Atlantis

Being set of the idea
    Of getting to Atlantis,
You have discovered of course
    Only the Ship of Fools is
Making the voyage this year,
As gales of abnormal force
    Are predicted, and that you
    Must therefore be ready to
Behave absurdly enough
    To pass for one of The Boys,
At least appearing to love
    Hard liquor, horseplay and noise.

Should storms, as may well happen,
    Drive you to anchor a week
In some old harbour-city
    Of Ionia, then speak
With her witty scholars, men
Who have proved there cannot be
    Such a place as Atlantis:
    Learn their logic, but notice
How their subtlety betrays
    A simple enormous grief;
Thus they shall teach you the ways
    To doubt that you may believe.

If, later, you run aground
    Among the headlands of Thrace
Where with torches all night long
    A naked barbaric race
Leaps frenzied to the sound
Of conch and dissonant gong;
    On that stony savage shore
    Strip off your clothes and dance, for
Unless you are capable
    Of forgetting completely
About Atlantis, you will
    Never finish your journey.

Again, should you come to gay
    Carthage or Corinth, take part
In their endless gaiety;
    And if in some bar a tart,
As she strokes your hair, should say
'This is Atlantis, dearie,'
    Listen with attentiveness
    To her life-story: unless
You become acquainted now
    With each refuge that tries to
Counterfeit Atlantis, how
    Will you recognize the true?

Assuming you beach at last
    Near Atlantis, and begin
The terrible trek inland
    Through squalid woods and frozen
Tundras where all are soon lost;
If, forsaken then, you stand,
    Dismissal everywhere,
    Stone and snow, silence and air,
Remember the noble dead
    And honour the fate you are,
Travelling and tormented,
    Dialectic and bizzare.

Stagger onward rejoicing;
    And even then if, perhaps
Having actually got
    To the last col, you collapse
With all Atlantis gleaming
Below you yet you cannot
    Descend, you should still be proud
    Even to have been allowed
Just to peep at Atlantis
    In a poetic vision:
Give thanks and lie down in peace,
    Having seen your salvation.

All the little household gods
    Have started crying, but say
Good-bye now, and put to sea.
    Farewell, dear friend, farewell: may
Hermes, master of the roads
And the four dwarf Kabiri,
    Protect and serve you always;
    And may the Ancient of Days
Provide for all you must do
    His invisble guidance,
Lifting up, friend, upon you
    The light of His countenance.




-- W.H. Auden