Rosslyn
Sanctuary
Southern Oregon Thelemic Community and Organic Farm
Rosslyn Coven of the Hawk & Jackal
Merlin - Oregon - USA
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THE LOST CONTINENT
By Aleister Crowley
Sun in Cancer
Moon in Leo
AN 81 e.n.
*
.pa
The Lost Continent
PREFACE
Last year I was chosen to succeed the venerable K-Z—who had it in his mind to
die, that is, to join Them in Venus, as one of the Seven Heirs of Atlantis, and
I have been appointed to declare, so far as may be found possible, the truth
about that mysterious lost land. Of course, no more than one seventh of the
wisdom is ever confided to one of the Seven, and the Seven meet in council but
once in every thirty-three years. But its preservation is guaranteed by the
interlocked systems of "dreaming true" and of "preparation of the antinomy". The
former almost explains itself; the latter is almost inconceivable to normal man.
Its essence is to train a man to be anything by training him to be its opposite.
At the end of anything, think they, it turns out to be its opposite, and that
opposite is thus mastered without having been soiled by the labours of the
student, and without the false impressions of early learning being left upon the
mind. I myself, for example, had unknowingly been trained to record these
observations by the life of a butterfly. All my impressions came clear on the
soft wax of my brain; I had never worried because the scratch on the wax in no
way resembled the sound it represented. In other words, I observed perfectly
because I never knew that I was observing. So, if you pay sufficient attention
to your heart, you will make it palpitate.I accordingly proceed to a description
of the country.
Aleister Crowley
.PA
I.
OF THE PLAINS BENEATH ATLAS, AND ITS SERVILE RACE*.
Atlas is the true name of this archipelago—continent is an altogether false
term, for every ‘house’ or mountain peak was cut from its fellows by natural,
though often very narrow waterways. The African Atlas is a mere offshoot of the
range. It was the true Atlas that supported the ancient world by its moral and
magical strength, and hence the name of the fabled globe-bearer. The root is the
Lemurian ‘Tla’ or ‘Tlas’, black, for reasons which will appear in due course.
‘A’ is the feminine prefix, derived from the shape of the mouth when uttering
the sound. ‘Black woman’ is therefore as near a translation as one can give in
English; the Latin has a closer equivalent. The mountains are cut off, not only
from each other by the channels of the sea, but from the plains at their feet by
cliffs naturally or artificially smoothed and undercut for at least thirty feet
on every side in order to make access impossible. These plains had been made
flat by generations of labour. Vines and fruit-trees growing only on the upper
slopes, they were devoted principally to corn, and to grass pastures for the
amphibian herds of Atlas. This corn was of a kind now unknown, flourishing in
sea-water, and the periodical flood-tides served the same purpose as the Nile in
Egypt. Enormous floating stages of spongy rock—no trees of any kind grew
anywhere on the plains so wood was unknown—supported the villages. These were
inhabited by a type of man similar to the modern Caucasian race. They were not
permitted to use any of the food of their masters, neither the corn, nor the
amphibians, nor the vast supplies of shellfish, but were fed by what they called
"bread from heaven", which indeed came down from the mountains, being the whole
of their refuse of every kind. The whole population was put to perpetual hard
labour. The young and active tended the amphibians, grew the corn, collected the
shell-fish, gathered the "bread from heaven" for their elders, and were
compelled to reproduce their kind. At twenty they were considered strong enough
for the factory, where they worked in gangs on a machine combining the features
of our pump and treadmill for sixteen hours of the twentyfour. This machine
supplied Atlas with its ‘ZRO’* or ‘power’, of which I shall speak presently. Any
worker showing even temporary weakness was transferred to the phosphorus works,
where he was sure to die within a few months. Phosphorus was a prime necessity
of Atlas; however, it was not used in its red or yellow forms, but in a third
allotrope, a blue-black or rather violet-black substance, only known in powder
finer than precipitated gold, harder than diamond, eleven times heavier than
yellow phosphorus, quite incombustible, and so shockingly poisonous that, in
spite of every precaution, an ounce of it cost the lives (on an average) of some
two hundred and fifty men. Of its properties I shall speak later.The people were
left in utmost slavery and ignorance by the wise counsel of the first of the
philosophers of Atlas, who had written: "An empty brain is a threat to Society."
He had consequently instituted a system of mental culture, comprising two parts:
Part 1 was compulsory; the people then took Part 2 without protest.* The
language of the plains was simple but profuse. They had few nouns and fewer
verbs. ‘To work again’ (there was no word for ‘to work’ simply), ‘to eat again’,
‘to break the law’ (no word for ‘to break the law again’), ‘to come from
without’, ‘to find light’ (i.e. to go to the phosphorus factory) were almost the
only verbs used by adults. The young men and women had a verb-language yet
simpler, and of degraded coarseness. All had, however, an extraordinary wealth
of adjectives, most of them meaningless, as attached to no noun ideas, and a
great quantity of abstract nouns such as ‘Liberty’, ‘Progress’, without which no
refined inhabitant could consider a sentence complete. He would introduce them
into a discussion on the most material subjects. "The immoral snub-nose", "the
unprogressive teeth", "lascivious music", "reactionary eyebrows"—such were
phrases familiar to all. "To eat again, to sleep again, to work again, to find
the light—that is Liberty, that is Progress" was a proverb common in every
mouth.The religion of the people was Protestant Christianity in all essentials,
but with an even closer dependence upon God. They asserted its formulae, without
attaching any meaning to the words, in a manner both reverent and passionate.
Sexual life was entirely forbidden to the workers, a single breach implying
relegation to the phosphorus works.
In every field was, however, an enormous tablet of rock, carved on one side with
a representation of the three stages of life: the fields, the labour mill, the
factory; and on the other side with these words: "To enter Atlas, fly." Beneath
this an elaborate series of graphic pictures showed how to acquire the art of
flying. During all the generations of Atlas, not one man had been known to take
advantage of these instructions. The principal fear of the populace was a
variation of any kind from routine. For any such the people had one word only,
though this word changed its annotation in different centuries. ‘Witchcraft’,
‘Heresy’, ‘Madness’, ‘Bad Form’, ‘Sex-Perversion’, ‘Black Magic’ were its
principal shapes in the last four thousand years of the dominion of
Atlas.Sneezing, idleness, smiling, were regarded as premonitory. Any cessation
from speech, even for a moment to take breath, was considered highly dangerous.
The wish to be alone was worse than all; the delinquent would be seized by his
fellows, and either killed outright or thrust into the compound of the
phosphorus factory, from which there was no egress.
The habits of the people were incredibly disgusting. Their principal relaxations
were art, music and the drama, in which they could show achievement hardly
inferior to that of Henry Arthur Jones, Pinero, Lehar, George Dance, Luke Fildes,
and Thomas Sidney Cooper.
Of medicine they were happily ignorant. The outdoor life in that equable climate
bred strong youths and maidens, and the first symptoms of illness in a worker
was held to impair his efficiency and qualify him for the phosphorous factory.
Wages were permanently high, and as there were no merchants even of alcohol,
whose use was forbidden, every man saved all his earnings, and died rich. At his
death his savings went back to the community. Taxation was consequently
unnecessary. Clothes were unnecessary and unknown, and the ‘bread from heaven’
was the "free gift of God". The dead were thrown to the amphibians. Each man
built his own shelter of the rough stone sponge which abounded. The word ‘house’
was used only in Atlas; the servile race called its huts ‘Hloklost’ (equivalent
to the English word ‘home’). Discontent was absolutely unknown. It had not been
considered necessary to prohibit traffic with foreign countries, as the
inhabitants of such were esteemed barbarians. Had a ship landed men, they would
have been murdered to a man, supposing that Atlas had permitted any approach to
its shores. That it hindered such, and by infallible means, was due to other
considerations, whose nature will form the subject of a subsequent chapter. This
then is the nature of the plains beneath Atlas, and the character of the servile
race.
.pa
II.
OF THE RACE OF ATLAS
In the city or ‘house’ which was formed from the crest of every mountain, dwelt
a race not greatly superior in height to our own, but of vaster frame. The bulk
and strength of the bear is not inappropriate as a simile for the lower classes;
the higher had the enormous chest and shoulders and the lean haunches of the
lion. This strength gave an infallible beauty, made monstrous by their most
inexorable law, that every child who developed no special feature in the first
seven years should be sacrificed to the Gods. This special feature might be a
nose of prodigious size, hands and wrists of gigantic strength, a gorilla jaw,
an elephant ear—or any of these might entitle its owner to life:* for in all
such variations from the normal they perceived the possibility of a development
of the race. Men and women were hairy as the ourang-outang and all were closely
shaven from head to foot. It had been found that this practice developed tactile
sensibility. It was also done in reverence to the ‘Living Atla’, of which more
in its place. The lower class were few in number. Its function was to
superintend the servile race, to bring the food of the children to the
banqueting-hall, to remove the same, to attend to the disposition of the
‘light-screens’, to ensure the continuance of the race by the begetting, bearing
and nourishing of the children. The priestly class was concerned with the
further preparation of the Zro supplied by the labour-mills, and its
impregnation with phosphorus. This class had much leisure for ‘work’, a subject
to be explained later. The High Priests and High Priestesses were restricted in
number to eleven times thirty-three in any one ‘house’. To them were entrusted
the final secrets of Atlas, and to them was confided the conduct of the
experiments in which every will was bound up.* The colour of the Atlanteans was
very various, though the hair was invariably of a fiery chestnut with bluish
reflections. One might see women whiter than Aphrodite, others tawny as
Cleopatra, others yellow as Tu-Chi, others of a strange, subtle blue like the
tattooed faces of Chin women, others again red as copper. Green was however a
prohibited hue for women, and red was not liked in men. Violet was rare, but
highly prized, and children born of that colour were specially reared by the
High Priestesses.However, in one part of the body all the women were perfectly
black with a blackness no negro can equal; from this circumstance comes the name
Atlas. It is absurdly attributed by some authors to the deposit of excess of
phosphorus in the Zro. I need only point out that the mark existed long before
the discovery of black phosphorus. It is evidently a racial stigma. It was the
birth of a girl child without this mark which raised her mother to the rank of
goddess, and ended the terrestrial adventure of the Atlanteans, as will
presently appear.
Of the ethics of this people little need be said. Their word for ‘right’ is
‘phph’ made by blowing with the jaw drawn sharply across from left to right,
thus meaning ‘a spiral life contrary to the course of the sun’. We may assume it
as ‘contrary’. "Whatever is, is wrong" seems to have been their first principle.
Legs were ‘wrong’ because they only carry you five miles in the hour: let us
refuse to walk; let us ride horseback. So the horse is ‘wrong’ compared to the
train and the motor-car; and these are ‘wrong’ to the aeroplane. If speed had
been the Atlantean’s object, he would have thought aeroplanes ‘wrong’ and all
else too, so long as the speed of light was not surpassed by him. Curious
survivals of these laws are found in the Jewish transcript of the Egyptian code,
which they, being a slave race, interpreted in the reverse manner. "Thou shalt
not make any graven image." Every male child on attaining manhood, had a graven
image given him to worship, a miracle-working image, whose principle exploits he
would tattoo upon it.
"Remember the Sabbath Day and keep it holy." The Atlantean kept one day in seven
for all purposes unconnected with his principle task.
"Thou shalt not commit adultery." Though the Atlanteans married, intercourse
with the wife was the only act forbidden. "Honour thy father and thy mother." On
the contrary, they worshipped their children, as if to say: "This is the God
whom I have made in my own likeness."
Similarly, there is one exception and one only to the rule of silence. It is the
utterance of the ‘Name’ which it is death to pronounce. This word was constantly
in their mouths; it is ‘Zcrra’, a sort of venomous throat-gargling. Hence,
possibly the Gaelic ‘Scurr’ ‘speak’, English ‘Scaur’ or ‘Scar’ in Yorkshire and
the Pennines. ‘Zcrra’ is also the name of the ‘High House’, and of the graven
image referred to above. Others traces may be found in folklore; some mere
superstitions. Thus the correct number for a banquet was thirteen, because if
there were only one more sign in the Zodiac, the year would be a month longer,
and one would have more time ‘for work’. This is probably a debased Egyptian
notion. Atlanteans knew better than anyone that the Zodiac is only an arbitrary
division. Still it may be laid down that the impossible never daunted Atlas. If
one said, "Two and two make Four" his thought would be "Yes, damn it!"* I now
explain the language of Atlas. The third and greatest of their philosophers saw
that speech had wrought more harm than good, and he consequently instituted a
peculiar rite. Two men were chosen by lot to preserve the language, which, by
the way, consisted of monosyllables only, two hundred and fourteen in number, to
each of which was attached a diacritical gesture, usually ideographic. Thus
‘wrong’ is given as ‘phph’ moving the jaw from right to left. Wiping the brown
with ‘phph’ means ‘hot’, hollowing the hands over the mouth ‘fire’, striking the
throat ‘to die;’ so that each ‘radicle’ may have hundreds of
gesture-derivatives. Grammar, by the way, hardly existed, the quick apprehension
of the Atlanteans rendering it unnecessary. These two men then departed to a
cavern on the side of the mountain just above the cliff, and there for a year
they remained, speaking the language and carving it symbolically upon the rock.
At the end of the year they returned; the elder is sacrificed and the younger
returns with a volunteer, usually one who wishes to expiate a fault, and teaches
him the language. During his visit he observes whether any new thing needs a
name, and if so he invents it, and adds it to the language. This process
continued to the end. The rest of the people abandoned altogether the use of
speech, only a few years’ practice enabling them to dispense with the radicle.
They then sought to do without gesture, and in eight generations the difficulty
was conquered, and telepathy* established. Research then devoted itself to the
task of doing without thought; this will be discussed in detail in the proper
place. There was also a ‘listener’, three men who took turns to sit upon the
highest peak, above the ‘light-screens’, and whose duty it was to give the alarm
if any noise disturbed Atlas. On their report that High Priest charged with
active governorship would take steps to ascertain and destroy the cause. The
‘light-screens’ spoken of were a contrivance of laminae of a certain spar such
that the light and heat of the sun were completely cut off, not by opacity, but
by what we call ‘interference’. In this way other subtle rays of the sun entered
the ‘house’, these rays being supposed to be necessary to life. These matters
were the subjects of the deepest controversy. Some held that these rays
themselves were injurious and should be excluded. Others considered that the
light-screens should be put in position during moonlight, instead of being
opened at sunset, as was the custom. This, however, was never attempted, the
great mass of the people being devoted to the moon. Others wished full sunlight,
the aim of Atlas being (they thought) to reach the sun. But this theory
contradicted the prime axiom of attaining things through their opposites, and
was only held by the lower classes, who were not initiated into this doctrine.
The ‘houses’ of Atlas were carved from the living rock by the action of ^ro in
its seventh precipitation. Enormously solid, the walls were lofty and smoother
than glass, though the pavements were rough and broken almost everywhere for a
reason which I am not permitted to disclose. The passages were invariably
narrow, so that two persons could never pass each other. When two met, it was
the law to greet by joining in ‘work’ and then going away together on their
separate errands, or passing one above the other. This was done purposely, so as
to remind every man of his duty to Atlas on every occasion on which he might
meet a fellow-citizen. The Banqueting-Hall of the children was usually very
large. The furniture, which had been brought by the first colonists, and
gradually disused by adults, never needed repair. A vast open doorway facing
North opened on the mountainside on to the vineyards and orchards, the meadows
and gardens, in which the children passed their time. Suckled by the mother for
three months only, the child was then already able to nourish itself on the
bread and wine, and on the flesh of the amphibious herds, of which there were
several kinds; one a piglike animal with flesh resembling wild duck, another a
sort of amatee tasting like salmon, its fat being somewhat like caviar in
everything but texture, and a sure specific for any of childhood’s troubles. A
third, an ancestor of our hippopotamus, was really tamed, and was employed by
the serviles for preparing the ground for the corn, trampling through the fields
while they were covered with sea-water, and thus leaving deep holes in which the
seeds were cast. Its flesh was not unlike bear, but more delicate. Notable, too,
was the great quantity of turtle; also the giant oysters, the huge deep sea
crabs, a kind of octopus whose flesh made a nutritious and elegant soup, and
innumerable shell-fish, added to the table. The waterways were haunted by shoals
of a small and poisonous fish,* whose bite was immediate death to man, a fact
which altogether cut off communication between one island and another except by
air, as the hippopotamus-animal, although immune to its bite, was unable to
swim. Of the sleeping chambers I shall tell more particularly in the course of
my remarks on Zro.
.pa
III.
OF THE AIM OF THE MAGICIANS OF
ATLAS: OF ZRO; AND ITS PROPERTIES
AND USES: OF THAT WHICH
COMBINED WITH IT: AND OF
BLACK PHOSPHORUS.
It was the most ancient tradition of the Atlantean magicians that they were the
survivors of a race inhabiting a country called Lemuria, of which the South
Pacific archipelago may be the remains. These Lemurians had, they held, built up
a civilization equal, if not superior to their own; but through a
misunderstanding of magical law—some said the 2nd, some the 8th, some the
23rd—had involved themselves and their land in ruin. Others thought that the
Lemurians had succeeded in their magical task, and broken their temple. In any
case, it was the secret Lemurian tradition that they themselves represented the
survivals of a yet earlier race who lived on ice, and they of yet another who
lived in fire, and they again of earlier colonists from Mars. The theory, in
fine, was that the aim of man is to attain the Sun, whence, according to one
school of cosmology, he was exiled in the cosmic catastrophe which resulted in
the formation of Neptune. His task on any given planet was therefore to overturn
the laws of Nature on that planet, thus mastering it sufficiently to enable him
to make the leap to the next planet inward. Exactly how and in what sense the
leap was made remains obscure, even to the heirs of Atlantis.* The men of Atlas
could fly, it is true, and that by a method so simple that men will laugh
outright when it is rediscovered; but they needed air to support them; they
could not confront the cold and emptiness of space. Was it in some subtler body
that they conveyed the Palladium? Or, content to die, could they project some
vehicle across so great a distance? The answer to such questions probably lies
in the recovery by mankind of the knowledge of Zro and its properties. Beneath
the labour mills* run troughs* in which the sweat of the workers collects and
drains off into an open basin without the mill. In this basin churns with
immense rapidity—through multiple bevel gearing—a sort of paddle with knife
edges. The sweat is thus churned into froth, and gradually disappears, and is as
continually replaced. The workers toil in shifts—eight hours work, four hours
repose, eight hours work, four hours rest and recreation. The mills never cease
day or night. The basin is of polished silver and agate, and is set at an angle,
facing two enormous spheres of crystal, encased in a sort of trellis made of a
certain greenish metal, its optical focus at a point midway between the two.
The only sign of activity is that out of this focus a spark crackles unless the
air be dry, a condition difficult to secure in this part of the world, although
fans blow air, dried over chloride of calcium and sulphuric acid, over the
globes and their focus. These fans are worked by tidal power, human labour being
appropriated solely to the one use.
In the temple of the ‘house’ are two globes similar to those upon the plains,
and the mysterious force generated below is transferred to those above,
collecting within them. Now the name of this substance is always Zro, but in its
first state the gesture is a twiddling of the thumbs. In its second, it is a
rapid twittering of the fingers, and in its third state of distillation it is a
screwing of the hands together. Within the spheres it sublimes suddenly in the
air as a snaky powder (4) of silver, which immediately turns to an iridescent
fluid (5) that is forced up, by its own need of expansion, through a fountain
into the temple, on whose floor it lies (6) in a semi-solid condition. Expert
priests gather this in their hands, and rapidly shape it into its seventh state,
when it is a knife of diamond, but alive. An instrument like a Mexican machete
is used to carve rocks. The edge shears them, the back smooths them. The rock
behaves exactly like wax, responsive to the lightest touch. What is not used for
weapons is then gathered up swiftly and kneaded by women of the rank of high
priestess. It is not known even to the high priests with what they knead it, but
in its eighth stage it is a substance solid enough to support great weight, but
eternally heaving of its own force. Of this they make beds, so that the sleeping
Atlantean is (as it were) continually massaged. To this they attribute the fact
that Atlanteans sleep never more than half an hour, though they do so four times
daily. These beds remain active only for a few days, and they are then thrown
into the ninth stage by being taken into a room where is a cauldron of great
size. They are thrown into this and sprinkled with black phosphorus.* The Zro
then divides into two parts, one liquid, one solid. Neither of these has any
ascertainable properties, for it is absolutely passive to the will of the user,
who may taste therein his utmost desire, whether for food or drink. Among adults
there is no other food or drink than this. The children are not allowed to taste
it. The black phosphorus is always added by a high priestess, and it is not
known in what manner she does this. The Zro that may remain is the subject of
eternal experiments by the Magicians. It is generally thought by the greatest of
them that an error was committed in bringing it to a ninth stage of division
into two, and many openly deplored the discovery of black phosphorus. All
however strive in harmony to produce a tenth stage that shall surpass the
virtues of the ninth. Theoretically it is possible to reach an eleventh stage
wherein the Zro takes human form, and lives! Opinion is divided as to whether
this was not actually done by a certain magician at the time of the passing of
Atlas. In any case, I beg the reader to remember that I have only described one
seventh of the virtues of Zro, and I have even omitted this, that in its ninth
stage it is not only food and drink, but universal medicine, if properly
understood. For Zro is also a vision and a voice!
Now the muscles of the people of Atlas are the muscles of giants, and yet they
do one thing only. And this thing is combined by the wisdom of the magicians, so
that it is at the same time work, exercise, sport, game, pleasure, and all else
that may fulfill life.
This work never ceases. It has these parts:
This working, whether with or for Zro, requires two persons at least at any
one time and place. Great heat is generated in the working, and the bodies of
the workers are therefore sprinkled heavily with the black phosphorus, which is
incombustible. This black phosphorus, poisonous to the servile race, becomes
innocuous to anyone who has been in any way impregnated with Zro. This itself,
in its first stage, is as dangerous as electricity of high voltage.
The reverence attached to Zro is unbounded. At one time it was hymned as the
father of the gods, and till the end all children were thought to be "begotten
of Zro", though everyone might know who was the father.* All such conception was
however held indignity. Its official name was ‘the old experiment’. It was
carried on simply because the new methods of continuing the race were not
perfected. Childbirth was therefore in one way accident; although a duty,
everyone shrank from it. For though no pain or discomfort attached to the
process, it was a sort of second-best achievement from which proud women turned
contemptuously. This was in part the reason why the father’s name was never
mentioned. On several occasions in the history of Atlas the Zro ‘failed’.
Although not changed in appearance, its properties were lost or diminished. In
such a case young men and maidens in great numbers were captured on the plains,
brought into Atlas, and offered in sacrifice to the Gods. Their blood was
mingled with Zro in its third stage, and the latter recovered its potency. Their
flesh was eaten by the high priests and priestesses in penance for the unknown
wrong. It was subject to other and terrible scourges, being the most sensitive
as well as the strongest thing on Earth. On one occasion it had to be treated
with a fox-like perfume prepared by the chief magician; on another it was
subjected to streams of moonlight from parabolic mirrors. The most serious
crisis was some two thousand years before the destruction of Atlas. One of the
serviles, riding his ‘hippopotamus’ to the ploughing, fell off and was instantly
bitten by the poisonous fish previously described. Through an accident of
boyhood he had, however, for a reason too obscure to describe here, no such
vulnerable spot as suited the Zhee-Zhou. He survived and went to work, as it
chanced, the next day. The Zro was poisoned; a third of Atlas died within the
hour; the plants on the affected island had to be destroyed, and all its people.
It was only repopulated some three hundred and eighty years later, and then for
particular reasons of magical economy impossible to dwell upon in this account.
Marriage was compulsory on all those whose passion had been so exclusive and
enduring as to produce two children. Further intercourse between the pair was
barred. The Magicians thought it was inimical to variation for a woman to have
more than one child (a fortiori two) by the same father; and the custom further
prevented those stupid sporadic outbursts of burnt-out lust which make so many
modern marriages intolerable. Closely connected with marriage, the close of the
reproductive life, is that of death, the close of the little that remains. Death
hardly threatened the Atlantean; he would decide to "go and see", as the old
phrase ran, and take an overdose of a particular preparation of black phosphorus
mixed with a very little Zro in the ninth stage, which ensured a painless death.
That none ever returned was taken as proof of the supreme attractiveness of
death.
The ghoulish and necromantic practices with which Atlanteans have been unjustly
reproached never occurred. A little vampirism, perhaps, in the early days before
the perfecting of Zro; but no Atlantean was ever so stupid or so ignorant as to
confuse death with life.
Beside this voluntary death only one danger existed. As the use of Zro
guaranteed life and health and youth—a centenarian high priest was no better
than a kitten!--so did its abuse spell instant corruption of those qualities. As
mentioned above, now and then the Zro itself was at fault, and caused epidemics;
but from time to time there were deaths in a particularly loathsome form caused
by what they called ‘misunderstanding’ the Zro.* Such mistakes were particularly
common in the early days of its discovery, and before its use had become well
nigh a worship. The first symptom was a crack in the skin of the temple, or
sometimes of the bridge of the nose, more rarely of an eyelid or cheek. Within a
few minutes this crack became one open sore, of horrid foetor, and within
twenty-four hours, the patient was completely rotted away, bone and marrow. A
circumstance of singular atrocity was that death never occurred until the spinal
column collapsed. No treatment could be found even to prolong the agony by an
hour. This being recognised, sufferers were thrown from the cliffs at the first
sign of the malady. In this way too were all other corpses disposed. It was the
most honourable death possible, for becoming ‘bread from heaven’ for the
serviles, they were again worked up into Zro itself, a transmutation which in
their view would be well worth all the "resurrections of the body" and
"immortalities of the soul" of the theoretical, dogmatic, hearsay religions. So
much then concerning Zro, and the matters immediately connected with it..pa
IV.
OF THE SO CALLED
MAGIC OF THE ATLANTEANS.
Magic in Atlas was a ‘Science of Sciences’. It was the final integration of all knowledge. In method its theory was differentiation, and in theory its method was integration. For example, the fifth of the great philosophers indicated "Everything is Zro" to the Keeper of the Speech at the annual sacrifice. This in spite of the fact that in that very year two new forms of Zro had been discovered by that same philosopher. It was the third of the galaxy who announced "The ultimate analysis of sensation is pain; that of thought, madness; that of super-consciousness (a state of trance induced by Zro and valued above all things) annihilation." His successor had retorted that in this was implicit a postulate that pain, madness and annihilation were undesirable. The third admitted that he had so meant his phrase, but destroying the postulate, still stuck to it. All this was the foundation of much magical theory, and on these purely psychological researches was based the whole magical practice. ‘There is no God’ was a commonplace. It only implied that the mind was wrong to try to conceive within it what was by definition without it. To set limits to anything whatever seemed to them the greatest of crimes, the exact opposite of the true path to the Sun. The practical side of magic was for the most part a mere utilization of known forces, such as are employed by modern science. But the resources of Atlas were as great, and the advantages incomparably greater. The whole archipelago was a laboratory. There was no question of the ‘cost of research’;$ every man was devoted to it. Every man thought only of the main problem ‘How to reach Venus’ and its sub-issues. Further, the main laws of magic had always been found to govern and include chemical and physical laws. In the early days of colonization Zro was only known in its crude state; it was the genius of a single man that obtained the third state in its purity. From this state to the seventh it moved almost of itself, very much as radium does. The genius, having sufficient in this seventh state, made a sword, and completed in three days the subjugation of the servile races. It was a stroke of fortune, this quickness, for on the fourth day the Zro began to disintegrate. The magicians then began to seek a means of making this state permanent. But in this they failed,* so that knives had always to be replaced twice weekly; but in the course of their failures they discovered the infinitely more valuable eighth and ninth stages of Zro. Tradition has preserved a hint of their efforts in Alchemy with its problems of the fixation of the Universal Mercury, the secret of perpetual motion, and ‘potable gold—the Universal Medicine’. It has been theoretically determined towards the end of the tenth state, that Zro should be a solid, but whether this was confirmed is beyond my knowledge. To return to the main magical theory, the Quintessence, said they, or Universal Substance (which some strove to identify with Hyle, others with the Luminiferous Aether) is the two-in-one, liquid and solid, the former part being also twofold, fluid and gaseous, and the latter earthy and fiery. The combination of these four phases of Zro accounted for the universe. This quintessence is Zro in some state unknown and incalculable. Some expected to find it in its twelth state, some in a seventeenth, others in a thirty-seventh: all this was pure guesswork. Some tradition to this effect appears to have reached Plato; and the neo-Platonists combined with those Jews who had preserved fragments of the Egyptian tradition to form a new initiated hierarchy, the echo of whose teaching is found in Paracelsus. At one period, too, missionaries (not colonists, as has been ignorantly asserted; there was no trouble of over-population in Atlantis) were sent to the four quarters and parties landed in Mexico, Ireland and Egypt. The adventures of the party who travelled South form an astounding chapter in the history of Atlas. It was they who discovered the Magnetic South, and whose observations rendered possible the theory which resulted in the piercing of the Earth by Zro.* There were also preparations of Zro which increased the size of the user, and others which diminished it. In general use among the lower classes, until the very end, was that composition which made the body light. Careful adjustment would equalize its weight with that of the displaced air, and movements of the limbs would then permit flying. In this way the overseers visited the plains and returned. The other and earlier art of flying needed no apparatus, but I am forbidden to disclose the method, except to hint that it is connected closely with the art of ‘dreaming true’.These are but a few of the magic powers so-called of the compounds of Zro; but they will indicate the power of Atlas by shewing what it could afford to neglect. Yet all these powers were implicit in the process of ‘working’. The art of prediction was in the same unsatisfactory state as it is in England today. Nor was its practice encouraged. A magician makes the future, and does not seek to divine it. All true prediction was therefore necessarily catastrophe. The greatest good fortune seemed worthless to an Atlantean, since it was accident, and if accidents are to happen, one of them may be fatal. They believed themselves to be equal to the whole tendency of things, and proudly gazed on Nature as a man might upon a virgin captive to his spear. Everything that was being was Zro; everything that was Energy was ‘working for Zro’. Outside this was but by-product and waste-heap. The arrangement of the houses was in accordance with the magical theory. There was first the High House, then four (later six, last ten) ‘Houses of Houses’; and to each of these was attached a varying number of ordinary houses. The High House was the central shrine of the whole archipelago, and must be separately described..pa
V.
OF THE HIGH HOUSE OF ATLAS, OF ITS INHABITANTS, AND OF THEIR MANNERS AND
CUSTOMS, AND OF THE LIVING ATLA.
The High House was separated from its nearest neighbor by over twenty miles of
sea. Its diameter was about an half-mile and its height four miles. It had no
plains at the base, and its cliffs went absolutely sheer and smooth into the
water. It was in shape a flattish cylinder, but the top broadened into a pointed
knob, somewhat in the style of St. Basil’s at Moscow. There was not a trace of
vegetation, which by the way was despised by the Atlanteans. A child would pick
a flower contemptuously thinking "You cannot even move about", or pet it as an
English degenerate woman does a dog. The only entrance was by an orifice at the
top. But the base was tunneled so that from every house was a channel for the
Zro which having been brought to the highest perfection was thus transferred to
headquarters. The receptacle at the base being far below the earth, and the Zro
further heated by friction, it seethed continually into a bluish or purplish
smoke. This was the sole sustenance of the inhabitants of the High House. In
early days the old High House, in an island since destroyed by order of the Atla,
had been called the House of Blood, the inhabitants subsisting only on blood
sucked from the living. The improvements in Zro had changed all that; but the
idea was the same, to live on the Quintessence of Life. Hence while the ‘houses’
ate and drank Zro, the High House drank its vapour. No children were born in it,
and none below the rank of High Priest dwelt there. Except for one matter which
was never thought of, though constantly spoken, the inmost mystery of the High
House was the ‘Living Atla’. This had many names, ‘Wordeater’, ‘Unshaven’
(because the razors of Zro were turned on its hair), ‘Fireheart’, ‘Beginning and
End’ and so on: but especially a word I can only translate as ‘To Her’, a
defective pronoun existing only in the dative. What the Living Atla really was,
is a secret of secrets.* We know it only from its epithets, its veils. Thus it
was ‘That Black which makes black white’. It was ‘twenty-six feet high and
fifteen feet across—Oh my Lords, it is the essence of the Incommensurable!’ It
was ‘the wife of Zro’, ‘the heart of Zro’, ‘desire of Zro’, ‘the Atla that eats
Atlas’, ‘the swallower up of her own house’, ‘the pelican’, ‘the fire-nest of
the Phoenix’, according to the greatest of the poets. And the burden of his
hymns of worship was that it must be destroyed. It was impossible to approach
the Atla without being instantly sucked up and devoured by it. This was the
greatest death, and ardently desired by all. The favour was accorded only to
those who discovered improvements in Zro, or otherwise merited signal and
supreme recognition from the state. Hidden men listened to the cries of the
victim, and thus learned the nature of the death. It appears that the black
suddenly broke into a fiery rose, ‘the only* luminous thing in Atlas’, and a
shooting forward enclosed him. For some reason which was never even guessed the
Atla refused women. Those who had seen Atla were however useless to instruct.
They came forth from the Presence smiling, and even under the most fearful
tortures that the magicians could devise, continued to smile. This smile never
left them during life, and the conscious superiority of it was so irritating,
and so contrary to the harmony of life in Atlas that the women were killed, and
their companions for the future forbidden to approach the Atla. Whatever
theories as to its nature may have been formed by the magicians were upset by a
famous experiment. A most holy high priest, a man who at puberty had insisted on
immediate marriage with all the women of his house, a magician who had formed
four new compounds of Zro, and discovered how to pass matter through matter, was
honoured by the great death. On reaching the last corridor, where the
concentrated spirals of Zro vapour whirled up into the Presence of Atla, he bade
farewell to the appointed listeners in the manner suitable to his dignity, and
then, taking a last deep draught of Zro into his lungs, rushed into the antrum.
They heard him cry aloud "O!" with surprise, and then with inexpressible rapture
the words "Behind Atla, Otla!" which were, and still are, completely
unintelligible. Their surprise was greater, when, seven days later he came
striding past them without greeting. He went to his ‘house’ and shut himself up,
was never seen or heard again, but was assuredly living at the time of the
‘catastrophe’. This man founded a school of philosophy, or rather, it founded
itself on what it supposed him to have discovered; and this school disputes with
the orthodox the credit of the final success. The lesser mysteries of the High
House were concerned almost entirely with the creation of life, and the bridging
of the gulf between Earth and Venus. These were connected intimately; the theory
was that if Atlantean brains could exist in bodies sufficiently subtle to
traverse aether, the task was done. Some of the experiments were crude enough,
and, to our minds, horrible. They attempted to breed a new race by crossing with
snakes, swans, horses and other animals.* The Greek legends of such monsters as
Chimaera, Medusa, Lamia, Minotaur, the Centaurs, the Satyrs and the like are
mere filtrations of the Atlantean tradition. The only theory behind such
experiments was that they were contrary to the natural order, and so worth
trying. Men of more scientific mind more plausibly passed Zro vapour through
sea-water; but they only created serpents of vast size, which they cast into the
sea about the High House as guardians. The sea-serpent, whether legend or fact,
is derived from this ex periment. It is quite possible that some such survive.
Another school, objecting strongly to the sex-process, "which must be
transcended as the Lemurians overcame gemmation" vivisected men and women,
taking various parts of the brain, especially the cerebellum, the pineal gland,
and the pituitary body, and cul tivated them in solutions of Zro under the
invisible rays of black phosphorus. The best results of this work was a race of
translucent jelly-folk of great intellectual development; but so far from being
able to travel through space, they could hardly move in their own element.
Another school argued that as Zro in vapour combined the virtues of the liquid
and the solid Zro, so a fiery state might be produced which would so impregnate
their bodies as to make them ‘mates of the aether’. This school held that fiery
Zro already existed in Nature, "in the heart of the Living Atla", and asserted
that those who died by absorption into Atla passed straight to Venus. Many of
them therefore tried hard to obtain messages from that planet. Familiar with
Newton’s first law of motion, they further held it possible to prepare Zro in
such a state that a current of it could never be deflected or dissipated, and
so, if it could be made in sufficient quantity, a bridge to Venus might be built
by which they might travel. They therefore tunneled through the planet, as
previously explained, to have a sort of cannon for the Zro. But as their supply
was pitifully insufficient, they endeavoured also to prepare a Zro which would
have the power of multiplying itself. Alchemical tradition has some record of
this problem. Yet another group of magicians argued that as Nature had cast off
the planets from the Sun—a disputed point, some thinking this due to magic,
which if so completely destroys the argument— it would be contrary to Nature to
cause the planets to fall back into it. They busied themselves with attempts to
increase the Earth’s gravitational pull, and (alternatively) to check her
course. Their schemes were generally regarded as Utopian—yet they could boast of
the discovery of the Zro that lightened bodies, and of a kind of aether-screen
which generated mechanical power in inexhaustible quantities by making matter
slightly opaque to aether. This engine only worked on a very small scale. A
screen two inches long would tear itself from fastenings that would have held an
earthquake, while the rocks in its neighbourhood would melt in a few minutes,
and the sea boil instantly where its rays struck. The most brilliant of this
school asserted "Matter is a strain in the aether." He explained gravitation in
this way. Place two ivory spheres in a rubber tube; the strain on the tube is
least when the balls touch. The tendency is therefore for them to come together.
Friction alone checks them. Now aether is infinitely elastic and without
friction. From these data he calculated the Law of Inverse Squares. A more
mystic school saw life everywhere. It knew all that we know, and more, about
ions and electrons; it saw every phenomenon as a manifestation of will. The
crowning glory of this school was the discovery that Zro in its ninth stage,
eaten and drunken with concentrated intention, produced the desired result,
whatever (within wide limits) that result might be. This went far to supersede
the use of all specialized forms of Zro, and so to unify the magical practice.
It seems curious with all this magic, Magic itself should be the thing most
deplored. But it was the means, and, as such, "that which is in particular not
the end". The word for Magic, ‘Ijynx’, was the only dissyllable in the language,
for Magic was the essentially two-fold thing, more two-fold (in a way) than the
number two itself. It is interesting here to sketch briefly the mathematics of
Atlas. The task is not easy, as their minds worked very differently from ours.
The number 1 was a fairly simple idea; but two was not only two, but also ‘the
result of adding 1 to 1’ and ‘the root of 4’. The numbers grew in complexity out
of all reason. Seven was 6 plus 1, and 5 plus 2, and 4 plus 3, and so on; as
well as ‘the root of 49’, ‘half 14’ and the like. They even distinguished 4 plus
3 from 3 plus 4. Each number also represented an idea or group of ideas on all
sorts of planes. It would have been quite possible to discuss dressmaking in
terms of pure number. To give an example of the way in which their minds
thought, consider the number three. Three, in so far as it gives the first plane
figure, suggests superficies; with regard to the dimensions of space, solidity.
Three itself is therefore ‘that ineffably holy thing in which the superficies is
the solid’. Of course hundreds of other ideas must be added to this; and to
grasp and harmonize them all in one colossal supra-rational idea was the
constant task of every mathematician. The upshot of this was that all numbers
above 33 were regarded as spurious, illusionary; they had no real existence of
their own*; they were temporary compounds, unreal in very much the same sense as
our square root of 1. They were always expressed by graphic formulae, like our
own organic compounds. To take an example, the number 156 was regarded as a sort
of efflorescence of the number 7; it was never written but as 77 plus [(7+7)/7]
plus 77. Again 11 was usually written 3 plus 5 plus 3. It was always the aim to
find symmetry in these expressions, and also ‘to find an easy way to 1’. This
last is difficult to explain. Eleven was their great ‘Key of Magic’. It is a
twofold number in ‘the act of becoming 1’. Thirty-seven was the essence of 1
inasmuch as multiplying it by 3 gives 111, three ones, which divided again by 3
in another manner, yield 1. "One would rather think of 48 as 37 plus 11 than as
4 times 12" is the statement of an elementary text-book dating from the earliest
days of Atlas. It was a sort of moral duty to teach the mind to think in this
manner. The number 7 was the ‘perfect number’ with them as with us, but for
very different reasons. It was the link between Earth and Venus, for one thing;
I cannot explain why. It was ‘the number of Atla’, and the ‘house of success’
(two being the ‘house of battle’). It was also grace, softness, ease, healing
and ‘joy of Zro’ as well as ‘play of phosphorus’. Many mathematicians, however,
attacked it with rigour; there was at one time an almost general consent to
replace it by 8, and its ‘rapture-combination’ 31, by 33. Despite the intense
preoccupation with such ideas, mathematics as we know them had reached a
perfection which if it does not surpass that of our own civilization, fails
principally because of its theorems, handed down to Euclid and Pythagoras,
although imperfectly, formed a springboard whence we might leap. The initiation
of children was also a matter reserved for the High House. Weaned at three
months, the children were tended by the lower classes until the age of puberty,
an occurrence which fitted them at once for initiation. A legate from the High
House was sent for, and in his presence the child was brought, acquainted with
Zro by its father and mother, and full instruction in ‘working’ was further
conferred by any member of the ‘house’ who chose to do so, this in practice
meaning by everybody. The ceremonies were frequently long and exhausting;
children often enough died in the course of them. This was not regarded as a
serious calamity; some schools of magicians even pretended to rejoice. The
representatives of the High House had a prior right to the parents of the child;
at times he conducted the initiation in person, a high honour, but invariably
fatal. On rare occasions male children were sent over to the Atla to be
devoured. The parents of so fortunate a child were advanced in rank on the spot,
and had special privileges conferred on them, sometimes even being transferred
to a ‘House of Houses’. All those who dwelt in the High House were veiled
whenever they appeared, in order to prevent it being known that they were of the
same appearance in all respects as their inferiors. This ordinance had been made
after the Great Conspiracy, with which I shall deal in the chapter on
History..pa
VI.
OF THE UNDERGROUND GARDENS
OF ATLAS, AND OF THE ALLEGED
COMMERCE OF THE ATLANTEANS
WITH INCUBI, SUCCUBI, AND THE
DEMONS OF DARKNESS.
I have referred to the contempt with which the Atlanteans were prone to regard
the vegetable kingdom. Animals, including man, shared their scorn. The idea may
have been that with their advantages they ought to have done much better for
themselves. Minerals, however, were regarded as helpless; and hence the
extraordinary attention paid to them. Beneath the houses the rock had been
tunneled out into grottos, some in odd fantastic forms, but most in immense
polyhedra or combinations of curves. Each ‘house’ had some twenty of such
gardens. Three reagents were used in the cultivation; the ‘seed of metals’, ‘the
seed of Light’, and the seed of ", an untranslatable idea approximating to our
mystic’s interpretation of ‘Alpha and Omega’. The two former produced simple
effects, the first formed jewels, self-luminious, which yet grew like flowers,
the second similar effects with metals; while the third brought any mineral to
flower in the most extravagant combinations of colour and form. All such
conditions as texture, hardness, elasticity, and physical attributes in general,
were considered worthy of the profoundest attention. As an instance of these, I
may describe particular gardens. One would have a roof of softly-glowing
sapphires, foxglove, bluebell or gentian, and between these champak stars of
ruby. The walls would be covered with tendrils of vine within whose depths
lurked tiny blossoms of amethyst. The floor would be of malachite, but alive,
growing as a coral does, softer than any earthly moss and more elastic to the
tread. On every darker leaf might glow dew-drops of self-strung diamond formed
from the carbon dioxide of the air by the action of the ‘seed of Light’. Another
grotto would be a monochrome of blue, various copper salts being ‘planted’
everywhere, and growing in incrustations and festoons of every shade of blue
from the faintest tinge of coerulean azure and green and grey, in whose abyss
would be seen shapes of anemonies, perhaps of such hues as iron oxide, silver
chromate, and cupramonium cyanurate. All this floor would in all respects
resemble water but for its greater solidity, and floating on it would be giant
lilies, great green leaves of emerald with cups of pearl not less than twelve
feet in diameter, with corollae of pure gold, so fine that they glimmered green,
with pistils of platinum on whose tops trembled great pigeon-blooded rubies.
Another might be wholly of metal, a mere bower of jasmine, with its floor of
violets. The law of growth of these creatures of wisdom was not that of plants
or animals, or even of crystals; it was that of the earth. Constantly growing as
the planet approached the sun, they as steadily shrank as she departed to
aphelion. This was not growth and decay, but the rise and fall of an eternal
bosom. It is probable, too, that this is one of the reasons why Atlas neglected
the higher kingdoms; they had learned to grow, but on wrong lines, and it was
too late to endeavour to correct the error. These gardens were the principal
places of working. It was hardly possible to pass from one place to another
without coming upon one of them, so cunningly were they distributed; and in
every garden would be found, joyful and noble, parties of workers intent on
their beloved task. The passer-by would gladly join one of such parties, engage
in the work for so long as he wished, and then proceed upon his private
business. In these same gardens too, were salvers and goblets always filled with
Zro, and after toil, refreshment fitted the workers to return to labour. Now of
these workings in the gardens strange tales are told. It is said that the
inhabitants falling to repose were visited in sleep by incubi and succubi
(whatever the nature of these may be, and I by no means concur in the opinion of
Sinistrari), and that they welcomed such with eagerness. Nay, darker legends
tell of infamous commerce and intercourse with demons foul and malicious, and
pretend that the power of Atlas was devilish, and that the catastrophe was the
judgement of God. These mediaeval fables of the debased and perverted phallicism
miscalled Christianity are unworthy even to be refuted, founded as they are on
hypotheses contrary to common sense. Nor would they who knew themselves masters
of the earth have deigned to degrade themselves, and moreover to vitiate their
whole work by commerce with inferiors. If there be any truth whatever in these
stories, it will then be more easily supposable that the Atlanteans aspiring to
journey sunwards to Venus, might invoke the beings of that planet, should it be
possible for them to travel to us. And that this is impossible, who can assert?
On the theory of the Magicians, power increases as the sun is approached, the
inhabitants of Earth being more highly infused with the magical force of Our
Star than those of Mars, and they again more than those of great Jupiter, gloomy
and disastrous Saturn and Uranus, or Neptune lost in star-dreams. Again, the
powers of each particular planet may, nay, must be wholly diverse. So
fundamental a condition of existence as the value of g being vastly various,
must not the inhabitants differ equally in body and in mind? What lives on the
minute and airless Moon can be no inhabitant of what may hide beneath the
flaming envelope of the sun, with its fountains of hydrogen flaming an hundred
thousand miles into the aether. And surely so wild an ambition as that of Atlas
would not have been held by beings so wise and powerful for so many centuries
had they not either a sure memory of coming from Mars, or some earnest of their
eventual departure to Venus. Man does not persist in the chimerical for more
than a few generations. Alchemy achieved results so startling and so beneficial
to humanity at large—one need only mention the discovery of zinc, antimony,
hydrogen, opium, gas itself—that the original ideals were changed for others
more limited and more practical—or at least more immediately realizable. Nor is
this view unsupported by testimony of a sort. "Great and glorious, rays of our
father the Sun", says one of the poets of Atlas, "are they within us. Let us
call them forth by utterance that is not uttered, by the gesture that is not
made, by the working that is above all working, for they are great and glorious,
rays of our father the Sun. Then from our bride that waits for us in the nuptial
chamber, green in the green West, blue in the blue East, exalted above our
father in the even and in the morn, spring forth our heirs and our hosts, to
greet us in the darkness. Dim-glimmering are our gardens in the light of the
seed of light; they are peopled with shadows; they take form; they are as
serpents, they are as trees, they are as the holy Zcrra, they are as all things
straight or curved, they are winged, they are wonderful. With us do they work,
and that which was but one in seven, and that which was two is become eleven!
With us do they work, and give us of the draught miraculous; us do they instruct
in magic, and feed us the delicate food. Let us call forth them that are within
us, that they that are without may enter in, as it was made manifest by Him that
maketh secret." This passage, not devoid of a rude eloquence, makes clear what
was held in exoteric circles. For in Atlas the poet was not as in England a holy
and exalted being, one set apart for his high calling, throned in the hearts of
the people, cherished by kings and nobles, one on whom no wealth and honour are
too great to shower, but one of the people themselves, of no greater con
sequence than any other. Every man was an artist in so far as he was a man; and
every man being equally so in nature, whether so in achievement or not mattered
nothing, as appreciation was of no moment. Accomplishing Art for the sake of
Art, the interest of the creator in his work died with its creation. It may
therefore be possible that these words are those of poetic exaggeration, or that
there is a concealed meaning in them, or that they are intended to mask and
mislead, or that the poet was not himself fully instructed. Indeed it is certain
that only the High House had the secrets of Atlas, and that the magicians of the
House held the undeniable if sometimes dangerous doctrine that the truth and
falsehood of any statement alternated as do day and night according to the
status of the hearer of the statement. However, so strong is the tradition
concerning the ‘Angel of Venus’ that it must at least be considered carefully.
The theory appears to have been that if the magicians of Venus invited the
Atlanteans, means would assuredly follow, just as if a King summons a paralysed
man to his presence, he will also send officers to convey him. Now whether the
‘Angel of Venus’ is really an angel in anything like the modern sense of the
word, or merely a title of one of the principal magicians of the planet, it is
evident that the High House ardentl desired his presence. That this might be
manifested by the birth of a child ‘without the stain of Atla’ was clearly an
ultimate desideratum, an outward and visible sign of redemption, an obvious
guarantee of the reality of the occurrence. It was then a Virgin high priestess
who achieved so notable a renown; whether or not this is a mere poetic parable
of the abiogenesis—if it is indeed fair so to describe it—of the eleventh stage
of Zro is another and an open question. In any case, such is the tradition, and
numerous parodies of it are still extant in the stories of the births of Romulus
and Remus, Bacchus, Buddha and many other legendary heroes of modern times; we
even catch an echo in the myths of such barbarian lands as Syria.So much and no
more concerning the Underground Gardens of Atlas, and of their commerce with the
inhabitants of Venus.
VII.
OF MARRIAGE AND OTHER CURIOUS CUSTOMS
OF THE ATLANTEANS:
AND OF SACRIFICES TO THE GODS.
I have already adverted to that most singular conception of the duty of the
married which opposes the customs of Atlas to those of any other race on Earth.
But the considerations which established it have yet to be discussed. I will not
insist on that gross and cynical point of view which might perceive in English
marriage today a practical vindication of the Atlantean position. On the
contrary, in Atlas marriage formed the loftiest of ideals. It resembles the
‘Hermetic marriage’ of certain alchemists. The bond between the parties was only
stronger for the absence of the lower link. The idea underlying this was in the
main a particular case of the general proposition that whatever was natural
should be transcended. As will be seen in the final chapter, the very stigma of
success in their Great Work was the transcending of the sexual process. The bond
of marriage was not, however, entirely of this negative character. It had its
positive side, and here closely resembled the so-called Christian doctrine of
Christ and the church. Husband and wife were to be father and daughter, mother
and son, brother and sister, teacher and pupil, and above all, friends. And this
relation was to subsist on all planes. The hieroglyph of love was a cross; that
of marriage, parallel straight lines, and as the cross was to be transcended in
the circle, so were these lines to converge not on earth, but in Venus. In the
meanwhile each partner led his own free life; and it often occurred that a
woman, having borne two children to a man and married him, would bear two
children to another man, and so on perhaps for two centuries, thus acquiring a
cohort of husbands. Such an arrangement must clearly have lead to grave
confusion had any question of property and inheritance been involved, but
notions so unfortunate were unknown. Where all had every heart’s desire, of what
value were they? It is true that some division of labour (though little) was
involved in the social scheme, but it occurred to no one to regard the
supervision of serviles as less honourable than the offering of great
sacrifices. In a perfect organism one part is as necessary and decent as any
other part, and no sane observer can reason otherwise. For a perfect organism
has a single definite aim, and the only dishonourable feather on an arrow would
be one that was out of place. Human nature being what it is, one may
nevertheless agree that this measureless content with the existing order, except
in so far as the purpose of the establishment of that order was unfulfilled, was
rendered possible by the extreme lightness of the toil demanded of any
individual. But it is impossible for slaves to understand free men. It is always
a wonder to Englishmen that a man should devote himself to unremitting toil for
an ideal. He is called a crank, basely slandered, the lowest motives being
without any reason assigned to his actions, mocked, persecuted, perhaps
crucified. This is partly forgivable, as in England philanthropy is almost
invariably the mask of vice and fraud.The ceremony of marriage* was simple,
dignified, yet poignant. The lovers in the presence of their whole house,
publicly embraced for the last time. Their two children pressed them apart.
Elevating their hands in a crossed clasp they gave way, and the children passed
through, preceding a most holy image which was borne by a priest and priestess
between them. Then they parted, and each was severally congratulated and
embraced by any of the others who chose, and the priest and priestess then,
exalting the image and setting it in a suitable shrine, closed the ceremony by
the command "To work" and adding force to the same by their example.
The education of the children was another important matter in which their ideas
were wholly opposed to our own. It ceased altogether at the age of puberty,
which was sometimes as early as six, never later than fourteen. Were it so
delayed, the delinquent was crowned in mockery with a square black cap,
sometimes tasselated, and sent among the serviles to instruct them in religion
and similar branches of learning, and never permitted to return to Atlas. The
ignorance and superstition of the plains was thus kept at a proper height. The
method of education was indeed singular. Certain Atlanteans who made it their
study would place the various articles in the hands of the infants, and observe
what use they made of them. In the course of a few months the experts had
accurately mapped the psychology of the child, and it was led in accordance
therewith. The marriage customs of Atlas allowed no too rapid growth in numbers,
and it was therefore easy to give each child attention. The method of opposition
was again employed in education, the child’s natural wish being constantly
stimulated by a parallel training in the contrary subject. Children were also
shewn a series of ordered facts, and an explanation given. But not the least
pains was taken to ascertain whether the child had retained those instructions;
they were left as impressions on the mind. The brain was not injured by the
strain of being constantly forced to bring up its stores from the subconscious.
It was found in practice that every child learnt everything that it was shown,
and that this learning was always ready for use, while the consciousness was
never wearied or overcrowded. It was also found that those whose memories were
what we call good were precisely those who failed to develop in other ways more
useful to society.The most peculiar of their methods was the search for genius.
It was the business of the experts to pay the most serious and reverent
attention to all that a child did, and whenever they failed to understand the
workings of its mind, to place it under the charge of a special guardian, who
did his utmost to comprehend sufficiently to be able to encourage it to become
yet more unintelligible.
Apud eos membrum virile membrano lucido erat; ob quod qualis circumscisio die
nativitatis facta erat. Vix credere dignum est, tanquam verum, feminarum montes
venereales similutidine facies fuere, facies demonicae, sardonicae, Satyricae,
cujus os erat os vulvae, res horribiles atque ridiculosa. Ferunt similia de
virorum membris, quae fingunt sicut imagines homunculorum fuere. Lege—Judice—Tace.Many
of the men had ossified extensions of the frontal process which amounted to
horns, and the formation was occasionally found in the higher types of women.
Curiously carven head-dresses of gold were worn by both sexes, and those of
priestly rank adorned these with living serpents, and the high priests yet
further with feathers or with wings, such being not the spoils of dead birds,
but the blossoms of the live gold of the crowns. Some tradition of this custom
is found in the pictures of the ‘Gods’ of Egypt, these gods being merely the
Atlanteans whose mission civilized the country. The names of some of the earlier
gods confirm this. Nu (Hebrew Noah) is Atlantean for arch, Zu (Egyptian Shu) for
many ideas connecting with wind, Asi means ‘cum quasi serpens’, obviously the
name of an actual High Priestess. Ra is pure Atlantean for Sun, and ‘Mse’
(Egyptian Chomse) for moon. The idea in ‘Mse is that of a strong woman (‘M)
closing the mouth of a serpent (S) or dragon, and from this we have the XIth
card of the Bohemian Tarot, and the legend in the Apocalypse. In the mystic
Greek used by the Gnostics we find similar traces, SOPHIA being from S Ph,
giving the idea of ‘serpent breath’ i.e. wisdom. IAO is PHALLOS, KTEIS, PROKTOS.
The word LOGOS means the Boy (G) naturally engendered of the Virgin (L) and the
Serpent (S). THEOS (root O, first written 0) means the sun in his strength and
also the Lingam-Yoni conjoined. CHRISTOS is ‘The love of passion of the Rising
Sun ® and the serpent’ (S). The I and T indicate certain details which are
foreign to the present discussion. NEUMA (Atlantean N M) is the ‘Arch of the
Woman’, MARIA, the Woman of the Sun.* The words MEITHRAS and ABRAXAS are again
derived from Atlas. "The woman entered, Lingam being conjoined with Yoni, bears
the sun from her serpent womb" and "From the womb’s mouth the sun (cometh
seeking) a womb for his desire, even the womb of a serpent", the course of the
year being signified in this manner, as usual with the ancients. This plan of an
idea corresponding to each letter was carried out very strictly: thus TLA,
black, means the stigma or mark of the virgin’s womb, IA (Hail! Greeting!) ‘Face
to Face’, from the other peculiarity described above. These few examples will
suffice to indicate the singular character of the language,* and the way in
which its essential dogmatic symbols have been incorporated by the heirs of
Atlas in the inmost sanctuaries of races which they deemed worthy of such
assistance. I must not pass over in silence the question of sacrifice to the
gods, to which a passing reference has already been made. Such sacrifices were
not very frequent; the victims were the ‘failures’, those who were useless to
the social economy.* As they represented capital expenditure, the object was to
recover this, at least, since no interest could be expected. The victim was
therefore handed over to a High Priest or Priestess, who extracted the life by
an instrument devised for and excellently adapted to the purpose, so that it
died of exhaustion. The life thus regained was given to ‘the gods’ in a manner
too complex to be described in this brief account. The early age at which
puberty occurred was due to design. The normal period of gestation had also been
shortened to four months. This was all part of the scheme to economize time. Old
age had been almost done away with by the great readiness of the Atlanteans to
‘go and see’ at the first sign of failing power. No doubt, further improvements
would have been made but for the loss of interest in the matter, all generation
being regarded as ‘the old experiment’, not likely to repay the trouble of
further research. In the 200 or 300 years of a man’s full vigour, only 8 years
on an average was the wastage of childhood, and even this was not all waste,
since some time at least must be necessary for the experts to discover and
direct the tendencies of the mind. The body ought therefore to be regarded as an
engine, the theoretical limit of whose efficiency had been reached. So much I
mention of the customs of the Atlanteans with regard to marriage, education and
religious sacrifices..pa
VIII.
OF THE HISTORY OF ATLAS, FROM
ITS EARLIEST ORIGINS
TO THE PERIOD IMMEDIATELY
PRECEDING THE CATASTROPHE.
The origin of Atlas is lost in the obscurity of antiquity. The official religious explanation is this: "We came across the waters on the living Atla", which is pious but improbable. A mystic meaning is to be suspected. The lay historian says "We came, escaping from destruction, eight persons in a ship, bearing the living Zro." This reminds one of later legends of presumably equal value. Poets frankly claim "We descended from heaven", and it has been seriously urged that seafarers would have preferred the plains to the rocks. The law of contrariety to Nature explains this away. Others maintain that the earliest settlers came ‘by air,’ or ‘through air’. This must mean balloons or airplanes, as flying was not known until centuries after. What is definitely known is that the earliest settlers were of a purely fighting race. An Atlantean Homer, Ylo, has described the first battle in such detail as to leave no doubt that he is retelling facts—a marked contradiction to his earlier books. There appear to have been but few Atlanteans, unless the names given are those of chiefs, which internal evidence contraverts. Their valour seems to have been prodigious. The natives were armed with every possible instrument of precision, having cavalry and artillery in abundance, as well as weapons that must have been as superior to the modern rifle (unless Ylo exaggerates) as that is to the arquebus. In spite of this the men of Atlas ‘smote them with rods’ or ‘fell upon them with their cones’, and routed them utterly. This mention of rods and cones has absurdly suggested to commentators that the Atlanteans used their eyes, and hypnotised the enemy. To state such an opinion is sufficient to expose its author to the contempt of the thoughtful. Altogether 86 battles were fought, extending over five years, before the natives were reduced to sue for peace. This was granted on generous terms, which the colonists broke, as soon as they dared to do so, in accordance with the invariable rule of colonists, then as much as today. However, it was nigh on a hundred years before the first college of magic was established. Previously the Atla had been carried about as occasion demanded. It was now enshrined with some decency of ceremonial upon a mountain. About three hundred years later we find ourselves face to face with the first great Mystery of Atlas. This is a translation of the record of that most strange event."Now it came to pass that all men turned black and died, and that the living Atla abode alone, bearing Mercury, whereof the Sun knoweth. Thus came again the true men of Atlas, and their women, bearing gods and goddesses. And the void suffered nothing, and the earth was at peace. Now then indeed arose Art, and men builded, being blind. And there was light, and some of the light wrought mischief. Wherefore the wise men destroyed them with their magic, and there is no record because it is written in that which is." A sort of ‘Si monumentum quaeris, circumspice’ seems here implied. In any case there were clearly two gaps unbridge able between the early struggles of the settlers, the period of great buildings, and the modern period, which proved stable of ‘houses’. The ‘houses’ were only made possible by the perfecting of Zro, and this helps considerably to fix the date. The next 2500 years were years of peaceable progress; the labour-mills were run without a hitch, and the next event was the discovery of black phophorus. It had been the custom to worship the Atla with lights, and these lights had been candles of yellow phosphorus in golden sheathes. At that time the Atla was veiled. At one festival of Spring the veils were burnt up, the lights extinguished, and the yellow phosphorus was found to have been turned into the black powder. The magicians examined this, and brought Zro to its ninth stage. This revolutionized the condition of things: old age and disease were no more, and death voluntary. Strangely enough this led directly to the Great Conspiracy. At the end of this period of 2500 years the system of ‘houses’ was well established. There were over 400 such ‘houses’, each of perhaps 1000 souls on an average. These were governed by 4 ‘houses of houses’ whose rulers took orders from the High House, at the head of which was the living Atla. The plain principle of Atlas was revolution; and like all revolutionary bodies, was obliged to adopt the strictest form of autocracy. A democracy is always soddenly conservative. The only hope is to catch it in one of its moments of crazy enthusiasm, and crush it before it has time to recover. Caesar and Napoleon both did this as far as they could; Cromwell and Porfirio Diaz did the same within narrower limits.Now a certain sophist—for philosopher one cannot call him— tried to enunciate a magical law to the effect that the present standard of life was all that could be desired; that further progress would be harmful, that Venus was not worth attaining, and that the sole endeavour of the magicians should be to preserve things as they were. That such a proposition could be supposed a ‘law’ reflects no credit on its author or its supporters. Yet of these it found many. The ninth stage of Zro was a leap calculated to unsettle the calmest mind. Its reality had beggared the optimist’s daydream. Poets had thrown down their stilettos.* High Priests who had spent decades in hopeful experiment saw their results attained by an entirely different method. In short, two thirds of the people were infected with the heresy, and hoped to hear it promulgated as a Law of Magic. It should here be explained that every Law of Magic had its turn as the principal law of practical working, and the school supporting any law, or insisting on it, became prominent with it. Every dominant law in all history had always been made insignificant by a new discovery about Zro, or other matter of practical importance, just as the "Peace with Honour" battle-cry of Disraeli was drowned by the calculation of the cost of warships, soldiers and patriotism. Each step in Zro had consequently implied the rise to power of a new school; and the sophist was ambitious, and yet the law he wished to establish was the ruling law of the servile races. The ‘law’ was accordingly sent to the High House for approval. Some opposition may have been forseen, but no one was prepared for the blackness of disapproval which actually radiated, striking hearts cold. A course without precedent, no answer was vouchsafed. On the contrary, even normal communication was suspended. The houses which favoured the innovation--333 in numbers—took counsel, came to the decision that it was useless to oppose the High House, and were about to acquiesce, when a woman who had once been in the presence of ‘To Her’ rose and thought vehemently ‘The Living Atla is the head of our conspiracy’. In other words, they were the loyalists, the Magicians of the High House the rebels. This was why they had cut themselves off, because their own head was against them. It was instantly resolved to go to the High House, and demand the custody of ‘To Her’. Nearing the goal, however, a remnant of the ancient reverence half cowed even the ringleaders—I may mention that five of every six of the heretics were women—when they saw a stern phalanx of magicians, its point threatening their centre. As they wavered, a woman cried "They are only men such as we are." The ranks stiffened; on all sides the army closed upon the tiny phalanx, which only numbered 66 all told. It was then that the truth was known. Ere a blow could be struck, the attacking party vanished; it was instantaneous and complete annihilation. From that moment it was certain that the ruling power in Atlas was Something* infinitely more awful than the Living Atla. In order to avoid any possible repetition of such a disaster—for the Magicians of the High House knew that any manifestation of the Supreme must undo the work of centuries—they gave out that they had become too terrible to look upon, and for the future they always appeared with heavy veils, or rather masks, since for the most part they were carven fantastically by the wearers in their leisure hours. A further alteration was made in the system of government. The head of one of the ‘houses of houses’ was made supreme: the High House took no part in affairs of state. Thus the Atla was to all intents and purposes deposed, although the same reverence and sacrifice were paid to it as formerly. It became a ‘constitutional monarch’, in our modern jargon. The next thousand years were years of serious trial in other ways. The toil of repopulation was excessive, and there was a revolt or rather strike of the servile races, which was ended by the substitution of ‘bread from heaven’ for those products of the earth on which they had formerly been fed, a diet which proved so adapted to their natures that no labour troubles ever recurred. The Greek legends of the wars between Gods, giants, Titans are traditional of a real war or series of wars which continued with intervals over 200 years. The enemy had developed naval armament to an extreme. Their tactics were these:
The first of these met with a great deal of success, the floating rock being struck with projectiles and sunk. This occurred chiefly on the outlaying islands, where they were not too much afraid to make raids in force. They also sent epidemic disease of many kinds. Atlas was reduced to such extremity in these ways that at one time the waterways were forced and the assault on the High House was actually carried out, bombardment continuing day and night for months together. Through a misunderstanding of a well known magical law, Atlanteans at that time considered themselves prohibited from employing any other defence than the rods and the cones of their forefathers; and these, it appears, were useless against machinery, or against men protected by fortification in such a way that they could not be got at from any quarter. Thus the sharklike submarines of the enemy were unassailable. The war was therefore at first entirely one-sided. A certain youthful magician, however, resolving to die for his country if need were, decided to retaliate. He had found that Zro in its nascent state (i.e. between the globes) had the power of bringing about endothermic reaction, seawater for example, becoming caustic soda and hydrochloric acid; and further that this acid thus produced was many thousand times more active than in its normal state. For example, the rock basins in which he conducted his first experiment dissolved as rapidly as butter under boiling oil. He then prepared a number of pairs of receiver-globes, and dropped them in the vicinity of the enemy’s submarines by night. In this manner he destroyed the hulls of almost the whole fleet in a single night; and the remainder fled in panic at dawn. They returned the following year, carrying out daylight raids only and devoting themselves chiefly to destroying the labour-mills. The young magician had been rewarded for his services by being presented to the Atla, and this example encouraged others to find means of attacking the invaders. Artificial darkness was therefore invented, and combined with the former method; but this was only partially successful, the tremendous pace of the ‘sharks’ enabling them to evade any threatening clouds. They did enormous damage, and the supplies of Zro were seriously curtailed. Things now went from bad to worse, and culminated in the attack on the High House, the besiegers keeping their battleships surrounded by rafts of fire, so that attack was impossible even by night. It was then that the High House called on the heorism of its sons. Armed with long swords of Zro, they plunged into the sea, to perish under the tooth of the Zhee-Zhou, but not before they had time to hack the invading battleships to shreds. Their floating torch-rafts only assisted the attack by directing the swimmers to their quarry. The attack on the High House had aroused Atlas at last. A counter invasion was plotted and carried out with immediate and complete success, the enemy being exterminated, and their country not merely ravaged but destroyed by arousing the forces of earthquake. All activity of this kind however was deprecable, a recurrence was guarded against by removing the High House to the lofty mountain previously described, and a ‘house’ was chosen to cultivate the art of war, and entrusted with the duty of destroying any living thing that might approach within a hundred miles of Atlas. Only one other adventure of historical importance remains to be recorded. It is the attempt of some foolish Atlanteans to found an ‘Empire’, and so to be entirely distinguished from the missionary effort referred to previously. The original settlement of Atlas, as has been the case with all flourishing colonies, was made by a few hardy pioneers, who strengthened themselves gradually by growth. But Atlas in her momentary madness poured out blood and treasure in the fatuous attempt to impose alien domination on lands utterly unsuited to the genius of the people. The idea, of course, was to increase the supply of labour and consequently of crude Zro. In the first place the adventure was expensive. It was uneconomical (in the scientific sense) to send ships with less than 1000 fighting men. The Zro required for these meant the employment of at least 7000 serviles, and the naval construction was therefore of a colossal order. But although little difficulty was found in conquering the country in the military sense, the natives had to be almost exterminated, and the labour of the survivors proved difficult to enforce. It was even then not a tenth as efficient as that of the serviles at home. The imported serviles moreover caught native diseases, and died in hundreds; and though by prodigious sacrifices the West African Empire was kept going for nearly 200 years, it had to end at last no less ingloriously than the French adventure in Mexico, or the English in India, and South Africa.* The main causes were the impossibility of breeding children in a climate so unsuitable, even of maintaining their own women, and above all the fact that the crude Zro was not of a quality equal to that obtained in Atlas, and that the Zro generated by the Atlanteans themselves was not to be made at all outside their own country. The lesson was learnt. Until the end no further attempt was made to advance in any but the true direction. The great majority of the colonists returned to Atlas; but many, degenerating as is the fashion with colonists of this conquering kind, abandoned Zro for gross food, intermarried with the natives, and have generally degenerated yet further to races inferior even to the present descendants of those who were in those days the equivalents of the serviles of Atlas..pa
IX.
OF THE CATASTROPHE,
ITS ANTECEDENTS AND
PRESUMED CAUSES.
In my remarks on Zro I have a necessarily somewhat diffuse account of the
properties of this remarkable substance. It must now be made clearer that the
crude Zro in its nine stages produced by the serviles, and consumed in the
‘houses’ was in each stage of inferior quality to that of the same degree
produced by the Atlanteans, and consumed by the High House. For example, the
crude Zro was made in a labour-mill with all sorts of insulations. The first
stage of the priest’s Zro could be made anywhere and at any time, and naturally
directed itself to the receptable for it without any precautions. It must, I
think, be presumed that the Zro generated in the High House was again of far
greater purity and potency. Very little of it can have been used in the
experiments of the magicians, and it is therefore necessary to account for
enormous quantities, produced during many centuries of uninterrupted labour. I
have, however, no data of any kind for this investigation; the mysteries of the
High House have ever been inscrutable, and were not wholly delivered to the
Heirs of Atlas. They must be rediscovered by the magicians of the new race. It
may be that in some form or other the Zro had been made stable, and used to
impregnate the column which is alleged to have been driven ‘through the Earth’;
perhaps, and less improbably, only to the depth of a few hundred miles. This
column, however long it may have been, had certainly its top immediately beneath
the reservoir of the High House. It had been completed about 70 years before the
‘catastrophe’ but apparently no effort was made to utilize it in any way. To me
it appears probable that in some one mind the whole ‘catastrophe’ was brooding,
that the column was part of the device, and that the event which I shall now
describe was the other part. This event was the birth of a child in the High
House, a child without the distinguishing mark of the daughters of Atlas. That
any child at all should have been born there is so incredible that I am inclined
to suspect an improper use of the word ‘born’. I think rather that a magician
brought Zro to its eleventh stage, when it takes human form, and lives! The
alternative theory is that of the ‘Angel of Venus’ described in the chapter on
the Underground Gardens of Atlas. The supporters of this theory hold that the
child was not born of a priestess, but of the Living Atla. In any case, the
whole country gave itself up to unbridled rejoicing. Work was carried on at a
greater speed than ever before: one might say a delirium of labour. For eleven
years this continued without cessation, and then without warning came the order
to repair to the High House—every man, woman and child of Atlas. What was then
done, I know not, and dare not guess; that same day seven volunteers, heroic
exiles from the reward of so many centuries of toil, voluntary maroons on the
discarded planet, the Heirs of Atlas, turned their faces from the High House,
and severally sought distant mountains, there each to guard his share of the
Secrets of the Holy Race, and in due time to discover and train up fit children
of other races of the earth so that one day another people might be founded to
undertake another such task as that now ended. Hardly had the pinnacle of Atlas
melted into the sea behind them, than the ‘catastrophe’ occurred. The High House
and the column beneath it, with all the inhabitants of Atlas, shot from the
earth with the vehemence of a million lightnings, bound for that green blaze of
glory that scintillated in the West above the sunset.Instantly the Earth, its
god departed, gave itself up to anguish. The sea rushed unto the void of the
column and in a thousand earthquakes Atlas, ‘houses’ and plains together were
overwhelmed forever in the ocean. Tidal waves rolled round the world; everywhere
great floods carried away villages and towns; earthquakes rocked and tempests
roared; tumult was triumphant. For years after the catastrophe the dying tremors
of the Event still shook mankind with fear.* And the eternal waves of the great
mother rolled over Atlas, save where Earth in her agony thrust up gaunt
pinnacles, bare masts of wreckage to mark the vanished continent. Save for its
heirs, of whose successors it is my highest honour to be the youngest and the
least worthy, oblivion fell, like one last night in which the sun should be
forever extinct, upon the land of Atlas and its people. Shall such high purpose
fail of emulation, such achievement and example not excite us to like striving?
Then let earth fall indeed from her high place in heaven, and mankind be outcast
forever from the sun! Men of Earth! Seek out the heirs of Atlas; let them order
you into a phalanx, let them build you into a pyramid, that may pierce that
appointed which awaits you, to establish a new dynasty of Atlanteans to be the
mainstay and mainspring of the Earth, the pioneers of their own path to heaven,
and to our lord and Father, the Sun! And he put his hand upon his thigh, and
swore it.By the ineffable , Tla, and by the holy Zro, did he swear it, and
entered into the body of the new Atla that is alive upon the earth.
.pa
NOTES:
Chapter I:
p3. There were four (some say five) distinct races, each having several sub-rages. But the main characteristics were the same. Some alleged the Portuguese and the English to be survivals of this or kindred stock. p3. Or ZRA’D. The ZR is drawled slowly; then the lips are suddenly curled back in a sneering snarl, and the vowel sharply and forcibly uttered. It is disputed whether this word is connected with the Sanscrit SRI, holy. p4. The same danger to society in our own time has been forseen, and an identical remedy discovered and applied in compulsory education and cheap newspapers.
Chapter II:
p6. Gautama Buddha was the reincarnation or legend of a previous Buddha who was a missionary from Atlas, hence the account of his immovable neck, the ears that he could fold over his face, and other monstrous details. p6. There was a Governor of these, of whose name, nature and function I am not permitted to speak. p7. One of the most brilliant children committed suicide on learning that he could not move his upper jaw. This boy is of the eleven heroes who had statues in the High House. And the Atlantean for ‘sorrow’ in its ultimate sense (‘dukka’ or ‘weltschmerz’) is to wrench at the upper jaw. p8. This system of communication has great advantages over any other. It is independent of distance, and dependent on the will of the transmitter. Telepathic messages could not be ‘tapped’ or miscarry in any way. p9. Called by them Zhee-Zhou, in imitation of the swish of the tail and the cry of its victim.
Chapter III:
p10. The point was discussed fully, and finally relegated, in the Council of Stockholm, 1913. p10. The scene is so real to me that I find it impossible to avoid using the historic present here and elsewhere, inadvertently. p10. There are six other pieces of apparatus to insulate and carry to the basin the six subtler principles of sweat. p11. Only the smallest quantity is required, and it is unchanged, its function being purely catalytic. This form of phosphorus is one of the most stable elements. It combines (so far as is known) only with Zro. But if thrown out of such a combination, it becomes ordinary yellow phosphorous. p12. In spite of the absolute promiscuity of the Atlanteans, this was never in doubt, owing to the special mark of each man, whose stigma or variation was infallibly transmitted. p13. This item is loosely used, as equivalent of ‘life.’ The sacrifice is described later, and the point made clear.p13. No other disease was known after the bringing of the Zro to its ninth stage, all indisposition being instantly cured by a single dose.
Chapter IV:
p14. No known state of pure Zro is stable. From this it will be seen how entirely Atlas was in the hands of the servile races. Fortunately no trouble ever arose; the supply of labour was always ample. p15. There was also a settlement in Finland. Its only remains in historic periods is ‘Lapland Witches.’
Chapter V:p16.
There are various theories; one a sort of avatar affair, another that the Atla is a quintessence of some kind; another calls ‘To Her’ the ‘Angel of Venus, the force of our aspiration.’ p16. A mere compliment. p17. Especially monkeys. The results of this experiment were sent to colonize an island, but escaped, and after many journeys, reached Japan, where their descendents flourish still. p19. A partial exception existed for prime numbers, as being self-generated, and each of these which had been investigated had its special (and comparatively simple) signification.
Chapter VII:
p25.There was also the marriage of those of the Magicians who refused all intercourse with the opposite sex, and were therefore married to the whole sex as such. Here was no ceremony used; but each had a special mark signifying that he or she was thus consecrated. p26. MAR is Atlantean (also Sanscrit) for die. This word throws light on their conception of death. p26.Note that no tautologies defile its linguistic wells. "As I have written" is never changed to ‘as I have observed, noted, described, said, indicated, remarked, pointed out’ and so on. p26. I must revert for a moment to the language. OIK, Greek OIKOS meant the ‘House of the penetrating men.’ NOM, Greek NOMOS, the ‘arch of the House of the Women,’ i.e. that which roofed them in or protected them. Hence "the law.’
Chapter VIII
p29. Needle-sharp daggers of Zro in its seventh stage were used to write on the rock walls of Atlas. p30. This matter is not for open discussion. Even at this distant date it would be dangerous to do so much even as indulge in speculation. p32.I write a little, but not much, in advance of the events. To illustrate the theory here advanced I will ask the reader to compare the results of the attempts to colonize America by (a) the whole military power of Spain at her zenith, (b) the handful of exiles in the ‘Mayflower.’
Chapter IX
p34.The Legend of the Deluge is derived from this event.