason to expect that I could speak their language
+intelligibly? Yet necessity prodded me on; and, after gaping stonily
+at the spectators, I found myself somehow uttering a series of more
+or less connected sounds. I did not say what I had intended, and I
+suspect that more than one English word got itself intertwined with my
+Atlantean vocabulary; but I was encouraged when I observed that all
+eyes were fixed upon me with apparent interest, and that no one openly
+laughed or so much as tittered, though one or two (and among them
+Stranahan) could hardly suppress a smile.
+
+After a vague, sputtering introduction that I cannot begin to recall,
+I found myself on fairly solid ground. I declared that I could
+answer many of the questions which the previous speaker had put; I
+explained that my companions and myself were not barbarians, being
+representatives of the highest of modern civilizations; I stated that
+we had no evil intentions, having come to Atlantis by accident, and
+certainly not being the forerunners of a wave of invasion; and, at the
+same time, I offered our thanks for the treatment already accorded us,
+and expressed our intention to abide by the laws of Atlantis and to act
+in conformity with the best traditions of the land.
+
+As I took my seat, I could see from the faces of my hearers that I
+had produced a favorable effect. Many were the nods of approval that
+greeted me, and many the sympathetic smiles. But at the same time I
+could perceive that I had not made myself perfectly clear; and when a
+score of voices simultaneously requested that I return to the platform,
+I had no other choice.
+
+Questions regarding my native land were now rained upon me in
+profusion. But whether because of my limited knowledge of the language
+or because the experience of the Atlanteans differed so fundamentally
+from my own, I had great difficulty in making myself understood. My
+description of the growth and attainments of the modern world was
+listened to with interest, but with a lack of comprehension that I
+thought almost idiotic. Thus, when I declared that the United States
+was a leading nation because of its population of a hundred million,
+its rare inventions and its prolific manufactures, my hearers merely
+looked blank and asked how the country ranked in art; and when I stated
+(what surely is self-evident to all patriotic Americans) that New
+York is the greatest city on earth because of its tall buildings and
+its capacity for housing a million human beings in one square mile,
+my audience regarded me with something akin to horror, and one of the
+men--evidently a dolt, for he seemed quite serious--asked whether no
+steps had even been taken to abolish the evil.
+
+But it was when describing my own career that I was most grievously
+misunderstood. Had I confessed to murder, the people could not have
+been more shocked than when I mentioned that I was one of the crew of
+a ship commissioned to ram and destroy other ships; and I felt that
+my prestige was ruined beyond repair when I stated that I had entered
+the war voluntarily. Even the most friendly hearers seemed to draw
+unconsciously away from me after my recital; loathing and disgust
+showed plainly in their faces, as though I had announced myself to
+be an African cannibal or a Polynesian head hunter. Only too plainly
+I perceived that what was termed heroism among my fellows was here
+regarded as villainy. It did little good to explain that war was a
+cherished custom in the upper world, and that patriotism was among the
+prime virtues; it was useless to plead that there might be reasons
+for taking the lives of men, whom one had never seen, and that such
+reasons were generally recognized among civilized nations. The more I
+argued, the greater the abhorrence I aroused; and beyond an occasional
+murmured “Agripides was right,” my words brought little direct reply.
+And at length I returned to my seat feeling myself to be in disgrace,
+yet curbing my embarrassment by inwardly cursing the stupidity of the
+Atlanteans.
+
+The remaining business of the assemblage was disposed of quickly
+enough. Following my retreat, the tall young man again addressed the
+meeting, reminding his audience that they had not yet passed judgment
+upon us. “Fellow citizens,” said he, in conclusion, “I have a proposal
+to make, which, so far as I can see, is the only one possible under the
+circumstances. Whether we like it or not, we must recognize that the
+intruders are here; and, though we did not will their presence, we must
+treat them humanely. Since we cannot dispose of them by violence and
+since we must accept their assurance that no others of their kind are
+to follow, we must let them remain, and see that they are educated and
+put to work like all other citizens. But one thing we must insist upon
+above all else: the isolation of Atlantis must be protected, and the
+countries above seas must never learn of our existence. Hence we must
+decree that, no matter how many years go by, none of the aliens shall
+ever return to the upper world!”
+
+And it was with a sinking heart, with the hopelessness of one being
+sentenced to life imprisonment, that I heard the assemblage endorse
+this recommendation.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+[Illustration: Half a dozen of the queerest beings we had ever seen
+came crowding into our path ... from the blank amazed stares with which
+they greeted us, it was evident that our appearance was as much a
+surprise to them as theirs was to us. But from a certain sternness and
+resolution which invested their faces following the first speechless
+astonishment, we concluded that they had probably seen others of our
+kind, and were not disposed to treat us leniently.]
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+
+
+ CHAPTER XIV
+
+ The Upper World Club
+
+
+During the next few hours, Captain Gavison and the new-found members of
+his crew were all provided with the native garb and lodged in sumptuous
+quarters in various parts of the city. They looked peculiar indeed in
+their new costumes of light blue and green and yellow, and grumbled not
+a little at the change; but they confessed to their relief at having
+left the X-111; and not even the prospect of passing their remaining
+days in Atlantis sufficed to neutralize their joy.
+
+As nearly as I could determine, they had had an altogether wretched
+time during the past few weeks. A spirit of panic had grown among them,
+following the failure of Rawson and myself to return from our searching
+expedition, and neither by bribe nor by threat could any other member
+of the crew be induced to venture into that wilderness where we had
+disappeared. And so they had all remained anxiously in the vicinity of
+the disabled ship, drinking the distilled water of the Salty River and
+snatching what food they could from the land while exhausting their
+vessel’s reserve supplies. How long they could have held out it was
+impossible to say, but certainly they could not have held out long;
+madness had been overtaking them with the delay and the suspense; and,
+but for the timely arrival of the natives, bloody disaster might have
+ensued.
+
+Yet, while they realized that they had been rescued from possible
+destruction, I must not give the impression that they were altogether
+contented with their new surroundings, or that their queer native
+garments constituted their only source of complaint. Being normal human
+beings, they found abundant cause for dissatisfaction. And, indeed,
+they were not much to blame, for how could they adapt themselves
+immediately to an environment so unfamiliar as that of Atlantis? For
+some time they walked about like men in a daze; or, rather, like men
+who know they are dreaming and expect shortly to awaken; and they
+stared with incredulous eyes at the marble columns of the Sunken World,
+its sculpture-lined thoroughfares and statuesque palaces. And what
+wonder if they were dazzled and yet a little frightened by this beauty,
+which seemed to them so cold and alien a thing? What wonder if the more
+superstitious shuddered a little at times, and muttered to themselves
+in the presence of what they took to be the supernatural? What wonder
+if they missed the familiar things of the earth, the scenes and the
+faces they had left behind them, the habits they had discarded and the
+remembered life that was dwindling to a shadow?
+
+Fortunately, they were not always free to brood over their misfortunes.
+Like those of their shipmates who had preceded them to Archeon,
+they were at once supplied with tutors who sought to teach them the
+Atlantean tongue. Each of them received at least two hours a day of
+personal instruction, and each was required to devote several hours to
+various prescribed written exercises. It need hardly be stated that
+not all of them took kindly to this enforced application, for most of
+them were anything but studious by nature; but the tutors persisted
+even though their task was a hard one, and prevailed by means of that
+magnetic dominance I had often noted in the Atlanteans; and all of the
+crew, from the grizzled McCrae to the callow young Barnfield, were soon
+plodding regularly over their lessons in grammar and spelling.
+
+But among a group of nearly forty men, it was but natural that some
+should make more willing and able students than others. And so,
+while the more backward were still struggling with the elements of
+Atlantean, others were striding toward a speaking knowledge. Among
+the latter was Captain Gavison, who still had a position to maintain,
+and could not let himself be outdone by his men. Whether because of a
+natural aptitude or of diligent application, he speedily outdistanced
+all his crew, with the exception (I must modestly admit) of one
+whose pre-war specialty had been Greek. And partly on account of his
+evident supremacy in Atlantean, but more largely owing to the force of
+ironclad habit, he was still the acknowledged leader of us all; and
+his word still was like the word of a king, his approval still a favor
+to be courted and his anger a thing to make one quail, although his
+commission from the United States Navy Department, could hardly give
+him any authority here in Atlantis.
+
+I do not know whether it was at Captain Gavison’s prompting, or
+whether it was at the suggestion of one of the men, that we took the
+step which was to band us more closely together. At all events, the
+step was inevitable; for all of us felt like kinsmen isolated among
+strangers, and our common experiences and common origin constituted an
+irresistible bond.
+
+And so it was that we found ourselves convening one afternoon--the
+whole thirty-nine of us--in a little colonnaded court in one of the
+city parks. All of us were waiting in vociferous expectancy, for it had
+been whispered that important events were in store; and so we listened
+eagerly when Captain Gavison arrived, and took the center of the stage,
+launching at once into an address.
+
+“The proposal has been made,” he announced, beginning without
+formality, “that we all join forces by forming a social club. We’re all
+in the same boat still, you see, even though we’re out of the X-111.
+Most of us feel rather out of place down here in Atlantis; we find the
+people strange, the land stranger still, and the customs strangest of
+all. And so the best way will be to stick together and try to make
+things agreeable for one another ...” And in this vein he continued
+for five or ten minutes, pointing out the advantages of union, the
+increased power as well as the social gain, the possibility of making
+our will felt in Atlantis if we acted in concert.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+When he had finished, he asked for opinions--and received them in
+abundance....
+
+“If we got together and started a club,” summarized Stangale, whose
+views coincided with the majority, “things might begin to look a little
+less dead. Seems to me every day down here is Sunday!”
+
+“Sure, and they’ve got lots of Sunday closing laws, too!” Stranahan
+contributed, with a wry grimace to ward the massive columns and tinted
+statuary.
+
+Very tactfully Captain Gavison reminded Stranahan that the question to
+be decided did not concern the Sunday regulations of the Atlanteans.
+And without further dalliance he raised his voice and inquired how many
+were in favor of a social club.
+
+The proposal having been accepted by unanimous acclaim, the next
+question was one of nomenclature. Various names were suggested: “The
+Woodrow Wilson Club,” “The Theodore Roosevelt Club,” “The U. S. A.
+Club,” “The X-111 Club,” “The Underseas Association”--but finally,
+after much pointless debating, we decided that, since we were the sole
+representatives of the upper world in Atlantis, the most appropriate
+title would be “The Upper World Club.”
+
+Having threshed out this important matter, we now felt it necessary to
+elect the officers of “The Upper World Club.”
+
+Obviously, there was only one possible nominee for President. It seemed
+almost a matter of form to propose the name of Gavison; and once this
+name had been mentioned, the election was settled, for there was no
+one daring enough to run in opposition or even to think of suggesting
+another candidate.
+
+After being duly installed in office, the Captain made his inaugural
+address. It was brief and to the point. He began by thanking us in
+conventional terms for the honor and by assuring us that he would try
+to run the club as well as if it were a ship under his command. And he
+concluded with a declaration of policy: “We’re all of us caught like
+rats in a trap, you know, so while we’re here there’s nothing to do but
+to try to make the best of our prison. And I think the Upper World Club
+should be the means. It should have, I believe, the following objects:
+first, to bring us together for social purposes. Secondly, it should
+give us the chance to discuss our problems in this strange world, and
+should be the means of expressing our combined views to the Atlanteans.
+Lastly, it should keep us all together, so that we can act in unison if
+the time ever comes to make a dash for liberty.”
+
+“That time will never come!” I surprised myself by exclaiming, after
+Gavison had lapsed into silence. And, finding all eyes bent upon me
+inquiringly, I felt bound to continue.
+
+“Let us not deceive ourselves by the thought of escape,” I proceeded,
+stepping toward the center of the assemblage. “We are buried beneath
+thousands of feet of water, and for all practical purposes America is
+as far from us as the moon. Even if there were a way back, what good
+would that do us when we cannot even leave this city against the will
+of the Atlanteans? No, my friends, let us look facts in the face. We
+shall remain here till we are gray and toothless, and shall never see
+the United States again. And let us try to reconcile ourselves to that
+certainty. Let us try to become citizens of Atlantis, and share in the
+life about us ...”
+
+And in this vein I continued for some minutes, while my hearers
+followed me with transparent interest, and reluctantly nodded agreement.
+
+In general, my words may have been without effect; but they had at
+least one result I had not anticipated. For when, a few moments later,
+Gavison announced that nominations were in order for Vice-President,
+I was surprised to find that my name was the first put forward, and
+that no others were put forward at all--so that I was selected without
+opposition.
+
+After I had duly thanked my fellow club members for this honor, the
+President turned to me, and said, “Harkness, I appoint you a committee
+of one to confer with me in drawing up the constitution of the Upper
+World Club.” And with that the meeting adjourned.
+
+And thus began my intimacy with Captain Gavison. I do not know how
+seriously he took the Upper World Club and its constitution, for at
+most times his grim, firm face was inscrutable; but he acted as if he
+took it seriously indeed, and he and I spent hours together debating
+and planning for the club, almost as though we had had to draw up a
+pact not for thirty-nine individuals but for thirty-nine sovereign
+states.
+
+How much the club profited from our activities shall always be a
+question in my mind; but I am certain that I personally profited a
+great deal, and make bold to believe that even Gavison was not without
+benefit. Although he had a habit of shutting his thin lips stoically
+and glaring upon the world with stern, impassive air, an occasional
+look of weariness and even of melancholy in his keen gray eyes told me
+that he too was suffering from loneliness; and while he would have been
+the last man in the world to make such an admission openly, he made it
+tacitly by the amount of time he spent in my company, theoretically
+drawing up the constitution of the Upper World Club. He was always far
+from loquacious; frequently he was taciturn indeed, and would simply
+sit before me with a detached and meditative air, occasionally grunting
+some comment or question in response to my remarks. Perhaps the
+consciousness of the former gulf between us would not leave him; but
+all the while I felt that we were drawing together, were even beginning
+to look upon one another with a genuine, although undemonstrative
+regard. Certainly, he was emerging by degrees from the thick shell of
+his reticence, as I was emerging from mine. We began quite naturally by
+a discussion of Atlantis and the Atlanteans; and gradually we ventured
+into more personal subjects. There came a day when I went so far as to
+tell him of my former life, my training in ancient Greek, my betrothal
+to Alma Huntley; and, responsive to my confidence, he offered me one or
+two glimpses into his own past, and made himself appear more human than
+ever before, by stating that he had a wife and two little daughters in
+New York, who no doubt were even now mourning him as lost.
+
+“You know, Harkness, that’s the hardest thing of all to bear,” he
+said, while his thin fingers stroked his bristly chin ruminatingly,
+and the drawn lines of his gaunt face enhanced his habitual gravity.
+“If there were only some way of getting word to them, it wouldn’t be
+so bad. But I might be dead for all they know--and would you believe
+it, Harkness, sometimes it seems to me as if I’m actually in my tomb.”
+And the Captain averted his gaze, and after staring into vacancy for an
+indeterminate period, he continued, speaking more rapidly, and almost
+with brusqueness, “Now you see why I’m so anxious to get back! For my
+own part, it wouldn’t matter so much, but I can’t help thinking it
+must be Hell for those waiting up there!” And he concluded by drawing
+vivid pictures of blue-eyed Martha, his wife, and of the auburn-haired
+six-year-old Ellen, who was waiting for the father that would never
+come back.
+
+To all this I listened earnestly; and when Gavison had finished, I
+tried to say whatever I could by way of consolation. And in order
+to make his woes seem less by comparison, I exaggerated my own; I
+discoursed upon the misfortune of being sundered from my old father and
+mother (who, as a matter of fact, had previously been sundered from me
+by death), and dilated upon my grief at losing Alma Huntley--although,
+to tell the truth, she had been almost driven out of my thoughts by the
+proximity of one even fairer than she.
+
+It was from the time of our mutual confessions that my real friendship
+with Gavison dated. Not unnaturally, we now lost sight of our former
+positions as superior officer and subordinate, and began to act
+unrestrainedly toward one another as man to man. And while I was on
+terms of fellowship with all the crew and intimate with several, my
+attachment to Gavison became the closest of all; and often of an
+afternoon, when he had completed the day’s studies, or of an evening
+before the great golden orbs had been extinguished, we might have been
+seen strolling together along the winding colonnades, or seated on
+seaweed cushions in a marble hall, discussing the art or the odd ways
+of Atlantis, practicing the Atlantean speech, exchanging reminiscences
+of the world we had left, or merely absorbed in one of those long
+silences that marked our queer acquaintanceship.
+
+
+
+
+ CHAPTER XV
+
+ The Pageant of the Good Destruction
+
+
+While my intimacy with Captain Gavison was ripening, I had of course
+not forgotten one whose friendship meant more to me than that of any
+man. In the exhilarating moments of that first happy interview with
+Aelios, I had had visions of speaking with her often, visions of an
+Atlantis made bright by her very presence. But before long I began to
+feel that I had been too sanguine. Although I still caught glimpses
+of her when she came to give Stranahan his daily lesson, and although
+she would sometimes nod ingratiatingly to me, it was long before I
+had another opportunity to speak to her, since I could not detach her
+from the company of the other tutors. And so day after long uneasy day
+dragged by until they had piled up into a week, and slow, protracted
+weeks until they had accumulated into a month, before at last we had
+another conversation.
+
+Then came a day when I observed her by chance in one of the great
+festooned courts at the base of a towering campanile. She saw me even
+before I saw her; and approaching of her own volition, she flashed upon
+me a smile that seemed to make the universe stand still with joy. “I
+am glad to see you, my friend,” she said, simply and with unaffected
+kindliness. “I have been wanting to tell you about our coming pageant.
+I know you will not want to miss it, for it will explain many things
+you have been wondering about.”
+
+“What pageant do you mean?” I asked.
+
+“The Festival of the Good Destruction,” she explained. “Every year, as
+I believe I’ve told you, we hold a celebration on the anniversary of
+the Submergence. This year it will take the form of a pageant. It will
+be the Three Thousand and Thirty-fifth anniversary.”
+
+“In eight days. It will commence at noon in the Agripides Theatre,
+which you will very easily find, since it is in the center of town. I
+certainly hope to see you there.”
+
+“I certainly hope to see you there,” I declared, quite truthfully.
+But at the same time a shadow crossed my thoughts. Hesitatingly, and
+possibly blushing in my embarrassment, I had to confess that, after
+all, I would not be able to go.
+
+“Not be able to go?” she demanded, in manifest disappointment. “What
+other engagement can you possibly have?”
+
+Since some definite excuse appeared to be necessary, I explained--very
+reluctantly to be sure--that I could not pay my admission.
+
+“Pay your admission?” echoed Aelios, in such shrill surprise that I
+thought she had misunderstood me. “What on earth are you thinking of?
+Do you imagine we are barbarians?”
+
+“I’m afraid I haven’t made myself clear,” I hastened to explain. “Where
+I come from it is customary to pay upon going to a theatre.”
+
+“Really?” demanded Aelios, so incredulously that I thought her most
+naïve.
+
+“Of course!” I assured her, in such a manner as to stamp all doubt from
+her mind.
+
+“How queer!” she exclaimed. “How very queer! Still, I do remember
+hearing that people used to have to pay for everything before the
+Submergence. But that was so long ago, I thought the world had outgrown
+such crudity.”
+
+“I don’t see anything wrong about paying for what you get,” I stated,
+thinking this the most topsy-turvy land in the world. “Don’t they
+really charge you for going to theatres down here?”
+
+“Of course not! How could any one be so gross? Fancy being charged for
+beauty or ecstasy or dreams! Why, one would as soon think of paying
+for the air one breathes or the light that shines upon one! The State
+naturally recognizes the theatre as the birthright of every citizen,
+just as it recognizes poetry and music and education. We all take part
+in giving the performances, and of course every one is invited.”
+
+“And do you yourself take part?” I queried, my personal interest in
+Aelios overshadowing my general interest in the native customs.
+
+“Oh, yes, I try to do my share,” she acknowledged, with a faint blush
+that seemed only to accentuate her beauty. “I sometimes lead in the
+dances.”
+
+“And a most exquisite dancer you make!” said I, recalling my first
+enchanting glimpse of Aelios on the colonnade outside the city.
+
+But before I had had time for further compliments, she had whispered a
+light “Good-bye,” and had gone tripping toward the further end of the
+court and out of sight through a little half concealed door at the base
+of the campanile.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+It hardly need be stated that I waited eagerly for the day of the
+Pageant. Not that I was looking forward to the entertainment itself;
+I remembered only that Aelios had seen fit to invite me, and that I
+should be able to see her again. So utterly out of my head was I that
+her bright face now appeared to me at all times of the day and night;
+her least smile, her slightest gesture, her most careless nod, was
+re-enacted a thousand times in my memory. And what if somewhere in the
+past there had been an Alma Huntley whom I had admired and fancied I
+had loved?--she was now no more than a ghost amid the shadows of a
+vanished world.
+
+Certainly, I had no thought of Alma when at last the day of the pageant
+arrived. I was jubilant merely at the prospect of speaking with
+Aelios again; I could hardly restrain my impatience, but left for the
+festivities a full hour earlier than necessary. Such was my eagerness
+that I could not even walk at a normal pace, but unconsciously hastened
+my steps as when, in my native land, I had feared to miss a street car
+or be too late for an appointment with Alma.
+
+But the day’s pleasure was to be unexpectedly varied. As I hastened
+through the streets, striding more rapidly than ever before in this
+land of leisure, I heard a well known voice shouting behind me, “Hey,
+wait a minute! Where are you going so fast?”
+
+With a sinking heart I wheeled about--to face the grinning Stranahan.
+
+“Great Jerusalem, you were racing so I could hardly catch up!” he
+panted, as he joined me. “Where you bound for, anyway?”
+
+“Where are you bound for?” I countered.
+
+“To the pageant, of course,” he informed me. And, amiably unconscious
+that he might be interfering with my plans, he suggested, “Well, we
+both seem to be going in the same direction, so what do you say to
+going together?”
+
+“Yes, let’s go together,” I had to acquiesce; and so it happened that
+Stranahan and I reached the Agripides Theatre arm in arm.
+
+As I might have known, we were much too early; the doors were open,
+but the audience had scarcely begun to arrive. Indeed, the whole
+enormous open-air theatre was occupied only by a few children who
+danced and played about the stage and romped from tier to tier of the
+seaweed-cushioned marble seats.
+
+Upon entering, we paused for a view of the giant theatre, which
+seemed large enough to accommodate an entire community, and which
+was constructed with a simple and yet majestic art that I thought
+admirable. The seat arrangement was that of the typical Greek theatre,
+but the stage surprised me, not only by its size but by its general
+appearance, for it was not less than two or three acres in extent,
+and was completely enclosed by a ring of columns bearing a dome
+apparently inlaid with ebony and gold. But what particularly caught my
+attention was an object which was evidently not an integral part of the
+building--an amorphous mass many feet in height and covering more than
+half of the stage, but completely mantled in a linen-like white cloth
+that was like a garment of mystery.
+
+But Stranahan would brook not more than a moment’s pause for viewing
+the building. Impetuously he started down the steeply sloping central
+aisle, and did not halt until he had reached the front row, where
+he appropriated the best seat as nonchalantly as though it had been
+reserved for him. Of course, I had no choice except to deposit myself
+at his side; but I could not help wishing that he had chosen a less
+conspicuous position.
+
+It was not long before the theatre began to fill. Singly and in whole
+family groups the people were arriving, children and gray old men and
+bright-faced girls and youths; and all wore happy, expectant smiles,
+and all were clad in their pastel-tinted gowns that made them look
+like animated flowers. I had a chance now to observe the Atlanteans as
+never before; and, as never before, I was struck by the exceptional
+number of well formed and beautiful faces; by the fact that every one
+seemed tranquil and contented, and that there was little if any sign of
+tragedy or sorrow. Here was no evidence of the worn and withered, the
+distorted, the grotesque, the wolfish, the weasel and the bovine types
+so common on earth; even the old seemed to wear a sweet and placid and
+at times a beautiful look, which contrasted strangely with the sour and
+crochety expression I had regarded as natural; and most of the faces
+bore the imprint of something akin to poetry and music, an exalted
+something that I had first noted in Aelios and that set the Atlanteans
+apart from every other race I had ever known.
+
+Even to be among these people seemed to produce a strange and uplifting
+effect upon me. I do not know what mysterious psychic currents were
+at work, and I cannot say that my imagination did not betray me; but
+I do distinctly remember that, as the theatre gradually filled, a
+singular sense of well-being and almost of thankfulness came upon
+me, a feeling of spiritual tranquility and repose, as though by some
+subtle transference of thought I had shared the mood of the multitude
+and become one with them in heart. Even Stranahan seemed to have been
+affected, for he had none of his usual boisterousness; he talked but
+little, and there was a rapt and almost devout look in his eyes, as
+though he too had caught the glimmer of some rare loveliness.
+
+Yet there was still a shadow across my happiness--and possibly across
+his as well. As I scanned the faces that thronged down the aisles and
+along the tiers of seats, there was one smiling countenance for which
+I searched in vain. Surely, Aelios had not forgotten the day, nor had
+she forgotten her implied promise to see me here; yet till the last
+seat was filled by the expectant crowd, I scrutinized the faces of the
+newcomers, only to be assured that Aelios was not among them.
+
+But after about an hour, my thoughts were forcibly recalled from
+Aelios to the spectacle in the great theatre. A sudden flickering
+of the great golden orbs attracted our attention; and we noted that
+those luminaries were being dimmed as though by unseen hands until
+they had less than half their usual brightness. At the same time, long
+shafts of light began to shoot out simultaneously from all points of
+the horizon,--multicolored shafts that included all the hues of the
+rainbow. In wide ambling curves they met the dark glass of the roof,
+splashing it with red and purple, orange and green, lavender and
+violet; and for many minutes the play and interplay of color continued,
+the searchlights seeming to work out all manner of patterns and
+arabesques which endured for a moment and vanished.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+The one thing to which I could liken this pageant of light was the
+music that sometimes preceded theatrical performances in our own land.
+The flashing colors had all the ethereal loveliness of music; and like
+music they prepared one for a mood of rapture and contemplation. And
+when at length the original lights had faded out, to be replaced by
+others that shone directly down upon the open platform or stage, this
+mood was strengthened and intensified; and at the same time I felt that
+we had but beheld an introduction to the real exhibition.
+
+Suddenly, in the illumination of the many-hued searchlights, a
+white-gowned woman appeared upon the stage. She was very young,
+scarcely more than a girl, I thought, and her face had something of
+that sweetness and radiance which distinguished Aelios; while in the
+colored glow of the everchanging lights she seemed some shimmering,
+ethereal thing, possibly a butterfly, possibly some apparition as
+unreal as rainbows or moonlit cloud.
+
+I was surprised, accordingly, when the fairy-like creature began to
+speak. Or perhaps it would not be correct to say that she spoke; her
+words came in a soft, wonderfully melodious voice more than half like
+song; and merely to listen to her was to be lulled and soothed as
+though by music.
+
+Yet, despite the spirit of exaltation and almost of worship she aroused
+in me, I did not miss the drift of what she was saying.
+
+“Fellow citizens,” she declared, while a hush came over the assemblage,
+and all strained forward so as to lose not a syllable, “fellow
+citizens, for this year’s celebration we have decided to present a
+historical pageant. Imagine yourselves borne backward almost thirty-one
+hundred years, to those days when the Submergence was not yet an
+accomplished fact, and Agripides stood before the old National Assembly
+urging the Good Destruction. Agripides shall now appear before you, as
+he appeared to your forefathers in the lands above the sea; you shall
+be the National Assembly before which he speaks; and he shall present
+his views to you as he presented them to our ancestors, and depict for
+you, as he depicted for them, the reasons why Atlantis should become a
+sunken continent. Behold, here comes Agripides!”
+
+With a wide-sweeping bow the speaker ceased, retreating from view
+through some unseen door; and at the same instant some invisible
+instrument sent forth a sound like a trumpet blast, and from the rear
+of the stage a tall figure appeared, walking slowly and with head bent
+low as though in thought.
+
+“Agripides! Agripides!” came one or two indistinct murmurs from behind
+me, but there was no such tumult of applause as I might have expected.
+Yet all eyes were directed eagerly toward the newcomer, and I found
+myself a partner in the tense excitement of the multitude.
+
+Even had I not heard the name Agripides, I should have recognized the
+advancing figure from the bust shown me by Aelios--there was the same
+bearded countenance, the same broad and noble brow, the same furrowed
+and sympathetic features. But one characteristic there was which the
+bust could not show, and which, while merely incidental, struck me
+with peculiar force. The garments of Agripides were not gay-hued, like
+those of modern Atlanteans, but were of a deep and somber brown; and
+they clung to his body so closely as apparently to interfere with his
+walking, and to make him look disquietingly like an animated corpse.
+
+But I forgot all such irrelevant impressions the moment that
+Agripides--or, rather, his living representative--had uttered his
+first word. “Fellow members of the National Assembly,” said he, with
+a low bow, while in the audience an awed silence held sway, “for
+the hundredth time I address you on the subject of the proposed
+Submergence. And for the hundredth time I remind you that we have no
+choice in the matter: it is a question of the submergence either of the
+land of Atlantis or of its soul. Let me prove this to you, Members of
+the Assembly; let me show you how near the soul of Atlantis already is
+to submergence. Watch carefully as a stream of typical present-day men
+and women passes by.”
+
+The speaker ceased, and from invisible corridors on both sides of the
+stage came a noise as of shuffled feet, chattering voices, horns and
+bells and clattering wheels. “By the Holy Father, if we’re not back in
+the old U. S. A.!” muttered Stranahan so loud that many of the audience
+could hear him; and he leaned so far forward that I feared he would
+fall over the railing into the stage.
+
+But the spectacle before us was so engrossing as to make me forget
+even Stranahan’s absurd conduct. Very quickly I came to agree that
+Atlantis before the Submergence must indeed have been hideous; I had
+never known anything quite so ugly as the scene we now witnessed. From
+both sides of the stage a slow procession of men and women began to
+file, the two streams passing each other and trailing out in opposite
+directions; and the faces and figures of the people were the most
+repulsive I had ever seen. Some were so lean and scrawny as to remind
+me of walking skeletons; others, fat and bloated, waddled along like
+living caricatures with scarcely the power of self-locomotion; and the
+majority had an unnaturally sallow, flushed or mottled complexion that
+seemed to set them off as a species apart. And their clothes were in
+accord with their appearance; they were all clad in a drab brown or
+black, some with a peculiar steely color that encircled their chins
+and ears, some with strange metallic waist-bands that prevented them
+from turning in any direction, some with ornamental brass spikes that
+elevated the soles of their feet inches above their heels and converted
+their walking into a form of hobbling.
+
+But what chiefly interested me were the faces of the people. Not a few,
+with heavy paunches, and baggy, feeble cheeks, reminded me of nothing
+so much as of a certain bristly domestic beast; not a few others had
+features grotesquely like those of baboons, bears, wolves, foxes,
+weasels, or tigers. And a majority looked like nothing so much as the
+prey of tigers, weasels, and foxes. Their eyes had a hunted expression,
+and their whole manner was one of timidity; they seemed continually
+confused and frightened and ready to run at any sound, and yet had
+something of the cowed look of creatures beaten into resigned despair.
+
+All the while, as they proceeded across the stage, they produced a
+perfect pandemonium of squeaks, grunts, hoots, rumblings, howlings,
+and snarlings, some seeming quite familiar to me, others sounding like
+voices of the wilderness. The acting, I thought, was marvelous; it
+was executed so perfectly that for the time I had quite forgotten it
+was acting at all. Hearing the uproar and looking at the dark-robed,
+distorted multitude, I could not but think by contrast of Aelios and
+the grace and beauty that surrounded her; and I missed her even more
+keenly than before, and wondered impatiently if I should not yet see
+her at the pageant.
+
+At length, to my relief, the last of the uncouth mob had gone trooping
+off the stage, and only the tall figure of Agripides remained. “Members
+of the Assembly,” resumed the statesman, after all had again become
+quiet, “you have now had a close view of our typical citizens. Do you
+not believe them more deeply submerged than if a thousand fathoms of
+water rolled above them? Or if you are not yet convinced, let me show
+you these people in their normal occupations.”
+
+As though at a prearranged signal, three or four huge instruments,
+with long segmented oblong belts moving on wheels, were dragged to
+the center of the stage by half-invisible wires. I recognized these
+machines as curious forms of treadmills, for on each of the belts a man
+had been deposited, and each, man was forcing his legs back and forth
+at tremendous speed, as though running in a desperate hurry. But no
+matter how furiously they worked, all the men remained in exactly the
+same place, for the belts slid backward precisely as fast as their feet
+pressed forward.
+
+“Saints in heaven,” opined Stranahan, with a puzzled frown, “they’d get
+there just as fast if they took their time!”
+
+After a minute or two the treadmills were pulled off the stage and
+Agripides again briefly addressed the audience. “My friends,” said he,
+“I will now illustrate for you another of the leading occupations of
+our times.”
+
+ * * * * *
+
+I do not know what rare art of stagecraft was then applied, for
+as if by magic a bright bed of flowers sprang to life before us,
+and long-stemmed purple and yellow blossoms resembling tulips and
+hollyhocks waved above some retiring white-budding plant reminding me
+of the violet. But I was to be disappointed if I expected anything
+beautiful to follow. From one side of the stage came a series of oaths,
+growls, curses, shrieks, hisses, and mutterings, gradually increasing
+in fierceness and volume; and soon an amorphous mass of squirming,
+twisting, embattled men writhed into view. I could not tell how many
+of them there were, except that they were numbered by the dozen; and I
+could not determine what they looked like, except that they were all
+soberly attired. But it was as if a storm had been let loose among
+them; they were literally tumbling over one another, wrestling with the
+ferocity of lions, snatching violently at one another’s arms, legs and
+necks, until they seemed little more than a blur of convulsive, wildly
+agitated trunks and limbs.
+
+“Holy Methuselah, it’s a new kind of football!” cried Stranahan,
+excitedly, as he craned his long neck far forward for a better view of
+the contest.
+
+But before I had time to chide Stranahan on this senseless outburst, I
+was occupied by a new observation. The struggling men were advancing
+across the stage, and slowly intruding upon the flower beds. But none
+seemed to notice, and the pandemonium continued until the actors were
+beating down the flowers on all sides and not a hollyhock or tulip or
+violet remained.
+
+Then suddenly one of the men was thrust out of the wild multitude, and
+lay on the ground as if dead, his clothes ripped and torn, his body
+gashed and bleeding. But no one seemed to notice him, and his shrieks
+and howls rang forth until another had been flung aside with broken
+limbs, and then another, and then another. In the end only two remained
+standing, both grappling desperately for a little metallic disk that
+glittered a deep yellow. With bestial snarls and screeches they
+wrestled over this trinket; and at length, still wrestling, and with
+faces blood-red and distorted, they tumbled, moaning, off the stage.
+
+After this exhibition there was silence for several minutes. I was
+glad when at length Agripides seemed to feel that his audience was
+ready for a change of mood, and again took the center of the stage.
+
+“Members of the National Assembly,” he said, “you have now observed
+modern life in two of its more common phases. You will find something
+no less familiar in the third phase, which I am about to present to
+you.”
+
+This time a gigantic clattering black machine was rolled on to the
+stage by some unseen power, its innumerable wheels and belts and
+chains in rapid motion, some of them moving so swiftly as to look
+like whirring shadows. But it was not the speed or smoothness of its
+action that made the mechanism remarkable: all about its side, in a
+long, even row, stood scores of grime-faced and sooty men, their feet
+clamped to the ground by iron vises, their arms fastened by long rods
+to the wheels above. And all the while those rods were moving, moving
+with rhythmic, clock-like regularity, moving unceasingly up and down,
+pulling the arms of the men with them, first the right arm and then the
+left, then again the right and then the left, as though they had done
+so for all eternity and would continue to do so for all eternity.
+
+“The devil take me,” muttered Stranahan, who had to have his way, “It
+ain’t the men that work the machines! It’s the machines that work the
+men!”
+
+I am afraid that Stranahan’s remarks diverted my attention and made
+me miss part of the performance, for when next I turned my eyes to
+the stage, the scene was much changed. A great claw-like steel device
+was reaching out from the interior of the machine, seizing one of the
+men, wrenching him from his position as though he had been a misplaced
+screw, and casting him bleeding to the floor. And while he lay there
+moaning and helpless, a clamor of shouts was heard from off stage,
+and a score of tattered men came rushing in and threw themselves down
+before the machine as if in reverence. And, as though endowed with
+intelligence, the machine seemed to hear, for it reached out the same
+great claw-like hand, clutched one of the men at random, and thrust him
+into the place of the rejected one. And now the arms of the newcomer
+began to work up and down, up and down unremittingly, accompanying the
+steel rods in the same even and automatic fashion as the arms of his
+predecessor.
+
+The next feature on the program was a long oration delivered in
+Agripides’ most celebrated words; following which the actor prepared
+the way for the climax by a few explanatory comments. “Members of the
+National Assembly,” said he, still using phrases first uttered three
+thousand years before, “I wish you to look carefully at Axios, which,
+as you know, is one of the leading commercial cities of our age. First
+gaze upon its domes and towers as they are now familiar to you; then
+behold them as they will be when the unleashed waters of the Atlantic
+come sweeping across them; then open your eyes wide for a foreglimpse
+of our land in the golden era after the Submergence.”
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Even as the last words were uttered, my attention was drawn to the
+huge amorphous mass which lay cloaked in white linen at one side of
+the stage. Invisible hands seemed to take hold of the covering; slowly
+it was lifted into the air, then slowly pulled to one side and out of
+sight. At first I could only gape in astonishment--the strangest of all
+conceivable things was being unbared! Distinctly I was reminded of the
+paintings I had seen in various of the halls of Archeon--that which
+stared before me was a city in miniature, but a city such as I would
+have expected no Atlantean to conceive. Not the faintest resemblance
+did it bear to this undersea realm of statue-like temples and
+many-columned palaces; rather, it was like a city of the modern world.
+Row upon unbending row of box-like edifices, apparently of granite
+or brick, loomed at irregular heights and with flat, ungarnished
+roofs; tier after tier of little oblong windows looked out from the
+smoke-stained sides of the towers; slender defiles, so narrow that they
+reminded one of light-wells, separated the opposing ranks of masonry;
+and at the base of these dreary gray pits swarmed masses of dark-robed
+men and women, jammed together so compactly that one wondered if they
+were not standing on each other’s toes.
+
+“By the Blessed Mother, if it ain’t little old New York!” stuttered
+Stranahan, nudging me knowingly in the side.
+
+Even as he spoke, I was startled by a noise as of a thunder clap.
+And the next instant, the midget men and women scattered pellmell,
+vanishing through little openings in the walls. Meanwhile the thunder
+claps continued, loud-rumbling and resonant, one crash pealing and
+reverberating before the echoes of the last had died away; and
+miniature lightnings darted and flared from the great greenish vault
+above. As the display proceeded, it grew constantly brighter and more
+vivid; and I was wondering what the sequel would be, when suddenly
+there came a blast so loud that I clapped my hands to my ears in
+terror. Simultaneously a brilliant blade of light seemed to cut
+dagger-like through the buildings, wrapping them momentarily in a sheet
+of flame; the walls seemed to be heaving and trembling as though in an
+earthquake’s claws, and there came to my ears a rattling and crashing
+as of falling masonry.
+
+Then, while the clamor increased and the buildings heaved and wavered
+with the motion of tossing ships at sea, the ground beneath them gave
+a sharp lunge downward; and like toy castles, the towers all at once
+collapsed, some falling over their neighbors in crashing confusion,
+some shaken into great dusty piles of mortar and stone, some stripped
+of their walls yet still standing with gaunt contorted ribs of steel,
+some bursting into flame that glared and crackled fiendishly and poured
+out dense, black spirals of smoke.
+
+But scarcely had the thunder of the overthrown walls died down when a
+new and more ominous roaring came to my ears, a tumult as of Niagara or
+of sea-waves splashing the cliffs. Out of the great earthen basin into
+which the ruined city had subsided, there issued a foaming confusion
+of waters, as though a reservoir had burst its dam; and from all sides
+a white-flecked torrent came plunging down upon the wrecked towers,
+struggling and storming above their lower stories as if to wash them
+utterly away. And it seemed that they were to have their will, for the
+towers were sinking, visibly sinking beneath the waves. Heap after
+gigantic heap of debris dipped its head into the waters and was lost
+to view; edifice after looming edifice, dismantled and battered, was
+engulfed by the insatiable flood. And now the fires no longer burned
+and the smoke no longer soared; now only two or three tortured steel
+columns reached out of the indifferent sea; now only one was left,
+one lean and crooked metallic shaft like the agonized clutching hand
+of a drowning man. But soon even this had slipped from view, and the
+frothy-tongued, deep-blue waters gave no sign that a city had ever
+barred their path.
+
+And as the last trace of old Atlantis vanished, a grayness as of
+twilight suffused the scene; the golden lights became dim, and dimmer
+still, until they had fluttered out altogether, and blackness blotted
+all things from our gaze.
+
+But as we sat there spellbound in the dark, feeling like men who had
+beheld the end of all things, there came on airy change to break the
+dreariness of our mood. From far, far away, apparently whole worlds
+away, issued a faint tinkling music, more like the song of elves than
+of any mortal being. It was half like the loveliness that one hears in
+dreams, and more than half like the remote ghostly melodies borne to
+one across the wind; but gradually it grew nearer, gradually louder
+and more distinct, although its ethereal and fairy-like quality still
+remained. At length I recognized that it proceeded from a chorus of
+voices, a wonderfully sweet womanly chorus whose members may have been
+human but who seemed little less than angelic. For it was with a divine
+exaltation that they sang, and their tones were the tones of immortal
+sweetness and hope, and they seemed to assure me that all was well with
+the world and with life, and that beauty and happiness must triumph.
+
+As the singing continued, the darkness was gradually dispersed; yet the
+great orb above did not resume the full brightness of the Atlantean
+day, but remained subdued to a rose-tinged twilight glow. And in
+that twilight a troop of shimmering-gowned dancing maidens appeared,
+swinging from side to side with superbly harmonious movements of arm
+and waist and ankle until they seemed not so much individual dancers as
+parts of the eternal rhythm of the universe. But whether the singing
+proceeded from them or from persons unseen was more than I could
+judge; for just then my eye was caught by the leader of the dancers,
+and my thoughts were as if paralyzed. As she glided from side to side
+with movements like music, she smiled a gloriously sweet smile; and
+that smile seemed to be bent full upon me, though here my imagination
+may have borne false reports. But with furiously thumping heart and
+a surging of something dangerously like tenderness, I realized that
+Aelios had kept her promise to see me at the pageant.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+[Illustration: Then, while the clamor increased and the buildings
+heaved and wavered with the motion of tossing ships at sea, the ground
+beneath them gave a sharp lunge downward; and like toy castles, the
+towers all at once collapsed.... But scarcely had the thunder of the
+overthrown walls died down, when a new and more ominous roaring came to
+my ears, a tumult as of Niagara or of sea-waves splashing the cliffs...]
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+
+
+ CHAPTER XVI
+
+ An Official Summons
+
+
+Three or four days after the pageant, I was surprised to receive a
+visitor in the shape of a serious-looking gray old man whom I did
+not remember ever having seen before. In his hand he bore a little
+blue-sealed parchment scroll, on which my name had been inscribed in
+the native language; and by his grave manner, and particularly by
+the significant way in which he held the document, I feared that his
+mission might prove of ominous importance.
+
+My first impression was that I had unwittingly violated some local
+law, and was being summoned to court to answer for the crime. But this
+fear was swiftly dissipated. “I congratulate you, young man,” said my
+visitor, having determined that I was the person he sought. “This is an
+occasion such as comes but once in a lifetime.” And with a sedate and
+deferential air, and apparently not surmising that the nature of his
+mission was still a mystery to me, he passed the little document to me;
+following which he congratulated me again, and solemnly bowed his way
+out of the room.
+
+I now suspected that I was either the recipient of some high honor or
+the appointee to some responsible office. It is no wonder, accordingly,
+that my fingers trembled when I ripped open the blue seal, and that
+in my eagerness I almost tore the parchment as well. But again my
+expectations were to prove ill-founded. The message turned out to be
+very brief; and, far from providing cause either for exultation or
+dismay, it served merely to puzzle me.
+
+“To the respected Anson Harkness,” ran the words, which were handsomely
+formed in the native script, “the Committee on Selective Assignments
+wishes to announce that it is ready for the hearings and examinations
+in his case. If he will therefore be so kind as to present himself at
+the Committee offices any noon during the next ten days, he may be
+assured that the investigations will be carried out with a minimum of
+delay and a decision promptly rendered.”
+
+And that was all, except for the signature of the Head of the
+Committee! Not a word as to what the Selective Assignments might be!
+Not a word as to the nature of the “hearings and examinations!” Time
+after time I re-read this queer message, scrutinizing it until I had
+memorized it in its entirety; but the more I read the more perplexed I
+became, and I could almost believe myself the target of some practical
+joker. Just what was to be investigated? And what decision was to be
+reached? Was it that my conduct was thought improper and was to be
+reviewed? That I was considered too scornful of local customs, or too
+friendly to Aelios? Or--judging from the congratulatory manner of
+the gray-haired one--was I somehow deemed worthy of reward, possibly
+through the connivance of Aelios? Or was I to be examined as prize
+scholars are sometimes examined before being granted a scholarship?
+
+To confess the truth, none of these possibilities appeared very
+credible to me. But I could think of nothing more plausible, and at
+length was forced to recognize that the mystery was too deep for my
+penetration. The only reasonable course would be to consult one of
+the natives, who could doubtless answer all my questions without any
+trouble. And since I was acquainted with only one of the natives
+besides my tutor, and since it would give me particular pleasure to
+consult that one, I decided that, if possible, I should refer the
+baffling document to Aelios.
+
+But how to isolate Aelios long enough for a conversation was in itself
+a problem. After some thought, however, I conceived an idea which
+seemed promising: if I could determine where Aelios lived and then pay
+her a visit, I might solve the mystery of the Selective Assignments at
+the same time as I made possible a closer intimacy with Aelios herself.
+
+Yet it was only by a severe effort that I found the courage to carry
+out my plans----to follow Aelios one afternoon after the conclusion of
+her day’s instruction. Through innumerable curving lanes and avenues
+I trailed her and her fellow tutors, pressing close to the columns
+and the walls of the building, like a detective tracking his prey. At
+length, when we seemed to be approaching the outskirts of the city,
+Aelios waved a pleasant farewell to her companions, and started off
+alone down a little path bordered by a deep-red geranium-like flower.
+Thinking this to be my opportunity, I hastened my footsteps; but
+before I could overtake her she had reached the end of the path, and,
+quite oblivious of my approach, had entered the arching doorway of a
+house--or, should I call it a palace?--with curving convex walls of the
+color of pearl.
+
+For several minutes I stood wavering without. And it was in half-timid
+hesitancy, that at lest I forced my feet to the threshold and urged my
+hands to rap at the violet stained-glass panels of the door.
+
+It was but a minute before the sound of approaching footsteps notified
+me that I had not knocked in vain. But in that minute I was swept by
+wild hopes and still wilder torments and regrets. Would it be Aelios
+herself that answered me? Or would it be some member of her family,
+possibly her mother or father, or else a sister almost as charming as
+herself? And, if so, what should I say? and on what business pretend to
+seek a conference with Aelios?
+
+While I was wrapped in such thoughts, the door swung open, and I found
+myself face to face--not with Aelios, nor with her mother or father,
+nor with a sister of hers! But a young man of perhaps twenty-five,
+broad-browed and sparkling-eyed like most of the Atlanteans, stood
+looking inquiringly out at me.
+
+“Is this--is this where Aelios lives?” I gasped, in embarrassment.
+
+“Yes, Aelios lives here,” he returned, in matter-of-fact tones. And
+then, with a winning smile, “You would like to see her?”
+
+I admitted that he had surmised correctly, and was relieved to be
+admitted into the house without further questioning. Having passed
+through a broad hallway or vestibule illumined by large, swinging
+orange-colored lamps, we entered a daintily tapestried sitting room
+featured by lanterns of pale blue. The young man bade me be seated on
+the seaweed-decorated sofa, and then left me momentarily to myself; and
+in that brief snatch of solitude I found myself assailed by storms of
+jealous questions. Who was the young man? And in what relationship did
+he stand to Aelios? Was he perchance some suitor of hers? Or was he
+merely her brother? Or was it possible--oh, unspeakable thought!--that
+she was already married, and that this was her husband?
+
+At the latter reflection I experienced in advance all the pangs of
+unsuccessful love. My head swam with senseless fury; I was weighed
+down with anticipatory despair, and saw myself the victim of hopes
+that could never be fulfilled. I had just reached the darkest point
+of my broodings, and was just telling myself that of course I could
+never attract so admirable a woman as Aelios, when I heard a well known
+melodious voice murmuring, “What is the matter today, my friend? What
+are you so depressed about?”
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Recalled from my dejection as from a bad dream, I sprang up to take the
+hand of Aelios, who was smiling as graciously as though my visit had
+been expected and even welcomed.
+
+But what I next said I cannot recall. No doubt it was some bit of
+nonsense not worth repeating; indeed, it would perhaps have been some
+bit of sentimental nonsense, had I not recalled the existence of the
+unknown young man. But since I was too diffident to inquire who he
+might be, and since the thought of him remained with me in spite of
+Aelios’ kindness, I refrained from all sentimental advances in this,
+our first private meeting. It is true, that whenever her blue eyes
+flashed, they drew me toward her like twin magnets; it is true, that
+whenever she smiled, her inexpressibly sweet smile, I yearned to dash
+down all barriers in one long fervent confession; yet I was thankful
+even to be able to sit side by side with her quietly talking. In the
+wide years that separate me now from that brief enchanted interview, my
+memory has lost track of what she said, it merely retains how she said
+it; I can recall the sparkling eagerness with which her words poured
+forth, like the wavelets of a rapid crystal stream; I can recapture
+the sage nodding and tossing of her head, the ripples of deep feeling
+that passed and repassed on her mobile countenance, the luminescence as
+from some inner sun that would make her whole face shine as she uttered
+some rare bit of wit or fancy. But I do not even know the subject of
+our discussion, except that it was a theme suggested by her and that it
+was impersonal; I only know that it was she who did most of the talking
+while I looked on in awed worship, and that either she was blind to my
+reverence for her or else chose to ignore it.
+
+It was not until I rose to leave that my thoughts reverted to the
+subject which had brought me to see Aelios. And then, since the hour
+was late and my mood was no longer prosaic, I did not choose to
+discuss that topic long. I merely showed Aelios the letter, which she
+glanced at briefly and with a broad smile; then she surprised me by
+congratulating me just as the gray-haired bearer of the message had
+done.
+
+But she was exceedingly chary of information. “If you will go to the
+Committee offices,” she suggested, “the whole matter will be made much
+clearer to you than I could make it.” And, after directing me where to
+find the offices, she added, “I’d advise you to waste no time, or else
+you may lose your turn and have to wait another half year. You know,
+that’s what happened once to my cousin Argol, who met you at the door
+just before.”
+
+Genuinely gratified that my doubts about Cousin Argol had been
+dispersed, I thanked Aelios and turned to leave. My heart pattered
+happily when I found her accompanying me to the outer door; and I felt
+an actual thrill of joy when she pressed her little hand firmly in my
+great one, and murmured, in tones that could leave no doubt of her
+sincerity, “Come again, my friend. Come whenever you wish some one to
+talk with. I shall always be glad to see you.”
+
+And it was with a glow of triumph that I found myself walking down
+the flower-bordered walk toward the main avenue. Aelios was more
+friendly than I had had any reason to expect!--her company was even
+more charming than I had imagined! Considering all things, I had every
+cause to be thankful, and who knew but that some day-- But here my
+thoughts reached a dazzling veil beyond which I would not allow them to
+penetrate, for there were still heights that I could not mount even in
+my most daring fancies.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+[Illustration: Some of the trees had branches symmetrically woven into
+the likenesses of great cobwebs, and from those cobwebs at regular
+intervals dangled clusters of grape-like fruits; other trees were
+cactus-like and leafless; and some of the shrubs and creepers bore
+pods resembling those of beans and peas, except that they were over a
+foot in length. The vast majority of this strange assemblage of plants
+seemed to be fruit-bearing ...]
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+
+
+ CHAPTER XVII
+
+ The High Initiation
+
+
+Promptly at noon the following day I presented myself before the
+Committee on Selective Assignments. The offices, which I found without
+difficulty, were located on the lower floor of an imposing blue-tinted
+granite edifice; and the Committee itself occupied a hall reminding me
+vaguely of a court-room, except that its ornamental columns and busts
+and statues were unparalleled in any court-room I had ever seen. Before
+a long marble railing sat about fifteen men and women, some old but
+several conspicuously young. All were perched on cushioned marble seats
+before little marble pedestals or writing stands, and to their rear
+were cases lined with rows of parchment-bound volumes that lent the
+place a scholarly dignity. In front of them, across the railing, were
+half a dozen tiers of blue stone benches; and on each of the benches
+stood a huge pile of books, as though the spectators were expected to
+make use of their time during any delay in the proceedings.
+
+But I was not admitted at once into this great hall. First I was
+escorted into a small anteroom, where three Atlanteans--two youths
+of about twenty, and a girl of the same age--were seated studiously
+reading. From a little parchment document which each carried, I felt
+sure that they were here on a mission similar to my own; but so
+preoccupied did they seem, that I had no opportunity to question them.
+For a moment I merely stared at them impatiently; then, turning to
+inspect the room, I was delighted to observe a pile of little books on
+a reed stand in one corner.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+After a single curious glance, I began examining these volumes with
+hungry interest. Their very titles proved alluring, far more alluring
+than anything printed I had yet seen in Atlantis, with the exception
+of the lost Homeric masterpiece. Some were works of information
+dealing with subjects so varied as “Post-Submergence Mural Art,” “The
+Rise of Government by Selection,” “The Stimulation of Plant Life by
+Artificial Sunlight,” “History of the Abolition of Crime,” or “History
+of the Decline of the Upper World”; others were essays on such rare
+topics as “The Cultivation of Genius,” “Is Altruism One of the Human
+Instincts?” and “How Atlantis Found the World by Losing It”; still
+others were works of literature, and, though I had no time to observe
+them carefully, I saw that they included an epic poem on “Agripides,”
+a volume of lyrics by some unknown writer of two thousand years ago
+as well as selections from a dozen lyricists of the present, a poetic
+drama evidently designed for performance at the annual celebration of
+the Submergence, several novels and a collection of stories, and a
+romance of the far future entitled “Super-Art.”
+
+But what particularly engaged my attention was a genial little satire
+known as “The Prisoner.” This story, which was written in a crisp and
+simple style that I found delightful, recounted how an Atlantean of a
+thousand years before had been sentenced, as the penalty for his sins,
+to pass his remaining years in the upper world. Having been sent above
+seas in a little water-tight craft propelled by intra-atomic engines,
+he had set about to seek his fortune in his new surroundings; and,
+finding that the way to win distinction was to accumulate much gold,
+he applied his superior Atlantean wits so well that in a short while
+he became fabulously wealthy. But, after attaining what was reputed to
+be success, he discovered that his wealth meant nothing to him; he was
+hungry for the art and the beauty of Atlantis, without which the world
+seemed barbarous and empty. Even though he could have purchased any
+treasure or luxury on earth, he took to morbid repining; he brooded and
+brooded until he went completely out of his wits, which were finally
+restored to him when the Atlanteans took pity and decided to let him
+return. And so the poor man went back to his native land, having first
+forfeited his riches; and this was the last case of insanity even known
+among the Atlanteans.
+
+I had just completed this little story when I was roused to reality by
+hearing a strange voice sonorously pronouncing my name. Looking up,
+I saw a lavender-gowned man motioning me toward the main Committee
+Room; and I observed with surprise that the youths and the girl had
+disappeared while I was absorbed in my book.
+
+I found the central hall empty except for the fifteen men and women
+sedately seated behind the railing; but at sight of these grave
+individuals I felt my misgivings returning, and wished that I could
+have been anywhere else in the universe.
+
+“This is Anson Harkness, is it not?” rang forth the high-pitched
+and yet not unpleasant voice of an aged man whose proximity to the
+railing indicated that he was the head of the Committee. And after
+I had assured him that I was the person designated, the Head Member
+continued, earnestly and yet not so menacingly as I had expected, “Be
+seated, Anson Harkness. It is an important matter that brings you here.
+And I believe that, in your case, more than the usual amount of time
+and thought will be necessary before we can reach a decision.”
+
+The Head Member paused, cleared his throat, and slowly proceeded, “I
+trust that you will co-operate with us to the best of your ability, for
+only so can we expect satisfactory results. Just as the average man
+is betrothed but once in his life, so he appears but once before this
+Committee; and since, as in the case of a betrothal, much may depend
+upon the proper choice--”
+
+“I beg your pardon, sir,” I interrupted, unable to endure these
+long-winded sentences that only added to my confusion, “Would you mind
+telling me why I am here? As yet I haven’t the faintest idea.”
+
+The Head Member peered at me in mild surprise; his fourteen associates
+darted inquiring looks at one another.
+
+“Why, yes, that is a proper question,” he resumed, blandly. “I had
+forgotten: you are a foreigner, and are unacquainted with our ways.
+You will understand, of course that foreigners were so totally unknown
+before your coming that the necessity for explanation had not occurred
+to me. However, the whole matter can be made clear in a few words.
+You are summoned for what is known as the High Initiation--in other
+words, this should be the happiest day of your life, since you are now
+regarded as having reached maturity and so may set forth upon your
+career of service to the State.”
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Having been a voter in the United States for the past eleven years,
+I was not flattered to be told that I had reached maturity. None the
+less, I held my tongue, and listened patiently as the Head Member
+continued.
+
+“The government tutor who has been instructing you,” he pursued, “has
+reported that you have at least an elementary knowledge of our language
+and customs, and suggests that you be assigned at once to service.
+Acting upon his recommendation, we intend to promote you to duties
+that accord as nearly as possible with your desires and capabilities.
+But first we must say a word as to the methods in vogue in our land.
+Ever since the great social revolution which occurred in the second
+century after the submergence and which for a time threatened to engulf
+us in chaos, we have employed what is known as the Beehive System of
+labor--which means that every citizen is required to perform a certain
+minimum amount of work for the State in order to accomplish those tasks
+indispensable for our continued existence. Fortunately, the utilization
+of intra-atomic energy and the elimination of waste and of duplication
+of effort have reduced the essential work to one-tenth of that thought
+necessary before the Submergence; and the average citizen now labors
+not more than an hour and a half or two hours a day. There have,
+indeed, been occasional men and women so enamored of their employment
+as to insist on working four or five hours, but such excessive
+application is not encouraged, for it is believed to overcast the mind
+and blunt the esthetic sensibilities.”
+
+“Then for heaven’s sake,” I burst forth, thinking this country to be
+wholly without “push” and energy, “What do people here do with their
+time? If they don’t work, they must be simply bored to death!”
+
+The Head Member regarded me with a tolerant smile, as one might regard
+a lunatic who makes some harmless remark.
+
+“That is where you misunderstand the meaning of the word work,” he
+explained, with something of the manner of a schoolmaster to a backward
+pupil. “Our people do work, and work diligently indeed, and sometimes
+work many hours a day--but not on those barren practical duties to
+which they are assigned, and which are necessary merely in order
+that the community may exist. As soon as any man or woman has passed
+the period of elementary instruction and is assigned to service by
+this Committee, he finds himself in possession of many leisure hours
+a day--and those hours of leisure constitute the important part of
+his life, and it is on their account that he is to be congratulated
+on reaching maturity. For now he may have the opportunity both for
+self-expression and for the better sort of service to the State; he may
+devote himself to study, research or creation in any field that suits
+his fancy (there is absolutely no restriction in this regard, although
+every one is expected to apply himself to some definite pursuit). One,
+for example, may elect to paint landscapes; a second to conduct some
+elaborate philosophic inquiry; a third to write poetry; a fourth to
+investigate the ways of marine animals; a fifth to be an actor, or a
+musical virtuoso, or the author of historical essays, or a critic of
+architecture, or a designer of fine tapestries.”
+
+“But what if one finds nothing at all that he can do?” I inquired,
+wondering how on earth I could fit myself into this superior scheme of
+things.
+
+“Oh, but one must find something!” declared the Head Member, while his
+colleagues eyed one another with looks implying that I was really too
+naïve for belief. “It would be a disgrace to do nothing at all except
+one’s practical duties. It would mean that one had been a failure in
+life; that one’s existence had added nothing to the world. Why, there
+isn’t more than one such a case a year--and then it’s usually found
+that the poor sufferer has been the victim of some accident, which
+blunted his mental faculties.”
+
+The Head Member paused; and while I had horrific visions of myself as
+the first failure in a year, one of the members just to the rear of
+the Head Member leaned over and whispered something into his ear. Just
+what he said I could not catch, but the evident effect was to hasten
+proceedings, for the chief official promptly turned to me, and, with
+unwonted directness, continued, “Well, now that we have made all the
+necessary explanations, let us get down to the actual assignment. Just
+what sort of work do you think you would prefer, young man?”
+
+Having no reason to believe that I would prefer any work at all, I did
+nothing but gape blankly at the speaker.
+
+“I am surprised at your hesitancy,” that sedate individual at length
+continued, blandly. “There is so much for you to do that I should think
+you would simply overwhelm us with suggestions.”
+
+ * * * * *
+
+But I fear that I continued to do nothing but look blank. “You will
+pardon me,” I pleaded, when the suspense had become embarrassing, “if
+I leave the suggestions to you. I really know so little about Atlantis
+that I couldn’t possibly choose wisely.”
+
+“True, you do know little about Atlantis,” coincided the Head Member,
+with a smile. “But there is something about which you undoubtedly know
+a great deal, and about which we Atlanteans know nothing at all.”
+
+“You mean--my own country?” I demanded, while all the members of the
+Committee leaned forward with interested glances.
+
+“Of course--your own country, and the upper world in general,” the
+Head Member nodded, approvingly. “You must remember, our latest news
+of your world was received some three thousand years ago. Even for a
+leisurely people like us, that is a long while. You cannot imagine how
+curious we are as to all that has happened since.”
+
+“And that’s what you want me to tell you?”
+
+“Naturally. We know, to be sure, that no one man could begin to tell
+us everything, but at least we’d like to learn the general outline of
+events. And so we are thinking of appointing you Official Historian of
+the Upper World.”
+
+“Official Historian of the Upper World!” I repeated, like one in a daze.
+
+“Yes. Why not? Judging from the fact that you’ve made quicker progress
+in our language than any of your companions, we think you would perhaps
+be better qualified for the office.”
+
+“But I haven’t specialized in history--” I started to plead.
+
+“We’re more interested in general movements than in particular
+incidents,” explained the Head Member. “The sort of knowledge that any
+educated man might give us, is what we want.
+
+“You certainly are not unacquainted with the present civilization up
+above, are you?”
+
+“No, not altogether,” I was forced to acknowledge.
+
+“And you’ve been taught a reasonable amount about the past, have you
+not?”
+
+“I’ve taken a number of history courses at college, if that’s what you
+mean.”
+
+“Excellent! Excellent!” And the Head Member beamed upon me
+ingratiatingly. “Then the rest should be a mere matter of study and
+application. You don’t object to the appointment, do you?”
+
+I confessed that I did not object.
+
+Whereupon, turning to his associates, he inquired, “Do you all approve
+of the appointment of Anson Harkness as Official Historian of the Upper
+World?”
+
+Since there was no dissent among the Committee members, my life-work
+was apparently settled.
+
+“But just what do you expect me to do?” I queried, somewhat doubtfully,
+after my appointment had been confirmed.
+
+“You are to write a history of the upper world, of course,” explained
+the Head Member, surprised that I should ask the obvious. “How you
+are to proceed will be for you to decide; but you must remember that
+this will be your assigned work, to which you are expected to devote
+not less than two hours a day. I might point out, moreover, that yours
+is one of those rare cases where the assigned work is so important
+that you might do well to combine it with your optional work, and so
+dedicate your time exclusively to your duties as historian.”
+
+“Perhaps that would be the best way,” I agreed, for it struck me that
+the task before me would require all my energies.
+
+But at that juncture an important question occurred to me. I did not
+wish to seem too commercial; but it was evident that the examiners had
+overlooked something essential. “Now as to the practical returns,” I
+ventured, mildly. “I know, of course, that I cannot expect to be paid
+very much--”
+
+“To be paid?” repeated four or five of the Committee members all
+at once, with looks of such sheer amazement that I knew that I had
+blundered.
+
+“Oh, then perhaps I must show you some results first?” I suggested,
+perceiving no other alternative.
+
+For two or three seconds there was silence--an ominous, puzzling
+silence which made me realize that I had given deep offense.
+
+“Young man,” the Head Member at length broke forth, severely, “I fear
+that you are under a grave misapprehension. But possibly you are not
+wholly to blame, for it may be that your own country still labors under
+those primitive social arrangements which we Atlanteans abolished three
+thousand years ago. Know, then, that there is no such thing as payment
+in our land. There is no money; there is no medium of exchange. You
+do your work, and in return receive all the necessaries of life; your
+meals are brought to you by State employees, just as they have been
+brought to you thus far; you are also lodged by the State, clothed by
+the State, educated by the State; the State works of art are at your
+disposal, you are admitted freely to all State entertainments, and are
+even granted periodic vacations to break the monotony of existence.
+What more could any man desire?”
+
+“No more, of course,” I conceded, feeling utterly crushed.
+
+“Very well, then,” said the official, with an indulgent smile that made
+me feel ridiculous. “Now there is only one more matter to be decided.
+How would you like to set out on your travels the day after tomorrow?”
+
+“What travels?” I gasped, wondering what on earth he could mean.
+
+“Why, evidently you haven’t heard about that, either!” remarked the
+Head Member, noting my surprise. “You see, every Atlantean, upon
+receiving his assignment and before taking up his duties, is expected
+to make a tour of the country, so as to acquaint himself with it
+at first hand. Otherwise, how could he expect to voice himself
+intelligently on national affairs?”
+
+Having nothing to say in reply, I merely gaped and remained silent.
+
+“Ordinarily, this journey requires about a month,” my informer
+proceeded. “The trip is made entirely on foot, so that one may observe
+the country thoroughly. There is a party leaving in two days--perhaps
+you would like to join them.”
+
+“Very well,” I assented. And, after being advised regarding a few
+details of the trip and then notified of my dismissal, I went away
+feeling more puzzled than ever, for I could not believe that Atlantis
+could show me anything more marvelous than it had already shown.
+
+
+
+
+ CHAPTER XVIII
+
+ The Journey Commences
+
+
+Two days later I set out on what was to prove the most extraordinary
+excursion of my life. Arriving early in the morning at the appointed
+meeting place--an open, flower-bordered “circle” or park near the
+western end of the town--I was greeted by a score of eager young men
+and women, who introduced themselves as my traveling companions. They
+were all in an excited, highly animated condition, chatting and jesting
+continually, moving about restlessly, gay with the gaiety of high
+expectations; and they all, without exception, were conspicuously and
+vividly youthful, for their ages must have varied between eighteen and
+twenty-one. At the same time, they resembled their fellow Atlanteans
+in that they looked utterly wholesome and unworldly, and had the grace
+and beauty of persons whose lives have been unstained and whose minds
+untarnished.
+
+I was just wondering whether these attractive creatures were to
+be my sole companions, when I was surprised by the sight of four
+newcomers--two men and two women of somewhat maturer years than
+the others. At the moment of their arrival they were surrounded so
+enthusiastically by the members of the party that I had not a chance
+for a clear glimpse of them; but even a partial glimpse was enough to
+make me stop short with a gasp of delight--among their number I thought
+I saw the sparkling blue eyes of Aelios! At first I was not sure; but
+with fast-throbbing heart I pressed forward, and to my inexpressible
+joy found that I had not been mistaken.
+
+“Aelios!” I cried, as soon as I could manage to draw her to one side.
+“Aelios--what are you doing here?”
+
+She smiled her bewilderingly sweet smile, but did not choose to answer
+directly. “What are you doing here?” she countered.
+
+“Why, you should know without asking,” I reminded her. “Didn’t I show
+you my summons from the Committee on Selective Assignments?”
+
+“Yes, I remember,” she murmured. “Only, I didn’t know you would set
+out on your travels so soon. But I’m really very glad. Now you’ll be a
+full-fledged citizen of Atlantis!”
+
+“But are you going with us, Aelios? Are you going, too?” I asked, still
+unable to credit my good fortune.
+
+“Yes, I am going.” And, observing how quizzically I was regarding her,
+she continued, “You see, three or four tutors are assigned to each of
+the traveling parties, for we have made the journey before, and are
+able to explain the sights along the way.”
+
+“But how can you leave so suddenly?” I questioned, remembering
+Stranahan’s daily lessons. “How about--how about the work you were
+doing here?”
+
+“Oh, I am excused, of course, until my return. Some other tutor is
+substituted for me, and everything goes along smoothly enough with my
+students.”
+
+“Their loss is our good fortune,” said I, quite truthfully; and Aelios
+acknowledged the compliment with a gracious bow, and then smilingly
+rejoined the other tutors.
+
+A few minutes later we were under way. We crossed the Salty River
+on a long bridge overarched with a crystal arcade and lined with
+friezes representing mythological scenes; then on the northern bank,
+we followed a little winding lane westward at the base of the marble
+palaces and towers. Before many minutes, we approached the borders
+of the city; and when at length we passed into the open country,
+my companions experienced a rare burst of high spirits. Some gave
+expression to their feelings by low, soft cries of joy; some capered,
+romped and laughed merrily along the way; some engaged in loud-pitched
+and enthusiastic discussions; but all looked carefree and happy indeed;
+and I could not help being infected with their gay mood. I experienced
+nothing of the constraint that might have been only natural, for
+my companions seemed to accept me frankly as one of them, and in
+consequence I felt hardly out of place. Before long I was chatting with
+several of the young men as volubly as though I had known them all
+their lives.
+
+Of Aelios I caught no more than a glimpse on that first day. She
+seemed to be absorbed in her conversations with the other tutors; and
+an occasional smiling glance in my direction was all that she would
+vouchsafe me. But I was happy merely to know that she was near, and was
+convinced that succeeding days would offer opportunities to strengthen
+our friendship. And at the same time I was so well occupied that I had
+little leisure for thinking of anybody in particular.
+
+To one who has never been underseas and gazed at the landscapes of
+that incredible world, it will be impossible to convey any idea of
+the enthusiasm and the wonder I felt. Already I had beheld marvels
+in Atlantis, marvels sufficient to bewilder the most audacious
+imagination; but that which I now observed was so unique as momentarily
+to overshadow even my previous discoveries.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+For the first hour after leaving the city we pursued a little path
+that ran almost in a straight line along the banks of the Salty River.
+Opposite us, across the stream, stretched the long, low contours of the
+colonnades and temples I had inspected soon after arriving in Atlantis;
+and at our feet the waters shot swiftly by, with gentle swishing and
+murmuring, a green-gray expanse several hundred yards across, but
+differing from all other rivers I had ever beheld in that it was of the
+same width at all points and flowed in a straight and orderly manner
+without any twists, turns or meanderings.
+
+All this, of course, I had already observed; and my first surprises
+were not to come until at length the road bent abruptly northward away
+from the river and we entered what was for me a virgin territory. As we
+advanced, the vegetation became denser and more curious; tall reeds,
+bushes and trees began to cluster about us until I had the impression
+of being lost in a jungle. But it was a jungle such as no explorer has
+ever viewed in the wilds of Africa, New Guinea, or Brazil, for the
+plants were so fantastic that even the strange undersea vegetation I
+had already beheld seemed commonplace by comparison. Here, for the
+first time, the trees were of a vivid green, and a normal foliage was
+abundant; yet there was so much which looked abnormal that I could
+only stare and stare in amazement. Some of the trees had branches
+symmetrically woven into the likenesses of great cobwebs, and from
+those cobwebs at regular intervals dangled dusters of grape-like
+fruits; other trees were cactus-like and leafless, with huge round
+protuberances at regular intervals along their spiny boles; still
+others were almost concealed amid thick meshes of vines, or were
+adorned with multicolored cup-shaped blossoms larger than a man’s
+head, or dominated by scores of succulent-looking stalks like gigantic
+asparagus. Then again some were little more than great rounded and
+compressed masses of leafage, reminding me of ten-foot cabbages; and
+some would have struck me as nothing more than ordinary mushrooms,
+had they not reached as high as my waist; and some of the shrubs and
+creepers bore pods resembling those of beans and peas, except that
+they were over a foot in length. But the most conspicuous fact about
+this strange assemblage of plants was that the vast majority seemed to
+be fruit-bearing; and on all sides one could observe a multitude of
+green fruits of all sizes and shapes, as well as a profusion of the
+ripening and ripe product, some of it small as cherries and some large
+as watermelons, some pale green and some gaudy red, some lemon-hued and
+some a modest pink and some a deep purple, but all striking one by a
+contrast and a variety as pleasing to the eye as it was extraordinary.
+
+As we entered this peculiar jungle-like region, I noted a marked
+change in the atmosphere. For the first time, I became aware that there
+could be such a thing as climate in Atlantis: the air was growing dank
+and overheated, and I had the impression of having entered the tropics.
+And simultaneously I observed an increase of light that for the moment
+dazzled me, and I felt as if a torrid sun were burning directly above.
+Yet the source of the added warmth and illumination was in no way a
+mystery: brilliant white lamps had been placed at intervals along the
+great roof-supporting tinted columns, glaring down upon the foliage
+like miniature suns, and combining with the larger golden orbs to lend
+the scene a dream-like and unearthly beauty.
+
+Before long I noted that the vegetation was interrupted every few
+hundred yards by a ditch from five to ten feet across and filled to
+the brim with sluggish brown water. Had not these trenches invariably
+been of even width and geometrical straightness, I might have mistaken
+them for rivulets; but their precise outlines would permit but one
+interpretation, and they brought me remembrances of the irrigation
+canals I had seen on the semi-arid plains of Arizona and California.
+It seemed, however, that they served more than a single purpose; for
+as we crossed a little arching bridge over one of the widest of their
+waterways, I saw a long, flat boat anchored just beneath my feet; and
+four or five men, clad in close-fitting gray instead of in the usual
+long-flowing tinted robes, were busy loading this barge with newly
+plucked clusters of blue and crimson and orange-colored fruit.
+
+Even had there been no one to enlighten me concerning these queer
+jungles, I would now have understood their general nature. Still they
+seemed to embody a multitude of mysteries, mysteries to be explained by
+no known laws of biology; and, accordingly, I listened eagerly when one
+of the tutors, finding himself besieged by an enthusiastic, questioning
+coterie, launched forth upon on explanatory discourse.
+
+“From the earliest times, as you know,” said he, speaking informally,
+and yet with something of the manner of a professor addressing his
+class, “We Atlanteans have been skilled in horticulture. To begin
+with, nature provided the stimulus, for the flora of an island such
+as Atlantis is apt to be unique, and that of our own country was
+particularly so. But long before the Submergence, we had outdone nature
+by developing a multitude of new plants; and since the Submergence
+our botanists have busied themselves incessantly with the study
+of artificial stimulation of vegetable life. It is well known how
+industriously they have experimented, trying the effect of new soils
+and environments, grafting the limbs of innumerable bushes and trees,
+cross-fertilizing and encouraging all favorable chance growths or
+‘sports’; and in these pursuits they have been aided by the altered
+environment of Atlantis, which seems favorable to rapid and sudden
+variation, and has given rise to innumerable varieties of plants
+unknown before.
+
+“I do not need to tell you how essential all this has been for the
+maintenance of Atlantean life, for our land is limited in extent and
+much of it is unsuited for agriculture; only by the intensive and
+forced development of the rest can we hope to support our people. And
+so it has been necessary to evolve food-plants that would produce more
+prolifically than any known before; and at the same time we have had to
+develop a light which would be the chemical equivalent of sunlight, and
+so would stimulate the chlorophyl of the leaves, the original source
+of all organic matter. This, to be sure, was accomplished even before
+the Submergence; but since the Submergence there has been a constant
+improvement in the quality of the artificial sunlight; and in the
+eleventh century A. S., the great chemist, Sorandos, produced a light
+actually superior to sunlight. At least (for some reason that Sorandos
+himself never made sufficiently plain) it stimulates plant life to an
+extraordinarily rapid growth, even though it has the compensating fault
+of inducing rapid decay. It is this light which you see shining down
+upon you now from the great stone columns.”
+
+ * * * * *
+
+The speaker paused, and I thought the time opportune to put a question
+which had been puzzling me. “You tell us that you have need for
+intensive crop production,” said I, “and yet have I not heard that you
+can produce food chemically?”
+
+“Yes, indeed,” admitted the tutor, with a shrug. “The same light that
+develops the chlorophyl in plants may be employed for the synthetic
+manufacture of starch and sugar out of charcoal and distilled water.
+But that is an old-fashioned method, and not very successful on the
+whole, for we have found that this artificial food lacks some element
+essential for good health.”
+
+“Even so, why rely wholly upon plant life?” I inquired, curious to know
+why my diet in Atlantis had been strictly vegetarian. “Do you never--do
+you never eat meat?”
+
+“Eat meat?” The tutor’s tone was one of astonishment; and I observed
+half a dozen pairs of eyes staring at me in shocked surprise.
+
+For a moment I felt like one who has urged cannibalism or some
+other barbarous rite. And my discomfort was scarcely relieved when
+my informant sternly declared, “There has been no meat consumed in
+Atlantis since the Submergence; flesh-eating has been discarded along
+with the other uncivilized practices of the ancients. How could we feel
+ourselves to be superior to the beasts and yet live at the cost of
+blood?”
+
+“But are there no animals at all in Atlantis?” I found the courage to
+inquire.
+
+“Oh, yes, though naturally we couldn’t take care of many after the
+Submergence.” And my companion paused, and pointed to a little
+red-breasted feathered thing perched amid the dense green of the
+foliage. “There are birds of course--we could not dispense with them.
+Then there are a few insects, such as the butterflies--and the bees,
+which give us honey and are necessary for plant pollenization--though
+all harmful insects were long ago destroyed. Also, there are squirrels
+and chipmunks and other small creatures; and in the Salty River and the
+canals there are numerous fish. And in some places along the banks of
+the Salty River there are hundreds of bullfrogs.”
+
+“Bullfrogs!” I exclaimed. “Bullfrogs!” And suddenly I understood the
+meaning of those strange noises which had so terrified my shipmates and
+myself during our first night in Atlantis!
+
+ * * * * *
+
+[Illustration: And along each side of the broad passageway, rising
+almost to meet the ceiling, was a series of what I took to be gigantic
+boilers. All of these were connected with innumerable wires and
+with pipes thicker than a man’s body, while at the further end of
+the gallery the tubes were interwoven in intricate loops, coils and
+convolutions like the exposed entrails of a Titan.]
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+
+
+ CHAPTER XIX
+
+ The Glass City
+
+
+For five or six hours we proceeded through the fruit-bearing jungles,
+which seemed limitless in extent and yet constantly displayed new and
+unexpected features. But the journey was by no means arduous, for
+twice we paused for rest and refreshments at little open-air inns that
+fronted the roads; at all times our pace was unhurried. And most of the
+party seemed still fresh and energetic when, toward the middle of the
+afternoon, we emerged suddenly from the thickets and saw a group of
+fairy-like towers gleaming straight ahead.
+
+“That is the city of Thalos,” I heard one of the tutors explaining. “It
+is there that we stay for the night.”
+
+As we approached, I directed my eyes eagerly upon Thalos, which even
+at a distance appeared strikingly different from Archeon. Indeed,
+it appeared strikingly different from any city I had ever seen, for
+no streets or thoroughfares of any kind were visible, and, as we
+drew near, the various buildings seemed to merge in a long unbroken
+line dominated by turrets, domes and spires spaced at geometrical
+intervals; and all those domes and spires flashed and sparkled with a
+multi-colored light, which changed in hue and intensity with every step
+we took and was elusive and yet vivid as the glittering of innumerable
+gems.
+
+So awe-stricken was I that I scarcely thought of questioning my
+companions, but hastened toward this alluring city. And the nearer I
+approached the more dazzled I was. By degrees I came to realize that
+a high wall surrounded the town; but this wall brought no reminders
+of the fortified bulwarks of ancient cities, for its outlines were
+graceful and pleasing, its color an agreeable dark blue, and its
+evident purpose ornamental. And when I had come within a few hundred
+yards of the city, I observed that its blueness was translucent,
+indicating that the building material was glass!--and, judging from the
+peculiar glistening and glinting of the towers projecting above the
+wall, I wondered whether stained glass were not the substance of the
+entire town!
+
+This, in fact, I discovered was so. Having passed through the wall
+by means of a little arched gateway invisible at a distance, I found
+myself in what might have been a city out of the Arabian Nights. I
+cannot say with certainty whether I beheld a single building or a
+hundred, or whether I stood in an open court or in a street; for before
+me spread a wide expanse of glass masonry, of arches and covered
+galleries, of steeples and cupolas and winding balconies; and all this
+masonry seemed to be joined in a more or less unified whole. There may
+have been individual edifices, but there was no edifice not connected
+with its neighbors by arching walls or overhead passageways; there may
+have been streets winding through this wilderness of glass, but it
+struck me that there were only open spaces alternating with twining
+glass-roofed corridors. Yet, however bizarre the total impression (and
+bizarre it was beyond all imagining), there was also a certain unity
+that prevented the city from appearing grotesque; and its various
+segments, in their garments of lavender or pale blue or turquoise or
+vivid ruby, fitted together as perfectly as the parts of an intricate
+and beautiful mosaic.
+
+We had barely entered the city when half a dozen natives emerged from
+unseen corridors and greeted us. Like the members of our own party,
+they were dressed in exquisite light-tinted gowns; and, like all the
+Atlanteans, they were well built, prepossessing of appearance and
+handsome; and there was a perfect natural courtesy in their manner when
+they assured us how welcome we were and bade us accompany them to our
+lodgings.
+
+Still speechless with wonder, I followed my companions through long
+crystal galleries, around the base of jewel-like glimmering towers, and
+across flowered parks where iridescent fountains splashed and bubbled.
+“This is typical of the latest in architecture,” I heard one of the men
+saying, as he pointed up at the curving, interlinking stained glass
+porticoes and domes. “Thalos in its present form is not more than five
+centuries old, and is exclusively a development of Post-Submergence
+art.”
+
+Almost before these words were out of the speaker’s mouth, we were
+led up a long flight of stairs and through an elliptical doorway into
+a chamber which, to my surprise, was walled and roofed not with glass,
+but with marble. Here we were treated to a sumptuous repast, consisting
+of a sort of vegetable steak, native cakes and bread, honey and fruit,
+which already lay spread for us on half a dozen little tables. And,
+after we had dined, we were each shown to a room on the roof, which was
+equipped with all articles that necessity or convenience could demand,
+and where, if we wished, we might well rest from the day’s exertions.
+
+Some of our party may possibly have availed themselves of this
+opportunity; but, for my own part, I was so excited merely at being in
+Thales, that a rest was out of the question.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+As soon as I had washed myself clean of the dust of the journey, I
+made my way down from my roof-apartment and out of the building. As
+I stepped toward the outer door, I was rejoiced to see a familiar
+blue-clad figure preceding me down the stairs. “Aelios!” I cried; and
+when she turned to see what was the matter, I joined her with the
+breathless suggestion that we take a little stroll together. And--quite
+unexpectedly--she obliged me by agreeing.
+
+“Luckily, I’ve been here before, and so know my way about,” she said,
+as we started. “If you went alone, you might get lost.”
+
+“I wouldn’t mind--in such a charming place,” I declared, with a smile.
+
+And then, as a means of making conversation, I remarked, “The people
+here are exceedingly hospitable, aren’t they?”
+
+“Hospitable?” she echoed, as if not understanding. “What makes you
+think that?”
+
+Surprised, I pointed out the self-evident fact that they had lodged and
+feasted us so splendidly.
+
+“Oh, it is not they that have lodged and feasted us!” she corrected.
+“It is the State!”
+
+It was now my turn to look blank, and hers to explain.
+
+“Our complete itinerary has been arranged in advance,” she continued,
+“and all our needs will be provided for by the State, just as the State
+provides for us when we’re at home. Obviously, that’s the only possible
+way.”
+
+“Then is there no such thing as private property in Atlantis?” I
+inquired.
+
+“Private property?” She looked puzzled, as though trying to assimilate
+an alien point of view. “What would be the use of private property?”
+
+Then, seeing the dull stare with which I replied, she proceeded, “Of
+course, I remember that there used to be private property in the old
+days, before the Submergence. But that has all been abolished long ago.”
+
+“Is it possible?” I exclaimed, thinking this the most incredible
+statement I had yet heard.
+
+“Well, not quite all abolished,” she amended, thoughtfully. “Our
+clothes and books and personal ornaments are still private property, of
+course.”
+
+“But does the State supply one with everything else?”
+
+“Yes, with everything, including one’s clothes. You’ll see for yourself
+when you return from this trip and set out as a citizen.”
+
+Thereupon she told me a few more facts about the State control of
+property, and how things such as inheritance and taxation were unknown.
+Then gradually the conversation shifted to less impersonal and more
+alluring subjects. She asked me about the world I had come from, and
+whether it had any architectural marvels rivalling those of Thalos;
+and I replied that it had not, though the skyscrapers of New York were
+considered wondrous enough. I was reluctant to talk about my own world,
+however; I did not wish to be disturbed by remembrances; I desired
+only to be walking with Aelios as I was walking now, and to hear her
+speak, and to be permitted to look into those bright and glamorous blue
+eyes of hers. And so I listened like one in a trance as she told me
+of her life, and how she had been the eldest child of two celebrated
+artists and had never lacked anything she really wanted, and how from
+her earliest years she had loved music and the dance, but particularly
+the dance, and had followed her childhood inclinations in her chosen
+work for the State, though in her prescribed work she was a tutor. All
+this and much more Aelios told me about herself, while I heard her with
+adoration that must have been all too apparent in my fascinated gaze.
+But she seemed without self-consciousness and without realization of
+the tender sentiments welling up within me; and she rambled eagerly on
+and on, speaking with animation and vivacity, as one speaks to an old
+and amiable companion.
+
+We must have strolled through the rambling thoroughfares for an hour,
+when we seated ourselves on a cushioned marble bench at one corner of a
+wide court. “If we stay here until dark,” suggested Aelios, “you will
+see one of the most curious exhibitions that you have ever seen.”
+
+It seemed only a few minutes later when, without warning, the golden
+orbs above us flickered, grew dim, and flashed into blackness. Then,
+while I was wondering whether we were to be left in total gloom,
+other lights gleamed from the city’s unseen pinnacles; and their rays
+darted in long streamers against a blank glass wall directly across
+from us, illuminating it with fantastic and unbelievable designs.
+Unlike the searchlights that had amazed me at the Pageant of the Good
+Destruction, these lights were not without apparent purpose; they shed
+definite patterns, I might almost say pictures, upon the broad glass
+screen. First one could make out the form of a man, life-sized and
+with pale-colored robes, moving in agile cinematograph fashion; then
+a woman or a child would advance across the screen to meet him; then
+the two would engage in various significant motions or gesticulations,
+to be joined perhaps by others; and in the swaying and blending of
+the lights, the weird mingling and intermingling of a myriad shades
+and colors, the background of shadows and the foreground of lithe and
+active figures, I realized that I was witnessing the representation of
+scenes from Atlantean life!
+
+What those scenes were I cannot recall. But I have the impression that
+they aimed to present life symbolically rather than literally; that
+beauty was their purpose rather than accuracy, and that a pleasing
+harmony of color, tone and proportion was deemed more important than a
+stringent realism. I fear that I was not sufficiently advanced in the
+native art to appreciate them, for they left little more effect upon
+my mind than an exhibition of mere technique with the violin or piano
+would leave upon one untrained in music.
+
+But, at the time, the spectacle certainly did have its influence.
+Although vaguely aware that the seats about me were being silently
+occupied, I could scarcely give a thought to my surroundings; and under
+the enchantment of the shifting and pictorial lights, I felt as if
+Aelios and I were alone together; and I pressed close to her, until
+not a fraction of an inch divided us and it seemed that we breathed
+not as two persons but as one. Very cautiously, as though it were a
+clandestine and forbidden act, I reached out my hand till it touched
+hers and the palm closed softly over her fingers. She did not return
+the pressure and yet did not withdraw her hand, nor even seem to notice
+what I was doing; and, in my confusion, I scarcely knew whether to feel
+encouraged or repulsed.
+
+Then, by that wavering and uncertain light, I caught a glimpse of her
+eyes. They were bright and shining--and did they merely reflect her
+joy at the colored display? Not a word was spoken between us, nor was
+I anxious that a word be spoken; I had sudden visions of a tomorrow
+fairer than I would once have dared to hope for.
+
+
+
+
+ CHAPTER XX
+
+ Farm and Factory
+
+
+Early the following morning we were again under way. Leaving Thalos
+through a little arched gateway under the western wall, we trudged for
+several hours through flat green countryside. Here and there, amid
+breaks in the vegetation, we observed edifices which my companions
+described as “farmhouses,” but which, with their statue-lined walls
+and marble columns, seemed to me to be little less than palaces. These
+remarkable dwellings, of which there must have been four or five to
+every square mile, were conspicuous from a distance, for there were no
+obscuring trees, and the landscape was dominated by a hardy reed that
+grew shoulder-high in impenetrable clusters.
+
+Except for the size of this plant, I might have fancied it to be a
+variety of wheat. Not only were its leaves long and grass-like, but it
+bore a rich crop of some grain that closely resembled wheat, although
+each of the seed-clusters were large as ears of Indian corn. That it
+was cultivated for food purposes was obvious, for brilliant white lamps
+were beaming from the tinted columns as in the fruit-jungles, and at
+regular intervals we passed irrigation ditches, and now and then caught
+glimpses of gray-clad men at work amid the green thickets.
+
+But while this scenery was fairly interesting, it was on the whole the
+most monotonous I had yet viewed in Atlantis. Hence I was relieved when
+the landscape showed a sudden change, and the cultivated plains gave
+way to a series of long, low, grass-covered hills. From the beginning,
+I noticed something peculiar about these eminences, for their contours
+were rounded with almost geometrical evenness; while beyond the
+furthest heights, a clear, rapid stream flowed out of the ground as
+if forced up from nowhere, and, after meandering to the edge of the
+reed-covered plain, divided into half a dozen diverging irrigation
+canals. But all this was less surprising than what I next observed; for
+as I stood staring at the stream in wonder, a huge rock at the base of
+the nearest hill thrust itself outward, and a man emerged as if from
+the center of the earth!
+
+Startled, I turned to my companions for an explanation--but not a
+murmur issued from them, and their faces showed none of that amazement
+I might have expected. “Here is where we enter,” declared one of the
+tutors, in matter-of-fact tones; and followed by the rest of the party,
+he plunged through the aperture made by the dislodged boulder.
+
+Like one in a dream--or rather like one in a nightmare--I trailed
+with the others into that hole on the hillside. As I approached the
+entrance, I found that what I had taken to be a rock was not a rock at
+all, but merely a cleverly disguised bit of metal; upon reaching the
+doorway, I was amazed to find, instead of the tunnel-like corridor I
+had expected, a spacious and wide-vaulting hall.
+
+With the exception of the Sunken World itself it was the largest
+enclosure I had ever entered; indeed, it occupied the entire interior
+of the hill. Along the full length of a half-mile gallery the
+white-lanterned ceiling arched to a height of two hundred feet; and on
+each side of a broad passageway, rising almost to meet the ceiling,
+was a series of what I took to be gigantic boilers. All of these were
+connected with innumerable wires and with pipes thicker than a man’s
+body, while at the further end of the gallery the tubes were interwoven
+in intricate loops, coils and convolutions like the exposed entrails of
+a Titan.
+
+As I stepped through the doorway, a warm breeze swept my face, bearing
+to my nostrils the odor of oil, and at the same time bringing me
+reminders of the furnace-dry air of steam-heated apartments. “What
+place is this?” I could not forebear to ask; but almost instantly I was
+sorry that I had spoken, for four or five pairs of eyes were turned
+upon me in surprise at so obvious a question.
+
+“This is a distillery, of course,” answered one of my young companions.
+
+“A distillery?” I echoed, scarcely less astonished at his words than at
+the extraordinary appearance of the place. And although the Atlanteans
+had seemed to me to be a sober people, I had visions of the manufacture
+of intoxicants on a scale inconceivable to the most bibulous of my own
+countrymen.
+
+“Yes, this is where we prepare our distilled water,” continued my
+friend, surprised at my surprise.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+For a moment I merely stared at him without comprehension. “But why so
+much distilled water?” was all that I could gasp.
+
+“That’s easily explained,” said the young man, with a smile. “The water
+piped from our deep wells, which serves us for drinking purposes,
+couldn’t begin to take care of our irrigation problems--and without
+irrigation Atlantis would be a desert. The Salty River, of course,
+contains enough for all our needs; but it is ocean water, and the brine
+would kill all land vegetation. And so the only possibility was to
+distill the water. This was arranged for long ago by Agripides, when
+he built this distillery and eleven others, which together keep the
+irrigation system of Atlantis supplied, and incidentally provide us
+with all the salt required for domestic and chemical purposes.”
+
+“That may be all very well,” I remarked, “but the amount of heat
+necessary to evaporate so much water must be tremendous ...”
+
+“That is no problem at all,” my companion assured me. “By means of
+intra-atomic energy, we could generate power enough to distill the
+entire ocean.”
+
+I felt certain that this statement was an exaggeration, but before
+I had had time for comment, my attention was suddenly diverted. All
+of our party had paused before a circular slit in the floor; and a
+brown-clad workman, stepping forth from amid the boilers, applied a key
+to a little hole near the edge of the slit, and removed a steel disk
+perhaps five feet in diameter.
+
+Instantly we were bathed in a brilliant copper light, so dazzling
+that at first I had to turn abruptly away. Then as my startled eyes
+gradually accustomed themselves to the vivid illumination, I peered
+through a glass partition far down into what remotely reminded me
+of a furnace, except that no flames were visible, but from the
+vague fire-bright background great sheets and rods of a shining red
+or a blinding brassy yellow stared at me steadily with unbearable
+incandescence.
+
+“Those are the intra-atomic generators,” explained the workmen. “They
+are constantly liberating energy, which is transformed into electrical
+power by means of giant induction coils; and it is this electricity
+which is wired to the boiler-room below and heats the water from the
+Salty River.”
+
+“But how terrible to work down there!” it occurred to me to comment.
+“How can any man--”
+
+“It is not necessary to work down there,” I was promptly informed.
+“The generators continue operating automatically so long as they are
+supplied with fuel.”
+
+“What fuel do you use?” I inquired.
+
+The reply was not at all what I had expected. “Any of the heavier
+metals will do,” stated the workman. “One of the best of the cheaper
+fuels is gold, for its high atomic weight makes possible extensive
+dissociation. Sometimes, however, we use silver, platinum, or
+lead--although the latter is ordinarily regarded as too valuable for
+such purposes. A supply of lead will run the generator for twenty-seven
+years, one of silver for thirty-three, and one of gold for forty-five.
+When new fuel is required, we simply shoot it in through the tube over
+there.” And the speaker pointed to a tube of about the thickness of a
+man’s wrist, which projected several feet above the floor between two
+of the boilers.
+
+I thought that I had now seen enough of the distillery, and was not
+disappointed when my companions made ready to leave. But there was one
+problem which still troubled me: why did the building look so much
+like a hill from without, and why had such evident pains been taken to
+conceal its existence?
+
+To these questions I found a speedy answer. “If this edifice had
+been erected in the days before Agripides,” declared one of my young
+friends, “it would have been nothing more than an ugly mass of steel
+and stone. But Agripides, seeking a way to beautify the structure and
+hide its unavoidable defects, hit upon the plan of covering it with a
+coating of earth and sowing the earth with grass, so as to give the
+appearance of a green hill. All our factories, you will find, have in
+some such way been concealed or made beautiful.”
+
+This, indeed, I discovered to be the case. We had now reached the
+industrial center of Atlantis; and all the rest of that day we were
+busy inspecting manufacturing plants of sundry kinds and sizes. But
+nowhere was the air clouded with that smoke and dust which I had
+come to associate with industrial districts in my own land; nowhere
+was there a dingy or soot-blackened building, nowhere were my ears
+assaulted by the shrieking or droning of whistles, or by the hammering,
+pounding, screeching, whirring or grating of machines. Instead, we
+passed through a region that might have been recommended to sufferers
+from nervous ailments. In the midst of pleasant, grassy lands an
+occasional tree-bordered building arose with glittering steeples or
+stainless marble facade or august columns of granite; and within each
+building, which one might have mistaken for a mansion or a temple,
+electrically driven wheels and levers would be operating noiselessly,
+preparing the food of the Atlanteans or weaving their clothes from
+the fibre of a flax-like plant, manufacturing farm implements or
+fertilizers or scientific articles or household wares; and in each of
+these factories a few workers (never more than a score) would be calmly
+and often smilingly tending the machines, occupying thus their two or
+three hours of assigned daily service for the State.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+The institution that interested me most was the building where
+chemists were at work renewing the air supply of Atlantis--or, rather,
+the oxygen supply. Here, in a long hall dominated by great vats
+connected by pipes and wires reminding me vaguely of the distillery,
+a continual stream of water was being disintegrated by a process
+of electrolysis, the hydrogen being diverted to enter into various
+chemical compounds, with carbon nitrogen and other elements, the
+oxygen being released into the atmosphere to replace that consumed
+by respiration and combustion. By means of the air-gauge, a finely
+adjusted apparatus whose index was a flame that varied in intensity
+with the amount of oxygen, chemists were able to determine how much of
+this vital gas was required at any specific time; but some oxygen had
+to be provided continually, for, large as Atlantis was, it was not so
+great that nature would preserve a balance and replace the oxygen that
+was consumed by that freed in the course of organic processes of plant
+life.
+
+But if the Atlantean industries were arranged with a regard for the
+welfare and esthetic sensibilities of the people as a whole, scarcely
+less pains had been taken to insure the health and convenience of the
+workers. I will not speak of the safety devices, which had been so
+perfected that accidents were virtually unknown; I will not dwell upon
+the precautions to vary the monotony even of the two-or three-hour
+working day, to make possible individual initiative, to guard against
+fatigue and excessive strain, or to render the surroundings pleasant
+to the eye and mind. But what I must mention, because it impressed
+me as unique, is the fact that the workers were housed in dwellings
+not less imposing than the most stately city homes. The road took us
+through half a dozen villages reserved for the factory workers; and
+each of these seemed to be in itself a work of art, with many-columned
+residences, arches and marble portals and connecting colonnades,
+flowered parks and statuary and fountains, all co-ordinated in a
+tasteful and elegant design.
+
+
+
+
+ CHAPTER XXI
+
+ The Wall and the Wind-makers
+
+
+That evening we were lodged in the city of Arvon, a moderately large
+town which differed strikingly from anything we had yet seen. Its
+scattered houses were huddled amid vegetation so thick that from a
+distance it resembled a forest; and even at close range one could
+not lose sight of its sylvan aspect, since all the buildings were
+vine-covered and painted a green and brown that harmonized ideally with
+the woodland colors.
+
+But I must not devote too much space to the strange appearance of this
+town--still stranger sights were to greet me on the following day. For
+then I was to reach a turning-point in my journey, and to penetrate
+some of the salient mysteries of Atlantis.
+
+Even though I did not know what interesting discoveries were before me,
+I had a hint of something unusual very early in the morning. We had
+hardly left Arvon when I observed that the golden-lighted dome seemed
+lower and nearer than usual, and curved gradually down to westward
+until it appeared to merge with the ground.
+
+“There’s where the glass wall begins,” said one of the tutors,
+pointing; and I looked eagerly, hopeful that we would soon reach the
+wall itself.
+
+A little further on, the road curved abruptly southward, and for
+several miles we merely paralleled the wall. Then, to my joy, a
+familiar gurgling met my ears--we were back again near the Salty River.
+Straight across the stream we passed on an arching bridge dominated by
+a crystalline pale-blue colonnade; and, on the further side, we again
+turned westward, and followed the river directly toward the green glass
+wall.
+
+As we advanced, I noticed that the waters were becoming white and
+foamy, with great briny patches as if a passing steamer had churned
+up the waves. Gradually these frothy expanses grew wilder and more
+conspicuous, until the entire river was a seething, effervescent mass;
+and troubled waves sprang to life, with turbulence that increased as
+we moved upstream, until the bubbling white was mingled with the green
+and gray of leaping surges, and the waters were agitated as if by a
+storm-wind. Yet only the faintest breeze was blowing, and I could not
+understand the source of the strange commotion.
+
+At the some time, a disquieting sound came to my ears--the continuous
+and droning sound of thunder, dull and muffled but gradually growing
+louder in spite of the clamoring and roaring of the waves. So
+deep-toned and voluminous was it that it reminded me of a din I never
+expected to hear again--the booming of the ocean along resisting shores.
+
+All of our party moved without a word now, moved rapidly and with
+faces straining westward, as if eager for some rare and long-awaited
+event. In their very speechlessness there was a contagious tension;
+and, responsive to their mood, I too was expectant, though I could not
+imagine what there was to be anticipated.
+
+But I did not have long to wait. “Look! There it is!” exclaimed one of
+the party, suddenly. And he paused, and pointed straight ahead; and all
+his companions paused and pointed straight ahead, joining in his awed
+cries of “Look! There it is!”
+
+Of course, I strained my eyes quite as earnestly as any of them. But
+at first I saw nothing to impress me. All that was visible was a
+broad sheet of white looming just above the river for almost its full
+width, as though there were a falls a mile or two upstream. And, in my
+ignorance, I accepted this as the explanation.
+
+But I was speedily to discover my error. Suddenly the path bent away
+from the river at an acute angle; and as we followed our new course the
+distant thundering grew louder--while a cold wind began to sweep over
+us and the supposed waterfall took on unexpected dimensions. By degrees
+it lengthened until it seemed a long jet of water shot horizontally
+out of some colossal hose. Intensely white, with the whiteness of foam
+and edges blurred with spray, it went hurtling with the impetuosity
+and swiftness of an arrow from the nozzle of a gigantic pipe, plunging
+outward hundreds of yards in a graceful parabola and giving rise to the
+Salty River.
+
+Almost as remarkable as this torrent of water was the tube from which
+it was discharged. This great pipe, which may have been of a steel
+alloy, was well over a mile long, and was a hundred yards across at
+the opening; but it narrowed gradually as it crept westward along the
+ground and disappeared where the green horizon met the earth.
+
+Needless to say, I did not have to inquire as to the meaning. Only one
+explanation was conceivable: the metallic tube was the valve through
+which the X-111 had found entrance to Atlantis, the valve that admitted
+the ocean water and kept the Salty River supplied. The aperture at
+the ocean end was doubtless not very wide (I was later told that it
+was but twenty-five feet across); but such was the pressure at these
+depths that the waters burst through with the force and swiftness and
+tremendous volume I had observed, and had to be diverted through a long
+and gradually widening tube before their torrents could be controlled
+and safely emptied into the river channel.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+As we approached the glass wall, the hoarse and resonant roaring
+was continuously in our ears, thudding and crashing with echoes that
+reverberated like the combined monody of a hundred Niagaras. But,
+forgetful of the tumult, I kept my eyes fastened straight ahead, where
+the great green dome sloped down to meet the ground in a curve modelled
+on that of the actual heavens. Except for the dark weird coloration,
+I might have fancied that I was staring toward an actual horizon on
+earth; and so close was the resemblance that the illusion persisted
+until I was almost within a stone’s throw of the barrier. Only then
+could I persuade myself that I actually beheld a solid mass; and, even
+so, the curvature was so graceful and so elusive that I could not feel
+that a mere wall stretched before me; but, rather, I had the sense that
+it was some ultimate boundary, the dividing line between reality and
+infinite nothingness.
+
+This impression was confirmed by the fact that the wall at close range
+looked opaque. Olive-green and of impenetrable thickness, it seemed
+impervious to the rays of light; though, remembering my experiences on
+the X-111, I knew that it was really transparent.
+
+All the members of our party approached the wall almost breathlessly,
+then held out their hands and touched it in silence--a procedure which
+may have had some ceremonial importance, or may have been akin to the
+actions of persons who, seeing the ocean for the first time, gravely
+dip their hands in the salt water. At any rate, I lost no time in
+following their example, and found that the surface of the wall was
+just as I had expected--smooth and polished, and of a substance that
+would have been apparent to a blind man.
+
+After the twenty students had duly inspected the wall, one of the
+tutors lifted his voice so as to be heard by the entire party.
+
+“My friends,” said he, “we have now reached the border-land between
+Atlantis and the outside world. A rim of glass fifty feet thick
+divides us from the ocean; and that glass, as you know, is composed of
+dozens of layers, one above the other, several of them strengthened
+with interwoven strands of fine wire, and all composed of a special
+pressure-resisting glass devised at the orders of Agripides. You
+understand, of course, that the wall does not end where you see it, but
+penetrates five hundred feet underground, lest the ocean overwhelm us
+from beneath; you also understand that the glass is ribbed with steel,
+which holds it together in a sort of latticed framework, with girders,
+beams and stanchions at measured intervals like the metallic skeleton
+of a great building.
+
+“The erection of the wall represents the supreme accomplishment of
+Atlantean engineering, and required the labor of thirty thousand men
+for thirty-four years. But Agripides, with his usual foresight, planned
+it so, that the work, once done, would never require renewal, for glass
+is one of the most durable of substances, and is virtually immune to
+dissolution by the ocean waters. We have our immersible vessels, of
+course, which regularly range the seas around the glass dome in search
+of any possible fault or fissure; but no serious damage has ever yet
+been discovered, and it is safe to say that the present edifice will
+serve us and our descendants for a hundred thousand generations.”
+
+The speaker paused, as if for effect; then, noting that his audience
+remained silent, he concluded, “Is there anyone that would like to ask
+a question?”
+
+“Yes, I would,” I surprised myself by saying.
+
+All eyes were bent curiously upon me, and I was forced to continue,
+“Glass is, as you say, an exceedingly durable substance, but it is also
+extremely fragile. Is there no possibility that the wall will ever be
+cracked?”
+
+“Cracked?” echoed the tutor, with a surprised smile. “Do you think
+that, if there had been such a possibility, Atlantis would not have
+been inundated long ago? Granted, if any very heavy object were to
+collide with the wall, it might be broken and we would be flooded out
+like ants. But how could there be any such heavy object here in the
+deep sea? Certainly, the fishes couldn’t break through.”
+
+“No, of course not,” I conceded, feeling that I had made myself
+ridiculous--and with that the discussion ended. But my words were often
+to be recalled to me in the tempestuous days that followed; and more
+than one of my hearers was to speak of them as strangely prophetic.
+
+For the next hour we followed a little path that clung close to the
+glass wall. And, as we proceeded, my impression of its opaqueness
+was dissipated, for from time to time a little flickering light was
+momentarily visible beyond the green thicknesses; and I had disturbing
+remembrances of the lantern-bearing fishes that had haunted us on our
+way to Atlantis.
+
+We had covered not more than a mile or two when we met with a new
+surprise. A brisk breeze began to blow over us; and the farther we
+walked the sharper the breeze grew, until it assumed the fury of a
+gale, and for the first time since reaching Atlantis I felt cold,
+almost as if I were back on earth. Why we continued in the face of this
+strange blast I could not understand, nor whence it proceeded nor how
+it had been produced. But while I was wondering and fighting my way
+through the wind, a singular whirring sound came to my ears, a buzzing
+as of gigantic flies; and gradually that sound grew louder, until
+from resembling the murmuring of insects it came to remind me of the
+flapping of colossal wings. That this noise was somehow connected with
+the quickening wind was apparent from the first; and the relationship
+became evident when the path swerved abruptly away from the wall and I
+glanced back, to behold a series of queer-looking machines supported
+on stone pedestals high up against the glass. It would be impossible
+to say just what the machines were like, for they were in such rapid
+motion that the parts were not visible; but there were six or eight of
+them, and they were round, and probably each a hundred yards across;
+and so swiftly were they rotating that they formed each a gray blur
+through which the green of the wall was vaguely discernible.
+
+“Those are the electro-intra-atomic wind generators,” explained
+one of the tutors. “By means of these great fans and others like
+them stationed at various points around the wall, the atmosphere of
+Atlantis is kept in constant circulation. Without them the air would
+be stagnant and the climate sultry and unhealthy. These generators are
+in action at all times, with great air-wheels that make from ten to
+fifteen revolutions a second; and it is estimated that the daily energy
+consumed by each of them would be sufficient to boil a thousand tons of
+ice water.”
+
+We did not linger long in the vicinity of the great fans, for the
+strong wind was most annoying and the temperature too low for comfort.
+But we set out at a brisk pace across a moss-covered plain away from
+the wall; and we did not pause again until we had reached the city of
+Lerenon, which was our destination for the day.
+
+This town, which was located some miles from the wall and yet was
+constantly fanned by cool breezes from the wind generators, had one
+striking feature all its own: it was dominated by two colossal bronze
+figures, one of a man, the other of a woman, which reached far above
+the city domes and towers halfway to the green-glass sky. Both these
+statues were carved with an irresistible majesty, the man’s face that
+of an Apollo, the woman’s that of a Diana; and their right hands were
+extended high over the city roofs and joined in a firm clasp, so
+lifelike that I might almost have expected them to move and speak. At
+first I thought that they represented mythological characters, but an
+inscription at their base informed me of my error, for the man was
+meant to typify Wisdom, and the woman Beauty; and in their union above
+the spires and columns of Atlantis I thought I could read the meaning
+and purpose of the entire land.
+
+
+
+
+ CHAPTER XXII
+
+ The Journey Ends
+
+
+During the thirty days of our journey, I was the witness of marvels so
+numerous that, if I were to dwell upon them all, I might fill hundreds
+of pages. Yet while there is much that cannot be recorded and much
+that I have forgotten, there are some observations which have stamped
+themselves indelibly upon my memory, and which are so essential for an
+understanding of Atlantis that I could not well overlook them.
+
+Thus, I found that the wall enclosing the country formed a vast circle,
+of a diameter impossible to determine precisely but probably in the
+neighborhood of two hundred miles. Thus, also, I learned that the glass
+roof was at an average height of five hundred feet above the ground,
+although the distance varied greatly according to the level of the
+land; and I discovered that it was everywhere supported by myriads
+of the huge tinted columns--columns with steel interiors and surface
+of concrete or stone. I ascertained, likewise, that the Salty River
+followed an absolutely unbending course, flowing in a straight-line
+and on an even, gradual grade from the western wall of Atlantis to
+the eastern (since it was really a canal rather than a river); and I
+was amazed and dazzled at sight of the great intra-atomic pumps which
+forced the torrents back into the sea.
+
+Since they were expected to overcome a pressure of many tons to the
+square foot, these pumps had to be very powerful; and powerful they
+were, with their labyrinths of levers and revolving chains, and
+three-hundred-foot pistons and rods that pounded against the waters
+like gigantic pile-drivers, pressing them slowly back into the sea to
+the accompaniment of a roaring and thundering that could be heard for
+miles and that proved deafening upon close approach.
+
+The cities of Atlantis, according to the count I made, were eighteen
+in number (exclusive of the smaller towns and villages). But an
+Atlantean city, although always occupying considerable space, was
+what we in America should scarcely regard as a city at all, since it
+never had more than twenty or twenty-five thousand inhabitants. This
+insignificant population, when considered along with the liberal amount
+of territory allotted each town, accounted for the fact that no great
+crowds were ever to be seen on the streets; and it also explained how
+it was possible for efficient popular assemblages to debate and decide
+public questions.
+
+But the surprising fact about the Atlantean cities was not so much
+their small population as their almost unbelievable variety. No town
+in Atlantis was like any other town; the only characteristic possessed
+by them all in common was their unfailing beauty. To give some idea of
+their amazing diversity, I might mention the city of Atolis, which,
+when seen from the hill that surmounted it, formed a definite pattern,
+resembling some colossal Grecian temple of which the streets and
+avenues were the columns. Or I might picture Aedla, which was built
+along a series of canals connecting with the Salty River, with a lake
+in the center, giving a Venetian effect, except that the palaces were
+more exquisitely designed than any in the upper world. Then, again, I
+might depict the small town of Acropolon, in which all the houses were
+connected in an enormous colonnaded quadrangle surrounding a vividly
+flowering park, reminding me of some university I had seen long before;
+or I might launch into a lengthy description of Mangona, another
+small town, whose houses were all roofless and collapsible, and were
+generally taken down during the day and put into place only at night or
+when the inhabitants desired seclusion.
+
+But more interesting to me than any of these was Sardolos, one of
+the few present-day Atlantean cities that had existed before the
+Submergence. Although of course the town was not the same as in ancient
+times, and although its gracefully winding thoroughfares and marble
+friezes and frescoed domes represented the work of modern artists, yet
+some relics of the old days had been carefully preserved.
+
+In one corner of the city, concealed from the general gaze in a
+statue-lined bronze enclosure, were the remains of buildings said to
+date from the second century B. S. Yet, ancient as these ruins were, my
+first impression was that there was something familiar about them. The
+most conspicuous exhibit was a stone wall, five stories high and with
+gaping rectangular holes where the windows had been; and to the rear
+was a mass of rusted and distorted steel, reaching the full height of
+the wall with twisted, spidery arms that had once lent it support.
+
+“A splendid specimen of pre-Submergence architecture,” stated a
+placard placed prominently before the exhibit. “This was the seat of
+the Stock Market of old Sardolos--a wholesale gambling house abolished
+by the Anti-Corruption Act of the first century A. S. The mass of
+shapeless and desiccated stone opposite is all that remains of the
+Inter-Atlantean Bank, which owned a controlling share in this gambling
+resort; while just to the right were the ruins of the shrine in which
+the owners of the bank worshipped, and of the clubhouse in which, late
+in the second century B. S., they convened in the interest of their
+lotteries, and decided to declare the fifth Atlanto-Bengenese war.”
+
+ * * * * *
+
+But when I looked to see the ruins, all that I beheld was a series
+of irregular stone walls, not over two or three feet high and brown
+with the lifeless parchment hue of extreme age. Somehow, it made me
+uncomfortable to look upon these vestiges of the past; nor was I
+relieved when I gazed at a picture of Sardolos as it had been, and saw
+two long opposing rows of geometrically regular five-story buildings.
+To think of these, and then to turn to present-day Atlantis, was merely
+to shudder at the contrast; yet all the while I could not repress the
+sense that I was standing in the presence of something undefinably
+familiar.
+
+If it was somewhat irritating to gaze at the ruins of Sardolos,
+the disagreeable moments were few indeed during the thirty days of
+the journey. All in all, I have rarely taken part in so thoroughly
+delightful an expedition; and my joy in the trip is not to be explained
+merely by the engrossing sights of Atlantis, nor by the companionship
+of the twenty enthusiastic, friendly young students, but rather by
+the presence of one who meant more to me than all else that Atlantis
+contained. My opportunities of speaking with Aelios were not plentiful,
+for she seemed always to be engaged in conversation with some member
+of the party; but occasionally I exchanged a few words with her,
+and occasionally she darted a bright smile in my direction, thereby
+reassuring me when at times I gave way to disturbing doubts.
+
+It was not until our travels were drawing to a close that I had another
+intimate talk with her. The morning of the thirtieth day had arrived,
+and we had set out through wide fields of the wheat-like reed toward
+the city of Archeon, which we hoped to reach shortly after noon. But,
+absorbed in somber contemplation, I took no part in the merriment of
+my companions, and almost from the first I lagged moodily behind them.
+Hence it was a relief to hear light footsteps suddenly at my side, and
+to find a flaxen-curled head nodding a greeting and a pair of kindly
+bright blue eyes peering at me inquiringly.
+
+“Aelios!” I exclaimed. And I returned her greeting in terms that could
+not half express my pleasure.
+
+She wasted no time about plunging into the subject that had brought her
+to me. “Today our journey ends,” she reminded me, almost regretfully.
+“And tomorrow you must take up your duties as a citizen. You may find
+matters a little strange at first. Perhaps there are already some
+things that puzzle you.”
+
+“Indeed there are,” I admitted. “I really have very little idea what I
+am expected to do.”
+
+“Oh, but you must have some idea!” she remonstrated. “Why, haven’t you
+been appointed Historian of the Upper World?”
+
+“Yes, that is so,” I murmured.
+
+“Then you must set out at once upon your duties. In work such as yours,
+no record will be taken of the hours you employ, but you have a moral
+obligation to work not less than two hours a day.”
+
+“That doesn’t seem excessive,” I stated, with a smile.
+
+“Yes, but remember you have also an obligation to do some work on your
+own account for the State. And things won’t be any easier, if, as you
+say, you will combine your assigned and chosen work.”
+
+“The real problem,” I acknowledge hesitatingly, “is that I don’t know
+the language well enough to write a history.”
+
+Aelios frowned disapprovingly. “Oh, but you have already a good
+speaking command of Atlantean,” she pointed out. “And with practice
+you should be able to write passably well. Meanwhile I’d advise you to
+go to the government library, and read up all you can to familiarize
+yourself with our language--and with our life.”
+
+I thanked Aelios for the suggestion, and promised to visit the library
+at the first opportunity.
+
+“But don’t forget that mere working and studying won’t be enough,”
+she continued. “I hope you’ll make friends of many of our people, and
+participate in our intellectual contests and recreations. You might
+even join one of the political parties.”
+
+“Political parties?” I repeated. “I didn’t know there were any parties
+in Atlantis.”
+
+“Oh, yes, of course there are,” she quickly returned. “There are
+always several parties to present their opinions at the Hall of Public
+Enlightenment.”
+
+“What parties are those?” I inquired.
+
+“Well, let’s see,” she enumerated, reflectively. “First of all,
+there’s the Party of Submergence, so-called because it was founded
+by Agripides and has been the ruling group ever since the Good
+Destruction. Then there is the Industrial Reform Party, which
+contends that all machines and in particular intra-atomic engines
+are incongruous in Atlantis and should be reduced to a minimum far
+below the present number. Then, again, there is the Party of Artistic
+Emancipation, which is really literary rather than political, and
+appeals for freedom in art. Also, there is the Party of Birth
+Extension, which maintains that the government should relax its
+restrictions on population. And, finally, enlarging the principles
+of the Birth Extension Party, there is the Party of Emergence, which
+is the smallest of them all and has always been highly unpopular if
+not actually despised, since it holds that we should renounce the
+principles of Agripides, enter into communication with the upper world,
+and send our excess population to live above seas.”
+
+“That sounds quite interesting,” I commented, for the Party of
+Emergence seemed to me to be the most understandable of the group. “But
+you say this last party has never had much success?”
+
+“Fortunately not. Its members have always been looked down upon
+as anti-social agitators, for they have transgressed against
+that fundamental principle, ‘Atlantis for the Atlanteans.’ Few
+self-respecting citizens have ever lent them support, and they have
+never been powerful enough to carry any of their proposals.”
+
+“Too bad,” I found myself remarking, with unguarded frankness; and the
+shocked expression on Aelios’ face showed me how I had erred.
+
+“At any rate, now that you know something about the parties, you will
+be better able to choose among them,” she concluded.
+
+I assured her that I would choose as best I could.
+
+“If there’s ever anything you’re in doubt about,” she urged, “don’t
+be afraid to ask me. I know that things aren’t easy here for you, a
+stranger from a strange land, and I’d like to help if I could.”
+
+I thanked her fervently, and declared that I should not hesitate to
+consult her should occasion arise. And secretly I was determined that
+the occasion should arise.
+
+“I’m glad to hear you say that,” she returned. And her eyes shone with
+a bright light, and her lips quivered sympathetically, and her whole
+face radiated kindliness and warmth.
+
+But at this juncture she saw fit to give the interview an impersonal
+turn. “See, over there!” she exclaimed, pointing through a break in the
+dense green foliage. “Those are the towers of Archeon!”
+
+I looked eagerly, and far across the plain I beheld a minute glittering
+spire, more than half obscured by the intervening array of tinted
+columns--the first sign of that city which I was this day to enter, and
+where I was to make my home, and seek the fulfillment of my love, and
+undertake my duties as a citizen of the Sunken World.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+[Illustration: ... By degrees it lengthened until it seemed a long
+jet of water shot horizontally out of some colossal hose. Intensely
+white, with the whiteness of foam and edges blurred with spray, it went
+hurtling with the impetuosity and swiftness of an arrow from the nozzle
+of a gigantic pipe, a plunging outward hundreds of yards in a graceful
+parabola and giving rise to the River.]
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+
+
+ CHAPTER XXIII
+
+ Xanocles
+
+
+As an accredited citizen of Atlantis, I was assigned to permanent
+lodgings immediately after returning to Archeon. The housing
+representative of the Atlantean government (the only substitute in the
+Sunken World for our “realtors”) accompanied me on a leisurely tour
+of the city, allowing me my choice of not less than fifteen or twenty
+apartments. The task of selection was by no means easy, not because
+it was hard to secure suitable quarters but because it was difficult
+to choose among so many desirable places. Never before had I realized
+how utterly superior the Atlantean homes were to our own--out of all
+the houses I visited, there was not one that was not separated by wide
+spaces from its neighbors, or that did not enjoy a full share of air
+and light, or that did not look comfortable and alluring. The grim and
+musty interiors of many of our own dwellings, the furniture-littered
+rooms, the glaring bad taste of gilt and tinsel chairs and adornments,
+found no parallel among the Atlantean residences I visited. Instead,
+each apartment was so artlessly inviting that I might have claimed it
+at once as my home.
+
+The distinguishing feature of most of the Atlantean houses was a
+central court that reminded me of the dwellings of the ancient world.
+Usually the court was square or rectangular in shape, though in some
+instances it was hexagonal or round; and more often than not it was
+completely enclosed. Some of the courts were surrounded by stalwart
+columns, but the majority were plain. Some had walls of granite, some
+of marble, some of a peculiar bluish stone that I could not recognize;
+some were marked by spangled fountains, some by flower-gardens, some by
+swimming pools; and the most distinctive of all was arranged as an art
+gallery, with a dominating statue in the center and paintings hung at
+intervals along the sides. But whatever the particular contents of the
+court, it was certain to be accessible by four or five doors leading
+into the several apartments.
+
+After inspecting the various prospective lodgings, I finally decided in
+favor of a little three-room suite (three rooms, that is, in addition
+to the sleeping chamber on the roof) which looked out over a tree-lined
+expanse toward the sapphire dome of the Hall of Public Enlightenment.
+I was urged to take these quarters largely because of the fascination
+of the frieze-lined adjourning court, whose finely modelled images of
+gods and nymphs and satyrs offered me a prospect of fruitful study.
+But I was also captivated by the rooms themselves, which gave a
+bizarre effect with their walls decked with seaweed tapestries, and
+which seemed at once like a home and a temple with their high vaulted
+ceilings, their arching doorways and great elliptical windows, and
+their removable partitions capable of transforming the entire apartment
+into a single good-sized hall.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+It was fortunate perhaps that I chose these particular lodgings, for
+otherwise I might never have known Xanocles. Xanocles was to be my one
+intimate among all the men of Atlantis. It so happened that he--that
+fiery spirit, audacious thinker, and trustworthy friend--had chosen
+his abode in the same building; and it also happened (since fate
+works in inscrutable ways even in Atlantis) that he and I were early
+thrown together. It was, indeed, on the very day after my return to
+Archeon that Xanocles and I met. I had just settled in my new home,
+and had gone out into the court for my first close inspection of its
+mural decorations, when a door across from me slid open and a tall,
+white-clad figure emerged. A single glance would have told me that the
+stranger was exceptional, and a single glance perhaps told him that I
+was exceptional in Atlantis: for he paused in startled surprise, and
+for an embarrassed instant we stood staring inquiringly at one another.
+In that first fleeting glimpse I had an impression of a powerful
+personality; a large head poised squarely over a pair of broad and
+capable shoulders; two vivid blue eyes deeply set beneath a massive
+brow; a beardless oval face dominated by flowing chestnut locks;
+classic features, with chin and nose consummately modelled. But I did
+not notice then what I was often to observe later: the ironic glitter
+in the alert eyes, the forceful and determined lines into which the
+face would habitually settle, the air of overflowing vigor tempered by
+an easy self-command. Judging from the smooth contours of the man’s
+face, I took him to be not over thirty years of age; and I was later
+much surprised to learn that he was well past forty (since in Atlantis
+people do not age so rapidly as on earth).
+
+“By Agripides! You must be one of those visitors from up above!”
+exclaimed the newcomer, recovering from his astonishment. And he
+approached me with a winning smile, and held out both hands by way of
+greeting. “My name is Xanocles. We seem to be neighbors, you and I.
+Perhaps we can get to know each other.”
+
+“I hope we shall,” I seconded, as I took his hands. “My name is
+Harkness. I’ve just finished my tour around Atlantis, and now I’m
+supposed to begin duty as a citizen.”
+
+“That’s quick work,” nodded Xanocles, approvingly. And then, after an
+instant’s pause, “So you’re the one they’ve appointed Historian of the
+Upper World?”
+
+I pleaded guilty to the accusation.
+
+“I knew it must be so,” explained my new acquaintance, “because only
+one of the immigrants has been admitted to citizenship. Of course,
+there will be others later on.”
+
+“Won’t you come in?” I invited, with a gesture toward my new apartments.
+
+Xanocles needed no second invitation. A minute later we were seated
+opposite one another on seaweed cushions in the little room that was to
+be my study.
+
+“It seems to me, Harkness,” he suggested, using my name as familiarly
+as though he had known me all my life, “we might as well be frank with
+one another from the beginning. At least, I might as well be frank with
+you. And I’d better start by warning you that you’ll not gain much from
+acquaintance with me. I’m none too popular.”
+
+“No?” I demanded, wondering vaguely what offense he had committed.
+
+“No,” he confessed. “I’m so very unpopular, in fact, that it may
+reflect upon you even to be seen in my company.”
+
+“But what is it that you’ve done?” I asked, thinking it strange that
+this attractive and able-looking man should be so disliked. “Surely,
+you haven’t blown up a building, or stolen some one’s jewels, or killed
+a man--”
+
+A frown of disgust passed across Xanocles’ face. “Such primitive forms
+of violence,” he reminded me, “are unknown in Atlantis. No, I haven’t
+stooped to anything so low. But I’ve done something bad enough in the
+eyes of the people.”
+
+“I’ll have to give it up,” said I, growing more puzzled each moment.
+
+“It shouldn’t be hard to guess--not if you know the ways of Atlantis,”
+he continued, gravely. “I’ve joined the Party of Emergence.”
+
+“The Party of Emergence?” I exclaimed, remembering what Aelios had told
+me of this minority group.
+
+“I not only joined the party,” he acknowledged, completing the
+indictment, “but I’ve let them elect me one of their Debating
+Delegates.”
+
+“But I don’t exactly understand--” I admitted, hesitatingly.
+
+“You would understand if you knew more about Atlantis. Every people has
+to have its pet aversion, I suppose, and our pet aversion down here is
+the Emergence Party. That’s because it opposes the principles of the
+one hundred per cent Atlanteans.”
+
+“But just what is the Emergence Party?” I inquired, still in doubt as
+to the tenets of this detested faction. “Is it anything so terrible?”
+
+“That all depends upon the point of view,” declared Xanocles,
+enigmatically.
+
+He paused long enough to give me an instant’s scrutiny with keen and
+quizzical eyes. “I am not sure that you would understand,” he decided,
+speaking as much to himself as to me. “But the main thing is that we
+oppose the compulsory limitation of population.”
+
+“Compulsory limitation of population?” I repeated, wondering if I had
+heard him correctly.
+
+“Most certainly. You’ve heard, perhaps, that our population is limited
+by law to five hundred thousand.”
+
+“But that’s impossible!” I cried, incredulously.
+
+“Experience has proved quite the contrary,” he dissented.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+For a moment I did not reply. I merely sat staring at my companion,
+trying to fathom the secret hidden in those inscrutable grave eyes of
+his. And though he gave no sign of not being utterly truthful, I ended
+by giving expression to my scepticism.
+
+“What do you do with your extra inhabitants? Do they emigrate to the
+center of the earth? Or do you prefer to shoot them or drown them, or
+perhaps to asphyxiate them humanely?”
+
+“There are no extra inhabitants,” was the surprising reply. “Do you
+know nothing of the Milares Compulsory Population Law?”
+
+I was forced to confess my ignorance.
+
+“Then let me enlighten you,” volunteered Xanocles, with a tolerant
+smile. “First let me take you back a few thousand years, to the days
+just after the Submergence. At that time the population of Atlantis
+was several millions, and the swarms of our people were so dense that
+long hours of labor were necessary, living quarters were crowded and
+unsanitary, and there was little time for the creation or appreciation
+of beauty. This state of affairs endured for over a century, when,
+after much discussion, the Milares Compulsory Population Law was
+passed, and the citizenry was gradually reduced to its present
+satisfactory numbers.”
+
+“And what was the Milares Population Law?” I asked.
+
+“It is the law that is still the backbone of our life. According to
+Milares, a great social philosopher of the second century A. S., the
+most important of public questions is that of parentage. He maintained
+that the parents of each generation might either poison or uplift the
+next; and all of his numerous pamphlets and books bore the warning
+that persons congenitally deficient in mind or physique should not be
+permitted to breed, while those of the higher physical and intellectual
+qualities should be encouraged.
+
+“In pursuance of these views, Milares proposed a basic innovation in
+social customs; he recommended that the institution of marriage be
+dissevered from that of parenthood. In other words, while marriage--and
+likewise divorce--should be permitted to all that desired it,
+parenthood should become a subject of drastic state regulation: any
+young couple wishing, children must have their fitness examined by
+a carefully selected State board. Since effective methods of birth
+control were known, this system was wholly practicable, and, in fact,
+has proved--”
+
+“But what if the orders of the Board were disobeyed?” I interrupted.
+“Certainly, the unlawful newcomer couldn’t be punished.”
+
+“Certainly not. But a stigma would attach to the parents--the stain of
+illegitimacy.”
+
+“You mean that the parents would be considered illegitimate?”
+
+“Exactly. And the disgrace is so great that few persons have ever
+offended in that way. As a result, we have never at any time exceeded
+the prescribed population by more than ten or twelve thousands.”
+
+“Even so,” I contended, rather vaguely, “it seems to me that such a
+system would be altogether too arbitrary to succeed.”
+
+“Yet it has succeeded splendidly. The experience of nearly three
+thousand years has vindicated it beyond dispute. Do you think that,
+at the time of the Submergence our men and women enjoyed such
+perfection of physical beauty as today? Or do you imagine that the
+intellectual and artistic types were then predominant? Far from it!
+Thousands upon thousands were sickly and stunted in body; a myriad
+were imbecilic, weak-minded or insane. But thanks to the rigidity of
+the selection, these types have been entirely eliminated; and, owing
+largely to the same cause, the average human life has been lengthened
+from the pre-Submergence figure of sixty-five years to a hundred and
+twenty--which means that the man of ability has a whole century of
+mature service to render instead of a mere four, or five decades.”
+
+I had no choice except to admit that the results were marvelous. But at
+the same time I remembered a vital oversight in Xanocles’ recitation.
+“All this tells me nothing of the Party of Emergence,” I pointed out.
+“In fact, if the Milares Population Law has worked so successfully, I
+cannot understand why you should oppose it.”
+
+“It would not be strictly correct to say that we oppose it,” he
+explained. “We recognize its beneficent results, but we believe
+that the time has come to modify it. Not that we would increase the
+population of Atlantis beyond the half million mark, for that would
+be to impose an intolerable burden upon us all; but we hold that many
+deserving persons are being deprived of parenthood, and that many more
+children of the highest quality might be born. To furnish a simple
+illustration, the Board seems to believe it unwise to perpetuate the
+radical strains, and so rules with suspicious frequency against members
+of the Party of Emergence.”
+
+“Then precisely what is it that your party advocates?” I questioned.
+
+“Just what our name implies: to let our surplus population emerge into
+the upper world. That would be easily possible, for the submersible
+repair ships that range the ocean about the glass wall would be capable
+of conveying us above seas. Of course, there might be no possibility
+of a return, but a return would not be desirable: it would be enough
+to insure life for thousands of our unborn sons and daughters, and to
+remake the upper world by an infiltration of our superior blood and
+standards. Besides,”--here Xanocles hesitated perceptibly--“there is
+another reason.”
+
+“What is that?” I felt bound to inquire.
+
+Xanocles remained silent for a moment, staring abstractedly toward
+the romping fauns and mermaids on the seaweed tapestries of the
+opposite wall. Then slowly he resumed, “We hold--and in this we are
+violently combated by our friends of the Submergence Party--that there
+was one minor flaw in the plans of Agripides. In a thousand respects
+his projects were perfect; but we believe that in the thousandth and
+first he made an oversight--perhaps an unavoidable oversight. He did
+not leave room enough in Atlantis for adventure. Everything here is
+so well designed that there is little chance for daring courage, the
+unknown--little chance for sheer primitive rashness and hardihood.
+Our games and recreations, our art, our political contests, of course
+consume much of our surplus energy; but, after all, we are the children
+of savage ancestors, and among our young there is a craving for keener
+experience. And so we of the Emergence Party favor the increase of
+population, so that those who wish may enjoy the greatest adventure of
+all--may launch their vessels toward unknown worlds!”
+
+“You would find that adventure well worth taking,” I commented.
+
+“Then you--you perhaps agree with the Party of Emergence?” cried
+Xanocles, rising and coming toward me enthusiastically.
+
+“Perhaps I do,” I admitted, also rising, and taking his extended hands.
+And as I felt his hearty clasp, it seemed to me that I had not only
+gained a friend but found my political allegiance.
+
+
+
+
+ CHAPTER XXIV
+
+ What the Books Revealed
+
+
+Amid all the excitement of my return to Archeon, my establishment
+in new quarters and my meeting with Xanocles, I had not forgotten
+Aelios’ advice to visit the library at the first opportunity. Nor had I
+forgotten my official duties as Historian of the Upper World, nor the
+necessity for acquiring more, explicit knowledge of undersea customs
+before I could hope to interpret my own country to the Atlanteans.
+Hence I was determined to accomplish a double object: to prepare myself
+for my prescribed work and at the same time to gratify my curiosity by
+an extensive course of reading.
+
+As soon as I was fully settled in my new apartment, I set out for the
+main government library--and with highly interesting and even startling
+results. I found the building without difficulty: a many-domed edifice
+of granite and white chalcedony, located in a large flower-bordered
+square near the center of town. Had I not been able to identify it from
+the descriptions, I might have recognized it by the streams of people
+constantly filing in and out, giving me the feeling that it was the
+business heart of the city.
+
+Yet my first impressions of the library were bewildering in the
+extreme. Not only was the building one of the largest I had seen
+(covering not less than five or six acres) but the volumes it harbored
+were amazing in their profusion and variety. My first surprise was at
+the discovery that there were no railings, fences or locked doors,
+as in all other libraries I had known. Here the visitor was admitted
+without question to every room and corridor; my second surprise--and
+a far greater one--was caused by the queer arrangement of the books.
+For the volumes were catalogued and stocked, not alphabetically, but
+chronologically; there was a gallery reserved for each century of
+Atlantean history, down to the seventh century B. S.; and within the
+galleries, the books were arranged by authors and subjects in a way
+that impressed me as utterly novel. In a niche among the books, for
+example, one would observe the bust of a stern-browed, bearded man;
+and, coming close, one would note that this was the poet Sargos; and
+just below the bust one would find the complete collection of the
+poet’s works, as well as the commentaries upon them. Or, in another
+corner of the room, one would pause to admire the painting of a crowded
+ancient seaport; and the inscription below the painting would tell one
+that this was the vanished maritime city of Therion; and just beneath
+this inscription would be the books wherein Therion was pictured and
+discussed.
+
+In a way, the building reminded me of a museum as much as of a
+library, for, in addition to the paintings and statues, each gallery
+was featured by furniture, rugs, vases, tapestries and decorations
+that corresponded with the original date of the books. The effect of
+oddity was enhanced by the fact that the volumes themselves, while in
+many cases modern reprints, were not infrequently bound in the style
+of their first editions; and the total impression was most curious
+and interesting, considering the contrasting sizes and the numberless
+shades and colors of the books, and the various grades of silk,
+parchment and artificial leather in which they were attired.
+
+Yet the appearance of the books was the least noteworthy fact about
+them. Their sheer abundance was a source of unceasing astonishment
+to me--it seemed as if every era in Atlantean history had been a
+literary one. As nearly as I could determine, there had been an average
+of several hundred books a year which had been thought worthy of
+preservation--and the high period of productivity had already endured
+for twenty-five centuries! Nor were the favored works merely stored
+up in dusty shelves where they might remain forever unnoticed--every
+book of the scores which I opened had been well thumbed, and the crowds
+constantly browsing along the alcoves and aisles gave evidence that
+literary interest was not purely a thing of the past.
+
+It was not long before I myself felt inclined to emulate those
+enthusiasts. Seated in company with twenty or thirty Atlanteans before
+the long marble table that adorned the most modern of the galleries, I
+began to taste the contents of several books I had selected at random;
+and so delightful did they prove, that it was four or five hours before
+I had any thought of leaving.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+While all the books which I inspected proved richly diverting, the one
+that interested me most was a little volume entitled “Social Life in
+the Thirty-first Century.” When I recall today the unusual size of the
+type and the extreme simplicity of the style, I feel sure that the book
+was designed for an immature audience; but this fact did not then occur
+to me, and I found the work admirably suited to my needs. Questions
+that had been perplexing me ever since my arrival in Atlantis were now
+explained, in a manner that dispersed all doubts; and I found myself
+possessed of a clearer conception than ever before of Atlantean ideas
+and institutions.
+
+I had been wondering, for example, about the statue-like palace
+wherein Rawson and I had been imprisoned; I was now informed that
+this, “The Temple of the Stars,” was among the oldest buildings in
+Atlantis, having been erected just before the Submergence so that the
+people might bring back to mind at will the aspect of the skies. I had
+been wondering, likewise, about the “Hall of Public Enlightenment,”
+that amber-hued and sapphire theatre in which I had lately witnessed
+several debates; I now read that such a building had been erected
+centuries before in each of the Atlantean cities as a place of popular
+assemblage, a sort of forum, wherein the people might decide upon
+public questions; and I also learned that any citizen might attend the
+meetings there, that any might take part in the discussions, and that
+it was at such popular gatherings that the few laws of the country were
+proposed and the most important problems weighed and settled.
+
+The discussion of the Halls of Public Enlightenment naturally paved
+the way for a description of the political system and government of the
+Sunken World. “The State of Atlantis,” I read, “is neither a monarchy,
+an oligarchy, nor a republic. It is a Commonality, which means that
+all things are possessed in common by the people and all activities
+shared among them. At the head of the Atlantean State is the High Chief
+Adviser, whose principle duty is by way of counseling the people, but
+who decides certain specified minor questions confronting the Atlantean
+State and is empowered to assume dictatorial authority in case of a
+national crisis (although such a crisis has never occurred since the
+riots of the second century A. S., following the passage of the Milares
+Compulsory Population Law).
+
+“Like all the other officials of Atlantis, the High Chief Adviser
+assumes his position neither by appointment nor by heredity nor by
+election, but by Automatic Selection; or, in other words, he has taken
+office after defeating all rivals in a series of debates and rigorous
+competitive examinations. His term of office is indefinite, but every
+three years he is expected to prove his fitness by engaging in contests
+with qualified aspirants for the Advisorship; and unless he can still
+outdo all opponents, a new chief executive is installed.”
+
+It would have seemed to me that such a system would have detracted
+from the dignity of the High Chief Adviser; but the book informed me
+that, on the contrary, it added to his dignity, since he was assured
+of holding office on a basis of merit only. In fact, he was bound to
+keep fit and even to improve himself while in office; and most High
+Chief Advisers did actually remain so well qualified that they stayed
+in power for an average term of thirty years. Indeed, Icenocles (the
+incumbent at the time of the publication of the book) had already ruled
+for forty-five years, and now, at the mature age of one hundred and
+seven, he still regularly put all competitors to shame.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+All this, of course, told me nothing about Atlantean law-making, law
+enforcement and the administration of justice. Therefore I eagerly
+read on, and found many of my questions speedily answered. To my
+astonishment, I learned that there was no such thing as a legislature
+or a law-making group in Atlantis!--and yet such bodies were not
+unknown to the native political theory. “Ancient experience has taught
+us,” said the book, “that representative government usually represents
+only some particular faction. And in a community whose members are
+few and all of whose citizens are intelligent, there is no necessity
+for delegated authority. Local statutes and ordinances were abolished
+in Atlantis at the time of the Submergence; and the few national laws
+are proposed in any of the cities in the Hall of Public Enlightenment.
+Having been debated and approved by an assemblage of a hundred citizens
+or more, the measure is submitted to a referendum of all the Atlanteans
+after the lapse of thirty days--and a majority vote will suffice for
+its passage.
+
+“At the head of each city is a Local Adviser, selected in the same
+manner as the High Chief Adviser; and, aided by a corps of from five
+to fifteen assistants also chosen competitively, he decides those
+questions not settled in the popular assemblies,--questions such as
+the amount of energy to be devoted to the erection of new buildings,
+the time and nature of local festivals, the regulation of local
+hygienic problems, the number of public physicians required to attend
+the ill and aged, and a dozen other matters of practical and artistic
+concern. Equally important theoretically, though in actual practice far
+less so, is the court of eleven judges which presides in each town,
+settling all disputes among citizens and reprimanding the law-breakers.
+No doubt there were frequently such persons as law-breakers three
+thousand years ago, when these courts were planned, but today such
+offenders are virtually unknown, for the only crimes are those of
+impulse and passion, and these are exceedingly rare--fortunately,
+the congenital criminals have been wiped out along with lunatics and
+morons by our rigorous birth selection. Occasionally, indeed, some
+diseased person will break some unwritten rule of society, such as
+that against trapping or slaying fishes or small animals; but the
+government hospitals care for such unfortunates, just as they care
+for the criminals of impulse, and not infrequently effect a cure. As
+for disputes among individuals, they are as obsolete as embezzlement
+or highway robbery, for now that the ownership of property has been
+abolished, what is there left to quarrel about? And so for the most
+part our courts endure somewhat as the appendix endures in the human
+body--mere anachronistic reminders of an age that is no more.”
+
+At a single sitting I read my book from cover to cover. Even aside
+from what I have already mentioned, the facts that it told me were
+innumerable and highly varied: how the great golden lamps of Atlantis
+were electrically lighted and were switched on and off at specified
+intervals by country-wide clockwork; how all Atlanteans, old and
+young, ill and healthy, were cared for by the State, so that no man
+was weighed down with dependents; how disease had been almost wiped
+out, since all the commoner noxious germs had been conquered; how
+religion in the organized sense had ceased to exist, for the reason
+that each man was expected to arrive at his own philosophy; how the
+temples that littered the country were without theological meaning, but
+were sanctuaries of beauty whereto any one might come at any time to
+worship amid the solitude of his own thoughts; how education was one
+of the prime pursuits of the people, and was participated in by all
+from childhood to old age, but was never undertaken by the mob method
+popular in the upper world.
+
+From the few pages that the author of the “Social Life” devoted to
+the latter subject, I feel sure that the Atlanteans would have been
+horrified at our system of herding forty or fifty children together in
+subjection to a glowering pedagogue: their theory was that personal and
+friendly contact with the teacher was the important thing, and so their
+boys and girls were taught in small groups, and never for many hours
+a day, nor with more than a minimum of restraint upon their natural
+spirits, nor in a specified and unvarying place, for as often as not
+their school-room was a marble colonnade or the court of a temple
+or even the open fields. And, in the same way, the higher education
+among the Atlanteans (except in the case of scientific work requiring
+laboratory training) was much less formal than among us. There were no
+such things as universities or university degrees, but men and women of
+recognized wisdom and learning were chosen to commune with the young
+and discuss with them the problems of life, much as Socrates did when
+he presided among his disciples; and these “Guardians of the Mind,” as
+they were called, would counsel and direct their young charges, and
+guide them in that reading which constituted their primary source of
+information.
+
+
+
+
+ CHAPTER XXV
+
+ Duties and Pastimes
+
+
+It is from my first visit to the library that I date my real
+initiation into the affairs of Atlantis. From that time forth I was
+no longer a stranger in an unknown world; I became involved in such a
+round of activities that I began to feel almost at home. For it was my
+good fortune to have plenty to do, far more to do, in fact, than the
+average Atlantean; and with the demands of the Sunken World calling me
+on the one hand, and my old companions of the X-111 drawing me on the
+other, I did not have far to seek for an interest in life.
+
+First of all, of course, I was applying myself to my “History of the
+Upper World.” It took me a month to plan the book, though meanwhile I
+devoted hours a day to improving my knowledge of the Atlantean language
+and institutions. And when finally I had completed my preliminary
+outline it did not satisfy me entirely, and yet seemed adequate as a
+working basis. The introductory section of the book--necessarily a
+lengthy affair--was to be devoted to a description of the modern world,
+to the various nations, their customs, languages, social systems,
+scientific advances and wars; and having begun with this grand resume
+of modern achievement, I intended to show the steps by which that
+achievement had been consummated, and to picture in general the course
+of those social fluctuations, those invasions, battles, slave-raids,
+civil conflicts, religious persecutions, crusades, economic
+revolutions, industrial tumults and international blood-feuds that have
+brought civilisation to its present proud estate.
+
+But while I was planning my book, my thoughts were frequently on more
+personal subjects. And, having completed the outline, I could not
+forget a certain invitation made me by the most fascinating woman in
+Atlantis, but wasted no time about seeking her advice and approval.
+
+Late one afternoon, when I knew that her tutoring would be over for
+the day, I paid my second visit to her home. I went just a little
+hesitatingly, I remember, yet not without some justifiable hope, for
+our interview was to begin most auspiciously. It was Aelios herself
+that came to the door in response to my knock; and it was Aelios that
+escorted me into the house, with cordial greetings and delighted smiles
+that reaffirmed my impression of her unrivaled merits.
+
+“Well, my friend, I thought you would be coming,” said she, simply, as
+we took seats side by side on the seaweed sofa we had occupied on my
+first visit.
+
+“But what made you think that?” I questioned.
+
+“Why, didn’t you say you would come?” she returned, in unfeigned
+surprise. “You’re undertaking a difficult task, you know--to write a
+book in a strange language. Isn’t it only natural to want advice?”
+
+“It is, indeed,” I confessed, and should have liked to add, “when I can
+have such a charming adviser.”
+
+“I suppose you’ve been working hard,” she continued, evidently unaware
+of what was in my thoughts. “And, of course, you’ve brought something
+with you to show me.”
+
+“Yes, I have brought something,” I admitted; and, there being no
+choice, I forthwith unfolded the paper that contained my plans for the
+history.
+
+For several minutes she gazed at it intently, her features furrowed
+with thought, while eagerly I awaited her verdict.
+
+“This is going to be very interesting,” she at length decided. “As far
+as I can see, you’ve covered most of the important points. You will
+find it easier than I thought to write in our language--your beginning
+is most promising. Of course, you do make some errors of style....” And
+she proceeded to point out my mistakes, in such a manner that I felt
+certain never to repeat them.
+
+For possibly an hour--or two--we discussed my outline, though all the
+while I was conscious that there was something in Atlantis far more
+interesting to me than my book.
+
+I was still aware of that fact, when, at last, feeling that it was
+growing late, I arose reluctantly to leave. As she took my hand, Aelios
+flashed upon me her most genial smile, and requested, “Come again,
+my friend. Perhaps I’ll be able to help you some more. Our doors are
+always open, you know.”
+
+“Well, if it wouldn’t be asking too much of you,” I started to reply,
+fumbling for words, while the blood rushed all at once to my head.
+
+“It will be a pleasure. And besides,”--here she hesitated momentarily,
+and her fingers absently toyed with the folds of her gown--“besides, if
+I help you with your book, I will also be helping the State.”
+
+“Yes, possibly that’s true,” I conceded. And so what could I do but
+agree to give Aelios a further opportunity to help the State?
+
+But if I based any glamorous hopes upon her evident friendliness, I was
+building without knowledge of my foundations. Not long after my visit
+to her, a chance conversation showed me how far I was from that goal
+which my more sanguine fancies pictured.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+It was Xanocles that unwittingly made me see the difficulties. During
+one of our numerous little talks, he touched casually upon the marriage
+system of Atlantis. “The Milares Compulsory Population Law,” he
+chanced to inform me, “is perhaps not the only reason for the present
+superiority of the Atlantean stock. Another factor is what I may call
+the marital selection. This is regulated primarily by custom and is
+almost exclusively in the hands of the women, yet is so rigid that an
+inferior man can hardly find a mate--indeed, a superior woman would be
+disgraced by linking herself to a weakling.”
+
+“But just what do you mean by a weakling?” I inquired.
+
+Xanocles looked at me in surprise. “A weakling, of course, is one with
+nothing to give to society. A great poet, for example, could never be
+thought of as a weakling; nor a competent painter, nor philosopher,
+nor musician, nor biologist. But the man whose contributions show no
+particular skill or individuality is regarded as a weakling, no matter
+what his pursuit. Naturally, he is not condemned so long as he does his
+best; but he is not regarded as a fit subject for marriage except with
+another weakling--and, needless to say, weaklings are not permitted to
+propagate.”
+
+If Xanocles noticed that I was moody and silent for the rest of the
+day, the reason would not have been hard to find. I do not believe
+that, in my own world, I had ever suffered from what is known as an
+inferiority complex; but among the Atlanteans, with their higher
+standards, mere honesty demanded that I question my own qualifications.
+And what, I wondered, had I to offer to a woman such as Aelios? Would
+not my meagre attainments appear childish and unattractive to her?
+Even if I finished my “History of the Upper World,” would it not be a
+second-rate affair, altogether incapable of winning her admiration? And
+would I not, by comparison with the natives, be considered a weakling,
+a man whom Aelios could not marry without incurring disgrace?
+
+For days and weeks I was harassed by such thoughts; and it was to be
+long before I had wholly recovered. Meanwhile, however, I was partially
+consoled by the companionship of Xanocles. The friendship begun at
+our first meeting, was strengthening and solidifying in the course
+of the months; the proximity of our lodgings rendered it easy for us
+to see one another, but there also seemed to be a certain proximity
+of mind, which made each of us take pleasure in the company of the
+other; and in spite of the gulf of race, training and experience, we
+found that we actually had more in common than many persons who have
+spent all their lives in the same home. And so he would often seek me
+out, and we would spend hours exchanging ideas in the dim seclusion of
+my rooms; and often I would seek him out, and we would hold friendly
+debate in the quiet of his rooms; and not infrequently we might have
+been seen strolling arm in arm about the city, while I pictured to him
+the wonders and vastness of the upper world, or while he in his turn
+regaled me with colorful reminiscences, and told how he was employed by
+the State as a binder and designer of books, but how he spent his spare
+time in writing economic and philosophical treatises or delivering
+lectures in favor of the Emergence.
+
+It was under the pilotage of Xanocles that I was introduced to the
+social life of Atlantis. The Atlanteans did not spend all their time
+in grave and serious pursuits, as I had at first imagined; they did
+not devote themselves to art until it palled upon them, or seek for
+beauty until it became blurred and illusory; but they knew how to vary
+their lives and make them symmetrical, and they had quite as much time
+for laughter and recreation as for earnest endeavor and sober thought.
+Indeed, they proved to be an unusually sociable people; and after
+I had entered with Xanocles into the rare spirit of their life and
+pastimes, I was forced to conclude that a prime reason for the success
+of Atlantean society was the sane balance it preserved, and the fact
+that its more ideal aims were tempered by a recognition and a measured
+encouragement of all the normal inclinations of man.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+For sheer range and variety, the Atlantean pastimes excelled those of
+any other people I had ever encountered. To begin with the simplest
+first, there were athletic games, races and competitions that might
+have been popular even in the upper world; and on the outskirts of
+Archeon were fields where the young and even the middle-aged gathered
+in crowds, testing their prowess by boxing and wrestling, by hurling
+round, flat objects like the ancient discus, by sprinting along
+specified race-courses, by engaging in a sort of ball game remotely
+like tennis, or by participating in that more popular contest known as
+“sortos,” which reminded me of baseball except for the fact that it
+did not require so many players. I was surprised to observe that the
+Atlanteans could enter into these sports with hot enthusiasm; but I
+also noted that they could view their athletics with sanity, and were
+interested in their games only while actually engaged in them, and did
+not come forth in throngs as mere onlookers, nor waste time discussing
+the contests beforehand or after they were over, nor prostitute their
+spirit to a professional or commercial outlook.
+
+Not less popular than the athletics--in fact, probably much more
+popular--were the dances that featured prominently in Atlantean life.
+These were of a hundred styles and varieties, from the ethereal
+butterfly movements of trained women, such as Aelios, to the tripping
+and capering of children keeping time spontaneously to the rhythm of
+a song. Leaving out of account the dances for which unusual skill was
+necessary, the most interesting to my mind were those held on the
+polished floors of the temples, where as many as a hundred men and
+women would gather, all swaying synchronously to the subdued beat of
+the music, some in couples holding hands and some singly, but all
+lightly passing back and forth with bird-like co-ordinated movements,
+until as one watched, one lost sight of individuals and thought of them
+all only as the parts of some exquisite, ever-varying whole.
+
+It was not surprising to me to observe that the Atlantean love of the
+dance was matched by an equal taste for music. Having no technical
+musical knowledge, I cannot comment upon the Atlantean development
+of the art, except to say that its cultivation was widespread, that
+public concerts were held almost daily in the halls of Archeon, and
+that invariably their effect upon me was pleasing beyond anything I had
+ever heard on earth. Perhaps it was that the Atlantean music possessed
+in high degree the power of awakening ecstasy and visions; perhaps it
+was that its restrained melancholy and plaintive rapture were as keys,
+that unlocked a universe beyond the universe of sense, and brought the
+time-bound spirit into touch with the timeless; but, at all events, it
+possessed a ravishing power reminding me of the most consummate violin
+performances, and yet surpassing even the violin in the almost complete
+severance it effected between body and soul.
+
+Much the same may be said of the drama in Atlantis--a drama almost as
+popular as the music, and built like the music upon that beauty which
+reaches beyond time and space. The prose drama seems never to have been
+introduced; poetry, as the natural vehicle for ecstatic expression,
+was evidently regarded as the inevitable substance of all plays; and
+the playwrights were all in a tradition that might have appealed to
+Sophocles and Euripides, although they had never heard of those master
+dramatists. Indeed, Atlantis had a score of dramatic writers who in
+my judgment were in no way inferior to any produced by classical
+Greece; and the best works of these authors, staged with picturesque
+simplicity and presented by actors of power, afforded me some of the
+most absorbing hours I passed during all my years in Atlantis.
+
+But if delighted by such performances, I was not less pleased to note
+that dramatics flourished also on a small scale. In any little social
+gathering one of the most popular diversions would be the improvisation
+and acting of short plays; and the proficiency of the Atlanteans in
+this game seemed almost incredible to me, for the actors would not only
+originate their own little dramas, but would speak their impromptu
+lines with feeling and beauty; and so deeply was the spirit of poetry
+engrained that long fluent passages of exceptional verse would
+sometimes be delivered spontaneously.
+
+Beyond these dramatic exhibitions, the chief private pastime of the
+Atlanteans was in the art of discussion. To say that discussion was an
+art is not to exaggerate; it was believed that the mark of the cultured
+man was his ability to express himself intelligently; and themes for
+consideration in an Atlantean drawing room varied from the latest
+poetry and the latest music to the nature of the human personality
+and the ultimate meaning of life. To the self-respecting citizen, it
+would have been an insult to suggest that he avoid the boredom of
+conversation by games of dominoes or cards; and it would have seemed
+ludicrous to attempt to gossip concerning one’s food or clothes, one’s
+athletic prowess, one’s neighbor’s idiosyncrasies or bad manners, or
+any of those hundred and one subjects that might have proved diverting
+in upper world conversation.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+While Xanocles was introducing me to the social life of Atlantis, much
+of my time was being taken up by social life of a different type. Now
+that I had been elevated to the dignity of Atlantean citizenship, I
+could not forget that I had thirty-eight comrades who aspired to a
+similar honor. I saw fully as much of my former shipmates as before;
+indeed, I saw some of them more than ever, and in particular Captain
+Gavison, who would frequently visit me to exchange reminiscences; and I
+rubbed shoulders with the whole crew at the regular bi-weekly meetings
+of the Upper World Club, which were now held in my apartment.
+
+These meetings were sometimes exciting affairs, perhaps because
+there was little else in Atlantis which offered the possibility of
+excitement. Looking back after the lapse of years, it is not easy
+for me to recall just what there was to be agitated about; but it is
+certain that we would be agitated indeed, and that there would be fiery
+debates and discussions, which occasionally became so heated that
+President Gavison would rap and rap with the bit of stone that served
+him as gavel, raising his voice until he almost shouted and the sheer
+awe of his presence would restore order. As nearly as I can remember,
+most of the disputes were due to conflicting opinions of Atlantis; for
+frequently one of the club members would denounce the Sunken World
+in the most picturesque terms at his disposal; and immediately some
+champion of Atlantis would spring to his feet in disagreement, and the
+debate would wax fast and furious, most of the club taking a part,
+until the imperious voice of the President would put an end to the
+contest.
+
+Sometimes, however, the altercation would be over some proposal for
+improving our status in Atlantis. Many and curious were the views as
+to the drawbacks of our lot; and one of our members would be likely
+to suggest that we attempt the construction of a motor boat or of an
+automobile; and another would be convinced that a prime shortcoming of
+Atlantis was the absence of the phonograph or of motion pictures; and
+many would toy fondly with the idea of escape, and would advocate wild
+and wholly impractical schemes that would foment a tumult in the club.
+As time went by, it became increasingly apparent that the majority
+would never be reconciled to Atlantis; they felt estranged by its art,
+overwhelmed by its majesty, irritated by its suave peacefulness; and
+while they still studied the native language for several hours a day,
+and at times derived much satisfaction from being allowed a part in the
+native pastimes and athletics, yet on the whole they felt out of place
+in an atmosphere not adapted to them, and were coming to look upon the
+upper world as a sort of lost Elysium.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+[Illustration: That this noise was somehow connected with the
+quickening wind was apparent from the first; and the relationship
+became evident when the path swerved abruptly away from the wall and I
+glanced back, to behold a series of queer-looking machines supported on
+stone pedestals high up against the glass. It would be impossible to
+say just what the machines were like ... so swiftly were they rotating
+that they formed each a gray blur through which the green of the wall
+was vaguely discernible.]
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+
+
+ CHAPTER XXVI
+
+ Curiosities, Freaks and Monstrosities
+
+
+Even though my companions felt constantly ill at ease in Atlantis,
+yet as the weeks went by they were becoming more proficient in the
+use of the native tongue and were taking their places in the life of
+the Sunken World. One by one they were being summoned, as I had been
+summoned, before the Committee on Selective Assignments; and each in
+turn was ordered to perform some specified daily work after taking the
+usual thirty days’ tour around Atlantis.
+
+Captain Gavison, as one of the most adept of all in mastering the
+language, was one of the first to be graduated into citizenship. But
+his advancement brought him no great pleasure, since his prescribed
+duty was to spend two and a half hours daily in a bureau engaged in
+compiling statistics of population and industry; and his chosen work
+for the State, which was to write a comparison of Atlantean and upper
+world civilization, gave him no end of trouble owing not only to
+linguistic difficulties but to his lack of training in authorship.
+
+Meanwhile Stranahan and Rawson had also matriculated into citizenship;
+but their assigned work differed strikingly from the Captain’s. Rawson,
+as a well formed and brawny youth, was permitted to exercise his
+muscles for an hour and a half daily in a marble quarry some miles to
+the north of the city; while Stranahan, who had been given his choice
+of several occupations, decided that it would suit him best to serve
+three hours daily as doorman at the Archeon City Museum.
+
+It seemed almost as if this position had been made to order for him;
+for when he stood at the museum entrance, robed in an official red,
+and politely directed visitors to the various aisles and departments,
+he had the dignity of one born to a lofty station. His work was
+not altogether easy, he assured me, for the exhibits were many and
+confusing, and he had difficulty in memorizing their names and
+positions; yet to see him as he swayed commandingly from side to side
+of the great arched doorway, with chest thrown well out and hands
+folded sedately behind him, one could scarcely have believed that he
+was troubled by any doubts, but might have imagined him to be the owner
+and creator of the building.
+
+Indeed, the interest which he took in the museum seemed to be almost
+personal. He summoned the whole Upper World Club to inspect it, as
+though it had been his own handiwork; and he directed us from gallery
+to gallery and from exhibit to exhibit with the serenity of perfect
+knowledge. And while there was much about the institution that neither
+he nor the rest of us could understand, yet we had him to thank for
+introducing us to some truly extraordinary displays.
+
+Unquestionably, the museum was one of the things best worth seeing in
+all Atlantis. Not only were the contents vivid and remarkable beyond
+description, but the building itself was a never-failing source of
+wonder. The sides and roof were of glass, and on the lower levels the
+walls were colorless and transparent, so that passers-by could feast
+their eyes on the more conspicuous displays, just as on earth the
+passers-by may gaze into the shop windows. But above the first story
+the glass was no longer crystal-clear, but was frosted and tinted to
+the semblance of clouds driven across a pale blue sky; and over those
+clouds and down from the enormous rounded dome a dim rainbow seemed to
+reach, spreading a web that varied in hue and texture with every step
+one took and every variation in the luster of the searchlights that
+shone faintly from above.
+
+To glance at this superb building, one would never have guessed
+what queer objects it concealed. For my own part, I was simply
+astounded--astounded at the beauty of some exhibits, at the strangeness
+and ghastliness of others. The department of science and inventions (to
+select merely at random) was a source of bewilderment, for it showed
+the oddest contrivances I had ever beheld--machines for preventing
+earthquakes, machines for regulating the undersea temperature, machines
+for detecting and isolating noxious bacteria, machines for transforming
+iron into copper or tin into lead, machines for boring through the
+ground as a submarine bores through the water.
+
+But what particularly interested me was the historical department.
+I shall never forget my first visit to it; it was one of the most
+surprising experiences of my life. Imagine, for example, a glass case
+that contained nothing but the fragment of a brick wall, a perfectly
+commonplace wall of red brick!--and imagine reading that this was
+a substance employed for building purposes in the days before the
+Æsthetic Renaissance! Or, again, picture yourself in contact with half
+a dozen gold coins, larger than silver dollars and each worth several
+days’ wages, yet left unguarded where any one might seize them!--and
+fancy reading that these bits of metal had once been considered
+valuable and had even been contended for and hoarded! Or, to take still
+another illustration, conceive of one’s surprise at seeing a carefully
+treasured speck of coal, and being informed that this was used for fuel
+in the days before intra-atomic energy; or paint for yourself the shock
+of coming across a case of fine jewelry, of rings, earrings, brooches,
+bracelets, and the like, only to find them represented as typical of
+primitive taste!
+
+ * * * * *
+
+But while all of the historical department proved most diverting to me,
+there was one section that interested me more than all the rest. This
+was known as the “Hall of Horrors.” Once having observed the title,
+I was eager to explore the department in detail--and I was not to be
+disappointed. Somehow, there was something about the “Hall of Horrors”
+that seemed familiar, even though a placard at the entrance assured
+one that all the exhibits had been preserved from a remote antiquity.
+Thus, the first thing that I noted was a gas masque said to date from
+the third century B. S., but looking as if it might have been useful
+in the present World War. Beside the gas masque was a steel helmet
+reported to be from the fourth century B. S.; yet, had it not been for
+the card identifying it, I might have suspected it of being taken from
+the Germans this very year.
+
+This suspicion, however, would not have applied to the other military
+implements ranged about the room; most of them were so crude of design
+as to make me positively smile. Even as I write this, I can re-capture
+the mood of exultation I felt at the proof of our own superiority: the
+rifles of the second century B. S. were so puny-looking and feeble as
+to appear worse than primitive, and the bayonets were fully half a foot
+shorter than our own; the machine guns of the first century B. S. had
+obviously not half the killing capacity of ours, and the cannons were
+not constructed for long distance firing; while the conspicuous absence
+of the armored “tank,” the hand grenade and “liquid fire,” showed that
+the ancient Atlanteans would have had much to learn from the sanguinary
+experts of our own day.
+
+From the “Hall of Horrors” Stranahan conducted us into another
+and scarcely less interesting department that was apparently
+nameless, since its miscellany of ancient oddities would have defied
+classification. “Here’s where you’ll feel at home,” grunted our guide,
+as with a gesture of welcome he preceded us through the doorway. But
+his remark had been poorly chosen. We did not feel in the least at
+home. In fact, I had never had a more distinct reminder of my exile
+than when I gazed at great brick and iron chimneys towering within
+glass cases, and catalogued as typical of “The Age of Steel and Fire”;
+and it made me almost homesick to see pictures of long-vanished cities
+wrapped in great clouds of smoke and soot, and described succinctly
+as “Representative of the Tubercular Era in Old Atlantis.” But much
+more surprising to me were the huge ancient furnaces, resurrected in
+detail, with puppet stokers in the act of pitching the coal into the
+giant flames. An explanatory card naïvely declared that “These were
+once considered necessary evils, not only for industrial reasons,
+but because the Submergence had not yet made possible the automatic
+regulation of the weather.”
+
+But an apparently insignificant object in the same department aroused
+far greater interest among my companions. Carefully guarded under a
+glass cover, where it had evidently undergone some special process of
+preservation, was a flat, little rectangle of some shrivelled brownish
+substance, which upon close scrutiny I took to be tobacco!
+
+That my guess had been correct was demonstrated by a placard that
+accompanied the exhibit: “This is a fragment of a narcotic imported
+into old Atlantis from across the western ocean. It found high favor at
+one time among the women of the country, and to a lesser extent among
+the men, although its use was considered a mark of effeminacy. There
+were several common ways of absorbing this drug, the most popular being
+to ignite it and suck the smoke into the lungs by means of a little
+twisted tube. Happily, this disgusting habit has long ago disappeared,
+and the elimination of this plant at the time of the Good Destruction
+is not the least of the benefits conferred by Agripides.”
+
+I am afraid that few of my companions agreed with the latter statement.
+They cast longing glances in the direction of the tobacco; and, had it
+not been safely guarded beneath glass, its career would surely have
+ended then and there.
+
+With the memory of the tobacco still rankling in our minds, we were
+escorted into what was known as the “Department of Human Evolution.”
+Here was depicted the rise of man from the lowest savage state to
+the height of present-day Atlantis. A series of skeletons indicated
+the gradual transformation from a broad-boned, ape-like thing to a
+big-skulled modern--and, to my great surprise, the large cranial
+capacity was represented as belonging almost exclusively to the
+aboriginal and Post-Submergence eras!
+
+ * * * * *
+
+While I was wondering why this should be, I chanced to overhear
+the words of a sagacious-looking bearded man, who accompanied a
+party of smooth-faced youths, evidently as their tutor. “Before the
+Submergence,” he was saying, “we were civilized in a rude sort of way,
+and yet were not intelligent. That is to say, we were not intelligent
+as a people, for only one man in a hundred possessed any understanding
+of civilization; and it was that one in a hundred, or perhaps one
+in a thousand, who accomplished all the changes in science, art and
+culture. Today, however, every normal man is intelligent enough to be
+more than the dead lumber of civilization. You will observe this skull
+here”--the speaker paused, and pointed to one of the most ancient of
+the group--“this is the fossil of a paleolithic pre-Atlantean, who
+inhabited our island forty-five or fifty thousands years ago. You can
+see for yourselves how much higher and ampler the skull is than that
+of your own ancestor of thirty-two hundred years ago, although of
+course the latter represented the world’s most advanced civilization.
+Fortunately, our intellectual decline was counteracted by the vigorous
+measures of Agripides and his successors, and we can now boast of
+being on the same high mental plane as the men of fifty thousand years
+ago....”
+
+The speaker withdrew with his students toward a further exhibit, and I
+could catch no more of what he said. But I had heard quite enough, for
+it seemed to me that his words were not to be taken seriously. And I
+was more interested in browsing about the gallery than in listening to
+his pointless remarks--particularly since I had chanced to set eyes on
+some arresting tables of statistics. These figures, which dated back
+more than three thousand years, showed how the rise in the appreciation
+of beauty had been almost simultaneous with the growth of intellect;
+how the mental advance and the decline of crime seemed likewise to be
+related phenomena; how the general measure of happiness, as indicated
+by the absence of nervous disorders, mental aberrations and suicides,
+had been incalculably increased since the intellectual revival.
+
+Having read to the end of the statistics, I passed with my companions
+down several long corridors to the art departments, where some of
+the more notable contemporary paintings and statues were placed on
+exhibition along with a multitude of classic works. But if I were
+to dwell upon the contents of these galleries, beyond saying that
+its art was in that same exquisite and original style I had already
+observed, I should have to add chapters to my story; and, likewise, I
+should find my narrative interminable if I were to describe the other
+exhibits: the natural history department, with specimens of the flora
+and fauna of old Atlantis, the paleo-botanical department with lifelike
+restorations of long-extinct tree-ferns and gigantic palms, the
+sociological-historical departments, with representations of scenes in
+prisons, poorhouses, orphanages, and insane asylums, all of which were
+declared to have been “herding places of the days when unfortunates
+were so plentiful that they had to be dealt with by the pack, instead
+of, as at present, being consigned individually to the care of those
+sympathetic men and women who make social work their service for the
+State.”
+
+But while the sheer abundance of the exhibits makes it impossible
+to describe them all, there is one that I must not fail to mention,
+since in some ways it was the most remarkable in the museum. We had
+just entered the section ambiguously known as “Curiosities, Freaks
+and Monstrosities,” when Stranahan, with an odd twinkling expression,
+warned us to be ready for a surprise. And, certainly, he warned us
+with good reason! As we glanced toward the further wall, we were
+shocked by sight of something dazzlingly familiar--so very familiar,
+indeed, that several of us uttered little cries of amazement. Neatly
+arranged behind a glass case, flattened against the rear panels so
+as to afford a better view, were dozens of well known blue uniforms!
+Among them, from the Ensign’s stripes, I recognized my own; and among
+them, also, was the decorated uniform of the Captain! And above
+them, on a large-lettered placard, appeared the statement that these
+were the clothes worn by the only aliens to enter Atlantis since the
+Submergence, and that they were interesting as showing what grotesque
+and unsightly garments were fashionable in the upper world!
+
+
+
+
+ CHAPTER XXVII
+
+ The Warning of the Waters
+
+
+Although at times during my first months in Atlantis I may have felt
+out of place and wished that the waters would open above me and bear me
+back to my own land, yet my longings were never mixed with misgivings
+and my regrets never tinged with fears. Even in my most pessimistic
+moments, I had no doubt but that the Sunken World was secure; that no
+menace to life or tranquility lurked in its well-ordered depths; that
+I might live out my days unmolested and in a peaceful routine. Hence I
+was all the more shocked at discovery of that peril which was to give
+Atlantis the aspect of a beleaguered city, and to overcast its beauty
+with foreboding and horror.
+
+I had been in Atlantis over a year when the crisis occurred. It was a
+crisis as startling and unexpected as the flaming of a meteor out of a
+calm sky; and yet, had we but known it, it had been preparing its way
+insidiously during the days of fancied safety, like some mortal disease
+that burrows through tissues which are apparently sound. And, like such
+a disease, it might have been checked had it only been discovered in
+time.
+
+I remember that one night, after many onerous hours devoted to my
+“History of the Upper World,” I slept but poorly, with an intermittent
+slumber disturbed by nightmares of huge towers crashing to destruction.
+And during the wakeful intervals my thoughts framed other nightmares,
+and I was agitated by a vague alarm and excitement, though I could
+not understand why. Not until much later did it occur to me that some
+telegraphic force, akin to the magnetic will power of the Atlanteans,
+may have conveyed to me the deep unrest that surcharged the atmosphere.
+
+But whether or not this explanation be valid, I know that in the
+morning, when I had dressed and stood in my roof-bedroom gazing down
+into the streets, I became acutely conscious that something was wrong.
+Every few minutes a native or group of natives could be seen rushing by
+at a speed I had never before observed among the unhurried Atlanteans;
+and it seemed to me that their faces were convulsed as though with
+pain or fear; while the voices occasionally borne up to me had the
+nervousness, almost the hysteria, of men in a panic.
+
+What could have happened? I wondered. Had the Atlanteans all suddenly
+gone mad? Or were they facing an insurrection or a civil war? Or had
+the government perhaps been overthrown by a band of insurgents? Or had
+there been an earthquake through which I had somehow slept? Or was
+there an invasion from the upper world, and had some of our countrymen,
+seeking for clues of the lost X-111, discovered the Sunken World and
+entered?
+
+All these possibilities, as I turned them over in my mind, seemed
+so fantastic that I had to discard them. Yet it still filled me
+with apprehension to observe the natives scurrying about the
+streets--apprehension that was to be speedily justified.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+I was just preparing to go out and investigate when there came an
+excited rapping at my door. Unable to imagine who might be seeking me
+at this early hour, I cried out sharply, “Come in!”; and the door swung
+abruptly open to admit--Captain Gavison!
+
+He was far from his composed and normal self. His pale blue costume was
+all ruffled, and had been flung over his shoulders as though in great
+haste; his long hair hung dishevelled over his narrow bronzed brow; his
+face looked all hot and sweaty; his gray eyes burned and sparkled with
+a vague distress.
+
+He did not wait for a formal greeting. “Have you--have you heard the
+news?” he gasped, as he strode into the room.
+
+I confessed that I had heard nothing.
+
+“Don’t see how you could help hearing!” he snapped, and began to pace
+slowly about the floor, with brow wrinkled in bitter thought.
+
+“What news is it?” I demanded. “Just what have you heard?”
+
+“One of the natives told me strange things last night,” he confided,
+as he continued his restless perambulations about the room. “I haven’t
+slept a wink, not a wink!”
+
+“What strange things? We’re not going to be sent back home, are we?” I
+inquired, with an abortive effort to be facetious.
+
+“We’ll be sent to a worse place than that!” he growled, bristling
+almost into his old military manner. “The glass wall has been cracked!”
+
+“The glass wall cracked?” I cried, stupidly, stunned by the terror of
+the words.
+
+“Yes, the glass wall has been cracked,” the Captain affirmed, in a
+more matter-of-fact manner. “One of the patrol boats discovered the
+damage late yesterday afternoon. There’s a dangerous fracture near the
+entrance of the Salty River.”
+
+For reply I could only groan. The glass wall of Atlantis cracked!--the
+whole Atlantic Ocean bearing down upon the Sunken World! Too well I
+understand what that meant, too well to require comment! And in that
+first moment of horrible realization I had visions of torrents pouring
+through a gap in the wall, flooding over the streets and temples and
+highest towers of the land!
+
+“But how--how under heaven did it happen?” I burst forth, when I had
+half recovered from the first staggering blow.
+
+“That is not hard to say,” he declared, slowly and in measured tones.
+“At least, there are suspicions--”
+
+“Suspicions?” I demanded.
+
+“Suspicions that you and I and the rest of us are to blame.”
+
+“But how is that possible?” I exclaimed.
+
+“It’s possible, all right. It all happened before we got here. The
+X-111, caught in the whirlpool outside the Salty River, was hurled by
+the force of the waters against the glass wall, probably striking with
+its steel prow, which, as you know, was built for ramming our foes. The
+wall, luckily, was too stout to be shattered; but it was cracked, and
+the crack must have been growing all this time without being noticed.”
+“Merciful gods!” I cried. “Then if--if anything happens to Atlantis, it
+will be all on account of us!”
+
+But before Gavison had had time to reply, there came another rapping
+at the door. And, hardly waiting for my summons, a wild-eyed Xanocles
+burst in. Like my other visitor, he did not waste time on greetings.
+“You--do you know?” he faltered, with a lack of self-command most
+unusual in him.
+
+Solemnly we assured him that we knew.
+
+Without further delay we plunged into the subject that had brought him
+to us. “Maybe you’d like to go and see for yourselves?” he suggested.
+
+“But how can we see for ourselves?” I asked.
+
+“The government--that is to say, the High Chief Adviser--has ordered
+the intra-atomic river boats put at the people’s disposal. Seven of
+them are now plying back and forth, bearing thousands to the glass
+wall. The Adviser thinks the people should see for themselves just what
+has happened.”
+
+“Very well then, let’s go,” decided the Captain.
+
+Without another word the three of us set out together. In silence we
+strode down the long avenue that meandered toward the river. And as
+we sped along we encountered dozens of the natives, all of them in as
+great a hurry as we; and all had faces flushed and excited, or fearful
+and drawn, or pale as though with apprehension.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Upon arriving at the piers, we found that hundreds of Atlanteans had
+preceded us, most of them so transformed that I could hardly recognize
+them as citizens of the Sunken World; for they were chattering wildly,
+or pacing distractedly back and forth, or uttering half-hysterical
+exclamations; and one or two were mumbling and muttering to themselves,
+or moving their lips silently in what might have been prayer. But they
+did not fail to notice our arrival; angry exclamations broke forth at
+sight of us, and several of the men and women withdrew visibly from us;
+and, in my surprise, I did not know whether to ascribe their hostility
+to the unpopularity of Xanocles or to the part that Gavison and I had
+played as unconscious agents of disaster.
+
+To calm the excited multitude, a vigorous-looking young man ventured
+to raise his voice, and proclaim, “Friends, there is still no reason
+for alarm. We do not yet know how serious the damage may be, but the
+glass wall still holds; not a drop of water has broken through....
+There is reason to believe that the break will be speedily repaired,
+and that we will go on living as happily as ever....”
+
+These words, I was glad to see, had a soothing effect upon the
+crowd. Yet I was relieved when at last the boat hove into view, a
+slender affair as long as the longest river vessel, but not more than
+twenty-five feet from rail to rail. I did not then give any attention
+to its details, though I did note how low-lying it was, with but one
+visible deck, one small cabin and no smokestack or mast. But after it
+had drawn up to the pier and the gangplank was flung down, I wasted no
+time about boarding it with my two companions. Benches and chairs were
+strewn liberally about the deck, sufficient to accommodate the entire
+crowd; and we had hardly taken seats when the boat commenced to shiver
+and throb, and we started upstream with the velocity of an express
+train.
+
+So rapidly did we move that in less than an hour we were approaching
+the head of the Salty River. And during the interval I only once
+ventured to break the moody solitude of my own thoughts.
+
+“When did you find out about all this?” I asked Xanocles, who like the
+rest of us seemed to be absorbed in bitter reveries.
+
+“Last night,” he returned, in an abstracted manner. “I chanced to
+be in the Hall of Public Enlightenment, and heard the news over the
+Autophone.”
+
+“The Autophone?” I demanded.
+
+“Well, naturally, you wouldn’t know what that is,” explained Xanocles.
+“We get our ordinary news by wireless telegraph, of course, and it is
+then reported by speakers at the various public meeting places. But the
+Autophone is more effective, and is used only on rare and important
+occasions. It operates instantaneously, and consists of a tube and
+electrical attachment, enabling one to hear a speaker miles away.”
+
+“I understand,” said I, for, after all, the Autophone did not impress
+me as unfamiliar.
+
+And with that we lapsed again into silence, a silence shared by all
+the hundreds of passengers. For now that they had actually embarked
+upon the voyage, their excitement seemed to have died down to a mood
+of solemn waiting, a tense and painful waiting all too apparent in
+the rigid, staring faces of the men and the women’s pale cheeks and
+frightened eyes.
+
+It was with relief that at length I saw the river growing white and
+agitated ahead of us, and knew that we were not far from the valve
+where the torrents were hurled in from the sea. Yet I was filled with
+impatience before we swerved finally into a little side canal and our
+boat came to a landing before a long granite dock whence a sister
+ship was just leaving. I need hardly state that I lost no time in
+stepping across the gangplank, as soon as the crowded state of the deck
+permitted; and though we were still three or four miles from the glass
+wall, I was thankful to be able to walk the distance.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+To watch my two companions and myself set out along the clay footpath
+toward the wall, one might have thought that we were athletes training
+for a race. But if we moved rapidly, we were in no way exceptional, for
+there were scores who easily kept pace with us.
+
+For many minutes we hastened parallel to the Salty River. We passed
+the long, white rapids; we passed the spot where the gigantic jet of
+water shot thundering out of the pipe-like valve; we saw the wall
+itself sloping down before us, and near the wall we could make out a
+long, black mass which ultimately resolved itself into a multitude of
+humans.
+
+This multitude, as we drew near, showed itself to be in a wildly
+agitated condition. Men and women were pacing frantically to and fro,
+swarming and squirming like worms or ants; some were gesticulating
+vehemently, some speaking in high-pitched tones audible from afar, some
+merely standing petrified like men dealt a blow too great to bear.
+
+Yet, as we took our places among them, we could observe nothing that
+gave cause for alarm. To our right loomed the elongated, steely gray
+valve, a great tube as high as a three-story building, which narrowed
+as it approached the wall, and passed through it on a level with the
+ground. And just before us sloped the wall itself, now roped off so
+that we could not come within a stone’s throw, but apparently still
+the same smooth, dark greenish barrier I had viewed months before.
+No sign of any break or crack was visible, and it was almost with
+disappointment that I noticed how flawless it seemed.
+
+But while I stood there watching I heard a faint swishing sound, like
+the lapping of sea-waves against the rocks. I may have been mistaken,
+for amid the chattering and shouting of the mob and the distant roaring
+of waters from the valve, it was difficult to be sure just what one
+heard. But Gavison and Xanocles seemed to note that same ominous noise,
+and both paused to listen, while the anxious expression on their faces
+did not relieve my misgivings. “It’s the water working through the
+inner layers of the glass,” I thought I heard Xanocles remark; but here
+again I could not be sure, for even as he spoke a tumult of shouts
+burst forth, and I turned in sudden fright to see what was the matter.
+
+This time I did not have long to wait. On one of the great
+roof-supporting stone columns a searchlight had been mounted; and
+I observed that it was slowly swinging round, casting a piercing
+illumination upon the wall from a bright, yellow eye glaring like the
+headlight of a locomotive. For a moment it shook and wavered as if it
+could not find a focus; then it became rigid and still, and a circle of
+the wall, many yards across, stood out in brilliant relief.
+
+Instantly the people began to press forward. So excited were they that
+for a moment I almost lost touch with Gavison and Xanocles, and could
+catch no glimpse of the illuminated patch of wall. And at the same time
+shrill cries of terror and dismay broke forth. A man just to my rear
+groaned as if in pain; a woman gave a half suppressed sob; somewhere
+from the rear came a hysterical wailing. Then, when the circle in the
+wall again became visible, I was wedged in so tightly that I scarcely
+gave it any attention. It was only by degrees that I made out its
+features, and saw what resembled an enormous piece of cracked crockery.
+From an amorphous central blur several feet across, great seams and
+fissures ran in a hundred directions, with long, spidery arms that
+reached out like the roots of a tree, gradually growing thinner till
+they vanished in vacancy. It seemed a miracle that the water had not
+already burst through, for each of the scores of diverging cracks were
+rods long and must have been many feet deep.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+I do not know how long I stood staring blankly at that tragic break
+in the glass. I was as one divested of power of thought or movement;
+I merely hovered there transfixed, listening to the muttering and
+sighing of the multitude. Strangely enough, it did not occur to me to
+ask whether the damage could be repaired; it was as though I had known
+all the while that it was beyond remedy ... and for the moment my
+attitude was strangely detached, almost impersonal, as though I were
+the external witness of melancholy and inexorable things....
+
+Yet it was a highly personal thought that startled me back to myself.
+Somehow, out, of some dim subconscious depth, there swept across my
+mind the vision of two bright, blue eyes--and, with that vision, acute
+fear seized me, and longing, and despair. That Atlantis should be in
+danger was fearful enough--but that Aelios should be imperiled was a
+thought almost too terrible for belief. And, accompanying that first
+wild stab of alarm for her, there came a sharp desire to see her, to
+be with her, to speak with her now; and, hopeful that she might be
+somewhere in this crowd, I began to search all about me, and then to
+thread my way at random through the dense ranks of people, scanning all
+the faces in my anxiety, until Gavison and Xanocles, following me with
+difficulty, began to ask irrelevantly whether the cracks were in the
+wall or in my head.
+
+But no Aelios was to be seen; and at last I was forced reluctantly to
+abandon the quest. A dull and settled sadness had fallen over me; and,
+depressed for no reason that I would have acknowledged, I expressed my
+purpose of returning at once to Archeon, saying that I had already seen
+everything there was to be seen.
+
+“But you haven’t seen a thing yet,” demurred Xanocles, who seemed
+determined that I should remain. “The submersible repair ships have not
+yet arrived--and when they come, they should be a sight worth watching.”
+
+And he slipped his arm about mine, and drew me with him toward the
+wall, while I still protested that it would be better for me to return
+to Archeon.
+
+No doubt in the end I should have had my way, had not another hubbub
+arisen to distract my attention. Once more the thousands of voices,
+were lifted in excitement; but this time a note of joy was manifest,
+and even seemed to predominate. At the same time, many hands pointed
+eagerly toward the illuminated circle in the glass; and from just
+behind me I heard a thankful murmur that sounded encouragingly like
+“The repair ships; They’re here! They’re here!”
+
+Indeed, the repair ships had arrived. Even through the darkest sections
+of the wall, half a dozen faintly phosphorescent cigar-shaped forms
+were dimly apparent. They were all rather small, scarcely more than
+a third of the size of the X-111; but they seemed to be exceedingly
+agile, and were darting lithely back and forth like great fishes, or
+else were whirling or pirouetting or standing almost on end, as though
+stricken with giddiness and unable to control their movements.
+
+“They’re having the devil’s own time!” muttered Xanocles, as he stood
+watching. “That’s the worst danger-spot in all the ocean, for the
+waters are constantly in a whirlpool because of the torrents emptied
+into the Salty River. But our men are brave, and somehow they’ll manage
+it.”
+
+“But how can they set about it?” I inquired, unable to imagine any way
+of making repairs.
+
+“It’s far from easy, but it can be done,” continued Xanocles. “One of
+the ships will have to press itself against the wall, so closely that
+there is no space between. Once all water has been excluded between
+the vessel and the wall, you understand, the pressure on the ocean
+side will keep the ship in place. And after the ship is in the proper
+position, a porthole will be opened, and through this the men will pour
+cement into the crack.”
+
+Even as Xanocles explained, an anchor was dropped from one of the ships
+into the rocky sea bottom; and the vessel, having steadied itself,
+began to drift slowly toward the wall, so that at length its side was
+pressed tightly against the cracked glass. Then a little circle of
+light seemed suddenly to open on the ship’s side; and in that circle I
+could make out the rigid, determined faces of half a dozen men, while
+in their hands I could observe a variety of strange rods, tubes, and
+lantern-like contrivances.
+
+Pessimistic as I had been before, I could not but feel a burst of hope
+when I watched the capable, courageous way in which these men set to
+work. And evidently the waiting throng had become hopeful too, for
+murmurs of admiration and approval were repeatedly on their lips; and
+as they saw tube after tube of cement poured skilfully into the cracks,
+they became almost mad with relief; and some began to clap their hands
+and caper childishly, and some sighed in thanksgiving, and some wept
+silently, for, after all, Atlantis seemed to have been saved!
+
+Then, with the suddenness of a thunderbolt, all their hopes were dashed
+out. So swiftly did disaster descend that none had a chance to say how
+or whence it came--but it was disaster complete and irretrievable.
+Perhaps it was that the anchor-chain holding the submarine had snapped,
+or that some water had seeped in between the side of the vessel and
+the glass wall. At all events, the submarine was plainly visible one
+moment, the men pumping the viscid cement through long tubes to the
+very extremities of the crack; and the next moment there was only a dim
+shadow flitting away into a watery obscurity.
+
+For an instant there was an awed silence. Then, as comprehension dawned
+upon the crowd, a convulsive shudder swept it through and through, and
+a howl of horror and dismay rang forth. Men glanced askance at their
+neighbors, blank terror gaping from their eyes; and all at once, as
+by a common impulse, hundreds pressed confusedly toward the wall, as
+though they might succor thus those unfortunates lost in the briny
+wastes. But many, conscious of the futility of all action, sadly
+remained in their places, and mutely bowed their heads--a tribute of
+respect for the drowned.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+[Illustration: It was only by degrees that I made out its features,
+and saw what resembled an enormous piece of cracked crockery. From an
+amorphous central blur several feet across, great seams and fissures
+ran in different directions with long spidery arms ... one of the ships
+pressed itself against the wall, after which the port hole was opened
+and the men poured cement into the cracks.]
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+
+
+ CHAPTER XXVIII
+
+ The Waters Retreat
+
+
+The eight days that followed the discovery of the crack were among
+the most harrying I had ever spent. Indeed, they were among the most
+harrying that any resident of Atlantis had ever spent. That the peril
+was acute became more and more apparent as the days went by and the
+damage was not repaired--the submarine disaster which I had witnessed
+was but the precursor to other and not less frightful disasters. Vessel
+after vessel battled with the swirling waters in the effort to force
+itself against the wall and cement the crack; and vessel after vessel
+was shaken away like a twig by the fury of the maelstrom. Sometimes,
+fortunately, the portholes were shut in time and the crew managed to
+save their lives; but on other occasions the maddened waters snatched
+their prey; and before a week had gone by Atlantis was mourning for
+seven lost parties of rescuers.
+
+All the country was now in a tumult, I might almost say in a delirium.
+The regular currents of life had stopped short; men no longer went
+about their daily duties; the libraries and art galleries were
+deserted; the young were without tutors, the governmental departments
+without clerks; and the cities would have been without bread, had it
+not been for the drastic orders of the High Chief Adviser. But citizens
+who once had been amply occupied would loiter aimlessly about the
+streets, or would flock to the Hall of Public Enlightenment to hear the
+latest report over the Autophone; or else they would pace nervously
+along the colonnades, or stand discussing in small groups, nerve-racked
+and bewildered as men under sentence of death. Though I never heard
+them mention the fear that must have been uppermost in their minds, yet
+their pale faces and shuddery manner gave proof of the dread that was
+preying upon them; and my former shipmates and I had reason to know
+how overmastering was their terror, for that aversion I had already
+noted was deepening, and the people would glance at us with hostility
+and even accusation in their eyes, looking mute reproach at us, as
+though our coming had been responsible (as indeed it had been) for the
+threatened end of their world.
+
+Every morning five or six of the little intra-atomic submarines would
+leave Atlantis through the valve in the eastern wall, where the waters
+of the Salty River were forced back into the sea. And in the evening
+(if they survived till evening) they would return through the valve in
+the western wall, where the waters of the Salty River found entrance.
+In the interval, their occupants would work as courageously as I had
+ever known men to work, warring against odds that were apparently
+insurmountable; while all Atlantis would stand watching, or waiting
+at the Autophone for news of their progress. It seemed wrongful to my
+comrades and me that these men, brave and willing as they were, should
+risk their lives to repair an injury which we had caused; and so at
+Captain Gavison’s suggestion several of us volunteered to join the
+rescuing forces. But the High Chief Adviser, although expressing his
+gratitude, refused our offer in terms that could admit of no reply; for
+the repairing crews, as he explained, consisted of skilled mechanics
+especially trained for their duties and therefore irreplaceable.
+
+Fortunately, our assistance was not necessary. On the eighth day, the
+officials in charge of the repairs decided upon a change of tactics;
+and then it was that the “Acrola,” a specially equipped submarine
+provided with five anchors and an extra battery in intra-atomic
+engines, made its way out of the Salty River and around the glass
+dome to the scene of the damage. Truly, it was time that something
+desperate was done, for, according to official measurements, the crack
+had expanded between nine and ten inches since its detection. Thanks
+to its unusual powers of resistance, however, the “Acrola” withstood
+the buffeting of the waters and remained pressed against the wall while
+Captain Thermandos and his crew pumped the cement into the innumerable
+fissures. Except for the extraordinary courage of the men, it is
+probable that they too would have failed, for the task occupied them
+for more than six hours, any moment of which might have been their
+last; and they not only had to fill the cracks, but had to hold to
+their post till the cement had begun to harden and was no longer in
+danger of being washed away.
+
+But the notable fact is that they succeeded. Though they were worn and
+haggard from their exertions, yet they had succeeded magnificently.
+They had saved Atlantis! After all, the flood-gates would not
+burst!--the devouring waters would never race along the streets and
+colonnades! The people might return calmly to their work, certain that
+tomorrow would bring no new menace.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Such, at least, was the general impression. And so great was the public
+relief that the pendulum swung violently from a crisis of despair to an
+extreme joy. Like men newly awakened from a nightmare, the Atlanteans
+refused to believe that the peril had not been utterly wiped away; and
+so great was the force of the reaction, so sudden the snapping of the
+tension, that for a while their emotions controlled their heads, and
+their desire to feel safe became converted into a conviction that they
+were safe. Later, many of them were to awaken from their self-hypnosis;
+but during the celebration that followed the repairs, the people almost
+without exception, acted as if convinced of their rescue; and all the
+speakers at the great public gatherings referred in positive terms to
+the deliverance of Atlantis; and the songs that were sung were songs
+of thanksgiving, as of triumphant escape from a foe; and the games and
+dances and festive processions were those of a people wild with joy of
+new-won salvation.
+
+Yet even at the time there was at least one dissenting voice. Like
+most dissenting voices at a moment of popular emotion, it was but
+little heard, and then was heard contemptuously; yet it was often to be
+remembered in later days, when the occasion called for little beyond
+regret.
+
+Among the seven governmental experts sent to investigate the repairs
+and report on their soundness, there was one who strenuously challenged
+the views of his colleagues. While the other six agreed that the damage
+had been remedied beyond possibility of a further disturbance, the
+seventh (Peliades by name) brought in a vigorous minority report in
+which he contended that the relief was only temporary.
+
+His plea, as I remember it, ran somewhat as follows:
+
+“For four or five years--possibly for ten--the repairs will prove
+adequate; but after that period the damage will re-appear in a much
+more aggravated form than before. For the cement constitutes a foreign
+element in the glass, and produces an abnormal bulge, so placing an
+exceptional strain upon those portions which are still sound. For a
+while the wall may be able to endure the strain, but in the course
+of time the additional tension will become too great for the brittle
+material of the wall to resist; and first small cracks will appear, and
+then larger, growing by inches and by fractions of inches, until the
+break spreads towards the surface, and the tremendous pressure of the
+ocean shatters the remaining barrier. This effect, of course, will take
+years before it begins to be noticeable; but when finally it becomes
+apparent, the crack will have spread so far that only heroic measures
+will be able to save Atlantis.
+
+“The remedy, therefore, is to undertake the immediate erection of a
+new glass bulwark against the affected portion of the wall. Prodigious
+though this effort will necessarily be, we will probably be able to
+complete the work in time. But unless we do complete it, we will find
+ourselves within a hair’s breadth of catastrophe.”
+
+Unfortunately--most unfortunately, in view of what ensued--Peliades’
+warning was scarcely heeded. In some quarters he was denounced as a
+crank, a mad alarmist; in other quarters he was openly laughed at,
+or derided as the victim of hysteria; while the majority paid no
+attention to him at all. Least sympathetic of his hearers were his
+fellow specialists; for these, in response to an inquiry by the High
+Chief Adviser, testified at length as to the scientific unsoundness of
+Peliades’ theories, and disproved his views to their own satisfaction
+and that of the people.
+
+And so the dissenter’s motions were quietly tabled, and Atlantis
+returned to its normal duties with confidence in the future.
+
+
+
+
+ CHAPTER XXIX
+
+ The Party of Emergence
+
+
+Although all Atlantis resumed its normal aspect soon after the wall
+had been repaired, things were never again to be quite as before.
+It was as though there were some unseen fissure in the life of the
+Sunken World as well as in its glass boundary; as though the people
+realized, subconsciously, that they hovered on the rim of a smoldering
+volcano. Something seemed to be lacking that had been there before,
+perhaps because something was present that had never been there
+before; and the corrosive effects of fear, injected for the first time
+during all the centuries of the Submergence, seemed to dissipate the
+charmed tranquility of Atlantis and to suggest that inimical and even
+treacherous forces lurked beyond the marble fountains and palaces and
+the weird green-golden dome.
+
+But the one tangible result of the discovery of the crack was the
+rise of the Party of Emergence. This despised minority group, whose
+very name had been a phrase of contempt, now burst into a prominence
+as surprising to its members as to the people as a whole, and for
+the first time in history, threatened to become a power in Atlantean
+politics. Perhaps it was that there were thousands who, beset by
+a secret dread, looked to the Party of Emergence as their only
+salvation; perhaps it was merely that they had been shocked into a
+more liberal-minded attitude, and could view the policy of Emergence
+with wide-open eyes. At all events, a host of disciples flocked
+voluntarily to the Emergence banners; and among these were many persons
+of influence and position, including Peliades, the engineer who had
+declared the wall unsound, and Chorendos, the Local Adviser of Archeon.
+
+And now began a heated and aggressive campaign, conducted incessantly
+and not without success in the Hall of Public Enlightenment of every
+town and village in Atlantis--a campaign that threatened to develop
+into a life-or-death struggle between the regenerated Emergence Party
+and the more venerable Submergence group. It happened that I myself
+took an active, if minor part in that contest; and it also happened
+that the entire Upper World Club was implicated, for we all realized
+that the cause of Emergence offered us our only opportunity of
+returning to the upper world.
+
+Innumerable were the meetings that we attended, and innumerable the
+pleas that we made. To give a complete account of all our activities
+would be impossible, even if I could recall them all; and so I will
+have to confine myself to describing a particular meeting, which stands
+forth in my mind as typical.
+
+One afternoon, many months after the crack in the wall had been sealed,
+Xanocles and I found ourselves preparing for a strenuous session at
+the Hall of Public Enlightenment. It had been rumored that the day’s
+meeting was to be unusually interesting, and Xanocles and I were
+secretly determined to make it so; hence, when we arrived at the
+sapphire and amber theatre and found almost all the seats occupied, we
+felt that we had every reason to congratulate ourselves.
+
+We took chairs in the rear, and quietly awaited our turn. A discussion
+was in progress regarding the award of honor to be made to a certain
+lyric poet. (I do not know quite what the issue was, for I did not
+listen attentively.) But everyone understood that this was not to
+be the topic of the day; and after the question had been settled, a
+momentary hush came over the audience and many pairs of eyes were bent
+toward us inquiringly.
+
+Then it was that Xanocles arose. At a gesture from that same
+broad-browed elderly woman who had presided when Gavison and his crew
+had been brought to trial long before, my friend stepped out into
+the aisle and down to the central platform or stage, while all eyes
+followed him intently and a speechless lull dominated that great
+assemblage.
+
+“Fellow citizens,” he said, not taking time even for an instant’s pause
+after reaching the foot of the stairs, “I am here today to make one of
+the most momentous proposals ever presented since Agripides pleaded
+for the Submergence. But it is not a proposal that has never been put
+forth before; it is merely one that has never been endorsed. It has
+been, indeed, at the very backbone of the Party of Emergence, and will
+continue to be argued and preached until it meets with that success
+which it merits. For it is impossible, my friends, that Atlantis should
+retain its age-old isolation; modern progress makes such backwardness
+inconceivable, as the arrival of thirty-nine men from outside has
+demonstrated. I am certain that if Agripides himself were here now he
+would agree that our policies must be revised.”
+
+Here Xanocles paused as if for emphasis; but the audience remained
+intently silent, and with increased forcefulness he continued, “The
+question of emigration, my friends, is one of the most important
+that can confront any land. Never in the last three thousand years
+has Atlantis had an adequate law on this subject; our prohibition
+of emigration has been a form of intolerance unworthy of the high
+traditions of our people; and free emigration, if forbidden by the
+arbitrary conventions of society, is justified by the mandates of
+nature and the normal human craving for romance and adventure.
+
+“Therefore I suggest that the fundamental law of Atlantis be modified.
+But for the sake of those who fear to be too radical, I recommend that
+we proceed cautiously at first; let us begin by allowing three or four
+of our people to visit the upper world; and let these, having made
+their investigations, return with their reports, so that then, on the
+basis of definite knowledge, we may decide on the advantage of further
+emergence.”
+
+ * * * * *
+
+“No, no, no!” rang forth half a dozen voices in sharp disapproval; and,
+as Xanocles gracefully resigned the floor, one of the dissenters--a
+tall, stooped man with sallow face, fringed with a white beard--stepped
+down to express his views.
+
+“Citizens of Atlantis,” he declared, in a voice surprisingly resonant
+and vigorous for one of his age, “I have lived long enough to follow
+the debates of a hundred years, but never have I heard such folly as
+has just been advised. Under the influence of Agripides, Atlantis has
+been beautiful, and it has been happy--and what more can life give us
+than happiness and beauty? Would you let yourselves be stampeded by the
+ravings of these modernists, who would trample on every sacred thing,
+seeking a panicky escape from some imaginary peril, or misled by a
+childish lust for adventure or romance? Take an old man’s word, in all
+the upper world there can be no romance like that spread beneath our
+green-glass dome, and no adventure like that of our golden-illumined
+ways. Agripides was right, my friends, perhaps more marvelously right
+than even he could have known; for Atlantis can remain Atlantis only so
+long as the corrupting influence of the world is excluded; only so long
+as we are protected from those bickerings, greedy strivings and ruinous
+stupidities that must beset all men on an earth, which are things too
+vast to control and too diversified to understand. Need I do more than
+to remind you that already the first shock of contact with the upper
+world has almost shattered the foundations of Atlantis, and left us all
+momentarily in acute danger and fear?”
+
+And the old man ceased, and stalked majestically back to his seat,
+while the nods and murmurs of approval showed how favorably he had
+been received. Evidently the Submergence Party had scored, and scored
+heavily; and therefore the time seemed ripe for the address which I had
+prepared.
+
+I had no difficulty in gaining the floor; and after a few remarks
+expressing my sympathy with the ends if not with the methods of the
+Submergence Party, I launched into the main body of my speech.
+
+“You are all building without ample knowledge,” said I. “And that must
+necessarily be so, for what can you have learned of the upper world?
+But it happens that I, thanks to some years of experience, do know a
+little of the upper world; and it is because of this that I venture to
+address you on behalf of the policy of Emergence.”
+
+I paused momentarily, to pave the way for my next point; and I observed
+that hundreds of pairs of eyes were straining toward me, in a silence
+so intense that one might have heard the dropping of the proverbial pin.
+
+“I shall not dwell upon the merely physical advantages of my own
+world,” I continued. “I shall not describe its wide spaces and
+splendid vistas, its tree-mantled valleys and sun-burnished lakes,
+its uproarious white-splashed oceans and billowy mountains, dark
+with forest or glittering with the snow. I shall not linger over the
+tingling freshness of starry winter nights, the feathery softness
+of the spring, the enchantment of firefly-haunted glades or of the
+ever-shifting skies, with their fragile blue or gray or burning sunset
+red. I shall not discourse upon these sights, for even in the upper
+world they are but little noted, save by an occasional nature crank or
+poet.
+
+“But what I shall strive to make plain are those advantages familiar
+to every thinking citizen of the earth. Let me begin, for example, by
+picturing the life of the typical dweller in our greatest city. Not
+only in his home but in his work he enjoys the benefits of the most
+progressive civilization ever known. To begin with, his dwelling may be
+of any type that accords with his means and capacity, for if he likes
+high places and can afford them, he may enjoy the privilege of looking
+down upon his neighbors from the eleventh story; or, if he prefers
+exercise, he may walk up to the sixth floor whenever he goes home; or,
+again, if he be of a sluggish disposition, he may take lodgings at
+street level--and all without extra charge.
+
+“Now let me depict the daily routine of such a man. After being
+aroused in the morning by a wonderful little clock that is almost human
+in its faithfulness to habit, he slips hastily into his clothes and
+consumes a breakfast perhaps featured by refrigerated beefsteak grown
+half a world away, and by coffee mixed with the condensed milk of cows
+that lived far away and long ago. Having thus fortified himself against
+the day’s exigencies, he loses no time about leaving the house; and,
+in company with thousands as fortunate as himself, he enters a little
+hole in the ground, and twenty minutes or half an hour later emerges
+from another and precisely similar hole five or ten miles away. But
+this is the least of his conveniences. After climbing from the second
+hole, he wedges his way into a little movable electric box in any of
+our downtown buildings, and promptly finds himself delivered opposite
+his office on the fifteenth or twentieth floor. He is now ready for the
+day’s duties; and so marvelously simple is modern civilization that, no
+matter what those duties be, they are always the same.
+
+“For there is only one task that seems worth while to the modern man,
+and that is the making of money. Just why money-making is so important
+is a question that I personally cannot answer; but it must be important
+indeed, for every one becomes involved in it, especially those who have
+more already than they know what to do with; and this is doubtless why
+modern civilization runs so smoothly, why the wheels turn so regularly
+in so many mills, the shafts are sunk so deeply in so many mines, the
+forests are cut so completely from so many mountain sides, and men
+continue to spread out and multiply despite battles, pestilences, labor
+wars, earthquakes, and explosions.”
+
+ * * * * *
+
+In the latter part of my address I had rather lost control of myself,
+saying things I had not intended to say, things I did not exactly mean.
+But my enthusiasm carried me along irresistibly, and it was not until
+I was launched into mid-channel that I paused for a glimpse of my
+audience and observed the stares of amazement the nods of incredulity
+and the frowns of repulsion with which my words were received. Then
+suddenly I was sorry, for now I remembered how once before I had
+damaged my own cause by dwelling indiscreetly upon the merits of the
+upper world. But though I was following the wrong track I did not know
+how to find the right one--for unless I described our industrial and
+mechanical progress, what was there for me to boast about? And so, face
+to face with an impassable barrier, I faltered midway in my address,
+hastily summarized, led up to a feeble peroration, and confusedly took
+my seat.
+
+As I returned to Xanocles’ side, a strained silence filled the air;
+and the shocked and even hostile glances of the audiences showed how
+gravely I had harmed the cause of Emergence.
+
+But though I personally had failed, Xanocles was equal to the
+emergency. Springing to his feet during the momentary lull that
+followed my fiasco, he caught the attention of the chairwoman, and for
+the second time was accorded permission to address the meeting.
+
+“Fellow citizens,” he began, while the full attention of the assembled
+hundreds was focused upon him, “it deeply grieves me to hear of the
+deplorable state of affairs in the upper world. No doubt our friend has
+unconsciously exaggerated, for it is incredible that, after all these
+thousands of years, the unsubmerged races should still be so primitive
+as he has indicated. Yet we must accept his picture of conditions; we
+must reluctantly admit that our fellows on earth are still groping
+in the semi-savagery of the Age of Smoke and Iron, from which we
+Atlanteans escaped three thousand years ago.
+
+“But does that mean that we should ignore the upper world? Does that
+mean that we, in the consciousness of our superiority, should not reach
+out a helping hand to our brothers? To forget them in their need would
+be unworthy of the disciples of Agripides! Indeed, it is because of
+the very limitations of the upper world that we must emerge!--it is
+because the people are so deeply in need of assistance! Let us show
+them the folly of their ways! Let us convert them to the wisdom of
+Atlantis! Let us teach them that steel and gold are but frail things
+after all! Let us send out our missionaries among them, and bring them
+the creed of Agripides! Do you not realize, fellow citizens, that such
+an opportunity has never before been thrust at your door? For not only
+may you deliver the upper world from its barbarities and teach it a
+true culture, but you may show its peoples how to build glass walls and
+submerge as we have submerged!”
+
+And in this wild vein Xanocles rambled on and on, while his hearers
+followed him with enthusiasm that seemed gradually to mount to the
+point of conviction.
+
+Other arguments followed, which I will not weary the reader with
+repeating; and after all who desired it, had had their say, a vote was
+taken on Xanocles’ emergence proposal.
+
+To our great joy, the motion carried--carried by the decisive ratio of
+almost two to one! The moment of triumph, however, had not yet arrived;
+for, before the measure could become operative, it had to be approved
+by a referendum of all the Atlanteans.
+
+That referendum, according to the law, could not be held for at least
+thirty days, the interval being considered necessary for discussion.
+Hence there ensued a most exciting thirty days for Xanocles and myself,
+as well as for all members of the parties of Emergence and Submergence.
+Never in the past three thousand years had so fundamental an issue
+been brought before the people; for the first time since the Good
+Destruction, the basic principles of Agripides were at stake!
+
+Since there were no newspapers in Atlantis, at least one agency of
+political excitement was lacking. But there were other agencies in
+abundance. Never--with the exception of those dreadful days following
+the discovery of the crack--had I seen the Atlanteans so agitated.
+In all the houses and meetings that I visited, the chief topic of
+conversation was the proposed “Emergence Act”; every one was anxious to
+deliver his opinion, and every one----man and woman alike,----seemed to
+have an opinion, which he was capable of expressing in apt and pointed
+terms. But the desire for discussion was particularly in evidence at
+the great assemblies held daily at the Hall of Public Enlightenment;
+and it was there that Xanocles and his fellow “Debating Delegates”
+of the Emergence Party made some of the most forceful and eloquent
+pleas I had ever heard; and their rivals of the Submergence group
+were scarcely less fervid in appealing for the time-honored policies.
+These activities, I need hardly point out, were not confined to one
+city, but were participated in by all the eighteen cities of Atlantis;
+and numerous speakers from outside points would arrive to address the
+gatherings in Archeon, while occasionally Xanocles or some other leader
+would leave to speak in neighboring towns.
+
+Not least eager among the fighters for Emergence were the thirty-nine
+members of the Upper World Club. Indeed, it is certain that none of the
+older members could have outdone us in enthusiasm or determination. For
+we had more than an abstract principle at stake--our entire future lay
+in the balance.
+
+And while I personally was not eager to return to earth just now (being
+detained by thought of a certain fair-haired, blue-eyed woman), yet
+most of my comrades were almost passionately anxious to escape, for
+as time went by they found themselves more and more out of place in
+this too-perfect land, and increasingly unable to perform the duties
+required of them as citizens of Atlantis.
+
+But if they were dissatisfied with the Sunken World and incapable
+of making any contribution to Atlantean culture, they proved very
+competent when it came to helping the cause of Emergence. Few of
+them were sufficiently skilled in the language to speak in public
+(Captain Gavison was an exception, and several times expressed himself
+forcefully and to good effect); but they were all adepts at private
+electioneering; and they would stop every Atlantean they could inveigle
+into conversation and plead the cause of Emergence. Frequently, indeed,
+they did more harm than good; and I remember that Stranahan repeated
+my own error, and frightened away several prospective emergionists
+by boastfully describing the magnitude of wars in the upper world;
+and once I overheard Rawson draw an involuntary cry of disgust from a
+hearer, when he tactlessly decanted upon the advantages of airplanes
+as bomb throwers. But on the whole the men were well coached by
+members of the Emergence party, and knew enough to confine themselves
+to describing the beauty of the upper world! Partly because of their
+aid, but chiefly by virtue of the vigorous campaign being conducted in
+all the four corners of Atlantis, we had hopes that our revolutionary
+measure was to become law.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+[Illustration: And the utter helplessness of their plight--and of
+ours--became tragically apparent when suddenly a great elongated
+gray mass came flying in with the torrents from the sea--a rescuing
+submarine that had been hurled in through the gap in the wall!]
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+
+
+ CHAPTER XXX
+
+ Crucial Moments
+
+
+An election in Atlantis was seldom accompanied by intense excitement.
+There was no registration, for all citizens were permanently enrolled
+with the population bureau; on election day all the men and women of
+voting age (which means all who had passed their High Initiation)
+appeared quietly at the designated polling places to cast a secret
+ballot, or else--if they preferred--they sent in their vote in writing
+two or three days earlier. The election boards then slowly counted
+the votes, and the fate of the measure (for laws were the only things
+passed on by the voters of Atlantis) was disclosed at the Hall of
+Public Enlightenment.
+
+But the Emergence proposal proved an exception to the rule. Not a
+little agitation was apparent among the men and women thronging to the
+election chambers; and this agitation was heightened by the members of
+the Upper World Club, who used earthly political tactics by accosting
+the voters before they reached the polls and showering them with final
+arguments and pleas. It is doubtful whether these eleventh hour efforts
+had any effect, and, indeed, the results showed that they might have
+been spared; but at the time we felt that our exertions had not been in
+vain, and during the election and the days of suspense that followed,
+we remained unwarrantedly hopeful.
+
+Then came the disillusioning blow. After three days, the election
+results were announced in the Hall of Public Enlightenment. Out of
+more than a third of a million votes cast in all Atlantis, our party
+had polled nearly a hundred and fifty thousand--yet had failed by many
+thousands to equal the Submergence total.
+
+Even so, we were not wholly discouraged. As Xanocles pointed out, the
+cause of Emergence had never before been able to attract one-tenth as
+many voters; and we had reason to hope that we would eventually bring
+the majority to our side. And no sooner had the news of our defeat
+reached us than we began to plan for further campaigns, for we were
+determined not to abandon the fight so long as we had breath with which
+to wage it.
+
+Yet in one respect I was already regretting my connection with
+the Emergence Party. My regrets, to be sure, arose from purely
+non-political motives, and could not make me alter my allegiance; but
+they were none the less deep-rooted. To my surprise and chagrin, I
+found that my campaigning activities were bringing me into disfavor
+with Aelios. As one of Agripides’ staunch admirers and a devoted member
+of the Party of Submergence, she looked with growing disapproval upon
+my association with Xanocles and his kind; and during those little
+conferences, which we had for the supposed purpose of discussing my
+“History of the Upper World,” she would take occasion to reprove me
+mildly and even to suggest that my conduct savored of disloyalty.
+
+Of course, I would plead my right as a citizen to espouse any political
+cause that appealed to me; but she would nod gravely with dissent.
+“Theoretically you may have the right,” she would remind me, “but don’t
+you think you are showing remarkably bad taste? Remember, you came
+into our land uninvited, and have been freely received as one of us,
+and given citizenship and all the privileges of a native. And how do
+you show your appreciation? By taking sides with the party that would
+undermine our institutions; by doing all you can to wreck the very
+country that succored you.”
+
+To this I would reply that I had no intention of wrecking the country;
+that I was trying to further its interests according to my own lights.
+And Aelios, while not convinced that my own lights were the right ones,
+would at least admit that my motives were sincere; and having reached
+this halfway point of agreement, we would invariably turn to less
+provocative subjects.
+
+But despite her disapproval of my Emergence views, I had reason to be
+encouraged by her attitude toward me. I saw her, while not often, at
+least often enough to be assured of her friendship; and now and then I
+caught in her eyes a bright, warm light which intimated that what she
+felt might be more than friendship. Yet it may merely have been that
+my desires passed judgment for me, for not by a word or a gesture did
+she give evidence that she regarded me otherwise than as one kindly
+disposed human being may regard another; and the occasional hints of
+some gentler emotion were so rare and so fleeting that I could not be
+sure. And so, as best I could, I restrained my impatience, at first
+never seriously believing that I could aspire to her height, then
+gradually fanning faint hopes that remained concealed beneath the
+mantle of my diffidence. It was long before we even approached the
+subject of love; and meanwhile, we would speak of impersonal things, or
+personal things securely buried in the past, and nothing in my words
+would give hint of the passion flaming to life within me, while in her
+words I saw the traces only of a vivid and beauty-loving mind serenely
+unconscious of sex.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+But even in Atlantis it was impossible that we should continue to see
+one another and yet retain a merely placid brother-and-sister attitude.
+How it was with her I do not know, but I was the son of a world whose
+passions burn gustily and strong; and I was becoming almost painfully
+obsessed with the thought of her, and would be given to long fits of
+melancholy in her absence, while at times in her presence I would
+be tantalized by her passionless calm, and would feel the old sweet
+primitive prompting to slip my arms about her, and enfold her as one
+might enfold the Ultimate. But always I would restrain myself, for how
+be sure of the reaction of this daughter of an alien civilization?
+How be sure that embraces and caresses would not be repulsive to the
+Atlanteans? And so, though possessed by the thought of her, as by some
+exquisite perfume that provokes and allures, I repressed my eagerness
+for many, many months, awaiting that opportunity which in the end, I
+felt sure, time and circumstance must provide.
+
+And in the end my patience was rewarded, and I was favored
+unexpectedly by one of those occasions which life, if left quietly to
+itself, seems usually to offer to lovers.
+
+It was after one of my rare and delightful afternoons with Aelios, that
+the supreme event occurred. We had been strolling together about the
+city, and had gone for a moment’s rest into the “Temple of the Stars,”
+that majestic edifice in which Rawson and I had been trapped so long
+before. Seated on a stone bench in the darkness, we gazed awe-stricken
+at the spectacle above us--the whole glittering panorama of the
+night-skies, almost as I had beheld them so many times on earth. And as
+I peered up at the image of those heavens I could hardly hope to see
+again, a sad and reminiscent mood came over me; I could fancy myself
+once more on earth, and was wistful for all that earth contained;
+I missed the friends I had known, the sparkle of the sunshine, the
+magnificence of white-throated mountains: I longed for the bluster and
+cannonade of tempests, the icy tingling of the snow, the splashing and
+foamy turbulence of the ocean. And Aelios, although she had never known
+these things and could scarcely imagine what they meant, was strangely
+responsive to my mood, and seemed even to feel my melancholy. She asked
+me gently about the world I had left, and how it felt to wander among
+the great cities of the earth, and how it felt to hear the purling
+of mountain brooklets or to sit on a grassy knoll with the great sun
+blazing in the blue above. And, remembering all that I had seen and
+heard before my captivity in Atlantis, I described to Aelios what my
+life had been, and told of my adventures and wanderings, my happy
+childhood and youth and early manhood; and I drew upon my imagination
+for gorgeous pictures of the upper world, and painted the home I had
+lost as little less than a Paradise.
+
+“Ah, now I see why you’ve joined the Emergence Party,” Aelios remarked,
+her face glowing dimly in the near-starlight, and her eyes soft with a
+kindly luster. “Of course, you must sometimes wish yourself back among
+all those wonderful scenes you left.”
+
+“Sometimes, indeed, I am sorry,” said I, in low tones and
+reminiscently. “Sometimes I almost wish to be again in my native land.
+But there are other times when I am glad, very glad to be here, and
+when I would not go back to my own country if I could--not if you
+offered me the whole world.”
+
+“And when is that?” asked Aelios. “When you are in the beautiful
+buildings here, or look at the exquisite statuary?”
+
+“Yes, sometimes then,” I replied. “But not only then. There are other
+exquisite things that make me wish to stay.”
+
+“Yes, I can understand,” she declared, apparently still innocent of the
+trend of my remarks. “The paintings, for example, or the colonnades,
+or----”
+
+“No, not only that,” I interrupted. “There is something more personal,
+more human--something that--” Here I hesitated, hardly able to proceed,
+for I realized that I was approaching an embarrassing climax.
+
+“You mean then, that you like the people here?” she volunteered, still
+with perfect candor.
+
+“Yes, indeed I like the people!” I vowed, fervently. “And one person in
+particular!”
+
+If this remark had been intended to evoke a telltale reply, it was to
+fail signally. “Oh, I am glad you are so attached to your friends!” she
+responded, whether innocently or with calculating cleverness I could
+not say, since the darkness concealed any blush that may have suffused
+her face.
+
+“But don’t you understand, Aelios?” I persisted. “Don’t you know whom
+in particular I mean?”
+
+The note of surprise in her answer was either genuine or else was born
+of remarkably skilful acting. “How should I know whom you mean? Am I
+with you often enough to know all your friends?”
+
+She was making matters difficult for me. But, having reached this
+tactical position, I was determined not to surrender. “Why, Aelios,”
+I countered, “whom should you imagine that I have for my particular
+friend? Whom but yourself?”
+
+“Myself?” she repeated, in sheer astonishment. “Myself?”
+
+ * * * * *
+
+For a moment there was silence; but this time I felt that there could
+be no doubt about the blush that mounted to her face. And at length she
+turned to me with softly, smoldering eyes and the assurance of victory
+entered my heart and then swiftly receded as she murmured, bashfully,
+“I am pleased, very much pleased, to know you feel that way. It is a
+great compliment to me, and I am very proud--for nothing in Atlantis is
+held more precious than friendship.”
+
+“Oh, but it is not only friendship!” I remonstrated, wondering if it
+were possible that she still misunderstood. “It’s not only friendship,
+Aelios! It is love!”
+
+“Love?” she echoed, in low tones of surprise; and another long silence
+followed, while I waited eagerly for the words that did not come, and
+she averted her head so that not even the dimly glowing eyes were
+visible. Then, when the suspense was becoming embarrassing, I found
+hesitating speech, which gradually grew more fluent and assured; and
+all the pent-up emotions of months welled forth and forced a passionate
+torrent from my tongue, so vehement as to surprise even myself. I told
+her how immeasurably dear she had become; how she had been for me
+the central light of all this strange world; how she had soothed my
+loneliness, dispersed my despair, and given me hope and a reason for
+living; how my life could have meaning and beauty only if she had a
+share in it, while without her all things would be desolate and blank.
+All this and much more I poured forth in an eager rhapsody, not pausing
+to reflect that I was but repeating the sentiments of a million lovers;
+and the strength of my feelings perhaps lent wings to my commonplace
+words, and gave them a power that no analysis could reveal. Or perhaps
+it was that Atlantean lovers never expressed themselves as do lovers on
+earth; for even in the darkness I was aware that Aelios was listening,
+listening intently, listening almost with a breathless interest, as
+though she had never heard or imagined words such as mine.
+
+After I had finished, she seemed still held in some spell of
+speechlessness. For several tense seconds, slow-dragging portentous
+seconds that seemed minutes long, I waited for her to brook silence.
+But when her response came, it was in passionless tones that contrasted
+oddly with my emotion; and with an accentuation so feeble as to
+resemble a whisper, she declared, “All this that you say seems strange
+to me, very, very strange. You speak of love, but I fear I do not
+understand. Perhaps love in your land is not the same as here, for I am
+sure that what you speak of is not what we would call love.”
+
+“And what would you call love?” I asked.
+
+“It is something that hardly needs a name. It is like none of those
+momentary attachments that men and women sometimes feel. It is
+something that wraps one’s whole being in a mighty flame, and is born
+chiefly of a kinship of the mind and heart; and when it comes, it need
+not be much spoken of, but can never be forgotten or lost.”
+
+“That’s just what I feel toward you, Aelios!” I assured her, fervently.
+
+“But I do not know if it is what I feel toward you,” she returned,
+simply. “I do not know--I cannot yet be sure.”
+
+“But you think that perhaps--that perhaps sometime--” I gasped, wild
+hope springing to life within me.
+
+“Yes, perhaps sometime--I cannot say,” she murmured, slowly.
+
+But in her tones was the assurance of that which her expressed words
+denied; and, with the exultation of unlooked for success, I at last
+flung myself free of restraint, and my arms found their way about her
+slim, resisting form.
+
+But somehow she slipped free of my clasp, and stood dimly outlined
+before me in the shadows, herself no more than a shadow in this unreal
+world.
+
+“Not yet, my lover, not yet,” she forbade, in gentle tones that gave no
+indication of the hurt feelings I had feared.
+
+“But when, Aelios?” I demanded, baffled, but far from discouraged.
+“When--when may we get married?”
+
+“Not yet, not yet for a while--if ever,” she decided. “We must wait,
+we must wait until we are both quite certain.” She paused, then
+added casually, “Besides, remember, you have a duty to perform--an
+all-important duty with which neither your own pleasure nor your love
+must interfere.”
+
+“But what after I have performed that duty? What after my work is
+completed? Will you then--”
+
+“I will then be willing to listen to you again,” was all she would
+vouchsafe. “Come, let us be going now.”
+
+And she started for the door, while I followed awkwardly, since she
+knew the way much better than I. And, once outside, she began speaking
+impersonally about the art of the colonnades and marble galleries, and
+seemed to have forgotten entirely the subject that had been absorbing
+us. But in her eyes was an unusual sparkle, and in her cheeks an
+unwonted glow; and after I had left her and she had gone tripping out
+of sight, I pursued my way thoughtfully homeward, my steps made buoyant
+by a hope I once would not have dared to entertain.
+
+
+
+
+ CHAPTER XXXI
+
+ “The History of the Upper World”
+
+
+I had been in Atlantis two years before I had completed my “History of
+the Upper World.” Considering the magnitude of the task, it surprises
+me now to remember that I finished it so quickly, for not only was it
+longer than three average-sized volumes, but I was retarded by writing
+it in an adopted tongue and by having to work exclusively from memory
+and without reference books other than the Atlantean dictionaries. But
+six or seven hours of daily application is certain to show results even
+though one works slowly.
+
+It was indeed a proud day, and yet a day of many doubts, when I bore
+the finished manuscript to the office of the Literary Registrar.
+This official, assisted by a board of fifteen recognized writers and
+critics, passed upon all literary works submitted by the authors of
+Atlantis; and all books found worthy of perpetuation were published
+under his direction, while unstinted advice and criticism was given
+to promising aspirants. In the case of my own book, there could be no
+doubt as to publication, for not only had I been specifically directed
+to write it, but all Atlantis was eagerly awaiting the information it
+was expected to convey. None the less, it had to undergo the regular
+procedure of inspection by the Registrar; and, as it happened, this was
+more than a fruitless formality. Before the manuscript was given to
+the press a trained essayist was appointed to help me reconstruct the
+style; and, thanks to his assistance, my writing attained a dignity and
+polish I myself could never have supplied.
+
+But when at last the publication of the book was ordered, I had
+good reason to be gratified. An edition of fifty thousand was to be
+issued--an edition of phenomenal size considering that the population
+of Atlantis was only half a million.
+
+Naturally, I sought to know the reason for this enormous printing;
+and I learned much as to book distribution in the Sunken World.
+Publication, like all other activities, was solely in the hands of the
+government; and copies of all the hundreds of books issued each year
+were sent as a matter of course to every library in the land. Moreover,
+every citizen was permitted his choice of any fifty of the year’s
+books, the receipt of which was considered not a privilege but a right;
+and men and women engaged in research work were allowed in excess of
+fifty if they made plain their need of the additional volumes. In the
+case of my own book, public interest was at such a pitch, that a large
+percentage of the people were certain to include it among their chosen
+fifty; and the first edition was therefore regarded as conservative in
+size rather than excessive.
+
+So, in fact, it proved. The book was hardly off the press when orders
+began to pour in so rapidly that a second edition of fifty thousand had
+to be prepared. For it was literally true that every one was reading
+“The History of the Upper World”; and when I say every one, I do not
+mean one man out of every hundred, as might be the case were I writing
+on the earth; I mean that there was actually not a person of reading
+age who did not feel bound to acquaint himself with the contents of my
+book.
+
+In consequence, I found my life taking on a tinge of unwonted
+excitement. The notoriety of successful authorship was mine--and the
+satisfaction of one who finds himself the center of a storm of his own
+creation. For it was with a start of surprise, a gasp of incredulity
+and a wail of horror that Atlantis read the news of the upper world.
+Previously, when I had let loose a few hints as to life on earth, I
+had witnessed some curious reactions; but the former bewilderment and
+disgust of the people now seemed insignificant by comparison. It would
+be impossible to convey any idea of their repugnance to earthly life as
+I portrayed it; it was almost as if they had learned that we had gone
+back on all fours, or had joined the orang-utan and the gibbon in the
+trees; and the dozens of letters I received, the dozens of visitors
+that poured in upon me, and the dozens of inquiries addressed to me at
+public meetings, all gave evidence of a single but profound emotion: a
+sense of wonder and of revulsion at the degeneracy of the upper world.
+
+Perhaps the clearest proof of the general attitude was to be seen in
+the reviews of the book--reviews which, unlike earthly criticism, were
+not printed, but were delivered orally before gatherings at the Hall of
+Public Enlightenment.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Let me quote, for example, from a typical address.
+
+The speaker was Thermanides, a well known writer on social and
+philosophic questions; and his views regarding the upper world were
+milder in many ways than those of his audience. Speaking before an
+assemblage of four or five hundred, he showed himself to be precise and
+thorough in his acquaintance with my book.
+
+“Since we have no reason to believe that the author has deliberately
+exaggerated,” he declared, after summarizing the contents, “we must
+accept the picture of upper world life as he presents it. And what,
+therefore, must we conclude? That Agripides was wise, wonderfully wise,
+when he urged us to submerge. There can hardly be any more distressing
+subject than the history of the earth; even the most daring satirist,
+playing upon his imagination to expose the stupidity of the human race,
+could not offer a blacker picture of follies, crimes and inanities than
+Anson Harkness has painted for us in all seriousness. For what do we
+find to be the outstanding historical facts as he depicts them? Has the
+human race gone continuously forward, forgetting its savage instincts
+in perfecting a civilization at once beautiful and secure?--has man
+come to look on man otherwise than as beast looks on beast?--or has
+society come to be composed of nothing more than a clothed jungle
+pack? No, my friends--unfortunately no, if we would believe the volume
+before us. Slave-raids and wars; rebellions and murders; conquest and
+persecution; treachery and rapine and wholesale exploitation; dynasties
+that crumble and empires that decompose--these are the sign-posts
+of the past three thousand years; and evidently there has been no
+concerted or intelligent effort to create other and less revolting
+landmarks.
+
+“Yet though the darkness seems impenetrable, I can see one faint
+glimmer of hope. In the self-satisfied blindness of the upper world
+reposes the possible solution. It is not a solution altogether pleasing
+to contemplate, but it is the sort of cleansing remedy that nature
+will sometimes provide when a wound has festered beyond possibility of
+healing. For if no ordinary cure be attainable, life will sometimes
+take the sword into her own hands, and with one blow wipe out all her
+old mistakes, and with one blow bring annihilation. It is that stroke
+which, it seems to me, is about to fall upon the upper world man,
+smiting his rancorous and lopsided civilization, and turning against
+his own throat that knife with which he thinks to gouge out the eyes of
+his foe. And this is perhaps well, my friends, for after earthly man
+has committed suicide, the world will be ready for a population of less
+shortsighted and quarrelsome creatures, be they only beetles or ants!”
+
+And with a thankful gesture, as of one who lectures on the impending
+extinction of cannibalism, the speaker returned to his seat; while,
+much to my chagrin, I noted that his words had apparently found high
+favor with his audience. And those that arose in the ensuing discussion
+were not less narrow-minded than the principal reviewer himself;
+they seemed to imagine that my book had been intended as a sort of
+catalogue of horrors instead of as a restrained and veracious history;
+and either they suggested that I must have exaggerated hopelessly, or
+else they agreed that the upper world was so decadent that a second
+“Good Destruction” would be desirable. “Blood-curdling,” “Sepulchral,”
+“An able story of depravity and crime,” “The last word in thrills
+and terror”--these were some of the expressions used by the various
+commentators; and, to judge from their remarks, one might have thought
+that I had written a popular novel of mystery and murder instead of a
+sober history.
+
+But while all Atlantis was reading the book and being provoked and
+shocked by my most commonplace statements, I was surprised to observe
+one effect which I deplored even more than the gross misunderstanding
+of upper world standards and ideals. For the “History” had acted like a
+bombshell against the Party of Emergence! Deserters from our standards
+were now legion, and in a few weeks we had lost all that we had gained
+following the discovery of the crack in the wall. It was as if the
+people had been frightened by my picture of the lands above seas,
+frightened so that they wished to shun all contact with the earth as
+they might shun things unclean and evil; and despite all that Xanocles
+and the other Emergence leaders could do, it was impossible to shake
+the masses free of this ridiculous attitude. At a test vote of an
+Emergence measure two months after the appearance of the “History of
+the Upper World,” we were defeated more decisively than even our foes
+had predicted, defeated by the overwhelming ratio of ten to one!--And,
+in my disappointment and self-accusing despair, I bitterly regretted
+that I had not written my book from a less realistic point of view, for
+I knew that nothing short of a catastrophe or a miracle could now open
+up the lanes back to the earth.
+
+
+
+
+ CHAPTER XXXII
+
+ A Happy Consummation
+
+
+Not many months after the publication of the “History of the Upper
+World” there occurred a vastly more important event. At least, it
+was vastly more important to me, and constituted the most fortunate
+episode of all my life in Atlantis. Ever since that encouraging talk
+with Aelios in “The Temple of the Stars,” I had been drawing gradually
+nearer to her; and by slow and unconscious degrees, so subtle that
+we ourselves could hardly note the change, we seemed to be entering
+upon the rôle of lovers. There was no emotional demonstration, and
+no deliberate reference to love, for in Atlantis it was considered
+undignified to express any casual amorous sentiments; but at times,
+in her eyes I would catch that reassuring look I had noted at rare
+intervals before, and in our increasingly frequent meetings, her
+manner seemed to be tinged by something indefinably wistful and yet
+indefinably gentle, that I had not previously observed.
+
+It might be imagined that the appearance and wide discussion of my book
+would have had an adverse effect upon her; but, fortunately, I had
+shown her many chapters before publication, and the contents were no
+surprise to her. And while she was at one with her people in loathing
+the upper world, she could hardly blame me for the conditions I
+depicted. Indeed, she was soon to give proof that she did not consider
+me in the least a partner in the supposed backwardness of my race.
+
+I do not now recall the precise circumstances that led up to the
+climax; I only know that it was on one of my numerous visits to her
+home, when we were alone together in the tapestried room of the
+pale blue lanterns. Nothing had suggested to me in advance that our
+interview today was to differ from our previous interviews, and
+certainly nothing could have suggested such a thought to her; but
+somehow the conversation drifted into unexpected channels, and we found
+ourselves provocatively near the subject of love; and somehow her words
+(though I cannot now remember their trend) stirred up all my checked
+and slumbering emotions, forced down the barriers of my reserve, filled
+me with a sudden and unlooked-for courage, and urged my lips to frame
+words that I had not premeditated then. And almost as much to my own
+surprise as to hers, I found myself proposing that she marry me!
+
+But was my rashness appropriately punished? Far from it. What was my
+amazement, and what my delight, when she looked up at me with trustful,
+grave blue eyes and quietly consented!
+
+And yet it all seemed so simple that it might have been an everyday
+occurrence! She had taken my proposal almost as a matter of course,
+almost as if she had expected it; but at the same time the exalted and
+happy light in her eyes showed that she was far from indifferent.
+
+“I was not sure before,” she murmured, simply, after my first rapturous
+exclamations. “But now I am quite certain. We will be all in all to one
+another, will we not, my beloved?”
+
+I forgot just how I replied; I have an impression that my arms
+performed some lively antics, with Aelios as their goal, and that
+anything I said must have been merely incidental.
+
+“When shall the day be, Aelios?” I asked, when I was again in a mood
+for discussion. “When do you say?”
+
+“When do you want me to say?” she returned, as though surprised at my
+query. “If we are both sure, what is the use of delaying?”
+
+And, by dint of further questioning, I learned that long engagements
+were unknown in Atlantis. Although usually so slow-going and leisurely,
+the natives seemed to me singularly hasty in this one regard; and once
+two people had decided upon marriage, it was not customary to allow
+more than the few days’ interval necessary for the preparations. It
+had always been so in Atlantis, Aelios explained, and she could not
+imagine how it could be otherwise, for why subject the young couple
+to the unnatural tension of waiting, and why make love ridiculous by
+arbitrarily starving it?
+
+Previously, when I had dared to think of the possibility of marriage
+with Aelios, I had half reconciled myself to the prospect of a long
+engagement, since observation had taught me nothing of Atlantean
+marriage customs, and I had imagined that an interval at least of
+months, might be considered proper. And so I was a little bewildered
+by the unexpected imminence of our union; I was like a man who, long
+blind, has suddenly beheld a flash of light; and it took me a little
+while to adjust myself to the startling new unfolding vistas.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+To begin with, I was not sure quite what was expected of me. Should I
+present Aelios with a ring or similar trinket such as was customary
+on earth? or was some more elaborate gift deemed necessary? In my
+perplexity, I consulted Xanocles, who merely smiled at my doubts.
+“Marriage with us,” he explained, “is not treated as a form of
+barter; nor is it a bargain wherein precious articles must be given
+as sureties. We have long ago stamped out of our marriage system all
+traces of its primitive origin--all traces of that old custom which
+regarded it merely as a contract of sale, and which in the beginning
+demanded the parental receipt of cattle or other material property, and
+later required rings or similar baubles as a tender of the purchase
+price if not as a pledge of good faith. When two of our people are
+married, they would consider it degrading to be expected to give
+anything beyond themselves.”
+
+But even after I had been relieved on this important subject, there
+was still much that troubled me. Aelios had decided that but eight
+days were to intervene before the ceremony (this being about the usual
+time); and, despite all my joyous anticipations, I trembled just a
+little at the thought that I was so soon to exchange my known if
+monotonous bachelor life for an unknown career as Atlantean husband.
+But, fortunately, my hours were so completely occupied that I had
+little chance to be disturbed by doubts. For one thing, I spent a great
+deal of time with Aelios; for another thing, I was much entertained
+by my friends, who were astonished and yet loudly congratulatory upon
+hearing the news, and insisted upon putting me through long ordeals of
+questions, laughter, and amiable chaffing remarks. An entire meeting
+of the Upper World Club was given over to a celebration alleged to be
+in my honor; and President Gavison, after unbending from his official
+sternness to wish me luck in terms that I thought just a little wistful
+and a little reminiscent of his own lost happiness, was followed in
+quick succession by the various other club members, all of whom strove
+to express themselves with appropriate levity. Had there been such a
+thing as an intoxicant in Atlantis, I am sure that we would have had a
+merry old time; but, for lack of the proper stimulants, the men had to
+be content with their questionable jests, with poking me mirthfully in
+the ribs, with slapping me heartily on the back, with expressing the
+wish that they might be in my shoes (or, rather, sandals, since these
+were the only footwear in Atlantis), and with laughing and guffawing in
+a generally irresponsible and uproarious manner.
+
+But as the few remaining days slid by, did I have no thought of her
+whom I had left on earth? Did I not think of Alma Huntley, she to
+whom I had once pledged devotion? Perhaps I should be ashamed, but
+I am not, to say that the memory of her scarcely entered my mind.
+She was no more than a shadow in a world that was daily growing more
+shadowy, in an existence I had outlived and could not expect to
+reenter; and if at times she would obtrude herself before me like a
+dim melancholy presence without color or form, such occasions were
+growing increasingly rare; and now that Aelios seemed so near and our
+two lives were so soon to be fused, Alma was obscured as a pale star
+is obscured by the sunlight; and all the torrents of my being welled
+up tumultuously toward Aelios, and it seemed as if her companionship
+and her love were the only love or companionship I had ever known or
+desired.
+
+And how near I was to enjoying that companionship for life became
+vividly apparent to me about three days after we had reached our
+decision. Then it was that Aelios and I, in accordance with the custom
+of the land, visited the local housing bureau, which was to assign us
+to our new lodgings. After we had duly placed our names side by side
+in a great venerable-looking ledger wherein all the wedded couples of
+the past hundred years were enrolled, we passed an exciting afternoon
+in the company of the chief housing representative, who showed us all
+the available dwelling places with the same obliging courtesy as when
+I had selected my bachelor quarters. As on the former occasion, there
+were so many desirable locations that the choice was difficult; and on
+passing each new threshold, Aelios would pause with a little cry of
+wonder or surprise, and would point in admiration to some distinctive
+feature of arrangement or decoration. Needless to say, I too was
+dazzled and delighted; particularly since I had previously seen only
+apartments designed for single people. None of these homes were very
+large; indeed, most of them had but three or four rooms in addition to
+the roof sleeping chambers and the almost invariable central court;
+but they were the most home-like little nooks one could imagine, and
+were made attractive not only by the lawns and flowering gardens that
+surrounded them, but by their tastefully furnished rooms, whose lamps
+and tapestries and statuary were never too lavish or ornate and yet
+always gave an effect at once picturesque and cozy.
+
+Our choice was in favor of a little butterfly-shaped dwelling, with
+silvery walls inlaid with mother-of-pearl and high-arched windows
+surrounded by vivid bands of stained glass. The interior appeared
+entrancing to us both, for not only were the walls and ceilings
+frescoed as though by a master hand, but the painted designs were
+matched by the very rugs on the floor and the draperies that screened
+the doorways; while a little statue-lined fountain that bubbled
+perpetually in the court fascinated us both by its rainbow glimmering
+showers of spray.
+
+“You may move in any time after your names are registered in the
+Marriage Book,” said the housing representative, when we had notified
+him of our decision and he had duly recorded it. “But if ever you
+should find this house unsatisfactory, you have only to enter your
+complaint, and if possible we will provide you with another dwelling.
+But meanwhile this will be regarded as your official residence.”
+
+ * * * * *
+
+And with these words the housing representative bowed a gracious
+retreat, while Aelios and I were left to inspect the home that was so
+soon to be ours.
+
+With the enthusiasm of children we examined every nook and corner,
+growing constantly more excited as our search proceeded; Aelios was
+radiant; I had never seen her eyes sparkle more brightly, her cheeks
+glow more vividly; and I realized as never before how extraordinarily
+fortunate I was.
+
+And it seemed as if her emotions corresponded with mine! “Is it not the
+strangest whim of fate,” she asked, “that you have come down here to
+me, my beloved? How easily I might have missed you! How easily we might
+each have gone through life not knowing that the other existed!”
+
+“So it has been with all lovers since the world began,” I returned.
+“Even in Atlantis, love must always seem a miracle.”
+
+“Even in Atlantis, it always is a miracle,” she amended; and she looked
+up at me with a smile so luminous and trustful, so kindly and so tinged
+with a rapturous emotion, that I could not but admit that she was right.
+
+The days that followed this delightful interview are but a blur in my
+memory. Although every hour was slow-footed with the suspense and the
+waiting, it seems to me that but a moment elapsed between our departure
+from our chosen home and our happy return ... the intervening events
+are all obscured by that never-to-be-forgotten morning when Aelios and
+I entered the office of the Local Adviser and were officially united.
+
+The actual ceremony was insignificant--indeed, there was no ceremony
+at all. We had merely to record our names for a second time,
+writing them in the Marriage Book which the housing representative
+had mentioned--an enormously thick volume bound in blue and gold,
+with thousands of pages, of which one was devoted to the history
+of each marriage. There were no questions asked us; there were no
+high-sounding formulas to be spoken by clockwork; there were no
+official representatives of saintliness to offer dogmatic advice;
+there were no vows to be taken, no promises to be made, no witnesses
+to gape or snicker, no pompous giving or receiving of the bride. We
+merely furnished the State with that record which it required, and
+did so without having to purchase a preliminary printed tag by way of
+permission; and after we had entered our names in the book, we were not
+insulted with any attempt to sanctify proceedings with words of antique
+witchcraft, nor humiliated by any implication that our own feelings
+would not amply solemnize the day.
+
+Of course, if we desired to celebrate our nuptials with a festival of
+any sort, that was our privilege--a privilege which the State would
+recognize by providing an appropriate hall for the day. And, as it
+happened, most bridal couples availed themselves of this right. We
+were no exception, for when our marriage had been officially recorded,
+we repaired to a flower-decked chamber where a few of Aelios’ friends
+and relatives were awaiting us. And after receiving greetings and
+congratulations, we did not pass our time in feasting or drinking,
+nor in making merry nor in riotous jests; but we danced for a while a
+sedate dance timed to ethereal strains of music; and later we all sat
+quietly about the room, Aelios at my side and the others on mats and
+sofas opposite, while the lights were subdued, and we listened to a
+still more ethereal music, which rose and quavered in a voice of joy
+like the notes of melodious birds, then faintly trilled like a far-off
+elfin call or throbbed and sang in an organ-burst of ecstasy, until one
+was moved almost to tears by the revealed poignancy and beauty of life,
+and came to look upon love with a new reverence and a new wonder.
+
+
+
+
+ CHAPTER XXXIII
+
+ The Flood Gates Open
+
+
+When I look back now upon my life in Atlantis, my sojourn there seems
+to divide itself into two periods, of which the longer and by far
+the more tranquil, dates from my union with Aelios. In the new-found
+contentment of our marriage--and ours was no exception to the rule--we
+seemed to lose track of time; and months and years began gliding by at
+a smooth and even pace that was particularly deceptive because there
+were no seasons to mark the change and there were no outstanding events
+to serve as landmarks.
+
+Perhaps the secret lay in the fact that Aelios and I were both amply
+occupied; for in the hours when we were not together, we each had our
+own work to keep us busy. Aelios still tutored for several hours a
+day, and still led in the dances at public festivals; for in Atlantis
+no distinction was made between a married and a single woman, except
+in the event of motherhood; and even a mother, while released from her
+prescribed duties, was expected to keep alive a broad interest in life,
+by performing some optional services.
+
+For my own part, I was no less busy than Aelios, for after I had
+completed my “History of the Upper World,” I had again been summoned by
+the Committee on Selective Assignments, and had been directed to write
+a treatise on “Social Traditions and Institutions in the Upper World,”
+wherein I might describe conditions above seas in greater detail than
+in my previous book. This task, although far from uncongenial, was
+proving both lengthy and laborious, for I tried to cover every modern
+country; and the further I proceeded the harder the work became, for
+the more I learned of Atlantis the more difficult it appeared to
+represent the earth in a light that was not merely pitiable.
+
+I was now quite reconciled to passing my remaining days in Atlantis.
+Although Xanocles and his colleagues persisted with their agitation,
+the cause of Emergence was dwindling in my mind to an impossible dream;
+and, had it not been for the cataclysm which aroused us all to frenzied
+action, I might have been content to grow gray and wrinkled in the
+Sunken World. For now that Aelios was mine, I found that life was far
+richer than ever before; that not only was I steeped in pleasurable
+activity amid a delightful environment, but that there was an almost
+charmed absence of strain and hurry, and a leisure and serenity that
+would once have seemed the attributes only of a Nirvana.
+
+It is true, of course, that I could not escape all the ordinary
+physical ills of life. Once, for example, when my awkwardness betrayed
+me in an athletic contest and I suffered a broken arm, I was conducted
+to a State hospital, where a State physician skilfully treated my
+injury; and once when the incessant golden glare began to tell upon
+my eyes, I had to visit a State occulist, who relieved the strain by
+prescribing a pair of wide-rimmed amber-tinged glasses.
+
+My appearance was changing, moreover, in other ways than the mere
+addition of glasses. I was acquiring a long beard, largely owing to
+the habit formed during my first days in Atlantis; and my complexion
+was taking on a curious greenish tint, due to some peculiar action
+of the Atlantean light--an action to which the Atlanteans themselves
+had inherited immunity. But I was not alone in my queer pistache
+complexion; there were exactly thirty-eight others who could show the
+same distinctive pigmentation; and so marked was the coloration that,
+as the men sometimes declared, our origin was “written on our skins.”
+
+My fellow members of the Upper World Club meanwhile did not share
+my liking for Atlantis. As time went by, in fact, they seemed to
+care less and less for their adopted country. With the exception of
+Gavison, who had written a brief but popular treatise on “Navigation
+on Upper World Waters” and a not less popular “Comparison of Upper and
+Lower World Civilizations,” there was not one of my former shipmates
+who was adapting himself to life in Atlantis or who was not remiss in
+his obligations as a citizen. While they had all acquired at least
+a rudimentary knowledge of the language and were all reasonably
+successful in performing some prescribed mechanical task for two or
+three hours a day, yet none of them had accomplished anything in any
+of those artistic or intellectual pursuits which alone were considered
+worth while in Atlantis. For how, indeed, could they hope to conform
+to the standards of a world that had so little in common with their
+own? Apparently the natives did not even expect them to conform, and
+tolerated lapses that would have been considered disgraceful in born
+Atlanteans; but they themselves appeared to feel that they were somehow
+inferior, somehow out of place; and much of their restlessness, and
+much of their longing to escape, is to be explained by the desire for a
+less ideal but more familiar mode of life.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Considering the eagerness with which my companions would have exchanged
+the ease of Atlantis for even the most strenuous labors and hardships
+of the earth, it seems ironic that the man ultimately chosen to emerge,
+was he whose marriage to an Atlantean had made him more than resigned
+to the Sunken World. My sole excuse is that the choice, when it fell
+upon me, was made wholly upon the suggestion of others, and occurred
+at a time of such acute public peril that the happiness or fate of
+individuals was as nothing.
+
+For the hour was to come--and to come with startling suddenness--when
+a fateful writing was to glare from the walls of Atlantis. I had been
+in the Sunken World seven full years when the menace burst forth, and
+I was not there seven days after it appeared.... But in the interval
+I was a witness to scenes of such havoc, such horror, confusion and
+despair as I had never seen before and fervently hope I shall never see
+again.
+
+It torments me now to recall that all that terror and all that
+irremediable loss might have been avoided, had we but heeded the advice
+of Peliades, Peliades who insisted that the crack in the wall had not
+been adequately repaired....
+
+But let me not anticipate. I must describe as dispassionately as I
+can those overwhelming events which descended like lightning to blast
+Atlantean life, and which are so disturbing even in memory that my
+pen trembles and my startled mind takes fresh alarm. Merely to try to
+record those distracting days and nights is to be obsessed as by an
+old madness; I can feel a paralyzing dread spreading once more through
+all my nerves; I can feel my brain grow numb, my eyes grow strained
+and distended, my arteries throb with delirious haste. And all the
+while confused visions come swarming across my mind--visions of roaring
+vigils by lamplit walls of glass, visions of huddled faces, weeping or
+praying or with terror-stricken eyes, visions of thundering waters,
+panicky flights, submerged temples and inundated plains; and it all
+seems like some nightmare I dreamt long ago, yet more vivid than any
+nightmare, for there are sobs and lamentations that echo even now in
+my memory, and pleading lips that shall never stir again, and agonized
+eyes that peer at me like phantoms which will not be exorcised.
+
+Long before, in moments of aimless fancy, I had sought to picture to
+myself the end of the world; to imagine the consternation and horror of
+an earth maddened by dread of impending doom. But I had never thought
+that I myself would be the spectator of a crumbling universe....
+
+As in the case of the crack in the wall years before, the danger
+appeared with devastating suddenness. One moment, all was tranquil;
+the next moment, the Sunken World was in a frenzy. I remember that one
+afternoon Aelios and I had gone to the Agripides Theatre to witness
+a performance of some sort (its precise nature has slipped from my
+mind); and it was at the close of the first act that the warning came.
+From the unexplained absence of the chorus that usually sang during
+intermissions, I might have suspected that something was wrong; but
+actually I was without misgivings until suddenly a great burnished,
+silvery horn--the horn of the Autophone!--was lifted quietly on the
+stage.
+
+At this unexpected sight, a stab of alarm darted through me; Aelios
+seized my hand and held it as if for reassurance; the audience sat
+rigid and tense, like persons who behold a ghost. For an instant we
+heard no sound, except for the quick breathing of our neighbors; then
+the strained silence was broken by an uncanny hollow voice that issued
+sonorously as if from nowhere.
+
+“A great misfortune has befallen,” announced the unseen, in tones
+that sounded almost sepulchral. “The crack in the glass wall has
+re-appeared, but this time it is of more serious proportions than
+before.”
+
+The voice faltered for an instant and halted, while murmurs of dismay,
+terror and unbelief shuddered through the audience.
+
+And in a more deliberate and even graver manner the speaker continued:
+“Late last evening our navigators observed that the Salty River was
+higher than usual; and an investigating party sent out today by the
+High Chief Adviser has discovered that the wall has actually given
+way at one point, and that the water is pouring in through a fissure
+several feet across. There is as yet no cause for despair, for the
+surplus water, while highly inconvenient, can be disposed of by the
+reserve capacity of our intra-atomic pumps, which are equipped for
+all ordinary emergencies and can discharge fifty per cent more than
+their usual delivery. But there is danger that the break will expand
+before repairs can be made; and for this reason the High Chief Adviser
+requests that you try to meet the situation courageously, and freely
+enlist your brains and your services till the peril is overcome.”
+
+ * * * * *
+
+It would be impossible to convey any idea of the commotion which these
+words created. The people did indeed follow the High Chief Adviser’s
+advice to be courageous, for there was no more than a hint of that
+panic which one might have expected. But there could be no further
+thought of the performance in the theatre. After an instant’s chill
+silence, the audience arose with one accord; and men’s faces were
+blanched and women could be heard muttering in fear as the crowd began
+pushing toward the exits. In their excitement, the people had forgotten
+their usual courtesy; and Aelios and I were shoved and jostled in a way
+that reminded me of the New York subways. It was all I could do not to
+lose track of her amid the mob; yet both of us were anxious not to be
+separated, particularly since the speechless eagerness of the throng,
+the sighs of women, the rapid breathing of men and our own fast-beating
+hearts, all served to fill us with grim forebodings.
+
+Once out of the great theatre, the people were driven as by a common
+instinct toward the river. All seemed fearful of even a second’s delay,
+as though our haste might repair the fractured wall!--and in a long,
+swiftly moving column, constantly augmented as we advanced, we followed
+the winding avenue that curved toward the waterfront. None of us spoke
+more than an occasional word; even Aelios was silent, but she clutched
+my arm with unwonted firmness, and looked up at me with eyes wherein
+apprehension alternated with a reassuring courage.
+
+But there was no prop for courage in the sight that greeted us at the
+river bank. The stream, which previously had flowed five or six feet
+beneath the docks, was now not more than eight or ten inches below the
+level.
+
+In speechless dismay we watched that broad, greenish-gray torrent
+go swishing and gurgling past. But what was there that we could do?
+Nothing--except to stand and gape helplessly at that swift-flowing,
+swollen stream. Indeed, we seemed worse than merely helpless, for
+as I stood there with Aelios amid that horror-faced crowd, I became
+conscious--as during that other crisis years before--that I was
+arousing a singular repulsion. My neighbors were edging away from me
+visibly; some were pointing toward me, or uttering half-suppressed
+oaths; I thought I heard some one ruefully mumbling something about
+“That foreigner” and something else about “The cause of all our
+troubles.”
+
+I would quickly have withdrawn with Aelios from that hostile throng,
+had I not chanced to observe a slim, gray form approaching from far
+upstream. With the speed of the swiftest racing craft it drew near, and
+in a few minutes was recognizable as an intra-atomic boat, akin to the
+one I had boarded years before. Much to my relief, it came to a rapid
+halt, drew up at the dock, and let down its gangplank. And as the crowd
+forced its way on to the docks, Aelios and I was not slow in finding
+seats for ourselves for what was sure to prove an extremely exciting
+trip.
+
+And exciting it was--far more exciting than we could have desired. We
+had been under way only a few minutes when the aspect of the river
+began to change disquietingly. Except for the current, it lost the
+character of a river entirely, and took on the appearance of a long
+lake! On both sides the water spread in a smooth-flowing sheet two or
+three miles broad; and above the surface in places stared dumps and
+dusters of vegetation, with here and there a miniature island; while
+several temples and colonnades stood with marble bases buried in the
+water, like the palaces of some aquatic goddess.
+
+But if this overflow was alarming, the full extent of the disaster was
+not evident until we approached the glass wall itself. This time it
+did not require any searchlight to reveal the nature of the injury;
+our ears might have told us if our eyes had not--but our eyes had
+sufficient to report. As we strode along the little, clay path toward
+the wall, we became aware of a broad, gleaming, greenish expanse
+between--a sheet of water where all had been dry land! And into that
+sheet of water, with a continuous thunder equal to that of the floods
+from the river valve, a long, white torrent spurted in a gracefully
+curving jet, shooting outward hundreds of yards from the glass bulwark,
+and descending with a splashing as of some gigantic fountain. It
+was impossible to estimate the volume, except to say that it was
+enormous; nor could we see the nature or extent of the leak, since the
+intervening water forbade our close approach. But we observed how the
+overflow worked its way circuitously into the Salty River in a sort of
+channel of its own choosing; and occasional swift-moving lights, which
+even from our distance we could see flashing from beyond the glass,
+showed us that the repair ships were busy trying to seal up the crack.
+But from the beginning we knew how hopeless were their efforts--with
+their midget vessels and midget tools they were like ants trying to
+stem the flood of a Niagara. And the utter helplessness of their
+plight--and of ours--became tragically apparent when suddenly a great
+elongated, gray mass came flying in with the torrents from the sea, and
+fell with a splash and a clatter in a battered heap projecting above
+the waters--a rescuing submarine that had been hurled in through the
+gap in the wall!
+
+ * * * * *
+
+[Illustration: Almost before I realized that the ultimate moment had
+come, I found myself assisting Aelios up the half-submerged gangplank
+and on to the deck of the grim, low-lying, shadowy ship ... we mounted
+to the deck, cast a last glance at the darkness that hid the marble
+temples of Atlantis, and waved for the last time to the dim watching
+figures.]
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+
+
+ CHAPTER XXXIV
+
+ Swollen Torrents
+
+
+It was five days later that I received the summons from the High
+Chief Adviser ... and made ready for the most extraordinary of all my
+adventures.
+
+In the interval, all Atlantis was in a state verging upon madness.
+The commotion created by the original discovery of the crack was
+insignificant beside the terror that now dominated every inhabitant.
+To say that the country seemed stricken with paralysis would be to
+understate the conditions; rather, it was driven to a dumb distraction,
+like some great beast that feels its foot in a trap. Only one thought
+was in anyone’s mind, only one topic on anyone’s lips; the people
+drifted hither and thither like phantoms, rushing back and forth
+between the cities and the spurting leak in the wall, sometimes engaged
+furtively in whispered discussions, on other occasions muttering
+half-audible prayers or withdrawing into themselves like men brought
+face to face with Fate. Some would hover near the offices of the High
+Chief Adviser, awaiting hopeful news that did not come; some would
+haunt the river banks, watching the swelling torrents go murmuring and
+whirling past; some would huddle together in small family groups, as
+though mortally afraid to lose sight of their dear ones; some would
+merely go pacing around like rats in a cage, scarcely heeding where
+they went, their white faces and harried eyes expressive of a dread
+they dared not mention.
+
+But none--none who were not driven by the most stringent orders--were
+heeding their daily duties. For the first time in history, the cities
+were inadequately supplied with food; the official producers and
+distributors shared the general inertia, and the people had to clamor
+at the doors of the great municipal warehouses for their meager
+rations; and actual starvation seemed certain unless the workers could
+be urged back to the fields.
+
+But more appalling to my mind--vastly more appalling, since it seemed
+like the overthrow of the very order of nature--was the laxity with
+regard to the golden orbs that ruled the Atlantean day. Owing no
+doubt to the negligence of the official in charge, the clockwork that
+controlled these artificial suns ran down on what should have been
+the third night, and the luminaries continued in full blaze after the
+usual hour of darkness. But few seemed even to notice the change, and
+most continued frenziedly watching the waters or awaiting encouraging
+reports; while those that could, snatched a few hours of troubled sleep
+during the continuous daylight, and many still kept their useless
+vigils with drawn faces and weary eyes.
+
+Meantime the Salty River continued to rise. Slowly and insidiously,
+by inches and by half inches, it crept up and up, up and up, until
+after two days not more than a hand’s breadth separated it from the
+top of the embankment. And after three days it had not more than a
+finger’s breadth to go, while on the fourth day we could see thin,
+sparkling streams flowing down the more low-lying street, not deep
+enough to make them quite impassable, but lending to the columned
+thoroughfares the aspect of some pathetic Venice. Simultaneously the
+Autophone brought news that the small towns of Malgos and Dorion had
+been inundated and that their inhabitants had fled for higher ground;
+that the larger cities of Atolis, Lerenon, and Aedla were rearing
+embankments to keep out the waters, and that the farm lands of eastern
+Atlantis were flooded as far as the eye could see. But little that was
+even mildly hopeful was reported. It was stated that the repair ships
+were still trying to cope with the leak, though without success; that
+the intra-atomic pumps were disposing of most of the surplus water,
+but were being taxed to capacity; that in several places huge electric
+shovels were at work, digging out great hollows into which the floods
+might be drained; that efforts were being made to freeze huge masses of
+water, and force the ice against the wall, in the attempt to stem the
+torrents.... But all the while the river continued to rise, and nothing
+short of a miracle seemed likely to check disaster.
+
+After five days the water was flowing to a depth of many inches through
+half the streets of Archeon; and only the rapid erection of earthworks
+had saved the other half. And it was after five nerve-racking days
+that--as I have stated--I received the summons from the High Chief
+Adviser.
+
+The messenger--a wan-faced old man who seemed to be in a breathless
+hurry--was waiting for me when I returned home with Aelios after
+strolling aimlessly for hours through the unflooded portions of the
+town. From the grave attitude with which he greeted me, I knew at once
+that something was amiss; but he had no explicit information to offer.
+“The High Chief Adviser wishes to see you without delay,” was all that
+he would report. And having uttered these words, he began edging away
+as though he had immediate business elsewhere.
+
+There being nothing else to do, I accompanied this singular messenger
+after hastily assuring Aelios that I would return as soon as possible.
+
+As I might have anticipated, our walk turned out to be far from
+pleasant. The old man had evidently been long trained in diplomacy,
+for I could not induce him to speak except non-committally and in
+monosyllables. And all the way to the office of the Adviser I was left
+to my own conjectures, while we skirted public squares that looked like
+lakes or waded ankle-deep through the salty water.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Arriving at the many-domed sandstone edifice where the Atlantean
+government had its headquarters, my companion bade me wait in a
+book-lined anteroom, and went to notify his chief of my arrival. It was
+as though my coming had been awaited, for the old man had hardly left
+me when he reappeared and motioned me to follow him.
+
+I have a vague remembrance of accompanying him through long, arched
+galleries; but of these my mind retains no definite impression, and
+the next thing I dearly recall is that I stood in a little blue-walled
+room before an impressive-looking elderly man whose picture I had often
+seen. His long, furrowed, sagacious features were manifestly those of
+a scholar, but there was a squareness about the jaw that marked him
+also as a man of action; while at the same time there was a patriarchal
+benignity about the sympathetic lines of the face. But one quality
+there was which dominated him now, and which none of the pictures had
+shown: an air of utter fatigue, of melancholy, almost of despair, all
+too plainly written in the hollows that underlined the weary, gray
+eyes, in the pale cheeks almost totally drained of blood, and in the
+haggard expression as of one who has not slept for days.
+
+To the right of the High Chief Adviser was seated a man whom I
+recognized with surprise. It was Xanocles, also looking pallid and
+worn--and as he rose to greet me I began to conceive some faint idea
+why I had been summoned.
+
+The Chief Adviser gravely motioned me to a seat at his left; and as
+I sank into the cushioned chair he plunged without formality into an
+explanation.
+
+“I need hardly tell you,” he commenced, speaking rapidly but in dull,
+sober tones, “how serious is the crisis that confronts Atlantis.
+But perhaps no one--except those of us who are on the inside of
+affairs--realizes quite how acute the danger is. Frankly speaking, we
+are incapable of dealing with the emergency. The intra-atomic pumps
+have been working to capacity for five days, forcing out fifty per cent
+more than their usual volume; but, even so, the water is pouring in
+at the rate of several tons a second faster than we can drive it out.
+This in itself would indicate a grave enough peril; but this is not the
+worst. Our engineers tell us that the crack is extending to portions of
+the wall previously unaffected, and that new sections may give way at
+any time. When this happens, it will be--the end.”
+
+The High Chief Adviser paused, bleakly frowning; then, with a piercing
+glance at me, as if to see whether I had anticipated his meaning, he
+continued, “It is apparent that Atlantis cannot save itself. We are
+facing a peril unique in history, and have not the weapons with which
+to combat it. If help comes, it must come from outside. And that is why
+I have summoned you.”
+
+“But I don’t exactly see--” I began.
+
+“Let me explain,” the official continued, impatiently. “You yourself of
+course can do nothing. But you come from a people who, to judge from
+your writings, have developed remarkable engineering and mechanical
+skill. I am hopeful that their science may be able to devise some means
+of saving us, and for that reason I am planning to send you above seas
+for help. What do you think of the idea?”
+
+“Why, I--I think it might be worth trying,” was all I was able to gasp
+in reply.
+
+“Your friend Xanocles also thinks it worth trying,” proceeded the
+Adviser suavely. “Now I personally have always been against the policy
+of Emergence; but it is imperative to try new measures; and at a time
+like this, fortunately, the law empowers me to take any action on my
+own initiative. And so I sent for Xanocles today as one of the most
+prominent local members of the Emergence Party, and when I asked whom
+he would advise me to appoint as special envoy to the upper world he
+had no hesitation about mentioning you.”
+
+“But why me?” I demanded, doubtful of my qualifications for so high an
+office.
+
+“Well, to be sure, you were not the only one,” stated the Adviser. “He
+also recommended a certain Gavison, but we have decided to hold him in
+reserve, and if you do not return in a few days we will send him out
+with a second submarine. Meanwhile, if you would care to accept--”
+
+“Why, of course--of course I’ll accept--if it is for the good of
+Atlantis,” I declared. “But just what would you expect of me?”
+
+“One of our submersible vessels, with a crew of four men, will be in
+readiness at the docks early tomorrow morning. You will board it, and
+it will bear you out through the eastern valve and to any part of
+the upper world you may direct. But you are to waste no time about
+informing your fellows of the menace that confronts Atlantis. They too
+have submersible vessels, as your arrival here proves--let them send
+some of their ships down here, if they can, with materials to repair
+the wall. But above all things, you must remember not to delay, not to
+delay!”
+
+“I will do my best,” I promised. “But let me not hold out any false
+hopes--I am not sure that the upper world will be able to assist.”
+
+“At any rate, you can try,” sighed the Head of the Atlantean
+government. “It is a chance worth taking. We lose nothing by the
+attempt.”
+
+And then, fixing on me that powerful magnetic glance common to all the
+Atlanteans, he demanded, “You will spare no effort?”
+
+“I will spare no effort,” I solemnly vowed.
+
+“Then the fates be with you!” And the High Chief Adviser rose and
+firmly took both my hands; and I thought that just a trace of emotion
+dimmed his eyes as he fervently continued, “I need say no more. You
+know as well as I how much depends upon this. Above all things,
+Harkness, you will make haste, you will make haste, will you not?
+Good-bye--and good fortune will be yours!”
+
+And the next moment, accompanied by Xanocles, I was passing through
+the outer galleries. The last glimpse I caught of the High Adviser
+showed me the great head wearily sagging, the lids drooping over the
+melancholy gray eyes as if in utmost renunciation or despair.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+From the Adviser’s office I hastened straight home, leaving Xanocles,
+after being assured that he would come to me early in the morning.
+
+I found Aelios impatiently awaiting my return. “You have been long,”
+she murmured, although it seemed to me that I had come back very
+quickly. And the big, blue eyes looked up at me inquiringly, and I had
+to explain at once the meaning of the Adviser’s summons.
+
+She followed my recital without a word; but heavy furrows began to
+appear upon her brow when I told her how serious was the plight of
+Atlantis; and a big limpid teardrop flowed unheeded down her cheek.
+
+“You did right to accept the commission,” she said, coming to me when
+I had finished my story, and resting one hand affectionately upon my
+shoulder. And a deep melancholy made moist her eyes as she continued,
+“I am glad that the choice has fallen upon you. When do we start on our
+voyage?”
+
+“We?” I repeated, staring at her in surprise.
+
+“Yes, we. I intend to go with you, of course.”
+
+“But, Aelios, that’s impossible!” I exclaimed, springing up and drawing
+her closely to me. “You know how much I’d like to have you with me. But
+you don’t seem to realize the peril.”
+
+“Peril?” She laughed disdainfully, as she withdrew from me. “Do you
+think I’d have you submit to a peril I wouldn’t share in? Besides, is
+it not in the interest of my own country? Should I stay here doing
+nothing when I might help to save Atlantis?”
+
+“But, even so, would you be permitted--” I started to protest.
+
+“Of course I’d be permitted! The High Chief Adviser would be more than
+willing--only, of course, he wouldn’t ask me to take the risk.”
+
+“And neither would I ask you--” I objected; but she cut me short by
+demanding, sharply, “Do you think it’s any greater than the risk of
+staying here?” And, with the air of one whose mind is made up and is
+not to be questioned, she reminded me, “We better be getting ready, for
+I don’t suppose we’ll have any time to waste.”
+
+And thereupon, the question having been settled, we began our meager
+preparations. But we found that there was not much to prepare, for of
+course the submarine would be well provisioned; and, except for a few
+personal trinkets, we could think of little to take away with us. But
+it occurred to me to bring a copy of Homer’s lost masterpiece, the
+“Telegonus,” which might convince the upper world of the truth of my
+reports about Atlantis. And it also occurred to me to pay a pilfering
+expedition to the museum, which was now untenanted even by the doormen;
+and, when I returned, my pockets were weighed down with several pieces
+of gold, and my arms were laden with a large amorphous bundle, whose
+contents might have been identified as an Ensign’s uniform.
+
+Of the night that followed I have only the most confused and disturbing
+remembrance. I know that I did not sleep, except to drowse away by
+brief, nightmare-haunted spells; and I also know that Aelios did not
+sleep, for her mind like mine was busy contemplating the adventure
+before us. Yet we were both too weary for connected thought; and
+jumbled visions were all that greeted us as we lay there speechless in
+the blackness.
+
+The moment the lights were flashed on again we renounced our futile
+attempts at slumber. And we had hardly risen and made ourselves
+presentable when we began to receive visitors. Not only did Xanocles
+arrive as he had promised, but the entire Upper World Club appeared in
+a group, for I had notified Gavison of my prospective departure and had
+expressed my desire to see all the men again before I left.
+
+Since all our visitors insisted on seeing us off, it was a good-sized
+company that attended us as we bade farewell to the butterfly-shaped
+building that had housed us so long, and set off through the streets of
+the stricken city toward the river. Yet our escort, while large, was
+far from merry, for the strain of the past few days was written upon
+us all, and the pale cheeks and weary looks of my companions matched
+their listless manner and their silence. One or two--and among them the
+unquenchable Stranahan--did indeed attempt to be jocular; but their
+efforts were half-hearted and flat, and their laughter rang thin and
+hollow like mockery; and as we drew nearer our goal and saw the flood
+rippling through the streets ahead, we heard no more of their jests,
+but all of us plunged onward speechlessly and with stern, set faces,
+oppressed as though by the shadow of some solemn and awful presence.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+When we reached the inundated districts, I of course urged my
+companions to turn back. But they paid no heed, and pressed gravely on
+their way, first wading ankle-deep, then halfway to their knees, while
+strung out in a long line among scattered houses that looked like lake
+dwellings. Here a marble edifice, there a colonnade, yonder a cluster
+of statues, projected above the deluge, whose green-gray current went
+swishing past as though from an inexhaustible source. Amid those fluid
+wastes, which had obliterated all familiar landmarks and gave to well
+known things a new and terrible majesty, it was impossible to be sure
+of our way; and once one of the men slipped into a depression so deep
+that he had to swim to save himself; and more than once some one
+tripped over some buried obstacle, and went floundering at full length
+into the water, thereby provoking a short-lived outburst of mirth. So
+great were the dangers that we had to move very slowly; but we also
+moved with grim regularity, and our progress was without sound other
+than the monotonous splash, splash of our advancing feet.
+
+Yet it was not only our own plight that made us moody and sad. As we
+plodded through the flooded districts, we had continual glimpses of
+the inhabitants--and in their aspect and manner there was nothing to
+reassure us. Here, through an open window, we would catch sight of
+several agile figures straining to bind some huge collection into a
+bundle; there we would observe a man descending from his doorstep
+into the enveloping waters, his back bent down with a great pile of
+household articles, a wan-faced woman clinging nervously to him or
+turning back with moist eyes to the home they were leaving. And we
+passed not one or two such refugees but scores, literally scores.
+One would have a three-year-old perched securely on his shoulder,
+another would be trying to soothe a crying babe or leading by the hand
+a frightened lad of five; some would be bearing off great heaps of
+clothing or huge cans and boxes that looked like food containers, and a
+few were puffing and panting to save their books, rugs and paintings.
+
+Meanwhile the eyes of all the people were baleful with a wild,
+unnatural light; their features were assuming a furtive, hunted
+expression; their voices had lost their music, and had grown nervous
+and shrill. And all were looking bloodless and bedraggled; ominous
+hollows were forming in their cheeks and beneath their eyes; their
+clothes were soiled and untended, their beards scraggly and untrimmed;
+and many had lost their normal restraint, so that we passed a woman
+who sobbed and sobbed quite regardless of our approach, an old man who
+growled and gibbered insanely to himself, and more than one that did
+not even seem to see us, but stared upward intently with imploring
+face, while mumbling incoherent melancholy phrases.
+
+When finally we drew near our destination, the water reached to the
+knees of the tallest of us, and our progress was more laborious and
+slower than ever. I now began to fear that we would not be able to
+locate the river bank, for how tell where the shallow water ended and
+the deep began? At length, however, I was relieved to observe a wide,
+unbroken flowing expanse several hundred yards ahead, and to note that
+a long rope, stretched in the water between improvised wooden supports,
+marked the river’s theoretical edge.
+
+It was just when we came in sight of our goal that the supreme horror
+befell. Even to this day I can recapture the amazement and alarm
+of that dread moment; and the abruptness of it all and the terror
+overwhelm me anew. Had the waters swelled and swept over us in a tidal
+wave, I would have been panic-stricken and yet halfway prepared--but
+I could not have anticipated that the blow was to strike from above
+rather than from beneath.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Suddenly--although this was only the beginning of the Atlantean
+day--the golden lights of the glass dome began to waver and flicker,
+then paled to a twilight glow, then (in less time than it takes to
+state) snapped into blackness.
+
+So startled were we that we stood there transfixed; scarcely an oath
+issued from our petrified lips. The darkness was absolute; we could
+not see our nearest neighbors; we seemed walled in by oblivion. For a
+moment there was silence; then came a light splashing to my left, and
+simultaneously dozens of voices burst forth bewilderingly in terror and
+dismay.
+
+And when that first horrified outburst was dying down, there crept
+over us from a distance other cries--confused cries as of many voices
+sighing and wailing in chorus. And all those voices seemed to form into
+one, and to grieve and drone in a single long-drawn sob, with echoes
+reminding me uncannily of lost souls mourning in the dark.
+
+But soon that melancholy tumult passed away; and we were aware only
+that we stood there knee-deep in the flood, in a silence unbroken
+except by the gurgling waters.
+
+Then it was that the most quick-witted of us all came to his senses.
+Suddenly a vivid light stabbed the gloom just to my left; and by its
+glaring yellow illumination I could make out the tall form of Xanocles.
+
+In his hands was a good-sized pocket flashlight. “I was a little afraid
+this might happen,” he declared, trying to be matter-of-fact, and
+speaking loudly enough for us all to hear. “Lucky I had these lanterns
+with me.” And, to our surprise, he calmly drew several more flashlights
+from the folds of his garments, and passed them to his nearest
+neighbors.
+
+“The High Chief Adviser warned me yesterday that this was possible,” he
+explained. “And so I thought it best to be prepared.”
+
+And then, while we all stood gaping at him like men with paralyzed
+minds, he continued, soothingly, “There is really nothing to be
+alarmed about. The water must have gotten into the electric power
+generators--that is all. In a few hours the lights will no doubt be
+shining again.”
+
+But his words did not carry conviction. In his voice was a note of
+concern that he could not wholly exclude; and as we glanced nervously
+into the gloom--a gloom that was all-enveloping except for our
+flashlights and an occasional firefly flicker in the far distance--we
+could not believe that the golden luminaries would soon beam upon us
+again.
+
+It was a solemn procession that started splashing once more toward
+the river bank. Guided by the sallow illumination of the flashlights,
+we could barely find our course; and step by step, with laborious
+slowness, we plodded through the unrelenting flood. None of us could
+find the heart to utter a word; and from time to time, among my shadowy
+attendants, I caught glimpses of lips rigidly compressed and faces
+firmly set, as among men who go forth to meet the Ultimate. All the
+while Aelios was at my side, hovering close as if for shelter; and when
+I could I helped her over the more difficult places, though she too was
+speechless, like one whose thoughts are too appalling for expression.
+
+Then, for an instant, hope came flashing back. A sudden radiance burst
+upon us from above; the great luminaries were once more touched with
+light, which fitfully expanded from a pale red glow almost to the
+normal golden--and then fitfully died out into utter gloom.
+
+And our cries of rejoicing were frozen on our lips, and the darkness
+that ensued seemed more intense than ever. And once more there was only
+the silence, the wavering flashlights and the whirling floods.
+
+Groping and floundering and sometimes sinking almost up to the hips in
+water, we at last found ourselves near the rope that marked the river’s
+verge. And by turning upstream toward a dim but steady yellow light, we
+managed to locate the docks and the submarine, which we recognized by
+the radiance filtering through the portholes.
+
+Then, almost before I realized that the ultimate moment had come, I
+found myself assisting Aelios up the half-submerged gangplank and on to
+the deck of the grim, low-lying, shadowy ship. The next that I remember
+is that I was back again in two feet of water, and that a multitude of
+hands clasped mine, a multitude of voices were lifted simultaneously,
+first the voices of a mob attempting a cheer that died prematurely,
+then the voices of individuals, shouting out advice and farewells,
+wishing me a safe voyage, entreating me to make haste for the good of
+Atlantis. I have a recollection of seeing the earnest, grave face of
+Gavison by the uncertain, shifting illumination of the flashlights; the
+elongated, intellectual face of Xanocles; the youthful but sad-eyed
+and frightened face of Rawson, and Stranahan’s droll countenance now
+furrowed almost into a tragic severity.
+
+But in an instant all these faces--so familiar to me, and so well
+liked--had drifted out of view. I too stood upon the gangplank, lightly
+waving although my heart seemed dull and dead within me. Then I mounted
+to the deck, cast a last glance at the darkness that hid the marble
+temples of Atlantis, and waved for the last time to the dim watching
+figures. And as the flashlights began slowly to retreat, I descended
+a narrow stairway, heard an iron door clatter to a close above me,
+felt a jolt and a shudder that were followed by a regular, incessant
+quivering--and knew that I was on my way back to the earth.
+
+
+
+
+ CHAPTER XXXV
+
+ The Return
+
+
+The facts of my return from Atlantis have been reported so widely that
+it would be futile for me to dwell upon them. It is generally known
+how, having crossed the ocean at the sixty-knot speed made possible by
+our intra-atomic propellers, our submarine found its way to the mouth
+of the Potomac and almost up to Washington; how, after it had anchored
+obscurely some distance below the city, I donned my old uniform and
+made my way out under cover of night; how I hastened the next day
+to the offices of the naval department, disclosed my identity, and
+met with ridicule not only at my incredible tale, but at my strange
+appearance, my long beard, my goggles and my greenish skin.
+
+Unfortunately, in the haste and confusion of my departure from the
+Sunken World, I had made one oversight. I had forgotten the copy of
+Homer’s lost “Telegonus,” which I had hoped to exhibit in verification
+of my story! Scattered lines of the poem, to be sure, did keep trailing
+through my mind with a wild, ringing majesty--but they were the merest
+fragments, and to recite them would have been to brand myself as a
+madman. Yet I had little other evidence to display. Aelios could
+not help me, for she could not speak English; and in spite of her
+exceptional beauty, there would have been nothing to prove that she had
+not been born above seas. And as for the four members of the submarine
+crew, they refused stanchly to leave the vessel; and, besides, they
+likewise could not speak English, and their fantastic Atlantean garb
+would no doubt have marked them also as lunatics.
+
+And so there was nothing to do but wait, wait for days and days,
+haunting the naval offices, making myself a laughing stock and a
+nuisance, yet repeating my pleas so insistently that in the end they
+had to be heeded. But meanwhile I was losing time--time which I knew
+to be all-important. Even now Atlantis might be in a death-grip with
+the waters; and the difference of a few hours might bridge the gap
+between safety and disaster. Would not my fellows make haste? was the
+question I kept asking and asking; and all the while they remained
+inactive and unmoved. Every day, with tears in her eyes, Aelios would
+inquire when the rescuing expedition was to set out; and every day I
+would nod sadly, and sigh, “Perhaps tomorrow.” But tomorrow would bring
+little hope; and even when at last an investigation was undertaken, it
+was careless and dilatory--and it was long before I could convince the
+bewildered inspectors that I was actually one of the company of the
+lost X-111.
+
+It was long, indeed, before I could even find any one to identify me.
+In a land where my acquaintances had been legion, I was apparently
+unknown; and my old friends had either been dispersed or else I had
+slipped out of their minds. Even Alma Huntley failed to reply to my
+letters; and it was months before I learned that, having long given me
+up as lost, she had left two years before for the Pacific Coast as the
+bride of the Reverend David Mosely.
+
+But though my messages to Alma never reached their destination, a
+letter to my old friend, Frank Everett, survived many forwardings and
+found its goal; and not only did Everett hasten to me from New York,
+but he summoned others of our former group, whose testimony combined
+with the evidence of finger-prints and handwriting to identify me
+beyond dispute.
+
+Matters now began to move more quickly--in fact, with a rapidity that
+was bewildering. Almost overnight my story was flashed from end to end
+of the land, and I found myself a public figure. Newspaper headlines
+flaunted my name, and the word Atlantis was on every one’s lips;
+interviewers came swarming to see me, scientists with their demands
+for information, the heads of lecture bureaus and of motion picture
+corporations with their golden offers. But all that really interested
+me were the offers of assistance for the Sunken World. Several men
+of means became interested, and placed large funds at our disposal,
+so making possible the Harkness Institute for Marine Research; half
+a dozen engineers volunteered to accompany me back to Atlantis, and
+with their aid we secured implements and chemicals capable of sealing
+wide breaches in a glass wall. But we could produce no vessel other
+than that in which we had left Atlantis, for the naval submarines were
+not equipped for the deep waters of the Sunken World; and so when
+finally the rescuing party set off down the Potomac from Washington,
+its members numbered only six in addition to Aelios and myself and the
+original crew.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+The small size of this expedition and its limited equipment would
+alone have made us doubtful of success; but we remembered with acute
+misgivings that two full months had passed since we left Archeon, and
+that during all this time the flood waters must have been rising. We
+were particularly uneasy because of the failure of Gavison to appear
+in a second submarine, as the High Chief Adviser had promised; and,
+brooding upon his absence, we would recall how we had bidden farewell
+to Atlantis, and would think with a shudder of the bleak confusion of
+the people and the swelling torrents swishing through the darkness.
+
+To make matters worse (if they could possibly be worse) our voyage
+back to Atlantis was beset with unforeseen difficulties. Owing to the
+absence of definite charts and our uncertainty as to the latitude and
+longitude of the Sunken World, we were lost for several days amid
+the wildest wastes of the Atlantic. At times we would dive to the
+sea bottom, or to such depths that Atlantis could not conceivably be
+beneath us, and would go cruising for hours amid that black infinity or
+along the shell-strewn or bouldery floor of the ocean, staring through
+the portholes at the luminous-eyed creatures that flitted ghost-like
+about us, and here and there gaping horror-stricken at some contorted
+but strangely eloquent rusty iron mass. But of Atlantis itself there
+was no sign, and we had the queer impression that it had dissolved
+bubble-like amid the watery immensity.
+
+And so at length our expedition converted itself into little more than
+a random questing after what did not appear to exist. Should we ever
+again catch a glimpse of the green-golden walls of our lost universe?
+There were moments when I was given to curious doubts, and felt that
+Atlantis, once lost, could never be found again; that the billows would
+cover it as completely from our sight as from the sight of the ages.
+But all the time, while we kept dashing at prodigious speed through the
+vacant waters, we were given to strange fits of hope that alternated
+with spells of despair,--hope when we would descry a far-off light that
+would turn out to be merely some elusive fishy lantern,--despair that
+our help, already too long delayed, was being retarded to the point of
+impotence.
+
+The final discovery came with startling suddenness. One day, gliding
+slowly downward at a considerable depth, we were stopped by a hard,
+flat barrier that spread beneath us like the sea bottom. But as
+we began to drift horizontally, we observed that the surface was
+smooth and ominously light-reflecting--and with a gasp of despair we
+recognized that the substance was glass!
+
+The surprise and horror of that moment are still vivid in my memory.
+“Turn the searchlights down, down!” muttered the leader of our crew,
+in a voice that trembled perceptibly; and as the great water-piercing
+streamers began to quiver and shake and then slowly descended in long,
+rambling curves, Aelios came rushing to my side like a child who fears
+to be alone, and clung closely to me while we both stared through the
+portholes with faces rigid and eager.
+
+But at first we saw nothing. All was dark beneath us--not a gleam, not
+a flicker, broke the blackness of the Sunken World.
+
+Then, as the searchlights swayed and shifted till they swept the depths
+directly beneath, we began to make out familiar objects amid the
+obscurity. Dimly, strangely, as though draped in a fog, the outlines of
+great domes and arches and colonnades began to emerge, interspersed by
+Titanic columns and statuesque temples that appeared to waver uncannily.
+
+“See! See! It is still there!” Aelios cried, frantically, as she
+pressed more closely to me; and with the agony of despair in her voice
+was mingled just a tinge of hope.
+
+I took her hand and sought to console her; but even as I did so her
+whole body began to shake spasmodically, and her sobbing throbbed from
+end to end of the ship. For many minutes she seemed unable to speak.
+
+Yet, even while the long-drawn, heartbreaking sobs panted forth, she
+began to point, to point distractedly downward, with blind, quivering
+fingers that called with frenzied urgency, forcing me to peer again
+through the porthole.
+
+With my arms still about her, I scanned the dim, ghostly twilight.
+But for a moment I observed nothing alarming. Then, as my gaze
+became focused upon a gray dome just below, I too cried out in dread
+realization.
+
+Those glass-covered depths were not without sign of life, as I had
+thought; but here and there a lantern-bearing object, with flapping
+finny body, went wavering through the windows and above the temple
+roofs!
+
+
+ THE END.
+
+
+
+
+Transcriber’s note:
+
+This etext was transcribed from _Amazing Stories Quarterly_, Summer
+1928 (vol. 1, no. 3, pp. 292–377).
+
+The section titles “Foreword” and “Introduction” were not present in
+the original.
+
+Obvious errors in spelling, hyphenation and punctuation have been
+silently corrected in this version, but minor inconsistencies and
+archaic forms have been retained as printed. Some illustrations have
+been moved to the nearest chapter break.
+
+*** END OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK 77257 ***