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    Jason and Medeia

    Page 32
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      gift—

      the mantle of scarlet that Argus wove, majestic but

      gloomy—

      it sent out a dull, infernal light—or the sky blue mantle King Thoas gave to Hypsipyle when she wept and

      spared him,

      sending him out on the sea. The son of Aison chose the blue, hurled it on the pile as if in anger; then, suddenly smiling, transformed, he came where I stood.

      The heralds

      approached. My mind went strangely calm, as calm as it

      was

      when I charmed the guardian snake. They left with the

      message. When I

      had come to the temple of Artemis—so the message

      ran—

      Apsyrtus must meet me, under cover of night. I would

      steal the fleece

      and return with the treasure to Aietes, to bargain for

      my life. Such was

      the lure. I know pretty well how Apsyrtus received it,

      sweet brother!

      His heart leaped up and he laughed aloud. ‘Ah, Medeia! Brilliant, magnificent Medeia of the many wiles!’ He

      could scarcely

      wait for nightfall, pacing restless on his ship and

      smiling,

      beaming at his sister’s guile.

      “The sun hung low in the heavens,

      reluctant to set, but at last, blood red with rage, it sank. As soon as darkness was complete he came to me,

      speeding in his ship,

      and landed on the sacred island in the dead of night.

      Unescorted,

      he rushed to the torchlit room where I waited and paced.

      He seized me

      with a cry of joy, proud of my Kolchian cunning. And

      for all

      my grief and revulsion, my murderer’s certainty of his

      imminent death—

      tricked for an instant by his smile of love—may the

      gods forgive me!—

      I returned the smile. With his bright sword lifted,

      Jason leaped

      from his hiding place. I turned my face away, shielding

      my eyes.

      Apsyrtus went down like a bull, but even as he sank

      to the flagstones

      he caught the blood in his hands, and as I shrank from

      him,

      reached out and painted my silvery veil and dress.

      I wept,

      soundless, rigid as a column. We bid the corpse in the

      earth.

      Orpheus was there, standing in the moonlight. There

      was no other way,’

      I said, rage flashing. He nodded. I said: ‘I loved my

      brother!’

      Perhaps even Jason understood, dark eyes more veiled

      than a snake’s.

      He took my hand, head bowed. We returned to the

      Argonauts.

      Apsyrtus’ fleet was heartsick, divided and confused,

      when they learned,

      by local seers, that the prince was gone forever. And

      so

      the Argo escaped.

      “Such was our crime, our helplessness.

      16

      “In Artemis’ temple we killed him. The blood-wet corpse

      we hid

      in the goddess’ sacred grove. Then Zeus the Father of

      the Gods

      was seized with wrath, and ordained that by counsel of

      Aiaian Circe

      we must cleanse ourselves from the stain of blood, and

      suffer sorrows

      bitter and past all number before we should come to

      the land

      of Hellas. We sailed unaware of that, though with heavy

      hearts,

      praying, the sons of Phrixos and I, for their mother’s

      escape

      when news of the murder came to Aietes’ dragon-dark

      mind.

      Our fears, we learned much later, were not ill-founded.

      He lay

      on the palace floor for days, shuddering in lunes of rage, calling on the gods to witness the foul and unnatural

      deed

      committed in Artemis’ temple. He’d neither lift his eyes nor raise his cheek from the flagstones, but wept and

      howled imprecations,

      hammering his fists till they bled. And at last it reached

      his thought

      that she who had seemed most innocent, bronze

      Khalkiope,

      was most at fault. Then soon chaogenous dreams of

      revenge

      were fuming in his serpent brain, the last of his sanity

      burned out,

      and he called her to him.

      “She knew when the message came what it meant.

      She touched her bedposts, the walls of her room, with

      the air of one

      distracted, and since they could grant her no time for

      parting words,

      she left with the guards themselves her sad farewell to

      our mother.

      She looked a last time at the figures of her sons, the

      work of a sculptor

      famous in the East, and tears ran down her cheeks in

      streams.

      Then, walking in the halls with her silent guards, her

      sandals a whisper

      on fire-bright tessellated floors, she prayed for the safety

      of her sons;

      and for all her trembling—most timid of all Aietes’

      children,

      her hair like honey as it rolls from the bowl—she kept

      her courage,

      and came where Aietes lay. He rose up a little on his

      arms

      and hissed at the guards. They backed away as

      commanded. And then,

      though he’d planned slow torture, unspeakable pain

      for the sly eldest daughter

      (so she seemed to him), he was suddenly wracked by

      such fiery rage

      that he hurled his axe, and Khalkiope, with a startled

      cry,

      was dead. A death to be proud of, the sweet gift of life

      to her sons!

      “We left behind the Liburnian isles, and Korkyra with its black and somber woods, and passed Melite,

      riding

      in a softly blowing breeze; passed steep Kerossus, where

      the daughter

      of Atlas dwelt, and we thought we saw in the mists the

      hills

      of thunder.

      “Then Hera remembered the counsels and anger of

      Zeus.

      She stirred up stormwinds before us, and black waves

      caught us and hurled us

      back to the isle of Elektra with its jagged rocks where

      once

      King Kadmos struck down the serpent and found his

      wife. And suddenly

      the beam of Dodonian oak that Athena had set in the

      center,

      as keel to the hollow ship, cried out and told us of the

      wrath

      of Zeus. The beam proclaimed that we’d never escape

      the paths

      of the endless sea, nor know any roofing but thunderous

      winds

      till Circe purged us of guilt for the murder of Apsyrtus.

      And if

      in cleansing us by ritual, the heart of Circe remained aloof, forgiving by law but not by love, then even in Hellas our lives should be cursed. The

      beam cried out:

      ‘Pray for your souls now, Argonauts! Pray for some

      track

      to the kingdom of Helios’ daughter!’ Thus wailed the

      Argo in the night.

      The Argonauts hurled up prayers to the gods as the

      ship leaped on

      through dark welms streaming like a wound. O, dark as

      my soul was the place!

      Sick those seas as my body in riotous rebellion—

      fevers,

      chills, mysteriou
    s flashes of pain. His ghost was in me, a steady nightmare, a madness. I vomited, fouling my

      beauty

      in Jason’s sight. Not even Orpheus’ lyre could check that sickness throbbing in my head, or the fire in my

      bowels. They looked

      away, one and all, as from Hell itself. I hissed

      imprecations,

      and they listened with white teeth clenched.

      “And as for the sea, it was

      the water of Helios’ wrath. No bird, for all its rush, for all the lightness of its arching wings, could cross

      that deep,

      but mid-course, down it would plunge, fluttering,

      consumed in flames;

      and all around it, the daughters of Helios, locked in

      poplars,

      wailed their piteous complaint, and their weeping eyes

      dripped amber.

      “There sailed the joyless Argonauts, weary of heart,

      overwhelmed

      by stench where the body of Phaiton still burned. At

      night, by the will

      of the gods, we entered an unknown stream whose rock

      shores sang

      with the rumble of mingling waters. So on and on we

      rushed,

      lost in the endless domain of the murderous Kelts. Now

      storms,

      now raging men dismayed us, thinning our company. My sickness stayed. My hand on the gunnel was

      marble-white;

      my face grew gaunt, rimose. We touched at the

      kingdom of stone,

      the kingdom of iron men, the kingdom of the ants. As

      dreams

      insinuate their unearthly cast on the light of the sick man’s room, making windows alien eyes, transforming

      chairs

      to animals biding their time, so now to the heartsick

      Argo

      the world took on a change. The night was unnaturally

      dark,

      crowded with baffling machines we could not quite see.

      And then

      at dawn we looked out, in our strange dream, on

      motionless banks

      where no beast stirred and even the leaves on the trees

      were still.

      No songbird sang, and the clouds above us were as void

      of life

      as stones. We struggled to awaken, but the ship was

      sealed in a charm.

      We waited. Then came to a fork in the stream, a great

      hushed island,

      and the Argonauts, half-starved, rowed in, cast anchor,

      and made

      the long ship fast. As far as the eye could see on the

      windless

      rockstrewn beach, there was nothing alive. The tufts of

      grass

      on the meadow above were still, as if lost in thought.

      “On a hill,

      rising at the center of the island, there stood a grove so

      dense

      no thread of light came through, and between the boles

      of the trees

      lay avenues. We went there, Lynkeus leading the way with his powerful eyes. I walked behind him, my hand

      in Jason’s,

      and my spirit was filled with uneasiness. I was sure the

      air—

      chill, unstirring—was crowded with thirsty ghosts. We

      found

      no game; it seemed that even the crawling insects slept.

      “Without warning from Lynkeus, we reached a glade

      and, rising

      in the center of the glade, a vast stone building in the

      shape of a dome.

      The gray foundation rocks were carved with curious

      oghams:

      spirals like eddies in a river, like blustering winds—

      the oldest

      runes ever made by man. At the low, dark door of the

      building

      a chair of stone stood waiting. We studied it, none of us

      speaking.

      And suddenly, even as we watched, there appeared a

      figure in the chair,

      seated comfortably, casually, combing his beard. He was

      old,

      his hair as white as hoarfrost. But as for his race, he

      was nothing

      we knew—a snubnosed creature with puffy eyes. His

      face,

      like his belly, was round, and he wore an enormous

      moustache. He said: ‘

      Ah ha! So it’s Jason again!’ The lord of the Argonauts

      stared,

      then glanced at me, as if thinking the curious image

      were somehow

      my creation. The old man laughed, impish, a laugh that rang like bells on the great rock mound and the

      surrounding hills.

      He laughed till he wept and clutched his sides.

      “I asked: “Who are you?

      Why do you mock us with silent sunlit isles and

      laughter,

      when Zeus has condemned us to travel as miserable

      exiles forever,

      suffering griefs past number for a crime so dark I dare not speak of it?’ He laughed again, unimpressed by

      grief,

      unmoved by our hunger. “Mere pangs of mortality,’ he

      said.

      ‘If you knew my troubles—’ He paused, reflecting, then

      laughed again.

      ‘However, they slip my mind.’ I repeated the question:

      ‘Who are you?’

      He tapped the tips of his fingers together, squinting,

      though his lips

      still smiled. ‘Don’t rush me. It’ll come to me.’ He

      searched his wits.

      ‘I’m something to do with rivers, I remember.’ He pulled

      at his beard,

      pursed his lips, looked panic-stricken. ‘Is it very

      important?’

      Suddenly his face brightened and he snapped his

      fingers. At once—

      apparently not by his wish—an enormous sow appeared, sprawled in the grass beside him, her eyes alarmed.

      He snapped

      his fingers again, looking sheepish, and at once the huge

      beast vanished.

      Again the name he’d been hunting had slipped his

      mind. Then:

      ‘Spirit of sorts,’ he said. ‘Not one of your dark ones, no

      god

      of the bog people, or the finger-wringing Germans, or—’ His bright eyes widened. ‘Ah yes! I’d forgotten!

      —We have dealings, we powers,

      from time to time. I received a request from the goddess

      of will.

      Abnormal. But isn’t everything? —Forgive me if I seem too light in the presence of woe. We’re not very good at

      woe,

      we Grand Antiques. Treasure your guilt if you like, dear

      friends.

      Guilt has a marvelous energy about it—havoc of

      kingdoms,

      slaughter of infants, et cetera. Discipline! That’s what

      it gives you!

      (Discipline, of course, is a virtue not all of us value.)

      However,

      Time is wide enough for all. Indeed, in a thousand years (I’ve been there, understand. A thousand thousand

      times I’ve heard

      the joke, and that lunatic punchline) … But what was

      I saying? Ah!

      Sail on in peace!—or in whatever mood suits your

      temperament.

      The passage is opened, this once, after all these

      millennia.

      Make way for the flagship Argo, ye golden generations!

      Make way

      for purification by fire, salvation by slaughter!’ His

      eyes—

      pale blue, mocking, were a-glitter; but at once he

      remembered himself.

      ‘Forgive me, lady. Forgive an old bogyman’s foolishness,

      lords

     
    of Akhaia.’ His smile was genuine now. The universe has time for all experiments. Sail in peace!’ He

      vanished.

      And the same instant the sky went dark and we found

      ourselves

      on the Argo, on a churning sea. Black waves came

      combing in,

      and mountains to left and right were yawing apart for

      us,

      and the opening sucked the sea in, and like a chip on

      a torrent

      the Argo went spinning, careening, the walls half buried

      in foam,

      to the south. I clung to the capstan. I would have been

      washed away,

      but the boy Ankaios abandoned the useless steering oar and caught my arm and held me till Jason could

      reach me, crawling

      pin by pin along the rail. He held me by the waist,

      his arm

      like rock. So we stood as we fell, dropped down from

      a dizzying height,

      a violent booming around us, as if the earth had split, and we looked up behind us in terror and saw the

      mountains close,

      and the same instant we struck and were hurled to the

      belly of the ship.

      The Argo shrieked as if all her beams had burst, and

      water

      boiled in over us. Then, at Ankaios’ shout, we knew we were safe, the ship was afloat, all her brattice-work

      firm despite

      contusions, a thin, dark ooze. And thus we came, by

      the whim

      of the river spirit of the North, to the kingdom of Circe,

      daughter

      of the sun, my father’s sister.

      “We did not speak of the dream—

      the cynical god who could scoff at all human shame

      and pain.

      Did only I dream it? There are those who claim we

      create, ourselves,

      in the dark of our minds, the gods who guide us. Was

      I in fact

      remorseless as the snake who smiles as he swallows the

      bellowing frog?

      Did my dreams create, then, even the dizzying fall of the

      Argo,

      that dark-as-murder sky? I dared not speak of the

      dream,

      but the image of the god remained, like the nagging

      awareness of a wound,—

      that and the sunlight in which he sat, with his attention

      fixed

      on his beard. If I closed my eyes, relaxed, I could drift

      to him again,

      abandon all sorrow and guilt forever, as if such things were childhood fantasy, and only this—his twinkling

      eyes,

      his laugh, his comb, his silent, sunlit glade—were real. I could step, if I wished, from my sanity to peace. I

      resisted,

      perhaps for fear of Jason.

      “We came to Circe’s isle.

      “At Jason’s command, the Argonauts cast the hawsers

      and moored

      the ship. We soon found Circe bathing where spindrift

     


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