David Selzer is a writer of poetry, prose fiction, screenplays and stage plays. He embraces digital platforms to share his work of more than fifty years… READ MORE


  • THE ISLAND OF ATLAS

    Given that Plato was keen to imprison

    poets of whatever stripe because of their

    disinclination to tell the truth,

    how chuzpah of him to write in detail

    about The Island of Atlas aka

    Atlantis – its topography, its people,

    its constitution, its politics, all

    compared unfavourably with Athens,

    of course – as if he had evidence

    that the island, inundated, he claimed,

    as a result of human frailty, had

    actually existed in that ocean

    that bears the name of his invention,

    west of the Pillars of Heracles.

     

    Perhaps he was thinking of other places

    whose alleged dystopia was punished

    by flooding – though north not west of the Straits

    of Gibraltar: like Kêr-Is off the coast

    of Brittany, lost by a wayward king

    or his wayward daughter – or Cantref Gwaelod

    drowned under the waters of Cardigan Bay

    by a carousing, drunken prince forgetting

    to keep the island’s flood gates shut fast.

    Or maybe they were tales told by poets

    keen to tell the truth about power.

     

     

     


    One response to “THE ISLAND OF ATLAS”


    1. Jeff Teasdale Avatar
      Jeff Teasdale

      Thanks, David… excellent again!

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