Ragnarok : the age of fire and gravel

368 CONCLUSIONS.

“He shall deliver the island of the innocent: and it is delivered by the pureness of thine [Job’s] hands.”

And, as I have shown, in Genesis it appears that, after the Age of Darkness, God separated the floods which overwhelmed the earth and made a firmament, a place of solidity, a refuge, (chap. i, vs. 6, 7,) “in the midst of the waters.” <A firm place in the midst of the waters is necessarily an island.

And the location of this Eden was westward from Europe, for we read, (chap. iii, v. 24) :

“So he drove out the man ; and he placed a the East of the garden of Eden cherubims, and a flaming sword wien turned every way, to keep the way of the tree of

ife.

The man driven out of the Edenic land was, therefore, driven eastward of Eden, and the cherubims in the east of Eden faced him. The land where the Jews dwelt was eastward of paradise ; in other words, paradise was west of them.

And, again, when Cain was driven out he too moved eastward ; he “dwelt in the land of Nod, on the east of Eden,” (chap. iv, verse 16.) There was, therefore, a constant movement of the human family eastward. The land of Nod may have been Od, Ad, Atlantis ; and from Od may have come the name of Odin, the king, the god of Ragnarok.

In Ovid “the earth” is contradistinguished from the rest of the globe. It is an island-land, the civilized land, the land of the Tritons or water-deities, of Proteus, &geon, Doris, and Atlas. It is, in my view, Atlantis.

Ovid says, (book ii, fable 1, “ The Metamorphoses”) :

“ The sea circling around the encompassed earth... .

The earth has upon it men and cities, and woods and wild beasts, and rivers, and nymphs and other deities of the