THE
HISTORY OF ATLANTIS
CHAPTER I
I
NTRODUCTORY
A HISTORY OF ATLANTIS must differ from all other histories, for
the fundamental reason that it seeks to
record the chronicles of a
country the soil of which is no longer available for examination to
the archaeologist. If, through some cataclysm of nature, the Italian
peninsula had been submerged
in the green waters of the
Mediterranean at a period subsequent to the fall of Rome, we would
still have been in possession of much documentary evidence
concerning the growth and ascent of the Roman Empire. At the
same time, the soil upon
which that empire flourished, the
ponderable remains of its civilisation and its architecture, would
have been for ever lost to us save
as regards their colonial
manifestations. We should, in a great measure, have been forced to
glean our ideas of Latin pre-eminence from those institutions which
it founded in other lands, and from those
traditions of it which
remained at the era of its disappearance among the unlettered
nations surrounding it.
But great as would be the difficulties
attending such an
enterprise, these would, indeed, be negligible when compared with
the task of groping through the mists of the ages in quest of the
outlines of chronicle and event which tell
of a civilisation plunged
into the