"Have you had occasion, sir, to verify this very ingenious etymology?"

he was finally able to gasp out.

"You have only to glance over these few books," said M. Le Mesge

disdainfully.

He opened successively five, ten, twenty cupboards. An enormous

library was spread out to our view.

"Everything, everything--it is all here," murmured Morhange, with an

astonishing inflection of terror and admiration.

"Everything that is worth consulting, at any rate," said M. Le Mesge.

"All the great books, whose loss the so-called learned world deplores

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to-day."

"And how has it happened?"

"Sir, you distress me. I thought you familiar with certain events. You

are forgetting, then, the passage where Pliny the Elder speaks of the

library of Carthage and the treasures which were accumulated there? In

146, when that city fell under the blows of the knave, Scipio, the

incredible collection of illiterates who bore the name of the Roman

Senate had only the profoundest contempt for these riches. They

presented them to the native kings. This is how Mantabal received this

priceless heritage; it was transmitted to his son and grandson,

Hiempsal, Juba I, Juba II, the husband of the admirable Cleopatra

Selene, the daughter of the great Cleopatra and Mark Antony. Cleopatra

Selene had a daughter who married an Atlantide king. This is how

Antinea, the daughter of Neptune, counts among her ancestors the

immortal queen of Egypt. That is how, by following the laws of

inheritance, the remains of the library of Carthage, enriched by the

remnants of the library of Alexandria, are actually before your eyes.

"Science fled from man. While he was building those monstrous Babels

of pseudo-science in Berlin, London, Paris, Science was taking refuge

in this desert corner of Ahaggar. They may well forge their hypotheses

back there, based on the loss of the mysterious works of antiquity:

these works are not lost. They are here. They are here: the Hebrew,

the Chaldean, the Assyrian books. Here, the great Egyptian traditions

which inspired Solon, Herodotus and Plato. Here, the Greek

mythologists, the magicians of Roman Africa, the Indian mystics, all

the treasures, in a word, for the lack of which contemporary

dissertations are poor laughable things. Believe me, he is well

avenged, the little universitarian whom they took for a madman, whom

they defied. I have lived, I live, I shall live in a perpetual burst

of laughter at their false and garbled erudition. And when I shall be

dead, Error,--thanks to the jealous precaution of Neptune taken to

isolate his well-beloved Clito from the rest of the world,--Error, I

say, will continue to reign as sovereign mistress over their pitiful

compositions."




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