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(ll. 1-5) Come now, Erato, stand by my side, and say next how Jason
brought back the fleece to Iolcus aided by the love of Medea. For
thou sharest the power of Cypris, and by thy love-cares dost charm
unwedded maidens; wherefore to thee too is attached a name that
tells of love.
(ll. 6-10) Thus the heroes, unobserved, were waiting in ambush
amid the thick reed-beds; but Hera and Athena took note of them,
and, apart from Zeus and the other immortals, entered a chamber
and took counsel together; and Hera first made trial of Athena:
(ll. 11-16) "Do thou now first, daughter of Zeus, give advice.
What must be done? Wilt thou devise some scheme whereby they may
seize the golden fleece of Aeetes and bear it to Hellas, or can
they deceive the king with soft words and so work persuasion? Of
a truth he is terribly overweening. Still it is right to shrink
from no endeavour."
(ll. 17-21) Thus she spake, and at once Athena addressed her: "I
too was pondering such thoughts in my heart, Hera, when thou didst
ask me outright. But not yet do I think that I have conceived a
scheme to aid the courage of the heroes, though I have balanced
many plans."
(ll. 22-29) She ended, and the goddesses fixed their eyes on the
ground at their feet, brooding apart; and straightway Hera was the
first to speak her thought: "Come, let us go to Cypris; let both
of us accost her and urge her to bid her son (if only he will obey)
speed his shaft at the daughter of Aeetes, the enchantress, and
charm her with love for Jason. And I deem that by her device he
will bring back the fleece to Hellas."
(ll. 30-31) Thus she spake, and the prudent plan pleased Athena,
and she addressed her in reply with gentle words:
(ll. 32-35) "Hera, my father begat me to be a stranger to the darts
of love, nor do I know any charm to work desire. But if the word
pleases thee, surely I will follow; but thou must speak when we
meet her."
(ll. 36-51) So she said, and starting forth they came to the mighty
palace of Cypris, which her husband, the halt-footed god, had built
for her when first he brought her from Zeus to be his wife. And
entering the court they stood beneath the gallery of the chamber
where the goddess prepared the couch of Hephaestus. But he had gone
early to his forge and anvils to a broad cavern in a floating island
where with the blast of flame he wrought all manner of curious work;
and she all alone was sitting within, on an inlaid seat facing the
door. And her white shoulders on each side were covered with the
mantle of her hair and she was parting it with a golden comb and
about to braid up the long tresses; but when she saw the goddesses
before her, she stayed and called them within, and rose from her
seat and placed them on couches. Then she herself sat down, and
with her hands gathered up the locks still uncombed. And smiling
she addressed them with crafty words:
(ll. 52-54) "Good friends, what intent, what occasion brings you
here after so long? Why have ye come, not too frequent visitors
before, chief among goddesses that ye are?"
(ll. 55-75) And to her Hera replied: "Thou dost mock us, but our
hearts are stirred with calamity. For already on the river Phasis
the son of Aeson moors his ship, he and his comrades in quest of
the fleece. For all their sakes we fear terribly (for the task is
nigh at hand) but most for Aeson's son. Him will I deliver, though
he sail even to Hades to free Ixion below from his brazen chains,
as far as strength lies in my limbs, so that Pelias may not mock
at having escaped an evil doom -- Pelias who left me unhonoured
with sacrifice. Moreover Jason was greatly loved by me before, ever
since at the mouth of Anaurus in flood, as I was making trial of
men's righteousness, he met me on his return from the chase; and
all the mountains and long ridged peaks were sprinkled with snow,
and from them the torrents rolling down were rushing with a roar.
And he took pity on me in the likeness of an old crone, and raising
me on his shoulders himself bore me through the headlong tide. So
he is honoured by me unceasingly; nor will Pelias pay the penalty
of his outrage, unless thou wilt grant Jason his return."
(ll. 76-82) Thus she spake, and speechlessness seized Cypris. And
beholding Hera supplicating her she felt awe, and then addressed
her with friendly words: "Dread goddess, may no viler thing than
Cypris ever be found, if I disregard thy eager desire in word or
deed, whatever my weak arms can effect; and let there be no favour
in return."
(ll. 83-89) She spake, and Hera again addressed her with prudence:
"It is not in need of might or of strength that we have come. But
just quietly bid thy boy charm Aeetes' daughter with love for Jason.
For if she will aid him with her kindly counsel, easily do I think
he will win the fleece of gold and return to Iolcus, for she is
full of wiles."
(ll. 90-99) Thus she spake, and Cypris addressed them both: "Hera
and Athena, he will obey you rather than me. For unabashed though
he is, there will be some slight shame in his eyes before you; but
he has no respect for me, but ever slights me in contentious mood.
And, overborne by his naughtiness, I purpose to break his ill-sounding
arrows and his bow in his very sight. For in his anger he has threatened
that if I shall not keep my hands off him while he still masters
his temper, I shall have cause to blame myself thereafter."
(ll. 100-105) So she spake, and the goddesses smiled and looked
at each other. But Cypris again spoke, vexed at heart: "To others
my sorrows are a jest; nor ought I to tell them to all; I know them
too well myself. But now, since this pleases you both, I will make
the attempt and coax him, and he will not say me nay."
(ll. 106-110) Thus she spake, and Hera took her slender hand and
gently smiling, replied: "Perform this task, Cytherea, straightway,
as thou sayest; and be not angry or contend with thy boy; he will
cease hereafter to vex thee."
(ll. 111-128) She spake, and left her seat, and Athena accompanied
her and they went forth both hastening back. And Cypris went on
her way through the glens of Olympus to find her boy. And she found
him apart, in the blooming orchard of Zeus, not alone, but with
him Ganymedes, whom once Zeus had set to dwell among the immortal
gods, being enamoured of his beauty. And they were playing for golden
dice, as boys in one house are wont to do. And already greedy Eros
was holding the palm of his left hand quite full of them under his
breast, standing upright; and on the bloom of his cheeks a sweet
blush was glowing. But the other sat crouching hard by, silent and
downcast, and he had two dice left which he threw one after the
other, and was angered by the loud laughter of Eros. And lo, losing
them straightway with the former, he went off empty handed, helpless,
and noticed not the approach of Cypris. And she stood before her
boy, and laying her hand on his lips, addressed him:
(ll. 129-144) "Why dost thou smile in triumph, unutterable rogue?
Hast thou cheated him thus, and unjustly overcome the innocent child?
Come, be ready to perform for me the task I will tell thee of, and
I will give thee Zeus' all-beauteous plaything -- the one which
his dear nurse Adrasteia made for him, while he still lived a child,
with childish ways, in the Idaean cave -- a well-rounded ball; no
better toy wilt thou get from the hands of Hephaestus. All of gold
are its zones, and round each double seams run in a circle; but
the stitches are hidden, and a dark blue spiral overlays them all.
But if thou shouldst cast it with thy hands, lo, like a star, it
sends a flaming track through the sky. This I will give thee; and
do thou strike with thy shaft and charm the daughter of Aeetes with
love for Jason; and let there be no loitering. For then my thanks
would be the slighter."
(ll. 145-150) Thus she spake, and welcome were her words to the
listening boy. And he threw down all his toys, and eagerly seizing
her robe on this side and on that, clung to the goddess. And he
implored her to bestow the gift at once; but she, facing him with
kindly words, touched his cheeks, kissed him and drew him to her,
and replied with a smile:
(ll. 151-153) "Be witness now thy dear head and mine, that surely
I will give thee the gift and deceive thee not, if thou wilt strike
with thy shaft Aeetes' daughter."
(ll. 154-166) She spoke, and he gathered up his dice, and having
well counted them all threw them into his mother's gleaming lap.
And straightway with golden baldric he slung round him his quiver
from where it leant against a tree-trunk, and took up his curved
bow. And he fared forth through the fruitful orchard of the palace
of Zeus. Then he passed through the gates of Olympus high in air;
hence is a downward path from heaven; and the twin poles rear aloft
steep mountain tops the highest crests of earth, where the risen
sun grows ruddy with his first beams. And beneath him there appeared
now the life-giving earth and cities of men and sacred streams of
rivers, and now in turn mountain peaks and the ocean all around,
as he swept through the vast expanse of air.
(ll. 167-193) Now the heroes apart in ambush, in a back-water of
the river, were met in council, sitting on the benches of their
ship. And Aeson's son himself was speaking among them; and they
were listening silently in their places sitting row upon row: "My
friends, what pleases myself that will I say out; it is for you
to bring about its fulfilment. For in common is our task, and common
to all alike is the right of speech; and he who in silence withholds
his thought and his counsel, let him know that it is he alone that
bereaves this band of its home-return. Do ye others rest here in
the ship quietly with your arms; but I will go to the palace of
Aeetes, taking with me the sons of Phrixus and two comrades as well.
And when I meet him I will first make trial with words to see if
he will be willing to give up the golden fleece for friendship's
sake or not, but trusting to his might will set at nought our quest.
For so, learning his frowardness first from himself, we will consider
whether we shall meet him in battle, or some other plan shall avail
us, if we refrain from the war-cry. And let us not merely by force,
before putting words to the test, deprive him of his own possession.
But first it is better to go to him and win his favour by speech.
Oftentimes, I ween, does speech accomplish at need what prowess
could hardly catty through, smoothing the path in manner befitting.
And he once welcomed noble Phrixus, a fugitive from his stepmother's
wiles and the sacrifice prepared by his father. For all men everywhere,
even the most shameless, reverence the ordinance of Zeus, god of
strangers, and regard it."
(ll. 194-209) Thus he spake, and the youths approved the words
of Aeson's son with one accord, nor was there one to counsel otherwise.
And then he summoned to go with him the sons of Phrixus, and Telamon
and Augeias; and himself took Hermes' wand; and at once they passed
forth from the ship beyond the reeds and the water to dry land,
towards the rising ground of the plain. The plain, I wis, is called
Circe's; and here in line grow many willows and osiers, on whose
topmost branches hang corpses bound with cords. For even now it
is an abomination with the Colchians to burn dead men with fire;
nor is it lawful to place them in the earth and raise a mound above,
but to wrap them in untanned oxhides and suspend them from trees
far from the city. And so earth has an equal portion with air, seeing
that they bury the women; for that is the custom of their land.
(ll. 210-259) And as they went Hera with friendly thought spread
a thick mist through the city, that they might fare to the palace
of Aeetes unseen by the countless hosts of the Colchians. But soon
when from the plain they came to the city and Aeetes' palace, then
again Hera dispersed the mist. And they stood at the entrance, marvelling
at the king's courts and the wide gates and columns which rose in
ordered lines round the walls; and high up on the palace a coping
of stone rested on brazen triglyphs. And silently they crossed the
threshold. And close by garden vines covered with green foliage
were in full bloom, lifted high in air. And beneath them ran four
fountains, ever-flowing, which Hephaestus had delved out. One was
gushing with milk, one with wine, while the third flowed with fragrant
oil; and the fourth ran with water, which grew warm at the setting
of the Pleiads, and in turn at their rising bubbled forth from the
hollow rock, cold as crystal. Such then were the wondrous works
that the craftsman-god Hephaestus had fashioned in the palace of
Cytaean Aeetes. And he wrought for him bulls with feet of bronze,
and their mouths were of bronze, and from them they breathed out
a terrible flame of fire; moreover he forged a plough of unbending
adamant, all in one piece, in payment of thanks to Helios, who had
taken the god up in his chariot when faint from the Phlegraean fight.
(1) And here an inner-court was built, and round it were many well-fitted
doors and chambers here and there, and all along on each side was
a richly-wrought gallery. And on both sides loftier buildings stood
obliquely. In one, which was the loftiest, lordly Aeetes dwelt with
his queen; and in another dwelt Apsyrtus, son of Aeetes, whom a
Caucasian nymph, Asterodeia, bare before he made Eidyia his wedded
wife, the youngest daughter of Tethys and Oceanus. And the sons
of the Colchians called him by the new name of Phaethon, (2) because
he outshone all the youths. The other buildings the handmaidens
had, and the two daughters of Aeetes, Chalciope and Medea. Medea
then [they found] going from chamber to chamber in search of her
sister, for Hera detained her within that day; but beforetime she
was not wont to haunt the palace, but all day long was busied in
Hecate's temple, since she herself was the priestess of the goddess.
And when she saw them she cried aloud, and quickly Chalciope caught
the sound; and her maids, throwing down at their feet their yarn
and their thread, rushed forth all in a throng. And she, beholding
her sons among them, raised her hands aloft through joy; and so
they likewise greeted their mother, and when they saw her embraced
her in their gladness; and she with many sobs spoke thus:
(ll. 260-267) "After all then, ye were not destined to leave me
in your heedlessness and to wander far; but fate has turned you
back. Poor wretch that I am! What a yearning for Hellas from some
woeful madness seized you at the behest of your father Phrixus.
Bitter sorrows for my heart did he ordain when dying. And why should
ye go to the city of Orchomenus, whoever this Orchomenus is, for
the sake of Athamas' wealth, leaving your mother alone to bear her
grief?"
(ll. 268-274) Such were her words; and Aeetes came forth last of
all and Eidyia herself came, the queen of Aeetes, on hearing the
voice of Chalciope; and straightway all the court was filled with
a throng. Some of the thralls were busied with a mighty bull, others
with the axe were cleaving dry billets, and others heating with
fire water for the baths; nor was there one who relaxed his toil,
serving the king.
(ll. 275-298) Meantime Eros passed unseen through the grey mist,
causing confusion, as when against grazing heifers rises the gadfly,
which oxherds call the breese. And quickly beneath the lintel in
the porch he strung his bow and took from the quiver an arrow unshot
before, messenger of pain. And with swift feet unmarked he passed
the threshold and keenly glanced around; and gliding close by Aeson's
son he laid the arrow-notch on the cord in the centre, and drawing
wide apart with both hands he shot at Medea; and speechless amazement
seized her soul. But the god himself flashed back again from the
high-roofed hall, laughing loud; and the bolt burnt deep down in
the maiden's heart like a flame; and ever she kept darting bright
glances straight up at Aeson's son, and within her breast her heart
panted fast through anguish, all remembrance left her, and her soul
melted with the sweet pain. And as a poor woman heaps dry twigs
round a blazing brand -- a daughter of toil, whose task is the spinning
of wool, that she may kindle a blaze at night beneath her roof,
when she has waked very early -- and the flame waxing wondrous great
from the small brand consumes all the twigs together; so, coiling
round her heart, burnt secretly Love the destroyer; and the hue
of her soft cheeks went and came, now pale, now red, in her soul's
distraction.
(ll. 299-303) Now when the thralls had laid a banquet ready before
them, and they had refreshed themselves with warm baths, gladly
did they please their souls with meat and drink. And thereafter
Aeetes questioned the sons of his daughter, addressing them with
these words:
(ll. 304-316) "Sons of my daughter and of Phrixus, whom beyond
all strangers I honoured in my halls, how have ye come returning
back to Aea? Did some calamity cut short your escape in the midst?
Ye did not listen when I set before you the boundless length of
the way. For I marked it once, whirled along in the chariot of my
father Helios, when he was bringing my sister Circe to the western
land and we came to the shore of the Tyrrhenian mainland, where
even now she abides, exceeding far from Colchis. But what pleasure
is there in words? Do ye tell me plainly what has been your fortune,
and who these men are, your companions, and where from your hollow
ship ye came ashore."
(ll. 317-319) Such were his questions, and Argus, before all his
brethren, being fearful for the mission of Aeson's son, gently replied,
for he was the elder-born:
(ll. 320-366) "Aeetes, that ship forthwith stormy blasts tore asunder,
and ourselves, crouching on the beams, a wave drove on to the beach
of the isle of Enyalius (3) in the murky night; and some god preserved
us. For even the birds of Ares that haunted the desert isle beforetime,
not even them did we find. But these men had driven them off, having
landed from their ship on the day before; and the will of Zeus taking
pity on us, or some fate, detained them there, since they straightway
gave us both food and clothing in abundance, when they heard the
illustrious name of Phrixus and thine own; for to thy city are they
faring. And if thou dost wish to know their errand, I will not hide
it from time. A certain king, vehemently longing to drive this man
far from his fatherland and possessions, because in might he outshone
all the sons of Aeolus, sends him to voyage hither on a bootless
venture; and asserts that the stock of Aeolus will not escape the
heart-grieving wrath and rage of implacable Zeus, nor the unbearable
curse and vengeance due for Phrixus, until the fleece comes back
to Hellas. And their ship was fashioned by Pallas Athena, not such
a one as are the ships among the Colchians, on the vilest of which
we chanced. For the fierce waves and wind broke her utterly to pieces;
but the other holds firm with her bolts, even though all the blasts
should buffet her. And with equal swiftness she speedeth before
the wind and when the crew ply the oar with unresting hands. And
he hath gathered in her the mightiest heroes of all Achaea, and
hath come to thy city from wandering far through cities and gulfs
of the dread ocean, in the hope that thou wilt grant him the fleece.
But as thou dost please, so shall it be, for he cometh not to use
force, but is eager to pay thee a recompense for the gift. He has
heard from me of thy bitter foes the Sauromatae, and he will subdue
them to thy sway. And if thou desirest to know their names and lineage
I will tell thee all. This man on whose account the rest were gathered
from Hellas, they call Jason, son of Aeson, whom Cretheus begat.
And if in truth he is of the stock of Cretheus himself, thus he
would be our kinsman on the father's side. For Cretheus and Athamas
were both sons of Aeolus; and Phrixus was the son of Athamas, son
of Aeolus. And here, if thou hast heard at all of the seed of Helios,
thou dost behold Augeias; and this is Telamon sprung from famous
Aeacus; and Zeus himself begat Aeacus. And so all the rest, all
the comrades that follow him, are the sons or grandsons of the immortals."
(ll. 367-371) Such was the tale of Argus; but the king at his words
was filled with rage as he heard; and his heart was lifted high
in wrath. And he spake in heavy displeasure; and was angered most
of all with the son of Chalciope; for he deemed that on their account
the strangers had come; and in his fury his eyes flashed forth beneath
his brows:
(ll. 372-381) "Begone from my sight, felons, straightway, ye and
your tricks, from the land, ere someone see a fleece and a Phrixus
to his sorrow. Banded together with your friends from Hellas, not
for the fleece, but to seize my sceptre and royal power have ye
come hither. Had ye not first tasted of my table, surely would I
have cut out your tongues and hewn off both hands and sent you forth
with your feet alone, so that ye might be stayed from starting hereafter.
And what lies have ye uttered against the blessed gods!"
(ll. 382-385) Thus he spake in his wrath; and mightily from its
depths swelled the heart of Aeacus' son, and his soul within longed
to speak a deadly word in defiance, but Aeson's son checked him,
for he himself first made gentle answer:
(ll. 386-395) "Aeetes, bear with this armed band, I pray. For not
in the way thou deemest have we come to thy city and palace, no,
nor yet with such desires. For who would of his own will dare to
cross so wide a sea for the goods of a stranger? But fate and the
ruthless command of a presumptuous king urged me. Grant a favour
to thy suppliants, and to all Hellas will I publish a glorious fame
of thee; yea, we are ready now to pay thee a swift recompense in
war, whether it be the Sauromatae or some other people that thou
art eager to subdue to thy sway."
(ll. 396-400) He spake, flattering him with gentle utterance; but
the king's soul brooded a twofold purpose within him, whether he
should attack and slay them on the spot or should make trial of
their might. And this, as he pondered, seemed the better way, and
he addressed Jason in answer:
(ll. 401-421) "Stranger, why needest thou go through thy tale to
the end? For if ye are in truth of heavenly race, or have come in
no wise inferior to me, to win the goods of strangers, I will give
thee the fleece to bear away, if thou dost wish, when I have tried
thee. For against brave men I bear no grudge, such as ye yourselves
tell me of him who bears sway in Hellas. And the trial of your courage
and might shall be a contest which I myself can compass with my
hands, deadly though it be. Two bulls with feet of bronze I have
that pasture on the plain of Ares, breathing forth flame from their
jaws; them do I yoke and drive over the stubborn field of Ares,
four plough-gates; and quickly cleaving it with the share up to
the headland, I cast into the furrows the seed, not the corn of
Demeter, but the teeth of a dread serpent that grow up into the
fashion of armed men; them I slay at once, cutting them down beneath
my spear as they rise against me on all sides. In the morning do
I yoke the oxen, and at eventide I cease from the harvesting. And
thou, if thou wilt accomplish such deeds as these, on that very
day shalt carry off the fleece to the king's palace; ere that time
comes I will not give it, expect it not. For indeed it is unseemly
that a brave man should yield to a coward."
(ll. 422-426) Thus he spake; and Jason, fixing his eyes on the
ground, sat just as he was, speechless, helpless in his evil plight.
For a long time he turned the matter this way and that, and could
in no way take on him the task with courage, for a mighty task it
seemed; and at last he made reply with crafty words:
(ll. 427-431) "With thy plea of right, Aeetes, thou dost shut me
in overmuch. Wherefore also I will dare that contest, monstrous
as it is, though it be my doom to die. For nothing will fall upon
men more dread than dire necessity, which indeed constrained me
to come hither at a king's command."
(ll. 432-438) Thus he spake, smitten by his helpless plight; and
the king with grim words addressed him, sore troubled as he was:
"Go forth now to the gathering, since thou art eager for the toil;
but if thou shouldst fear to lift the yoke upon the oxen or shrink
from the deadly harvesting, then all this shall be my care, so that
another too may shudder to come to a man that is better than he."
(ll. 439-463) He spake outright; and Jason rose from his seat,
and Augeias and Telamon at once; and Argus followed alone, for he
signed to his brothers to stay there on the spot meantime; and so
they went forth from the hall. And wonderfully among them all shone
the son of Aeson for beauty and grace; and the maiden looked at
him with stealthy glance, holding her bright veil aside, her heart
smouldering with pain; and her soul creeping like a dream flitted
in his track as he went. So they passed forth from the palace sorely
troubled. And Chalciope, shielding herself from the wrath of Aeetes,
had gone quickly to her chamber with her sons. And Medea likewise
followed, and much she brooded in her soul all the cares that the
Loves awaken. And before her eyes the vision still appeared -- himself
what like he was, with what vesture he was clad, what things he
spake, how he sat on his seat, how he moved forth to the door --
and as she pondered she deemed there never was such another man;
and ever in her ears rung his voice and the honey-sweet words which
he uttered. And she feared for him, lest the oxen or Aeetes with
his own hand should slay him; and she mourned him as though already
slain outright, and in her affliction a round tear through very
grievous pity coursed down her cheek; and gently weeping she lifted
up her voice aloud:
(ll. 464-470) Why does this grief come upon me, poor wretch? Whether
he be the best of heroes now about to perish, or the worst, let
him go to his doom. Yet I would that he had escaped unharmed; yea,
may this be so, revered goddess, daughter of Perses, may he avoid
death and return home; but if it be his lot to be o'ermastered by
the oxen, may he first learn this, that I at least do not rejoice
in his cruel calamity."
(ll. 471-474) Thus then was the maiden's heart racked by love-
cares. But when the others had gone forth from the people and the
city, along the path by which at the first they had come from the
plain, then Argus addressed Jason with these words:
(ll. 475-483) "Son of Aeson, thou wilt despise the counsel which
I will tell thee, but, though in evil plight, it is not fitting
to forbear from the trial. Ere now thou hast heard me tell of a
maiden that uses sorcery under the guidance of Hecate, Perses' daughter.
If we could win her aid there will be no dread, methinks, of thy
defeat in the contest; but terribly do I fear that my mother will
not take this task upon her. Nevertheless I will go back again to
entreat her, for a common destruction overhangs us all."
(ll. 383-491) He spake with goodwill, and Jason answered with these
words: "Good friend, if this is good in thy sight, I say not nay.
Go and move thy mother, beseeching her aid with prudent words; pitiful
indeed is our hope when we have put our return in the keeping of
women." So he spake, and quickly they reached the back-water. And
their comrades joyfully questioned them, when they saw them close
at hand; and to them spoke Aeson's son grieved at heart:
(ll. 492-501) "My friends, the heart of ruthless Aeetes is utterly
filled with wrath against us, for not at all can the goal be reached
either by me or by you who question me. He said that two bulls with
feet of bronze pasture on the plain of Ares, breathing forth flame
from their jaws. And with these he bade me plough the field, four
plough-gates; and said that he would give me from a serpent's jaws
seed which will raise up earthborn men in armour of bronze; and
on the same day I must slay them. This task -- for there was nothing
better to devise -- I took on myself outright."
(ll. 502-514) Thus he spake; and to all the contest seemed one
that none could accomplish, and long, quiet and silent, they looked
at one another, bowed down with the calamity and their despair;
but at last Peleus spake with courageous words among all the chiefs:
"It is time to be counselling what we shall do. Yet there is not
so much profit, I trow, in counsel as in the might of our hands.
If thou then, hero son of Aeson, art minded to yoke Aeetes' oxen,
and art eager for the toil, surely thou wilt keep thy promise and
make thyself ready. But if thy soul trusts not her prowess utterly,
then neither bestir thyself nor sit still and look round for some
one else of these men. For it is not I who will flinch, since the
bitterest pain will be but death."
(ll. 515-522) So spake the son of Aeacus; and Telamon's soul was
stirred, and quickly he started up in eagerness; and Idas rose up
the third in his pride; and the twin sons of Tyndareus; and with
them Oeneus' son who was numbered among strong men, though even
the soft down on his cheek showed not yet; with such courage was
his soul uplifted. But the others gave way to these in silence.
And straightway Argus spake these words to those that longed for
the contest:
(ll. 523-539) "My friends, this indeed is left us at the last.
But I deem that there will come to you some timely aid from my mother.
Wherefore, eager though ye be, refrain and abide in your ship a
little longer as before, for it is better to forbear than recklessly
to choose an evil fate. There is a maiden, nurtured in the halls
of Aeetes, whom the goddess Hecate taught to handle magic herbs
with exceeding skill all that the land and flowing waters produce.
With them is quenched the blast of unwearied flame, and at once
she stays the course of rivers as they rush roaring on, and checks
the stars and the paths of the sacred moon. Of her we bethought
us as we came hither along the path from the palace, if haply my
mother, her own sister, might persuade her to aid us in the venture.
And if this is pleasing to you as well, surely on this very day
will I return to the palace of Aeetes to make trial; and perchance
with some god's help shall I make the trial."
(ll. 540-544) Thus he spake, and the gods in their goodwill gave
them a sign. A trembling dove in her flight from a mighty hawk fell
from on high, terrified, into the lap of Aeson's son, and the hawk
fell impaled on the stern-ornament. And quickly Mopsus with prophetic
words spake among them all:
(ll. 545-554) "For you, friends, this sign has been wrought by
the will of heaven; in no other way is it possible to interpret
its meaning better, than to seek out the maiden and entreat her
with manifold skill. And I think she will not reject our prayer,
if in truth Phineus said that our return should be with the help
of the Cyprian goddess. It was her gentle bird that escaped death;
and as my heart within me foresees according to this omen, so may
it prove! But, my friends, let us call on Cytherea to aid us, and
now at once obey the counsels of Argus."
(ll. 555-563) He spake, and the warriors approved, remembering
the injunctions of Phineus; but all alone leapt up Apharcian Idas
and shouted loudly in terrible wrath: "Shame on us, have we come
here fellow voyagers with women, calling on Cypris for help and
not on the mighty strength of Enyalius? And do ye look to doves
and hawks to save yourselves from contests? Away with you, take
thought not for deeds of war, but by supplication to beguile weakling
girls."
(ll. 564-571) Such were his eager words; and of his comrades many
murmured low, but none uttered a word of answer back. And he sat
down in wrath; and at once Jason roused them and uttered his own
thought: "Let Argus set forth from the ship, since this pleases
all; but we will now move from the river and openly fasten our hawsers
to the shore. For surely it is not fitting for us to hide any longer
cowering from the battle-cry."
(ll. 572-575) So he spake, and straightway sent Argus to return
in haste to the city; and they drew the anchors on board at the
command of Aeson's son, and rowed the ship close to the shore, a
little away from the back-water.
(ll. 576-608) But straightway Aeetes held an assembly of the Colchians
far aloof from his palace at a spot where they sat in times before,
to devise against the Minyae grim treachery and troubles. And he
threatened that when first the oxen should have torn in pieces the
man who had taken upon him to perform the heavy task, he would hew
down the oak grove above the wooded hill, and burn the ship and
her crew, that so they might vent forth in ruin their grievous insolence,
for all their haughty schemes. For never would he have welcomed
the Aeolid Phrixus as a guest in his halls, in spite of his sore
need, Phrixus, who surpassed all strangers in gentleness and fear
of the gods, had not Zeus himself sent Hermes his messenger down
from heaven, so that he might meet with a friendly host; much less
would pirates coming to his land be let go scatheless for long,
men whose care it was to lift their hands and seize the goods of
others, and to weave secret webs of guile, and harry the steadings
of herdsmen with ill-sounding forays. And he said that besides all
that the sons of Phrixus should pay a fitting penalty to himself
for returning in consort with evildoers, that they might recklessly
drive him from his honour and his throne; for once he had heard
a baleful prophecy from his father Helios, that he must avoid the
secret treachery and schemes of his own offspring and their crafty
mischief. Wherefore he was sending them, as they desired, to the
Achaean land at the bidding of their father -- a long journey. Nor
had he ever so slight a fear of his daughters, that they would form
some hateful scheme, nor of his son Apsyrtus; but this curse was
being fulfilled in the children of Chalciope. And he proclaimed
terrible things in his rage against the strangers, and loudly threatened
to keep watch over the ship and its crew, so that no one might escape
calamity.
(ll. 609-615) Meantime Argus, going to Aeetes' palace, with manifold
pleading besought his mother to pray Medea's aid; and Chalciope
herself already had the same thoughts, but fear checked her soul
lest haply either fate should withstand and she should entreat her
in vain, all distraught as she would be at her father's deadly wrath,
or, if Medea yielded to her prayers, her deeds should be laid bare
and open to view.
(ll. 616-635) Now a deep slumber had relieved the maiden from her
love-pains as she lay upon her couch. But straightway fearful dreams,
deceitful, such as trouble one in grief, assailed her. And she thought
that the stranger had taken on him the contest, not because he longed
to win the ram's fleece, and that he had not come on that account
to Aeetes' city, but to lead her away, his wedded wife, to his own
home; and she dreamed that herself contended with the oxen and wrought
the task with exceeding ease; and that her own parents set at naught
their promise, for it was not the maiden they had challenged to
yoke the oxen but the stranger himself; from that arose a contention
of doubtful issue between her father and the strangers; and both
laid the decision upon her, to be as she should direct in her mind.
But she suddenly, neglecting her parents, chose the stranger. And
measureless anguish seized them and they shouted out in their wrath;
and with the cry sleep released its hold upon her. Quivering with
fear she started up, and stared round the walls of her chamber,
and with difficulty did she gather her spirit within her as before,
and lifted her voice aloud:
(ll. 636-644) "Poor wretch, how have gloomy dreams affrighted me!
I fear that this voyage of the heroes will bring some great evil.
My heart is trembling for the stranger. Let him woo some Achaean
girl far away among his own folk; let maidenhood be mine and the
home of my parents. Yet, taking to myself a reckless heart, I will
no more keep aloof but will make trial of my sister to see if she
will entreat me to aid in the contest, through grief for her own
sons; this would quench the bitter pain in my heart."
(ll. 645-673) She spake, and rising from her bed opened the door
of her chamber, bare-footed, clad in one robe; and verily she desired
to go to her sister, and crossed the threshold. And for long she
stayed there at the entrance of her chamber, held back by shame;
and she turned back once more; and again she came forth from within,
and again stole back; and idly did her feet bear her this way and
that; yea, as oft as she went straight on, shame held her within
the chamber, and though held back by shame, bold desire kept urging
her on. Thrice she made the attempt and thrice she checked herself,
the fourth time she fell on her bed face downward, writhing in pain.
And as when a bride in her chamber bewails her youthful husband,
to whom her brothers and parents have given her, nor yet does she
hold converse with all her attendants for shame and for thinking
of him; but she sits apart in her grief; and some doom has destroyed
him, before they have had pleasure of each other's charms; and she
with heart on fire silently weeps, beholding her widowed couch,
in fear lest the women should mock and revile her; like to her did
Medea lament. And suddenly as she was in the midst of her tears,
one of the handmaids came forth and noticed her, one who was her
youthful attendant; and straightway she told Chalciope, who sat
in the midst of her sons devising how to win over her sister. And
when Chalciope heard the strange tale from the handmaid, not even
so did she disregard it. And she rushed in dismay from her chamber
right on to the chamber where the maiden lay in her anguish, having
torn her cheeks on each side; and when Chalciope saw her eyes all
dimmed with tears, she thus addressed her:
(ll. 674-680) "Ah me, Medea, why dost thou weep so? What hath befallen
thee? What terrible grief has entered thy heart? Has some heaven-sent
disease enwrapt thy frame, or hast thou heard from our father some
deadly threat concerning me and my sons? Would that I did not behold
this home of my parents, or the city, but dwelt at the ends of the
earth, where not even the name of Colchians is known!"
(ll. 681-687) Thus she spake, and her sister's cheeks flushed;
and though she was eager to reply, long did maiden shame restrain
her. At one moment the word rose on the end of her tongue, at another
it fluttered back deep within her breast. And often through her
lovely lips it strove for utterance; but no sound came forth; till
at last she spoke with guileful words; for the bold Loves were pressing
her hard:
(ll. 688-692) "Chalciope, my heart is all trembling for thy sons,
lest my father forthwith destroy them together with the strangers.
Slumbering just now in a short-lived sleep such a ghastly dream
did I see -- may some god forbid its fulfilment and never mayst
thou win for thyself bitter care on thy sons' account."
(ll. 693-704) She spake, making trial of her sister to see if she
first would entreat help for her sons. And utterly unbearable grief
surged over Chalciope's soul for fear at what she heard; and then
she replied: "Yea, I myself too have come to thee in eager furtherance
of this purpose, if thou wouldst haply devise with me and prepare
some help. But swear by Earth and Heaven that thou wilt keep secret
in thy heart what I shall tell thee, and be fellow-worker with me.
I implore thee by the blessed gods, by thyself and by thy parents,
not to see them destroyed by an evil doom piteously; or else may
I die with my dear sons and come back hereafter from Hades an avenging
Fury to haunt thee."
(ll. 705-710) Thus she spake, and straightway a torrent of tears
gushed forth and low down she clasped her sister's knees with both
hands and let her head sink on to her breast. Then they both made
piteous lamentation over each other, and through the halls rose
the faint sound of women weeping in anguish. Medea, sore troubled,
first addressed her sister:
(ll. 711-717) "God help thee, what healing can I bring thee for
what thou speakest of, horrible curses and Furies? Would that it
were firmly in my power to save thy sons! Be witness that mighty
oath of the Colchians by which thou urgest me to swear, the great
Heaven, and Earth beneath, mother of the gods, that as far as strength
lies in me, never shalt thou fail of help, if only thy prayers can
be accomplished."
(ll. 718-723) She spake, and Chalciope thus replied: "Couldst thou
not then, for the stranger -- who himself craves thy aid -- devise
some trick or some wise thought to win the contest, for the sake
of my sons? And from him has come Argus urging me to try to win
thy help; I left him in the palace meantime while I came hither."
(ll. 724-739) Thus she spake, and Medea's heart bounded with joy
within her, and at once her fair cheeks flushed, and a mist swam
before her melting eyes, and she spake as follows: "Chalciope, as
is dear and delightful to thee and thy sons, even so will I do.
Never may the dawn appear again to my eyes, never mayst thou see
me living any longer, if I should take thought for anything before
thy life or thy sons' lives, for they are my brothers, my dear kinsmen
and youthful companions. So do I declare myself to be thy sister,
and thy daughter too, for thou didst lift me to thy breast when
an infant equally with them, as I ever heard from my mother in past
days. But go, bury my kindness in silence, so that I may carry out
my promise unknown to my parents; and at dawn I will bring to Hecate's
temple charms to cast a spell upon the bulls."
(ll. 740-743) Thus Chalciope went back from the chamber, and made
known to her sons the help given by her sister. And again did shame
and hateful fear seize Medea thus left alone, that she should devise
such deeds for a man in her father's despite.
(ll. 744-771) Then did night draw darkness over the earth; and
on the sea sailors from their ships looked towards the Bear and
the stars of Orion; and now the wayfarer and the warder longed for
sleep, and the pall of slumber wrapped round the mother whose children
were dead; nor was there any more the barking of dogs through the
city, nor sound of men's voices; but silence held the blackening
gloom. But not indeed upon Medea came sweet sleep. For in her love
for Aeson's son many cares kept her wakeful, and she dreaded the
mighty strength of the bulls, beneath whose fury he was like to
perish by an unseemly fate in the field of Ares. And fast did her
heart throb within her breast, as a sunbeam quivers upon the walls
of a house when flung up from water, which is just poured forth
in a caldron or a pail may be; and hither and thither on the swift
eddy does it dart and dance along; even so the maiden's heart quivered
in her breast. And the tear of pity flowed from her eyes, and ever
within anguish tortured her, a smouldering fire through her frame,
and about her fine nerves and deep down beneath the nape of the
neck where the pain enters keenest, whenever the unwearied Loves
direct against the heart their shafts of agony. And she thought
now that she would give him the charms to cast a spell on the bulls,
now that she would not, and that she herself would perish; and again
that she would not perish and would not give the charms, but just
as she was would endure her fate in silence. Then sitting down she
wavered in mind and said:
(ll. 772-801) "Poor wretch, must I toss hither and thither in woe?
On every side my heart is in despair; nor is there any help for
my pain; but it burneth ever thus. Would that I had been slain by
the swift shafts of Artemis before I had set eyes on him, before
Chalciope's sons reached the Achaean land. Some god or some Fury
brought them hither for our grief, a cause of many tears. Let him
perish in the contest if it be his lot to die in the field. For
how could I prepare the charms without my parents' knowledge? What
story call I tell them? What trick, what cunning device for aid
can I find? If I see him alone, apart from his comrades, shall I
greet him? Ill-starred that I am! I cannot hope that I should rest
from my sorrows even though he perished; then will evil come to
me when he is bereft of life. Perish all shame, perish all glow;
may he, saved by my effort, go scatheless wherever his heart desires.
But as for me, on the day when he bides the contest in triumph,
may I die either straining my neck in the noose from the roof-tree
or tasting drugs destructive of life. But even so, when I am dead,
they will fling out taunts against me; and every city far away will
ring with my doom, and the Colchian women, tossing my name on their
lips hither and thither, will revile me with unseemly mocking --
the maid who cared so much for a stranger that she died, the maid
who disgraced her home and her parents, yielding to a mad passion.
And what disgrace will not be mine? Alas for my infatuation! Far
better would it be for me to forsake life this very night in my
chamber by some mysterious fate, escaping all slanderous reproach,
before I complete such nameless dishonour."
(ll. 802-824) She spake, and brought a casket wherein lay many
drugs, some for healing, others for killing, and placing it upon
her knees she wept. And she drenched her bosom with ceaseless tears,
which flowed in torrents as she sat, bitterly bewailing her own
fate. And she longed to choose a murderous drug to taste it, and
now she was loosening the bands of the casket eager to take it forth,
unhappy maid! But suddenly a deadly fear of hateful Hades came upon
her heart. And long she held back in speechless horror, and all
around her thronged visions of the pleasing cares of life. She thought
of all the delightful things that are among the living, she thought
of her joyous playmates, as a maiden will; and the sun grew sweeter
than ever to behold, seeing that in truth her soul yearned for all.
And she put the casket again from off her knees, all changed by
the prompting of Hera, and no more did she waver in purpose; but
longed for the rising dawn to appear quickly, that she might give
him the charms to work the spell as she had promised, and meet him
face to face. And often did she loosen the bolts of her door, to
watch for the faint gleam: and welcome to her did the dayspring
shed its light, and folk began to stir throughout the city.
(ll. 825-827) Then Argus bade his brothers remain there to learn
the maiden's mind and plans, but himself turned back and went to
the ship.
(ll. 828-890) Now soon as ever the maiden saw the light of dawn,
with her hands she gathered up her golden tresses which were floating
round her shoulders in careless disarray, and bathed her tear-stained
cheeks, and made her skin shine with ointment sweet as nectar; and
she donned a beautiful robe, fitted with well-bent clasps, and above
on her head, divinely fair, she threw a veil gleaming like silver.
And there, moving to and fro in the palace, she trod the ground
forgetful of the heaven-sent woes thronging round her and of others
that were destined to follow. And she called to her maids. Twelve
they were, who lay during the night in the vestibule of her fragrant
chamber, young as herself, not yet sharing the bridal couch, and
she bade them hastily yoke the mules to the chariot to bear her
to the beauteous shrine of Hecate. Thereupon the handmaids were
making ready the chariot; and Medea meanwhile took from the hollow
casket a charm which men say is called the charm of Prometheus.
If a man should anoint his body therewithal, having first appeased
the Maiden, the only-begotten, with sacrifice by night, surely that
man could not be wounded by the stroke of bronze nor would he flinch
from blazing fire; but for that day he would prove superior both
in prowess and in might. It shot up first- born when the ravening
eagle on the rugged flanks of Caucasus let drip to the earth the
blood-like ichor of tortured Prometheus. And its flower appeared
a cubit above ground in colour like the Corycian crocus, rising
on twin stalks; but in the earth the root was like newly-cut flesh.
The dark juice of it, like the sap of a mountain-oak, she had gathered
in a Caspian shell to make the charm withal, when she had first
bathed in seven ever-flowing streams, and had called seven times
on Brimo, nurse of youth, night-wandering Brimo, of the underworld,
queen among the dead, -- in the gloom of night, clad in dusky garments.
And beneath, the dark earth shook and bellowed when the Titanian
root was cut; and the son of Iapetus himself groaned, his soul distraught
with pain. And she brought the charm forth and placed it in the
fragrant band which engirdled her, just beneath her bosom, divinely
fair. And going forth she mounted the swift chariot, and with her
went two handmaidens on each side. And she herself took the reins
and in her right hand the well-fashioned whip, and drove through
the city; and the rest, the handmaids, laid their hands on the chariot
behind and ran along the broad highway; and they kilted up their
light robes above their white knees. And even as by the mild waters
of Parthenius, or after bathing in the river Amnisus, Leto's daughter
stands upon her golden chariot and courses over the hills with her
swift-footed roes, to greet from afar some richly-steaming hecatomb;
and with her come the nymphs in attendance, gathering, some at the
spring of Amnisus itself, others by the glens and many-fountained
peaks; and round her whine and fawn the beasts cowering as she moves
along: thus they sped through the city; and on both sides the people
gave way, shunning the eyes of the royal maiden. But when she had
left the city's well paved streets, and was approaching the shrine
as she drove over the plains, then she alighted eagerly from the
smooth- running chariot and spake as follows among her maidens:
(ll. 891-911) "Friends, verily have I sinned greatly and took no
heed not to go among the stranger-folk 1 who roam over our land.
The whole city is smitten with dismay; wherefore no one of the women
who formerly gathered here day by day has now come hither. But since
we have come and no one else draws near, come, let us satisfy our
souls without stint with soothing song, and when we have plucked
the fair flowers amid the tender grass, that very hour will we return.
And with many a gift shall ye reach home this very day, if ye will
gladden me with this desire of mine. For Argus pleads with me, also
Chalciope herself; but this that ye hear from me keep silently in
your hearts, lest the tale reach my father's ears. As for yon stranger
who took on him the task with the oxen, they bid me receive his
gifts and rescue him from the deadly contest. And I approved their
counsel, and I have summoned him to come to my presence apart from
his comrades, so that we may divide the gifts among ourselves if
he bring them in his hands, and in return may give him a baleful
charm. But when he comes, do ye stand aloof."
(ll. 912-918) So she spake, and the crafty counsel pleased them
all. And straightway Argus drew Aeson's son apart from his comrades
as soon as he heard from his brothers that Medea had gone at daybreak
to the holy shrine of Hecate, and led him over the plain; and with
them went Mopsus, son of Ampycus, skilled to utter oracles from
the appearance of birds, and skilled to give good counsel to those
who set out on a journey.
(ll. 919-926) Never yet had there been such a man in the days of
old, neither of all the heroes of the lineage of Zeus himself, nor
of those who sprung from the blood of the other gods, as on that
day the bride of Zeus made Jason, both to look upon and to hold
converse with. Even his comrades wondered as they gazed upon him,
radiant with manifold graces; and the son of Ampycus rejoiced in
their journey, already foreboding how all would end.
(ll. 927-931) Now by the path along the plain there stands near
the shrine a poplar with its crown of countless leaves, whereon
often chattering crows would roost. One of them meantime as she
clapped her wings aloft in the branches uttered the counsels of
Hera:
(ll. 932-937) "What a pitiful seer is this, that has not the wit
to conceive even what children know, how that no maiden will say
a word of sweetness or love to a youth when strangers be near. Begone,
sorry prophet, witless one; on thee neither Cypris nor the gentle
Loves breathe in their kindness."
(ll. 938-946) She spake chiding, and Mopsus smiled to hear the
god-sent voice of the bird, and thus addressed them: "Do thou, son
of Aeson, pass on to the temple, where thou wilt find the maiden;
and very kind will her greeting be to thee through the prompting
of Cypris, who will be thy helpmate in the contest, even as Phineus,
Agenor's son, foretold. But we two, Argus and I, will await thy
return, apart in this very spot; do thou all alone be a suppliant
and win her over with prudent words."
(ll. 947-974) He spake wisely, and both at once gave approval.
Nor was Medea's heart turned to other thoughts, for all her singing,
and never a song that she essayed pleased her long in her sport.
But in confusion she ever faltered, nor did she keep her eyes resting
quietly upon the throng of her handmaids; but to the paths far off
she strained her gaze, turning her face aside. Oft did her heart
sink fainting within her bosom whenever she fancied she heard passing
by the sound of a footfall or of the wind. But soon he appeared
to her longing eyes, striding along loftily, like Sirius coming
from ocean, which rises fair and clear to see, but brings unspeakable
mischief to flocks; thus then did Aeson's son come to her, fair
to see, but the sight of him brought love-sick care. Her heart fell
from out her bosom, and a dark mist came over her eyes, and a hot
blush covered her cheeks. And she had no strength to lift her knees
backwards or forwards, but her feet beneath were rooted to the ground;
and meantime all her handmaidens had drawn aside. So they two stood
face to face without a word, without a sound, like oaks or lofty
pines, which stand quietly side by side on the mountains when the
wind is still; then again, when stirred by the breath of the wind,
they murmur ceaselessly; so they two were destined to tell out all
their tale, stirred by the breath of Love. And Aeson's son saw that
she had fallen into some heaven-sent calamity, and with soothing
words thus addressed her:
(ll. 975-1007) "Why, pray, maiden, dost thou fear me so much, all
alone as I am? Never was I one of these idle boasters such as other
men are -- not even aforetime, when I dwelt in my own country. Wherefore,
maiden, be not too much abashed before me, either to enquire whatever
thou wilt or to speak thy mind. But since we have met one another
with friendly hearts, in a hallowed spot, where it is wrong to sin,
speak openly and ask questions, and beguile me not with pleasing
words, for at the first thou didst promise thy sister to give me
the charms my heart desires. I implore thee by Hecate herself, by
thy parents, and by Zeus who holds his guardian hand over strangers
and suppliants; I come here to thee both a suppliant and a stranger,
bending the knee in my sore need. For without thee and thy sister
never shall I prevail in the grievous contest. And to thee will
I render thanks hereafter for thy aid, as is right and fitting for
men who dwell far oft, making glorious thy name and fame; and the
rest of the heroes, returning to Hellas, will spread thy renown
and so will the heroes' wives and mothers, who now perhaps are sitting
on the shore and making moan for us; their painful affliction thou
mightest scatter to the winds. In days past the maiden Ariadne,
daughter of Minos, with kindly intent rescued Theseus from grim
contests -- the maiden whom Pasiphae daughter of Helios bare. But
she, when Minos had lulled his wrath to rest, went aboard the ship
with him and left her fatherland; and her even the immortal gods
loved, and, as a sign in mid-sky, a crown of stars, which men call
Ariadne's crown, rolls along all night among the heavenly constellations.
So to thee too shall be thanks from the gods, if thou wilt save
so mighty an array of chieftains. For surely from thy lovely form
thou art like to excel in gentle courtest."
(ll. 1008-1025) Thus he spake, honouring her; and she cast her
eyes down with a smile divinely sweet; and her soul melted within
her, uplifted by his praise, and she gazed upon him face to face;
nor did she know what word to utter first, but was eager to pour
out everything at once. And forth from her fragrant girdle ungrudgingly
she brought out the charm; and he at once received it in his hands
with joy. And she would even have drawn out all her soul from her
breast and given it to him, exulting in his desire; so wonderfully
did love flash forth a sweet flame from the golden head of Aeson's
son; and he captivated her gleaming eyes; and her heart within grew
warm, melting away as the dew melts away round roses when warmed
by the morning's light. And now both were fixing their eyes on the
ground abashed, and again were throwing glances at each other, smiling
with the light of love beneath their radiant brows. And at last
and scarcely then did the maiden greet him:
(ll. 1026-1062) "Take heed now, that I may devise help for thee.
When at thy coming my father has given thee the deadly teeth from
the dragon's jaws for sowing, then watch for the time when the night
is parted in twain, then bathe in the stream of the tireless river,
and alone, apart from others, clad in dusky raiment, dig a rounded
pit; and therein slay a ewe, and sacrifice it whole, heaping high
the pyre on the very edge of the pit. And propitiate only-begotten
Hecate, daughter of Perses, pouring from a goblet the hive-stored
labour of bees. And then, when thou hast heedfully sought the grace
of the goddess, retreat from the pyre; and let neither the sound
of feet drive thee to turn back, nor the baying of hounds, lest
haply thou shouldst maim all the rites and thyself fail to return
duly to thy comrades. And at dawn steep this charm in water, strip,
and anoint thy body therewith as with oil; and in it there will
be boundless prowess and mighty strength, and thou wilt deem thyself
a match not for men but for the immortal gods. And besides, let
thy spear and shield and sword be sprinkled. Thereupon the spear-heads
of the earthborn men shall not pierce thee, nor the flame of the
deadly bulls as it rushes forth resistless. But such thou shalt
be not for long, but for that one day; still never flinch from the
contest. And I will tell thee besides of yet another help. As soon
as thou hast yoked the strong oxen, and with thy might and thy prowess
hast ploughed all the stubborn fallow, and now along the furrows
the Giants are springing up, when the serpent's teeth are sown on
the dusky clods, if thou markest them uprising in throngs from the
fallow, cast unseen among them a massy stone; and they over it,
like ravening hounds over their food, will slay one another; and
do thou thyself hasten to rush to the battle- strife, and the fleece
thereupon thou shalt bear far away from Aea; nevertheless, depart
wherever thou wilt, or thy pleasure takes thee, when thou hast gone
hence."
(ll. 1063-1068) Thus she spake, and cast her eyes to her feet in
silence, and her cheek, divinely fair, was wet with warm tears as
she sorrowed for that he was about to wander far from her side over
the wide sea: and once again she addressed him face to face with
mournful words, and took his right hand; for now shame had left
her eyes:
(ll. 1069-1076) "Remember, if haply thou returnest to thy home,
Medea's name; and so will I remember thine, though thou be far away.
And of thy kindness tell me this, where is thy home, whither wilt
thou sail hence in thy ship over the sea; wilt thou come near wealthy
Orchomenus, or near the Aeaean isle? And tell me of the maiden,
whosoever she be that thou hast named, the far-renowned daughter
of Pasiphae, who is kinswoman to my father."
(ll. 1077-1078) Thus she spake; and over him too, at the tears
of the maiden, stole Love the destroyer, and he thus answered her:
(ll. 1079-1101) "All too surely do I deem that never by night and
never by day will I forget thee if I escape death and indeed make
my way in safety to the Achaean land, and Aeetes set not before
us some other contest worse than this. And if it pleases thee to
know about my fatherland, I will tell it out; for indeed my own
heart bids me do that. There is a land encircled by lofty mountains,
rich in sheep and in pasture, where Prometheus, son of Iapetus,
begat goodly Deucalion, who first founded cities and reared temples
to the immortal gods, and first ruled over men. This land the neighbours
who dwell around call Haemonia. And in it stands Ioleus, my city,
and in it many others, where they have not so much as heard the
name of the Aeaean isle; yet there is a story that Minyas starting
thence, Minyas son of Aeolus, built long ago the city of Orchomenus
that borders on the Cadmeians. But why do I tell thee all this vain
talk, of our home and of Minos' daughter, far-famed Ariadne, by
which glorious name they called that lovely maiden of whom thou
askest me? Would that, as Minos then was well inclined to Theseus
for her sake, so may thy father be joined to us in friendship!"
(ll. 1102-1104) Thus he spake, soothing her with gentle converse.
But pangs most bitter stirred her heart and in grief did she address
him with vehement words:
(ll. 1105-1117) "In Hellas, I ween, this is fair to pay heed to
covenants; but Aeetes is not such a man among men as thou sayest
was Pasiphae's husband, Minos; nor can I liken myself to Ariadne;
wherefore speak not of guest-love. But only do thou, when thou hast
reached Iolcus, remember me, and thee even in my parents' despite,
will I remember. And from far off may a rumour come to me or some
messenger-bird, when thou forgettest me; or me, even me, may swift
blasts catch up and bear over the sea hence to Iolcus, that so I
may cast reproaches in thy face and remind thee that it was by my
good will thou didst escape. May I then be seated in thy halls,
an unexpected guest!"
(ll. 1118-1130) Thus she spake with piteous tears falling down
her cheeks, and to her Jason replied: "Let the empty blasts wander
at will, lady, and the messenger-bird, for vain is thy talk. But
if thou comest to those abodes and to the land of Hellas, honoured
and reverenced shalt thou be by women and men; and they shall worship
thee even as a goddess, for that by thy counsel their sons came
home again, their brothers and kinsmen and stalwart husbands were
saved from calamity. And in our bridal chamber shalt thou prepare
our couch; and nothing shall come between our love till the doom
of death fold us round."
(ll. 1131-1136) Thus he spake; and her soul melted within her to
hear his words; nevertheless she shuddered to behold the deeds of
destruction to come. Poor wretch! Not long was she destined to refuse
a home in Hellas. For thus Hera devised it, that Aeaean Medea might
come to Ioleus for a bane to Pelias, forsaking her native land.
(ll. 1137-1145) And now her handmaids, glancing at them from a
distance, were grieving in silence; and the time of day required
that the maiden should return home to her mother's side. But she
thought not yet of departing, for her soul delighted both in his
beauty and in his winsome words, but Aeson's son took heed, and
spake at last, though late: "It is time to depart, lest the sunlight
sink before we know it, and some stranger notice all; but again
will we come and meet here."
(ll. 1146-1162) So did they two make trial of one another thus
far with gentle words; and thereafter parted. Jason hastened to
return in joyous mood to his comrades and the ship, she to her handmaids;
and they all together came near to meet her, but she marked them
not at all as they thronged around. For her soul had soared aloft
amid the clouds. And her feet of their own accord mounted the swift
chariot, and with one hand she took the reins, and with the other
the whip of cunning workmanship, to drive the mules; and they rushed
hasting to the city and the palace. And when she was come Chalciope
in grief for her sons questioned her; but Medea, distraught by swiftly-changing
thoughts, neither heard her words nor was eager to speak in answer
to her questions. But she sat upon a low stool at the foot of her
couch, bending down, her cheek leaning on her left hand, and her
eyes were wet with tears as she pondered what an evil deed she had
taken part in by her counsels.
(ll. 1163-1190) Now when Aeson's son had joined his comrades again
in the spot where he had left them when he departed, he set out
to go with them, telling them all the story, to the gathering of
the heroes; and together they approached the ship. And when they
saw Jason they embraced him and questioned him. And he told to all
the counsels of the maiden and showed the dread charm; but Idas
alone of his comrades sat apart biting down his wrath; and the rest
joyous in heart, at the hour when the darkness of night stayed them,
peacefully took thought for themselves. But at daybreak they sent
two men to go to Aeetes and ask for the seed, first Telamon himself,
dear to Ares, and with him Aethalides, Hermes' famous son. So they
went and made no vain journey; but when they came, lordly Aeetes
gave them for the contest the fell teeth of the Aonian dragon which
Cadmus found in Ogygian Thebes when he came seeking for Europa and
there slew the -- warder of the spring of Ares. There he settled
by the guidance of the heifer whom Apollo by his prophetic word
granted him to lead him on his way. But the teeth the Tritonian
goddess tore away from the dragon's jaws and bestowed as a gift
upon Aeetes and the slayer. And Agenor's son, Cadmus, sowed them
on the Aonian plains and founded an earthborn people of all who
were left from the spear when Ares did the reaping; and the teeth
Aeetes then readily gave to be borne to the ship, for he deemed
not that Jason would bring the contest to an end, even though he
should cast the yoke upon the oxen.
(ll. 1191-1224) Far away in the west the sun was sailing beneath
the dark earth, beyond the furthest hills of the Aethiopians; and
Night was laying the yoke upon her steeds; and the heroes were preparing
their beds by the hawsers. But Jason, as soon as the stars of Heliee,
the bright-gleaming bear, had set, and the air had all grown still
under heaven, went to a desert spot, like some stealthy thief, with
all that was needful; for beforehand in the daytime had he taken
thought for everything; and Argus came bringing a ewe and milk from
the flock; and them he took from the ship. But when the hero saw
a place which was far away from the tread of men, in a clear meadow
beneath the open sky, there first of all he bathed his tender body
reverently in the sacred river; and round him he placed a dark robe,
which Hypsipyle of Lemnos had given him aforetime, a memorial of
many a loving embrace. Then he dug a pit in the ground of a cubit's
depth and heaped up billets of wood, and over it he cut the throat
of the sheep, and duly placed the carcase above; and he kindled
the logs placing fire beneath, and poured over them mingled libations,
calling on Hecate Brimo to aid him in the contests. And when he
had called on her he drew back; and she heard him, the dread goddess,
from the uttermost depths and came to the sacrifice of Aeson's son;
and round her horrible serpents twined themselves among the oak
boughs; and there was a gleam of countless torches; and sharply
howled around her the hounds of hell. All the meadows trembled at
her step; and the nymphs that haunt the marsh and the river shrieked,
all who dance round that mead of Amarantian Phasis. And fear seized
Aeson's son, but not even so did he turn round as his feet bore
him forth, till he came back to his comrades; and now early dawn
arose and shed her light above snowy Caucasus.
(ll. 1225-1245) Then Aeetes arrayed his breast in the stiff corslet
which Ares gave him when he had slain Phlegraean Mimas with his
own hands; and upon his head he placed a golden helmet with four
plumes, gleaming like the sun's round light when he first rises
from Ocean. And he wielded his shield of many hides, and his spear,
terrible, resistless; none of the heroes could have withstood its
shock now that they had left behind Heracles far away, who alone
could have met it in battle. For the king his well-fashioned chariot
of swift steeds was held near at hand by Phaethon, for him to mount;
and he mounted, and held the reins in his hands. Then from the city
he drove along the broad highway, that he might be present at the
contest; and with him a countless multitude rushed forth. And as
Poseidon rides, mounted in his chariot, to the Isthmian contest
or to Taenarus, or to Lerna's water, or through the grove of Hyantian
Onchestus, and thereafter passes even to Calaureia with his steeds,
and the Haemonian rock, or well-wooded Geraestus; even so was Aeetes,
lord of the Colchians, to behold.
(ll. 1246-1277) Meanwhile, prompted by Medea, Jason steeped the
charm in water and sprinkled with it his shield and sturdy spear,
and sword; and his comrades round him made proof of his weapons
with might and main, but could not bend that spear even a little,
but it remained firm in their stalwart hands unbroken as before.
But in furious rage with them Idas, Aphareus' son, with his great
sword hewed at the spear near the butt, and the edge leapt back
repelled by the shock, like a hammer from the anvil; and the heroes
shouted with joy for their hope in the contest. And then he sprinkled
his body, and terrible prowess entered into him, unspeakable, dauntless;
and his hands on both sides thrilled vigorously as they swelled
with strength. And as when a warlike steed eager for the fight neighs
and beats the ground with his hoof, while rejoicing he lifts his
neck on high with ears erect; in such wise did Aeson's son rejoice
in the strength of his limbs. And often hither and thither did he
leap high in air tossing in his hands his shield of bronze and ashen
spear. Thou wouldst say that wintry lightning flashing from the
gloomy sky kept on darting forth from the clouds what time they
bring with them their blackest rainstorm. Not long after that were
the heroes to hold back from the contests; but sitting in rows on
their benches they sped swiftly on to the plain of Ares. And it
lay in front of them on the opposite side of the city, as far off
as is the turning-post that a chariot must reach from the starting-point,
when the kinsmen of a dead king appoint funeral games for footmen
and horsemen. And they found Aeetes and the tribes of the Colchians;
these were stationed on the Caucasian heights, but the king by the
winding brink of the river.
(ll. 1278-1325) Now Aeson's son, as soon as his comrades had made
the hawsers fast, leapt from the ship, and with spear and shield
came forth to the contest; and at the same time he took the gleaming
helmet of bronze filled with sharp teeth, and his sword girt round
his shoulders, his body stripped, in somewise resembling Ares and
in somewise Apollo of the golden sword. And gazing over the field
he saw the bulls' yoke of bronze and near it the plough, all of
one piece, of stubborn adamant. Then he came near, and fixed his
sturdy spear upright on its butt, and taking his helmet, off leant
it against the spear. And he went forward with shield alone to examine
the countless tracks of the bulls, and they from some unseen lair
beneath the earth, where was their strong steading, wrapt in murky
smoke, both rushed out together, breathing forth flaming fire. And
sore afraid were the heroes at the sight. But Jason, setting wide
his feet, withstood their onset, as in the sea a rocky reef withstands
the waves tossed by the countless blasts. Then in front of him he
held his shield; and both the bulls with loud bellowing attacked
him with their mighty horns; nor did they stir him a jot by their
onset. And as when through the holes of the furnace the armourers'
bellows anon gleam brightly, kindling the ravening flame, and anon
cease from blowing, and a terrible roar rises from the fire when
it darts up from below; so the bulls roared, breathing forth swift
flame from their mouths, while the consuming heat played round him,
smiting like lightning; but the maiden's charms protected him. Then
grasping the tip of the horn of the right- hand bull, he dragged
it mightily with all his strength to bring it near the yoke of bronze,
and forced it down on to its knees, suddenly striking with his foot
the foot of bronze. So also he threw the other bull on to its knees
as it rushed upon him, and smote it down with one blow. And throwing
to the ground his broad shield, he held them both down where they
had fallen on their fore-knees, as he strode from side to side,
now here, now there, and rushed swiftly through the flame. But Aeetes
marvelled at the hero's might. And meantime the sons of Tyndareus
for long since had it been thus ordained for them -- near at hand
gave him the yoke from the ground to cast round them. Then tightly
did he bind their necks; and lifting the pole of bronze between
them, he fastened it to the yoke by its golden tip. So the twin
heroes started back from the fire to the ship. But Jason took up
again his shield and cast it on his back behind him, and grasped
the strong helmet filled with sharp teeth, and his resistless spear,
wherewith, like some ploughman with a Pelasgian goad, he pricked
the bulls beneath, striking their flanks; and very firmly did he
guide the well fitted plough handle, fashioned of adamant.
(ll. 1326-1339) The bulls meantime raged exceedingly, breathing
forth furious flame of fire; and their breath rose up like the roar
of blustering winds, in fear of which above all seafaring men furl
their large sail. But not long after that they moved on at the bidding
of the spear; and behind them the rugged fallow was broken up, cloven
by the might of the bulls and the sturdy ploughman. Then terribly
groaned the clods withal along the furrows of the plough as they
were rent, each a man's burden; and Jason followed, pressing down
the cornfield with firm foot; and far from him he ever sowed the
teeth along the clods as each was ploughed, turning his head back
for fear lest the deadly crop of earthborn men should rise against
him first; and the bulls toiled onwards treading with their hoofs
of bronze.
(ll. 1340-1407) But when the third part of the day was still left
as it wanes from dawn, and wearied labourers call for the sweet
hour of unyoking to come to them straightway, then the fallow was
ploughed by the tireless ploughman, four plough-gates though it
was; and he loosed the plough from the oxen. Them he scared in flight
towards the plain; but he went back again to the ship, while he
still saw the furrows free of the earthborn men. And all round his
comrades heartened him with their shouts. And in the helmet he drew
from the river's stream and quenched his thirst with the water.
Then he bent his knees till they grew supple, and filled his mighty
heart with courage, raging like a boar, when it sharpens its teeth
against the hunters, while from its wrathful mouth plenteous foam
drips to the ground. By now the earthborn men were springing up
over all the field; and the plot of Ares, the death-dealer, bristled
with sturdy shields and double-pointed spears and shining helmets;
and the gleam reached Olympus from beneath, flashing through the
air. And as when abundant snow has fallen on the earth and the storm
blasts have dispersed the wintry clouds under the murky night, and
all the hosts of the stars appear shining through the gloom; so
did those warriors shine springing up above the earth. But Jason
bethought him of the counsels of Medea full of craft, and seized
from the plain a huge round boulder, a terrible quoit of Ares Enyalius;
four stalwart youths could not have raised it from the ground even
a little. Taking it in his hands he threw it with a rush far away
into their midst; and himself crouched unseen behind his shield,
with full confidence. And the Colchians gave a loud cry, like the
roar of the sea when it beats upon sharp crags; and speechless amazement
seized Aeetes at the rush of the sturdy quoit. And the Earthborn,
like fleet-footed hounds, leaped upon one another and slew with
loud yells; and on earth their mother they fell beneath their own
spears, likes pines or oaks, which storms of wind beat down. And
even as a fiery star leaps from heaven, trailing a furrow of light,
a portent to men, whoever see it darting with a gleam through the
dusky sky; in such wise did Aeson's son rush upon the earthborn
men, and he drew from the sheath his bare sword, and smote here
and there, mowing them down, many on the belly and side, half risen
to the air -- and some that had risen as far as the shoulders --
and some just standing upright, and others even now rushing to battle.
And as when a fight is stirred up concerning boundaries, and a husbandman,
in fear lest they should ravage his fields, seizes in his hand a
curved sickle, newly sharpened, and hastily cuts the unripe crop,
and waits not for it to be parched in due season by the beams of
the sun; so at that time did Jason cut down the crop of the Earthborn;
and the furrows were filled with blood, as the channels of a spring
with water. And they fell, some on their faces biting the rough
clod of earth with their teeth, some on their backs, and others
on their hands and sides, like to sea- monsters to behold. And many,
smitten before raising their feet from the earth, bowed down as
far to the ground as they had risen to the air, and rested there
with the damp of death on their brows. Even so, I ween, when Zeus
has sent a measureless rain, new planted orchard-shoots droop to
the ground, cut off by the root the toil of gardening men; but heaviness
of heart and deadly anguish come to the owner of the farm, who planted
them; so at that time did bitter grief come upon the heart of King
Aeetes. And he went back to the city among the Colchians, pondering
how he might most quickly oppose the heroes. And the day died, and
Jason's contest was ended.
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