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CALYPSO S ISLAND.

One may search in vain, on maps of the Aegean Sea or in the gazetteer for Calypso’s Island. It is not there, though every reader of the “Odyssey” and °| Fenelon’s “Talemaque” knows the island well (says the New York “Times”). As a matter of fact, search elsewhere than among the isles of Greece will I’eveal an island thus named —it is in France, in Dordogne River, says Andre Lamande, who delights in antiquarian research as well as in writing up-to-date novels. Formei'ly called Barade or Bourgnon Island, it was the property of Fenelon himself. He renamed it Calypso s Island. The Archbishop of Cambrai made, no mention of it in his will, and his surviving relatives and the monks of the Carennae Monastery disputed among themselves for its possession. _ Thus they wrangled until the Revolution, when it was declared the common property of the taxpayers of the district. Then the question arose how to divide it equitably, seeing that its surface was variegated, woodland, and meadow. A levelling process was agreed upon. The century-old trees were uprooted and the whole island was made a bare, level tract. In this condition nobody wanted it, even when it had been divided according to the laws of justice. Now, after many years, new trees have grown and Calypso’s Island is again a place of beauty, worthy to have been the home of the enchantress of Ulysses and of Telemachus.

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Permanent link to this item

https://paperspast.natlib.govt.nz/newspapers/DUNST19270613.2.49

Bibliographic details

Dunstan Times, Issue 3378, 13 June 1927, Page 7

Word Count
239

CALYPSO S ISLAND. Dunstan Times, Issue 3378, 13 June 1927, Page 7

CALYPSO S ISLAND. Dunstan Times, Issue 3378, 13 June 1927, Page 7