<TEI xmlns="http://www.tei-c.org/ns/1.0" xmlns:py="http://codespeak.net/lxml/objectify/pytype" py:pytype="TREE"><text xml:lang="eng"><body><div type="translation" n="urn:cts:greekLit:tlg0059.tlg032.perseus-eng2" xml:lang="eng"><div type="textpart" subtype="section" resp="perseus" n="111"><said who="#Critias" rend="merge"><label>Crit.</label><p>And of its goodness a strong proof is this:  what is now left of our soil rivals any other in being all-productive and abundant in crops and rich in pasturage for all kinds of cattle;
<milestone unit="page" resp="Stephanus" n="111"/><milestone unit="section" resp="Stephanus" n="111a"/> and at that period, in addition to their fine quality it produced these things in vast quantity.  How, then, is this statement plausible, and what residue of the land then existing serves to confirm its truth?  The whole of the land lies like a promontory jutting out from the rest of the continent far into the sea and all the cup of the sea;  round about it is, as it happens, of a great depth.  Consequently, since many great convulsions took place during the 9000 years—for such was the number of years
<milestone unit="section" resp="Stephanus" n="111b"/> from that time to this <note anchored="true" resp="Loeb">Cf. 108 E.</note>—the soil which has kept breaking away from the high lands during these ages and these disasters, forms no pile of sediment worth mentioning, as in other regions, but keeps sliding away ceaselessly and disappearing in the deep.  And, just as happens in small islands, what now remains compared with what then existed is like the skeleton of a sick man, all the fat and soft earth having wasted away, and only the bare framework of the land being left.  But at that epoch the country was unimpaired, and for its mountains it had
					<milestone unit="section" resp="Stephanus" n="111c"/> high arable hills, and in place of the <q type="emph">moorlands,</q> <note anchored="true" resp="Loeb"><foreign xml:lang="grc">φελλεύς</foreign>means a porous stone, like lava, or a field of stony soil.</note> as they are now called, it contained plains full of rich soil;  and it had much forestland in its mountains, of which there are visible signs even to this day;  for there are some mountains which now have nothing but food for bees, but they had trees no very long time ago, and the rafters from those felled there to roof the largest buildings are still sound.  And besides, there were many lofty trees of cultivated species;  and it produced boundless pasturage for flocks.  Moreover, it was enriched by the yearly rains from Zeus,
<milestone unit="section" resp="Stephanus" n="111d"/> which were not lost to it, as now, by flowing from the bare land into the sea;  but the soil;  it had was deep, and therein it received the water, storing it up in the retentive loamy soil and by drawing off into the hollows from the heights the water that was there absorbed, it provided all the various districts with abundant supplies of springwaters and streams, whereof the shrines which still remain even now, at the spots where the fountains formerly existed, are signs which testify that our present description of the land is true.
<milestone unit="section" resp="Stephanus" n="111e"/> <milestone unit="para"/>Such, then, was the natural condition of the rest of the country, and it was ornamented as you would expect from genuine husbandmen who made husbandry their sole task, and who were also men of taste and of native talent, and possessed of most excellent land and a great abundance of water, and also, above the land, a climate of most happily tempered seasons.  And as to the city, this is the way in which it was laid out at that time.</p></said></div><div type="textpart" subtype="section" resp="perseus" n="112"><said who="#Critias" rend="merge"><label>Crit.</label><p>In the first place, the acropolis, as it existed then, was different from
<milestone unit="page" resp="Stephanus" n="112"/><milestone unit="section" resp="Stephanus" n="112a"/> what it is now.  For as it is now, the action of a single night of extraordinary rain has crumbled it away and made it bare of soil, when earthquakes occurred simultaneously with the third of the disastrous floods which preceded the destructive deluge in the time of Deucalion. <note anchored="true" resp="Loeb">Cf. <title>Tim</title>. 22 A, 23 A, B.</note> But in its former extent, at an earlier period, it went down towards the <placeName key="tgn,7010018">Eridanus</placeName> and the <placeName key="tgn,7010825">Ilissus</placeName>, and embraced within it the Pnyx;  and had the Lycabettus as its boundary over against the Pnyx <note anchored="true" resp="Loeb">The <placeName key="tgn,7010018">Eridanus</placeName> ran on the N., the <placeName key="tgn,7010825">Ilissus</placeName> on the S. side of <placeName key="perseus,Athens">Athens</placeName>.  The Pnyx was a hill W. of the Acropolis;  the Lycabettus a larger hill to the N.E. of the city.</note>;  and it was all rich in soil and, save for a small space, level on the top.
<milestone unit="section" resp="Stephanus" n="112b"/> And its outer parts, under its slopes, were inhabited by the craftsmen and by such of the husbandmen as had their farms close by;  but on the topmost part only the military class by itself had its dwellings round about the temple of Athene and Hephaestus, surrounding themselves with a single ring-fence, which formed, as it were, the enclosure of a single dwelling.  On the northward side of it they had established their public dwellings and winter mess-rooms, and all the arrangements in the way of buildings which were required for the community life
<milestone unit="section" resp="Stephanus" n="112c"/> of themselves and the priests;  but all was devoid of gold or silver, of which they made no use anywhere <note anchored="true" resp="Loeb">Cf. <title>Rep</title>. 416 D ff.; <title>Laws</title>, 801 B.</note>; on the contrary, they aimed at the mean between luxurious display and meanness, and built themselves tasteful houses, wherein they and their children's children grew old and handed them on in succession unaltered to others like themselves.  As for the southward parts, when they vacated their gardens and gymnasia and mess-rooms as was natural in summer, they used them for these purposes.  And near the place of the present Acropolis
<milestone unit="section" resp="Stephanus" n="112d"/> there was one spring— which was choked up by the earthquakes so that but small tricklings of it are now left round about;  but to the men of that time it afforded a plentiful stream for them all, being well tempered both for winter and summer.  In this fashion, then, they dwelt, acting as guardians of their own citizens and as leaders, by their own consent, of the rest of the Greeks and they watched carefully that their own numbers, of both men and women, who were neither too young nor too old to fight, should remain for all time as nearly as possible the same, namely, about 20,000.
<milestone unit="section" resp="Stephanus" n="112e"/> <milestone unit="para"/>So it was that these men, being themselves of the character described and always justly administering in some such fashion both their own land and <placeName key="tgn,1000074">Hellas</placeName>, were famous throughout all <placeName key="tgn,1000003">Europe</placeName> and <placeName key="tgn,1000004">Asia</placeName> both for their bodily beauty and for the perfection of their moral excellence, and were of all men then living the most renowned.  And now, if we have not lost recollection of what we heard when we were still children, <note anchored="true" resp="Loeb">Cf. <title>Tim</title>. 21 A ff.</note> we will frankly impart to you all, as friends, our story of the men who warred against our Athenians, what their state was and how it originally came about.</p></said></div><div type="textpart" subtype="section" resp="perseus" n="113"><milestone n="113" unit="page"/><milestone unit="section" resp="Stephanus" n="113a"/><said who="#Critias" rend="merge"><label>Crit.</label><p>But before I begin my account, there is still a small point which I ought to explain, lest you should be surprised at frequently hearing Greek names given to barbarians.  The reason of this you shall now learn.  Since Solon was planning to make use of the story for his own poetry, he had found, on investigating the meaning of the names, that those Egyptians who had first written them down had translated them into their own tongue.  So he himself in turn recovered the original sense of each name and, rendering it into our tongue,
<milestone unit="section" resp="Stephanus" n="113b"/> wrote it down so.  And these very writings were in the possession of my grandfather and are actually now in mine, and when I was a child I learnt them all by heart.  Therefore if the names you hear are just like our local names, do not be at all astonished;  for now you know the reason for them.  The story then told was a long one, and it began something like this.
	
	<milestone ed="P" unit="para"/>Like as we previously stated <note anchored="true" resp="Loeb">Cf. 109 B.</note> concerning the allotments of the Gods, that they portioned out the whole earth, here into larger allotments and there into smaller, and provided for themselves
<milestone unit="section" resp="Stephanus" n="113c"/> shrines and sacrifices, even so Poseidon took for his allotment the island of Atlantis and settled therein the children whom he had begotten of a mortal woman in a region of the island of the following description.  Bordering on the sea and extending through the center of the whole island there was a plain, which is said to have been the fairest of all plains and highly fertile;  and, moreover, near the plain, over against its center, at a distance of about 50 stades, there stood a mountain that was low on all sides.  Thereon dwelt one of the natives originally sprung from the earth,<note resp="Loeb" anchored="true">i.e. <q type="emph">autochthons,</q> cf. 109c, <title>Menex.</title>. 237 B.</note> Evenor by name,
<milestone unit="section" resp="Stephanus" n="113d"/> with his wife Leucippe;  and they had for offspring an only-begotten daughter, Cleito.  And when this damsel was now come to marriageable age, her mother died and also her father;  and Poseidon, being smitten with desire for her, wedded her;  and to make the hill whereon she dwelt impregnable he broke it off all round about;  and he made circular belts of sea and land enclosing one another alternately, some greater, some smaller, two being of land and three of sea, which he carved as it were out of the midst of the island;  and these belts were at even distances on all sides, so as to be impassable for man;
		<milestone unit="section" resp="Stephanus" n="113e"/> for at that time neither ships nor sailing were as yet in existence.  And Poseidon himself set in order with ease, as a god would, the central island, bringing up from beneath the earth two springs of waters, the one flowing warm from its source, the other cold, and producing out of the earth all kinds of food in plenty.</p></said></div><div type="textpart" subtype="section" resp="perseus" n="114"><said who="#Critias" rend="merge"><label>Crit.</label><p>And he begat five pairs of twin sons and reared them up;  and when he had divided all the island of Atlantis into ten portions, he assigned to the first-born of the eldest sons
<milestone unit="page" resp="Stephanus" n="114"/><milestone unit="section" resp="Stephanus" n="114a"/> his mother's dwelling and the allotment surrounding it, which was the largest and best;  and him he appointed to be king over the rest, and the others to be rulers, granting to each the rule over many men and a large tract of country.  And to all of them he gave names, giving to him that was eldest and king the name after which the whole island was called and the sea spoken of as the Atlantic, because the first king who then reigned had the name of Atlas.  And the name of his younger twin-brother,
<milestone unit="section" resp="Stephanus" n="114b"/> who had for his portion the extremity of the island near the pillars of Heracles up to the part of the country now called Gadeira after the name of that region, was Eumelus in Greek, but in the native tongue Gadeirus,—which fact may have given its title to the country.  And of the pair that were born next he called the one Ampheres and the other Evaemon;  and of the third pair the elder was named Mneseus
<milestone unit="section" resp="Stephanus" n="114c"/> and the younger Autochthon;  and of the fourth pair, he called the first Elasippus and the second Mestor;  and of the fifth pair, Azaes was the name given to the elder, and Diaprepes to the second.  So all these, themselves and their descendants, dwelt for many generations bearing rule over many other islands throughout the sea, and holding sway besides, as was previously stated, <note anchored="true" resp="Loeb">Cf. <title>Tim</title>. 25 A, B.</note> over the Mediterranean peoples as far as <placeName key="tgn,7016833">Egypt</placeName> and <placeName key="tgn,7009760">Tuscany</placeName>.
		
<milestone ed="P" unit="para"/>Now a large family of distinguished sons sprang from Atlas; <milestone unit="section" resp="Stephanus" n="114d"/> but it was the eldest, who, as king, always passed on the scepter to the eldest of his sons, and thus they preserved the sovereignty for many generations;  and the wealth they possessed was so immense that the like had never been seen before in any royal house nor will ever easily be seen again;  and they were provided with everything of which provision was needed either in the city or throughout the rest of the country.  For because of their headship they had a large supply of imports from abroad,
<milestone unit="section" resp="Stephanus" n="114e"/> and the island itself furnished most of the requirements of daily life,—metals, to begin with, both the hard kind and the fusible kind, which are extracted by mining, and also that kind which is now known only by name but was more than a name then, there being mines of it in many places of the island,—I mean <q type="emph">orichalcum,</q> <note anchored="true" resp="Loeb">i.e. <gloss>mountain-copper</gloss>;  a <q type="emph">sparkling</q> metal (116 C) hard to identify (cf. Hesiod, <title>Shield</title>. 122).</note> which was the most precious of the metals then known, except gold.  It brought forth also in abundance all the timbers that a forest provides for the labors of carpenters;  and of animals it produced a sufficiency, both of tame and wild.</p></said></div><div type="textpart" subtype="section" resp="perseus" n="115"><said who="#Critias" rend="merge"><label>Crit.</label><p>Moreover, it contained a very large stock of elephants;  for there was an ample food-supply not only for all the other animals which haunt the marshes and lakes and rivers,
<milestone unit="page" resp="Stephanus" n="115"/><milestone unit="section" resp="Stephanus" n="115a"/> or the mountains or the plains, but likewise also for this animal, which of its nature is the largest and most voracious.  And in addition to all this, it produced and brought to perfection all those sweet-scented stuffs which the earth produces now, whether made of roots or herbs or trees, or of liquid gums derived from flowers or fruits. The cultivated fruit<note anchored="true" resp="Loeb">i.e. the vine (cf. Hom. <title>Od.</title> 5.69).</note> also, and the dry, <note anchored="true" resp="Loeb">i.e., corn.</note> which serves us for nutriment, and all the other kinds that we use for our meals—the various species of which are comprehended under the name <q type="emph">vegetables</q>—
<milestone unit="section" resp="Stephanus" n="115b"/> and all the produce of trees which affords liquid and solid food and unguents, <note anchored="true" resp="Loeb">Perhaps the olive, or coco-palm.</note> and the fruit of the orchard-trees, so hard to store, which is grown for the sake of amusement and pleasure, <note anchored="true" resp="Loeb">Perhaps the pomegranate, or apple (cf. <title>Laws</title>. 819 A, B).</note> and all the after-dinner fruits <note anchored="true" resp="Loeb">Perhaps the citron.</note> that we serve up as welcome remedies for the sufferer from repletion,—all these that hallowed island, as it lay then beneath the sun, produced in marvellous beauty and endless abundance.  And thus, receiving from the earth all these products, they furnished forth
<milestone unit="section" resp="Stephanus" n="115c"/> their temples and royal dwellings, their harbors and their docks, and all the rest of their country, ordering all in the fashion following. <note anchored="true" resp="Loeb">See Illustration facing p. 286.</note><milestone ed="P" unit="para"/>First of all they bridged over the circles of sea which surrounded the ancient metropolis, making thereby a road towards and from the royal palace.  And they had built the palace at the very beginning where the settlement was first made by their God <note anchored="true" resp="Loeb">i.e., Poseiden.</note> and their ancestors;  and as each king received it from his predecessor, he added to its adornment
<milestone unit="section" resp="Stephanus" n="115d"/> and did all he could to surpass the king before him, until finally they made of it an abode amazing to behold for the magnitude and beauty of its workmanship.  For, beginning at the sea, they bored a channel right through to the outermost circle, which was three plethra in breadth, one hundred feet in depth, and fifty stades <note anchored="true" resp="Loeb">The plethron was about 100 ft.;  the stade (=6 plethra) about 600 ft.</note> in length;  and thus they made the entrance to it from the sea like that to a harbor by opening out a mouth large enough for the greatest ships to sail through. <note anchored="true" resp="Loeb">See Illustration facing this page.</note> Moreover, through the circles of land,
						<milestone unit="section" resp="Stephanus" n="115e"/> which divided those of sea, over against the bridges they opened out a channel leading from circle to circle, large enough to give passage to a single trireme;  and this they roofed over above so that the sea-way was subterranean;  for the lips of the landcircles were raised a sufficient height above the level of the sea.  The greatest of the circles into which a boring was made for the sea was three stades in breadth, and the circle of land next to it was of equal breadth;  and of the second pair of circles that of water was two stades in breadth and that of dry land equal again to the preceding one of water;  and the circle which ran round the central island itself was of a stade's breadth.</p></said></div></div></body></text></TEI>