The Voyage of Argo – Apollonius of Rhodes
I first saw the movie “Jason and the Argonauts” when I was a
little boy. Over the years I have told the story to my Greek and Roman classes
for decades – but it took till now [2014] for me to actually read the book
myself.
Apollonius of Rhodes was borne in 270 BC. He would eventually become the chief Liberian
at Alexandria. I enjoyed reading the
“history”, the thinking of the ancients, the stories of heroes I love
(especially Castor, Polydeuces, and Peleus), and much about the gods – the
powers they represent. It is interesting
that the two main characters, Jason and Medea, are so loathsome. There physical beauty does not redeem their
perfidy.
1. “And now, from Sparta, Aetolian Lede sent the mighty
Polydeuces and Castor, that famous that famous master of the racing horse. She had borne these two in Tyndareus’ place
at a single birth. She loved them
dearly, but she did not try to keep them back: hers was a spirit worthy of the
love of Zeus.” p. 39
2. “First of all, at a word from Argus, they strengthened
the ship by girding her with stout rope, which they drew taut on either side,
so that her planks should not spring from their bolts but stand any pounding
that the seas might give them. Next they
quickly hollowed out a runway wide enough to take her beam, extending it into
the sea as far as the prow would reach when they launched her, and as the
trench advanced, digging deeper and deeper below the level of her stem. Then they laid smooth rollers of the
bottom. This done, they tipped her down
onto the first rollers, on top of which she was to glide along. Next, high up on both sides of the ship, they
swung the oars inboard and fastened each handle to its tholepin so that a foot
and a half projected. They themselves
took their stance on either side, one behind the other, breasting the oars and
pressing with their hands. And now
Tiphys leapt on board to tell the young men when to push. He gave the order with a mighty shout and
they put their backs into it at once. At
the first heave they shifted her from where she lay; then strained forward with
their feet to keep her on the move. And
move she did. Between the two files of
hustling shouting men. Pelian Argo ran swiftly down. The rollers, chafed by the sturdy keel,
groaned and reacted to the weight by putting up a pall of smoke. Thus she slid into the sea, and would have
run still farther, had they not stood by and checked her with hawsers.” pp. 45-46
3. “His [Philyra] wife came too. She was carrying Peleus’ little boy Achilles
on her arm, and she held him up for his dear father to see.” p. 51
4. “Here, in the
previous year, the women had run riot and slaughtered every male
inhabitant. The married men, seized with
loathing for their lawful wives, had cast them off, conceiving an unruly
passion for the captured girls they brought across the sea from raids in Thrace
. . . Unhappy women! Their
soul-destroying and insensate jealousy drove them to kill not only their
husbands and the girls who had usurped their beds, but every male as well in
order that they might not have to pay the price one day for this atrocious
massacre.” p. 52
5. “But even if Heaven spares us that calamity [an attack
wandering ships], there are many troubles worse than war that you will have to
meet as time goes on. When the older
ones among us have died off, how are you younger women, without children, going
to face the miseries of age? Will the
oxen yoke themselves? Will they go out
into the fields and drag the ploughshare through the stubborn fallow?” p. 54
6. Message through
the halcyon “Bout towards the end of
the next night, while Acastus and Mopsus watched over their comrades, who had long been fast asleep, a halcyon
hovered over the golden head of Aeson’s
son and in its piping voice announced the end of the gales. Mopsus heard it and understood the happy
omen. So when the sea-bird, still
directed by a god, flew off and perched on the mascot of the ship, he went to
Jason, who lay comfortably wrapped in fleeces, woke him quickly with a touch .
. . p. 65
7. On the Goddess
Rhea “’My lord, you must climb this
holy peak to propitiate Rhea, Mother of all the happy gods, whose lovely throne
is Dindymum itself – and then the gales will cease. I learnt this from a halcyon just now: the
sea-bird flew above you as you slept and told me all. Rhea’s dominion covers the winds, the sea,
the whole earth, and the gods’ home on snow-capped Olympus. Zeus himself, the Son of Cronos, gives place
to her when she leaves her mountain haunts and rises into the broad sky. So too do the other blessed ones; all pay the same deference to the dread
goddess.’” P. 65
8. The loss of Hylas “Hylas soon found a
spring, which the people of the neighborhood call Pegae. He reached it when the
nymphs were about to hold their dances – it was the custom of all those who
haunt that beautiful headland to sing the praise of Artemis by night. The nymphs of the mountain peaks and caverns
were all posted some way off to patrol the woods; but one, the naiad of the
spring, was just emerging from the limpid water as Hylas drew near. And there, with the full moon shining on him
from a clear sky, she saw him in all his full radiant beauty and alluring
grace. Her heart was flooded by desire; she had a struggle to regain her
scattered wits. But Hylas now leant over
to one side to dip his ewer in; and as soon as the water was gurgling loudly
round the ringing bronze she threw her left arm round his neck in her eagerness
to kiss his gentle lips. Then with her
right hand she drew his elbow down and plunged him in midstream.” p. 69
9. Oath on the River
Styx “And she [Iris] went on to swear by the waters of Styx, the most
portentous and inviolable oath that any god can take, that the Harpies would
never visit Phineus’ house again, such being Fate’s decree.” p. 81
10. Zeus’ Attitude on
Prophesy “I [the Prophet Phineus] now realize that he himself intends a
prophet’s revelations to be incomplete, so that humanity may miss some part of
Heaven’s design.” p. 82
11. On Apollo
“Here they had a vison of Apollo on his way from Lycia to visit the remote and
teeming peoples of the North. Then
golden locks streamed down his cheeks in clusters as he moved; he had a silver
bow in his left hand and a quiver slung on his back . . . They were awe-struck
at the sight and no one dared to face the god and meet his lovely eyes . . .
The lord Orpheus joined them in their worship.
Striking his Bistonian lyre, he told them in song how Apollo long ago,
when he was still a beardless youth rejoicing in his locks, slew the monster
Delphyne with his bow beneath the rocky prow of Parnassus.” pp. 91-92
12. The Debate
between Jason and Peleus “He [Ancaeus]
ran up to Peleus and said: ‘My lord,
what sense is there in giving up the quest and wasting time in this outlandish
spot? Jason brought me all the way from
Parthenia to help him find the fleece not because I am a fighter, but because I
do know something about ships. So
believe me, you need have no fears at all for Argo. And I am not the only
one; there are others here who know the sea.
Not one of them would lead us into trouble if we put him at the
helm. I beg you to pass all this on at
once and to remind them boldly of their duty.’ Peleus’ heart leapt up for joy and he
quickly summoned the others. ‘My
friends,’ he said ‘why indulge in this unprofitable grief? When our two comrades died, there must have
been their destiny. But we have other
steersmen with us, plenty of them. On
the, without adventure; there is no excuse for loitering. Wake up, I say, and work, casting your
sorrows to the wind.’ But Jason took him
up; he could see no light ahead. ‘My lords
Peleus,’ he said, ‘where are these pilots of yours? The seamen whom we used to count on are even
more despondent and unmanned than I am.
Indeed, I see nothing for us but a fate as sad as that of our lost
friends. For it looks as though we
should neither reach the terrible Aeetes’ city nor find our way back to Hellas
past the Clashing Rocks. No, we are
doomed to grow old here, inglorious and obscure, with nothing done.’ In spite of this, Ancaeus , inspired by
Heaven, promptly undertook the steer and gallant ship. Erginus too, and Nauplius and Euphemus all
stood u, eager to have the task, But
there comrades held them back as the greater number voted for Ancaeus.”
p. 97
13. On Amazons
“Had the Argonauts stayed here as they intended and come to grips with the
Amazons, the fight would have been a bloody one. For the Amazons of the Doeantian plain were
by no means gentle, well-conducted folk; they were brutal and aggressive, and their
main concern in life was war. War,
indeed, was in their blood, daughters of Ares as they were and of the Nymph
Harmonia, who lay with the god in the depth of the Acmonian Wood and bore him
girls who fell in love with fighting . . . the Amozons of Themiscyra wer arming
for battle. I must explain that the
Amazons did not all live in one city; there were three separate tribes settled
in different parts of the country. The
party on the beach, whose queen at the time was Hippolyte, were Themiscyreans. The Lycastians lived apart and so did the
Chadesians, who were javelin-throwers.”
p. 100
14. Men Suffer the
Birth Pangs “the country of the Tibareni . . . Here, when a woman is in
childbirth, it is the husband who takes to his bed. He lies there groaning with his head wrapped
up and his wife feeds him with loving care.
She even prepares the bath for the event.” p.101
15. “Backwards”
People “Next they passed the Sacred Mountain and the highlands were the
Mossynoeci live in the mossynes or wooden houses from which they take their
name. These people have their own ideas
of what is right and proper. What we as
a rule do openly in town or market-place they do at home; and what we do in the
privacy of our houses they do out of doors in the open street, and nobody
thinks the worse of hem. Even the sexual
act puts no one to the blush in this community.
On the contrary, like swine in the fields, they lie down on the ground
in promiscuous intercourse and are not al all disconcerted by the presence of
others. Then again, their king sits in
the loftiest hut of all to dispense justice to his numerous subjects. But if the poor man happen s to make a
mistake in his findings, they lock him up and give him nothing to eat for the
rest of the day.” p.101
16. Birth of Cheiron
“ . . . Cronos and Philyra were surprised in the vey at by the goddess Rhea.
Whereupon Cronos leapt out of bed and galloped off in the form of a long-maned
stallion while Philyra in her shame left the place, deserting her old haunts,
and came to the long Pelasgian ridges.
There she gave birth to the monstrous Cheiron, half horse and half
divine, the offspring of a lover in a questionable shape.” p. 107
17. The Suffering of
Prometheus “And now the last recess of the Black Sea opened up and they
caught sight of the high crags of Caucasus, where Prometheus stood chained by
every limb to the hard rock with fetters of bronze, and fed an eagle on his
liver. The bird kept eagerly returning
to its feed. They saw it in the
afternoon flying high above the ship with a strident whirr. It was near the clouds, yet it made all their
canvas quiver to its wings as it beat by.
For its form was not that of an ordinary bird; the long quill-feathers
of each wing rose and fell like a bank of polished oars. Soon after the eagle had passed, they heard
Prometheus shriek in agony as it pecked at his liver. The air rang with his screams till at length
they saw the flesh-devouring bird fly back from the mountain by the same way as
it came.” pp. 107-108
18. Here’s Test of
Jason “ . . . I have been very fond
of Jason ever since the time when I was putting human charity on trial and as
he came home from the chase he met me at the mouth of the Anaurus. The river was in spate, for all the mountains
and their high spurs were under snow and cataracts were roaring down their
sides. I was disguised as an old woman
and he took pity on me, lifted me up, and carried me across he flood on his
shoulders. For that, I will never cease
to honor him.” p. 111
19. Here Calls on
Aphrodite for Help “Here, choose her words with care, replied: ‘We are not
asking you to use your hands: force is not needed. All we require of you is quietly to tell your
boy to use his wizardry and make Aeetes’ daughter fall in love with Jason. With Medea on his side he should find it easy
to carry off the golden fleece and make his way back to Iolcus. She is something of a witch herself.” p. 111
20. Cupid Is
Rebellious “But ladies,” said
Cyprus, speaking now to both of them, [Here and Athena] ‘he is far more likely
to obey you than me. There is no
reverence in him, but faced by you he might display some spark of decent
feeling. He certainly pays no attention
to me he defies me and always does the opposite of what I say. In fact I am so worn out by his naughtiness
that I have half a mind to break his bow and wicked arrows in his very sight, remembering
how he threatened me with them in one of his moods.” pp. 111-112
21. Free Speech and Democracy
“’My friends,’ he said, ‘I am going to tell you what action I myself should
like to take, though its success depends on you. Sharing the danger as we do, we share the
right of speech; and I warn the man who keeps his mouth shut when he ought to
speak his mind that he will be the one to wreck our enterprise.’” p. 114
22. The Power of
Words “We ought not to use force to
rob him of his own without so much as seeing what a few words may do; it would
be much better to talk to him first and try to win him over. Speech, by smoothing the way, often succeeds
where forceful measures might have failed.”
p. 114
23. Zeus, God of
Hospitality “Every man on earth,
even the greatest rogue, fears Zeus the god of hospitality ad keeps his laws.”
24. Cupid Shoots
Medea “Meanwhile Eros, passing through the clear air, had arrived unseen
and bent on mischief, like a gadfly setting out to plague the grazing heifers, the
fly that cowherds call the breese. In
the porch, under the lintel of the door, he quickly strung his bow and from his
quiver took a new arrow, fraught with pain.
Still unobserved, he ran across the threshold glancing around him
sharply. Then he crouched low at Jason’s
feet, fitted the notch to the middle of the string, and drawing the bow as far
as his hands would stretch, shot at Medea.
And her heart stood still. With a
happy laugh Eros sped out of the high-roofed hall on his way back, leaving his
shaft deep in the girl’s beast, hot as fire.
Time and again she darted a bright glance at Jason. All else was forgotten. Her heart, brimful of this new agony, throbbed
within her and overflowed with the sweetness of the pain. A working woman, rising before dawn to spin
and needing light in her cottage room, piles brushwood on a smoldering log, and
the whole heap kindled by the little brand goes up in a mighty blaze. Such was the fire of Love, stealthy but all
consuming, that swept through Medea’s heart.
In the turmoil of her soul her soft cheeks turned from rose to white and
white to rose.” pp. 116-117
25. More on Medea’s
Passion “As the party wen tout of
the hall, Jason’s comeliness and char singled him out fro all the rest; and
Medea, plucking her bright veil aside, turned wondering eyes upon him. Her heart smoldered with pain and as he
passed from sight her soul crept out of her, as in a dream, and fluttered in
his steps . . . Medea too retired, a prey to all the inquietude that Love
awakens. The whole scene was still before her eyes – how Jason looked, the clothes
he wore, the things he said, the way he sat, and how he walked to the
door. It seemed to her, as she reviewed
these images, that there was nobody like Jason.
His voice and the honey-sweet words that he had used still rang in her
ears. But she feared for him. She was afraid that the bulls or Aeetes with
his own hands might kill him; and she mourned him as one already dead. The pity of it overwhelmed her; a round tear
ran down her cheek . . . “ p. 121
26. “But oh, how
bleak the prospect is, with our one hope of seeing home again in women’s
hands!” p. 122
27. Heroes Ready to
Act [Peleus, Castor, and Polydeuces]
“ The task, as Jason had described it, seemed so impossible to all of
them that for awhile they stood there without a sound or word, looking at one
another in impotent despair. But at last
Peleus took heart and spoke out to his fellow chieftains: ‘The time has
come. We must confer and settle what to
do. Not that debate will help us much: I
would rather trust to strength of arm.
Jason, my lord, if you fancy the adventure and mean to yoke Aeetes’ bulls
you will naturally keep your promise and prepare. But if you have the slightest fear that your
nerve may fail you, do not force yourself.
And you need not sit there looking round for someone else I, for one, am willing. The worst that I shall suffer will be
death.’ So said the son of Aeacus. Teamon too was stirred and eagerly leapt up;
next Idas, full of lofty thoughts, then Castor and Polydeuces; and with them
one who was already numbered with the men of might though the down scarcely
showing on his cheeks, Meleager son of
Oeneus, his heart uplifted by the courage that dares all. But the others made no move, leaving it to
these . . .” pp. 122-123
28. Blossom from the
Blood of Prometheus “It first
appeared in a plant that sprang from the blood-like ichor of Prometheus in his
torment, which the flesh-eating eagle had dropped on the spur of Caucasus. The flowers, which grew on twin stalks a
cubit high, were of the color of Corycian saffron, while the root looked like
flesh that has just been cut, and the juice like the dark sap of a mountain
oak.” p. 132
29. Medea’s
Instructions to Jason “In the
morning, melt this charm, strip, and using it like oil, anoint you body. It will endow you with tremendous strength
and boundless confidence. You will feel
yourself a match, not for mere men, but for the gods themselves. Sprinkle you spear and shield and sword with it
as well; and neither the spear-points of the earthborn men nor the consuming
flames the savage bulls spew out will find you vulnerable. But you will not be immune for long – only
for the day. Nevertheless, do not at any
moment flinch from the encounter. And
here is something else that will stand you in good stead. You have yoked the mighty bulls; you have
ploughed the stubborn fallow (with those great hands and all that strength it
will not take you long); you have sown the serpent’s teeth in the dark earth;
and now the giants are springing up along the furrows. Watch till you see a number of them rise from
the soil, then, before they see you, throw a great boulder in among them; and
they will fall on it like famished dogs and kill one another. That is your moment; plunge into the fray
yourself.” p. 137
30. Jason’s Oath to Medea “As she spoke,
tears of misery ran down her cheeks. But
Jason said: ‘Dear lady, you may spare the wandering Winds that task, and your
tell-tale bird as well, for you are talking nonsense. If you come to us in Hellas you will be
honored and revered by both the women and the men. Indeed they will treat you as a goddess,
because it was through you that their sons come home alive, or their brothers,
kinsmen, or beloved husbands were saved from hurt. And there shall be a bridal bed for you,
which you and I will share. Nothing will
part us in our love till Death at his appointed hour removes us fro the light
of day.’” p. 139
31. The Serpent’s
Teeth “The teeth were those of the
Aonian serpent, the guardian of Are’s spring.
Which Cadmus killed in Ogygian Thebes.
He had come there in his search for Europa, and there he settled, under
the guidance of a heifer picked out for him by Apollo in an oracle. Athene, Lady of Trito, tore the teeth out of
the serpent’ jaws and divided them between Aeetes and Cadmus, the slayer of the
beast. Cadmus sowed them in the Anoian
plain and founded an earthborn clan with all that had escaped the spear of Ares
when he did his harvesting. Such were
the teeth that Aeetes let them take back to the ship. He gave them willingly as
he was satisfied the Jason, even if he yoked the bulls, would prove unable to finish
off the task.” p. 140
32. The Yoking of the
Bulls “Jason, as soon as his men had
made the hawsers fast, leapt from the ship and entered the lists with spear and
shield. He also took with him a shining
bronze helmet full of sharp teeth, and his sword was slung from his
shoulder. But his body was bare, so that
he looked like Apollo of the golden sword as much as Ares god of war. Glancing round the field, he saw the bronze
yoke for the bulls and beside it the plough of indurated steel, all in one piece. He went up to them, planted his heavy spear
in the ground by its butt an laid the helmet down, leaning it against the
spear. Then he went for war with his
shield alone to examine the countless tracks that the bulls had made. And now, from somewhere in the bowels of the
earth, from the smoky stronghold where they slept, the pair of bulls appeared,
breathing flames of fire. The Argonaut
were terrified at the sight. But Jason
planting his feet apart stood to receive them, as a reef in the sea confronts
the tossing billows in a gale. He held
his shield in front o him, and the two bulls, bellowing loudly, charged and
gutted it with their strong horns. But
he was not shifted from his stance, not by so much as an inch. The bulls snorted and spurted from their
mouths devouring flames, like a perforated crucible when the leather bellows of
the smith, sometimes ceasing, sometimes blowing hard, have made a blaze and the
fire leaps up from below with a terrific roar.
The deadly heat assailed him on all sides with the force of
lightning. But he was protected by Medea’s
magic. Seizing the right-hand bull by
the tip of its horn, he dragged it with all his might towards the yoke, and then
brought it down on its knees with a sudden kick on its bronze foot. The other charged, and was felled in the same
way at a single blow; and a Jason, who had cast his shield aside, stood with
his feet apart, and though the flames at once enveloped him, held them both
down on their fore-knees where they fell.
Aeetes marveled at the man’s strength.
Castor and Polydeuces picked up the yoke and gave it to Jason –they had
been detailed for the task and were close hand.
Jason bound it tight on the bulls’ necks, lifted the bronze pole between
them and fastened it to the yoke by its pointed end, while the Twins backed out
of the heat and returned to the ship.” pp. 143-144
33. Slaughter of the
Earthborn Men “ By now the earthborn
men were shooting up like corn in all parts of the field. The deadly War-god’s sacred plot bristled
with stout shields, double-pointed spears, and glittering helmets. The splendor of it flashed through the air
above and struck Olympus. Indeed this
army springing from the earth shone out like the full congregation of the stars
piercing the darkness of a murky night, when snow lies deep and the winds have
chased the wintry clouds away. But Jason
did not forget the counsel he had had from Medea of the many wiles. He picked up from the field a huge round
boulder, a formidable quoit that Ares might have thrown, but four strong men
together could not have budged from its place.
Rushing forward with this in his hands he hurled it far away among the
earthborn men, then crouched behind his
shield, unseen and full of confidence.
The Colchians gave a mighty shout like the roar of the sea beating on
jagged rocks; and the king himself was astounded as he saw the great quoit
hurtle through the air. But the
earthborn men, like nimble hounds, leapt on one another and with loud yells
began to slay, Beneath each other’s
spears they fell on their mother earth, as pines or oaks are blown down by a
gale. An now, like a bright meteor that
leaps from the heaven and leaves a fiery trail behind it, portentous to all
those who see it flash across the night, the son of Aeson hurled himself on
them with his sword unsheathed and in promiscuous slaughter mowed them down,
striking as he could, for many of them had but half emerged and showed their
flanks and bellies only, some had their shoulders clear, some had just stood up,
and others were afoot already and rushing into battle. So might some farmer threatened by a frontier
war snatch up a newly sharpened sickle and , lest the enemy should rep hi
fields before him, hasten to cut down the unripe corn, not waiting for the season
and the sun to ripen it. Thus Jason cut
his crop of earthborn men. Blood filled
the furrows as water fills the conduits of a spring. And still the fell, some on their faces
biting the rough clods, come on their backs, and others on their hands and sides,
looing lice monsters from the sea. Many
were struck before they could lift up their feet, and rested there with the
death-dew on their brows, each trailing on the earth so much of him as had come
up into the light of day. They lay like
saplings in an orchard bowed to the ground when Zeus has sent torrential rain
and snapped them at the root, wasting the gardeners’ toil and bringing heat
break to the owner of the plot, the man who planted them.” pp. 145-146
34. Fate of a
Slave-girl “. . . shedding many
tears she went, much as a newly captured girl, torn from her own land by the
fortune of war, makes off from some rich house before she is inured to work and
schooled in the miseries of servitude under the cruel eye of a mistress.” p. 148
35. Prophesy of the
Moon “Rising from the distant east, the Lady Moon, Titanian goddess, was
the girl wandering distraught, and in
wicked glee said to herself: ‘ So I am not the only one to go astray for love,
I that burn for beautiful Engymion and seek I in the Latmian cave, How many times, when I was bent on love, have
you disgorged me with your incantations, making the night moonless so that you
might practice your beloved witchcraft undisturbed! And now you are as lovesick as me. The little god of mischief has given you
Jason, and many a heartache with him. Well, go your way; but clever as you are,
steel yourself now to face a life of sighs and misery.’” p.147
36. Jason’s Oath “Then, to comfort her, he [Jason] said: “Dear
Lady, I swear, and may Olympian Zeus and
his Consort Here, goddess of wedlock, be my witness, that when we are back in
Hellas I will take you into my home as my own wedded wife.’ And with that he took her right hand in his
own.” p. 149
37. Medea’s Spell on
the Snake “But the giant snake, enchanted by her song, was soon relaxing
the whole length of his serrated spine and smoothing out his multitudinous
undulations, like a dark and silent swell rolling across a sluggish sea. Yet his grim head still hovered over them and
the cruel jaws threatened to snap them up.
But Medea, chanting a spell, dipped a fresh sprig of juniper in her brew
and sprinkled his eyes wither most potent drug; and as the all-pervading magic
scent spread round his head, sleep felon him.”
p. 151
38. The Fleece
Described “The young men marveled when the saw the mighty fleece, dazzling
as the lightning of Zeus, and they all leapt up in their eagerness to touch it
and hold it in their hands.” pp. 151-152
39. Jason Cuts the
Hawsers “. . . and Jason drawing his sword cut through the hawsers at the
stern.” p. 152
40. Temple Secrets
“Medea had told them to land there and propitiate Hecate with a sacrifice. But with what ritual she prepared the
offering, no one must hear. Nor must I
let myself be tempted to describe it; my lips are sealed by awe.” p. 153
41. A Look Back on
History “Think of a time when the wheeling constellations did not yet
exist; when on would have looked in vain for the sacred Danaan race, finding
only the Apidanean Arcadians, who are said to have lived before the moon itself
was there, feeding on acorns in the hills.
These were the days before the noble scions of Dencalion ruled the
Pelasgian land, when Egypt, mother of an earlier race, was known as the
corn-rich country of the Dawn, and the Nile that waters all its length was
called the Triton, a generous river flowing through a rainless land, yet by its
floods producing crops in plenty. Now we
are told that from this country a certain king set out, supported by a loyal
force, and made his way through the whole of Europe and Asia, founding many
cities as he went.” p. 154
42. Medea Reminds
Jason of His Oath “Where are the honied promises that I believed in when I defied
convention and my own conscience, abandoning my country, the glories of my
home, even my parents, everything I valued most? And now I am carried off, far away across the
sea, with only the wistful halcyons for company. All this because I saw you through your
troubles, saw that you won your battle with the bulls and giants and came out
alive. And then the fleece, for which
you crossed the sea. You got it through
my own folly. I have disgraced my sex .
. . I hope that Here, Queen of Heaven, whose favorite you claim to be, will
never let you have it. I hope that you
will think of me some day when you yourself are suffering. I hope the fleece will vanish like an idle
dream, down into Erebus. And my avenging
Furies chase you from your home and so repay me for all I have endured through
you inhumanity. You have broken a most
solemn oath. It is not in reason that my
curses should miscarry. ‘You are
inflexible. But wait a while. You and your friends think that this covenant
has solved your problems, and I am nothing in your eyes. You will learn better soon.’ She boiled with rage, She longed to set the ship on fire, to break
it up and hurl herself into the flames.
But Jason calmed her. She had
frightened him.” p. 157
43. Lying, Love, and Killing One’s Brother “Such was the lure; and she reinforced her
words with magic, scattering to the four winds spells of such potency as would
have drawn wild creatures far away to come down from their mountain fastnesses. Unconscionable Love, bane and tormentor of
mankind, parent of strife, fountain of tears, source of a thousand ills, rise,
mighty Power, and fall on the sons of our enemies with all the force you used
upon Medea when you filled her with insensate fury. For Apsyrtus did obey her
call and she destroyed him foully.” p. 159
44. Sacrifice of the
Prince “Jason marked him down and struck him, as a butcher fells a mighty
strong-horned bull. The deed was done at
the temple of Artemis, which Brygi from the mainland coast had built. Apsyrtus sank to his knees in the porch and
in his death throes cupped his hands over the wound to stanch the dark
blood. Even so, as Medea shrank aside,
he painted red her silvery veil and dress.
With eyes askance the unforgiving and indomitable Fury took quick note
of the heinous deed. But Jason, after
lopping off the dead man’s extremities, licked up some blood three times and
three times spat the pollution out, as killers do in the attempt to expiate a
treacherous murder. The he hid the cold
corpse in the earth. And the bones still
lie, among a people who have kept Aqsyrtus’s name alive.” p. 160
45. On Castor and
Polydeuces “ . . . owing their
safety on this occasion to Castor and Polydeuces. Which is why these sons of Zeus have eve
since been honored with altars and sacred rites, though this was not the only
voyage where they played the part of saviors.
Zeus put the ships of generations then unborn in the keeping of the
Twins.”
46. Evolution “A
number of creatures whose ill-assorted limbs declared them to be neither man
nor beast had gathered round her like a great flock of sheep following their
shepherd fro the fold. Nondescript
monsters such as these, fitted with miscellaneous limbs, were once produced
spontaneously by Earth out of the primeval mud, when she had not yet solidified
under a rainless sky and was deriving no moisture from the blazing sun. But Time, combining this with that, brought
the animal creation into order.” p. 165
47. Thetis “Now you will not have forgotten that I[Here]
brought you up myself and loved you ore than any other Lady of the Sea because
you rejected the amorous advances of my consort Zeus. He, of course, has made a habit of such
practices and sleeps with goddess and girls alike. But you were frightened and out of your
regard for me you would to let hi have his will. In return for which he took a solemn oath
that you should never be the bride of an immortal god. Yet in spite of your
refusal he did not cease to keep his eye on you, till the day when the venerable
Themis made him understand that you were destined to bear a son who would be
greater than his father. Then he heard
this, Zeus gave you up though he still desired you. He wished to keep his power for eve and was
terrified at the thought that he might meet his match and be supplanted as the
King of Heaven. Then, in the hope of making you a happy bride and mother, I
chose Peleus, the noblest man alive to be your husband; I invited all the gods
and goddesses to the wedding-feast; and I carried the bridal torch myself, in
return for the good will and deference you had shown me. And there is something else that I must tell
you, a prophecy concerning your son Achilles, who is now with Cheiron the
Centaur and is fed by water-nymphs though he should be at your breast. When he comes to the Elysian Fields, it has
been arranged that he shall marry Medea the daughter of Aeetes; so you, as her
future mother-n-law, should be ready to help her now. Help Peleus too. Why are you still so angry with him? He was very foolish; but even the gods are
sometimes visited by Ate.” pp. 168-169
48. Cronos and Uranus “In the Ceraunian Sea, fronting the Ionian
Straits, there is a rich and spacious island under the soil of which is said to
lie (bear with me Muses; it gives me little pleasure to recall the old tale)
the sickle used by Cronos to castrate his father Uranus. Others al lit the reaping-hook of Demeter of
the underworld, who lived there once and taught the Titans to reap corn for
food, in her affection for Macris. From
this reaping-hook the island takes its name the Drepane, the sacred Nurse of
the Phaeacians, who by the same token trace their origin to Uranus.”
49. On the Kings
Justice “My lord, do not let the Colchians take her back to her
father. She was out of her mind when she
gave that man the magic charm for the bulls.
Then, as w sinners often do, she tried to cover one fault with another
by running away from her domineering father and his wrath. But I hear that Jason has given her his
solemn oath that he will take her into his home as his wedded wife. [King
Alcinous wife Arete speaking] . . . Fathers are much too jealous where their
daughters are concerned . . . Why, only recently and not so far from us, , the
brutal Echetus drove brazen spikes into his daughter’s eyes, and now the
miserable girl is wasting away in a gloomy cell, grinding grains of
bronze.’ Alcinous was touched by his
wife’s prayers. ‘Arete,’ he said; I
could certainly repel the Colchians by force of arms, siding with the young
lords for Medea’s sake. But I should
think twice before defying a just sentence from Zeus. Nor would it be wise to make little of
Aeetes, as you would have me do. There
is no greater king; and far away as he is, he could bring war to Hellas if he
wished. No; it is my duty to give a
decision that the whole world will acknowledge as the best. I will tell you what I mean to do. If Medea is still a virgin, I shall direct
them to take her back to her father. If
she is a married woman, I will not separate her from her husband. Nor will give a child of hers to the enemy if
she has conceived.’ . . . When
he [Orpheus] sang of the wedding, all the nymphs joined in the lovely marriage
song; and then again, as they circled in the dance they sang alone, tendering
their thanks to Here, who had put it in Arete’s mind to reveal the wise
decision of the king . . . From the moment when he delivered judgment and it was
know that the air were now man and wife, Alcinous remained inflexible. He was shaken by no deadly fears, no dread of
Aeetes’ enmity. He had taken oaths that
were not to be broken and he would not beak them. So when the Colchians perceived that their
protestations were in vain and were told that if they did not accept his ruling
he would close his harbors to their ships, they recalled their own king’s
threats and besought Alcinous to receive the as friends.” pp.176-180
50. Blown to Africa “ . . . they had just sighted the land of
Pelops when they were caught by a northerly gale which swept them south for
nine days and nights over the Libyan Sea and drove them deep into Syrtis.” p. 180
51. “Many heads are wiser than one.” p. 183
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