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    Jason and Medeia

    Page 34
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      armed.

      Crowds of women meanwhile poured from the city to

      view

      the wide-famed Argonauts; and when they learned our

      joyful news

      they spread it far and wide, and all Phaiakia came to celebrate. One man led in the finest ram of his flock; another brought a heifer that had never

      toiled; still others

      brought bright, two-headed jars of wine. And far and

      wide

      the smoke of offerings coiled up blinding the sun.

      There were golden

      trinkets, embroidered robes, small animals in cages—

      and still

      the Phaiakians kept coming. There were casques of

      chalcedony

      and mottled jade, and figures of ebony, and ikons of gold with emerald eyes. There were baskets, carpets, bowls,

      weapons,

      there were songs not heard since the First Age—mute

      Phlias danced—

      and for seven days more they came, those gentle

      Phaiakians.

      “And as for Alkinoös, from the moment he gave his

      judgment

      and learned soon after of the marriage, he stood

      intransigent.

      He couldn’t be shaken by threats or oaths, and he

      refused to dread,

      beyond the displeasure of Zeus, Aietes’ enmity. When the Kolchians saw that their case was hopeless,

      they remembered the vow

      of Aietes, and feared to return to him. More humble

      now,

      they craved the king’s asylum. Alkinoös granted it. I wept for joy, all danger past. I was sure I would soon be home. I looked at Jason—that beautiful, gentle

      face—

      and could nearly believe, in spite of myself, that the

      world was born

      anew, all curses cancelled.

      “But at times in dreams I saw

      the merry old god of rivers, who laughed in the North,

      untouched

      by the sorrows that unhinge man. And at other times I

      dreamed

      I stood in the sacred grove of Artemis and searched for

      something.

      It would soon be dawn, the rim of the mountains

      already on fire.

      I must hurry. I must struggle to remember. Whatever

      it was I sought,

      it was near, as near as my heartbeat. I heard a footstep.

      Or was it?

      A swish like the blade of a scythe … that I

      remembered … And I

      would scream, and Jason would hold me, his eyes

      impenetrable.

      “So the days passed, and on the seventh day we left the isle of the Phaiakians, the Argo loaded to the beams with Phaiakian treasure. King Alkinoös

      gave

      strong men to replace all those we’d lost from the

      rowing benches

      in our dark wanderings, and Arete sent six maidens with

      me

      to comfort and serve me as once I was served at home.

      On the shore

      King Alkinoös and his queen stretched up their hands

      and prayed

      to the gods for our easy passage and final forgiveness

      for crimes

      committed of harsh necessity; and the people kneeled, the whole population, weeping. And so we left the

      place,

      sailing for home. I rolled the sound on my tongue.

      For home.

      I started, cried out. For out of the corner of my eye,

      I thought,

      I’d caught a glimpse of the river-god combing his beard,

      watching us,

      terrible god from the beginning of things, who laughed

      at guilt.

      ‘Jason!’ I whispered.

      “ ‘Easy, my love,’ said Jason, smiling.

      They were all smiling, their eyes like the gods’ dark

      mirror, the sea.”

      17

      I awakened and looked in alarm for Medeia. The voice

      had ceased

      and the winds that tumble and roar in space—so I

      thought in my dream—

      were swallowed to nothing. I clung to the bole of the

      oak like a bat.

      Then came a shimmering light, sea-green on every side, blurred cloudshapes, moving, like crowds of sea-beasts

      hemming me in.

      The silence changed; it swelled—more swift than a

      falling tower—

      to a boom, sharp voices of angry men. And now,

      suddenly,

      my eyes focussed, or the universe focussed, life crashed

      in on me:

      sweat-dank, bearded sailors milling like bees in a hive, howling against some outrage, I knew not what.

      I’d grown

      more solid, it seemed. When they bumped me, hurriedly

      elbowing past,

      I staggered. They tromped my feet, jostled me,

      caved in my hat

      with no apology, hardly a glance. Wold-I, nold-I, I moved with the crowd. Men all around and ahead of

      me jumped,

      clambered for a view, shook fists, shouted. I caught a

      few snatches.

      Someone was dead, murdered by the king, the crew

      of some ship

      arrested by Kreon’s police. Some voice of authority

      bellowed

      from a raised platform somewhere ahead of us, but his

      cries were drowned

      by the roar of the mob. I struggled for breath, shouted for the goddess, but no help came. Some man at my

      back growled bitterly,

      “Corinth is cursed. We were fools to come.” Another

      voice answered,

      “Everywhere’s cursed.” I craned my neck to see who’d

      spoken,

      but they all looked alike, their tanned hides toughened

      by gale and salt

      to the thickness of a twice-baked galley biscuit. At their

      necks hung daggers

      with thong-wrapped handles and serried blades. On

      their wrists, brass sheaths

      ornate with dragons and monsters of the deep. Then

      someone seized

      my shoulder—so fierce that my arm went numb and

      I shouted—and without

      a glance, he shoved me away and down. In horror I

      felt myself

      falling to the mud, my spectacles dangling,

      precariously hooked

      by one ear. I squealed like a rat incinerated, my mind all terror, my left hand clutching at my

      spectacles, right hand

      stretching to snatch some hold on the sweatwashed back

      of the giant

      in front of me. I fell, sank deep in the mud; the

      maniacal

      crowd came on, stepping on my legs, battering my ribs. On the back of my left hand, blurry as a cloud, fell

      a scarlet drop

      of blood. “Dear goddess!” I whimpered. I’d surely gone

      mad. It was

      no dream, surely, this jangling pain! A foot sank, blind, on the four fingers of my thin right hand and

      buried them;

      thick yellow water swirled where they’d been, then

      reddened with blood.

      My mind grew befuddled. My vision was awash. Then hands seized me, painfully jerked me upward, at

      the same time

      heaving back at the crowd. I gave myself up to the

      stranger,

      clinging still to my spectacles. My rescuer shouted, struck at the crowd with his one free arm like a

      wounded gorilla.

      We came to a wall, a doorway; he dragged me inside,

      put me down

      on a pile of skins, and scraped the bloodstained mud

      from my face.

      Gradually, my vision cleared. I remembered my

     
    ; spectacles

      and, finding a part of my vest still dry, I wiped them, as well as I could. One lens was cracked

      like a sunburst,

      a small piece missing. The other was whole. My rescuer,

      seeing

      what I struggled to do, though he had no faintest idea

      what it meant,

      brought me water in a jug, poured it on the lenses,

      then offered

      a cloth. When at last I could see again, we looked at

      each other.

      He was young; not intelligent, or so I suspected, his face

      defeatured

      in its lionish, square-jawed frame. His small gray eyes

      were round

      with amazement. I might have been an elf, a merman,

      a unicorn’s child.

      Behind him, three women and a man, in the robes of

      shop-people,

      bent at the waist to stare at me. And still, outside, in the blinding brightness, the rioting sailors pressed

      and shouted.

      The young man turned, following my gaze. Then all

      at once

      some change came over the crowd. There were cries

      of alarm, loud questions.

      The crowd rolled back, retreating from the pressure in

      front. The women

      and the bearded man—his beard came nearly to his

      knees—came bustling

      to the door, peeked timidly out, their silhouettes

      blocking the light.

      They gave sharp yells, all four of them at once, and

      rushed to us, reaching,

      chattering gibberish—some argot Greek or Semitic

      tongue

      I couldn’t identify—and pushed us farther from the

      door into darkness.

      I caught a glimpse—as I plunged with them in past

      bolts of cloth,

      calfskins, wickerwork, leather—of Kreon’s police force,

      armed

      with naked swords and whips, great helmets like mitres

      that shone

      brass-red. Each time a whip flashed out, some man fell

      screaming

      to the yellow mud, his torn arms clenching his head.

      Then darkness;

      we’d come to a deeper stall, the air full of spices—aloes, cloves and saffron and cinnamon … They whispered in the language foreign to me. We waited for a long

      time.

      My eyes adjusted to the dimness a little, and I saw the

      old man

      was as thin and ashen as an old wood spoon. His

      marmoset face

      was covered like a cheap plaster wall with bumps and

      nodes like droppings

      of mason’s grout; his tiny eyes were like silver coins. He pulled at his beard with his fingers, watching in

      secret alarm

      (as I watched him) for signs that I might prove

      dangerous.

      His wife was brown and swollen, sullen, the others buxom and dimpled, country odalisques with dull, seductive eyes. All four of them watched

      me in fear,

      exactly as they’d watched the crowd, the Corinthian

      police. I grinned.

      The four grinned back, and the man who’d saved me;

      a glow of teeth

      in the cavern-dark of wares. The merchant brought

      wine. We drank.

      When the streets were quiet, we crept back out, down

      wynds and alleys

      to a silent square—fother by the walls, abandoned

      winejugs,

      wases of straw and faggots, wrecked carts … It was

      dusk. Here and there

      men lay still, as if asleep, sprawled out in the mud,

      on cobblestones,

      drawn up onto the stoops of shops that stared at the

      empty

      twilit square like lepers waiting for blessing. We went— the man who had saved my life and I—to a man who sat some twenty feet from the door of the shop that

      protected us.

      He sat with his face in his drawn-up knees, as if

      weeping, or sick.

      I touched his shoulder. He fell over slowly, indifferently,

      dead.

      My friend looked at me and nodded. He held out his

      hand, palm up.

      I understood, put my palm on his. He nodded again, unsmiling; and so we parted.

      I had no desire now

      to climb that hill to Kreon’s palace. My body ached from the soles of my feet to the crown of my head.

      My clothes were ragged,

      damp and bespattered, mud-stained. My right-hand

      fingers were numb

      and misshapen; broken, I believed. However, I climbed

      as far

      as the first of the palace pools, where I meant to wash

      the blood off,

      caked on my hands and face. I studied my reflection,

      amazed:

      hat battered like a tramp’s, the pockets of my suitcoat

      ripped,

      my nose grotesquely swollen, the spectacles tilted, bent. I straightened my glasses as well as I could, then tucked

      them in my pocket.

      In the stone gray sky above, bats circled. The city was

      still.

      Then someone spoke to me. “See it to the end.” I wiped

      the water

      from my eyes and looked. He stared gravely at nothing

      —the ancient

      seer of Apollo whom I’d seen, long since, with Jason.

      I hooked

      my spectacles over my ears and looked more closely:

      a man

      so calm he seemed to encompass Time like a vase.

      He said:

      “See it to the end. The gods require it.” He turned

      away,

      and I saw only now the boy with him, his guide. I

      struggled

      to speak, but couldn’t. I glanced up the hill at the

      palace, aglow

      like the galaxy with torches. When I turned to the seer

      again

      he was moving slowly downhill, leaning hard on the

      boy. I found

      my voice and called, “Teiresias!” He turned, waiting. I realized in alarm we had nothing to say.

      Enveloped

      in a mist that hid me from the watch, I climbed to the

      palace. The crowd

      was thinner by half than when last I’d listened to

      Jason speak.

      It filled me with dread. I knew well enough what the

      reason was.

      The best had abandoned the contest, and not because

      Jason appeared

      to be winning. The brutal quelling of the riot, tyrannic

      use

      of the law’s whole force on their own long-suffering,

      disgruntled crews—

      and perhaps something more, the murder I’d heard of,

      the crew arrested—

      had turned them to scorn of Corinth and Corinth’s

      prize. Without

      a word, I suspected, they’d turned their steps to the

      harbor and sailed

      for home. I was partly wrong, I learned later. There

      were shouts in the palace,

      young kings outraged, old kings quietly astounded at

      Kreon’s

      ways. But my guess was right in this: the best who’d

      come

      had abandoned Corinth, prepared to become, on further

      provocation,

      her enemies.

      I moved, among those who remained, to a stairway, a raised place where I could see. Except for the kings

      who’d departed

      all was the same, I thought—the princess Pyripta in

      her chair

      of gold, with her hand on her eyes (her light-filled hair

      fell softly,

      swirling, enclosing her
    shoulders as if as protection);

      Kreon

      stern in his place, lips pursed, eyes squeezed half shut;

      the goddesses

      listening, watching like kestrels, except Aphrodite,

      who sat

      half-dreaming, studying Jason and Pyripta. I noticed

      at last

      that Kreon’s slave Ipnolebes was missing, as was the blond Northerner, Amekhenos. But I had no time

      to brood much on it. Jason was speaking. His voice

      was gentle,

      troubled, I thought. How much had he seen, in his

      lordly isolation,

      of the day’s events? I saw him with the eyes of the

      young Medeia,

      stunned in her father’s courtyard. He would have been

      thinner then,

      as big in the chest, less thick in the waist, his gestures

      tentative,

      boyish despite all those daring deeds already. His eyes seemed hardly the eyes of a power-grabber. What was

      he, then?

      Yet perhaps I knew. His guarded glance at the princess,

      for instance.

      Age-old hunger of vanity, hunger to be loved just one more time, and just one more, one more—give the

      lie to death

      for an instant. But it wasn’t enough for him, the total

      adoration

      of a girl. He must have whole cities’ adoration—and

      he’d had that, once,

      rightful prince of Iolkos, the throne his uncle had

      usurped

      and he might have won back, without shame, by

      bloody deeds; yet chose

      the reasonable way, for all his might in arms, for all his people’s love. “Evil deeds commit their victims,” Medeia had said, “to responses evil as the deeds

      themselves.”

      That was the law he’d sought to change.

      No wonder if the child of Aietes hadn’t understood,

      had struck—

      sky-fire’s child—with the pitiless force of her father’s

      father.

      And so Lord Jason had lost it all. I remembered again the crowd of outraged sailors, turning and turning,

      grinding …

      My memory seethed with the image, all space astir like

      grain

      in the narrowing flume of a gristmill. Against that

      ceaseless motion,

      Jason stood in the great hall still as a rock, a tree, as gentle of mind, as reasonable, as firm of will as the cool, intellectual moon. Ah, Jason knew, all right, of the riots. Calm, his voice an instrument, he spoke:

      “Six weeks the god’s wrath banged us shore to shore

      among foemen,

      men who fought naked, cut off their enemies’ heads.

      All that

      for Circe’s failure to forgive. Old Argus’ wonderful

      engine,

      driven as if by its own will, struck rocks and laughed at the steering oar of Ankaios. I lost there fourteen men to wrecks and those savage raids. I gave what attention

     


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