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    Jason and Medeia

    Page 37
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      love

      of the stuttering, wrinkled old man that Argus devised

      the palace

      that made us the envy of Akhaia, or built the waterlocks that transformed barrenness to seas of wheat, or built,

      above,

      the shining temple to Hera that soared up tower on

      tower,

      mirrored by lakes, surrounded by majestic parks. It was

      not

      for love of Pelias that Orpheus brought in the mysteries of Elektra to Argos, and made our city of Iolkos chief of the sacred cities of the South. Nor was it for him

      that Phlias

      created the great dance of Heros Dionysos, which

      brought us glory

      and wealth and favor of the god of life and death. I

      shared

      all honors with Pelias, though I’d changed his kingdom

      of pigs and sheep

      to a mighty state; and I did not mind the absurdity

      of it.

      And yet he was thorn, a hedge of thorn, and I might

      have been glad to be rid of him.

      I could move the assembly by a few words to

      magnificent notions—

      things never tried in the world before. I could have

      them eating

      from my hand, and then old Pelias would rise, wrapped

      head to foot

      in mufflers and febrile opinions. His numerous chins

      a-tremble,

      blanched eyes rolling, the tip of his nose bright red, like

      a berry

      in a patch of snow, he’d stutter and stammer,

      slaughterer of time,

      and in the end, as often as not, undo my work with a

      peevish

      No. Nor was he pleased, God knows, to share the rule with me. He hadn’t forgotten the oracle that warned,

      long since,

      that he’d meet his death by my hand. He couldn’t decide,

      precisely,

      whether to hate and fear me outright—whatever my

      pains

      to put him at ease—or feign undying devotion,

      avuncular

      pride in my glorious works. At times he would snap like

      a mongrel,

      splenetic, critical of trifles—insult me in the presence

      of the lords.

      I was patient. He was old, would eventually die. His

      barbs were harmless,

      as offensive to all who heard them as they were to me.

      My cousin

      Akastos would roll his eyes up, grinding his teeth in fury at his father’s ridiculous spite. I would smile, put my

      hand on Akastos’

      arm, say, ‘Never mind, old friend.’ It drew us closer, his shame and rage at his bumbling father’s stupidity. He had, himself, more honor with the people than his

      father had,

      having sailed to the end of the world with us—a

      familiar now

      of Orpheus, Leodokos, and the mighty brothers Peleus and Telamon. He’d become, through us, a friend of the hoary centaur Kheiron, and come to

      know

      the child Akhilles, waxing like a tower and handsome as

      a god.

      What had Akastos to do with a snivelling, whining old

      man,

      Akastos who’d stood at the door of Hades, listened to

      the Sirens,

      braved the power of Aietes and the dangerous Kelts?

      The old man

      hinted that after his death Akastos should follow him as my fellow king. It was not in the deal; I refused.

      Akastos

      was furious—not at me. And now he seldom came to the palace, bitterly ashamed. He remained with

      Iphinoe, at home,

      or travelled with friends, supporting their courtships

      or wars.

      “At times Pelias would drop his peevishness, put on, instead, a pretense of cowering love. He’d sit with his head to

      one side,

      lambishly timid, and he’d ogle like a girl, admiring me. ‘Noble Jason,’ he’d call me, with lips obscenely wet, and he’d stroke my fingers like an elderly homosexual, his head drawn back, as if fearing an angry slap. His

      desire

      to please, in such moods, was boundless. He couldn’t

      find honors enough

      to heap on me. He gave me gifts—his ebony bed (my father’s, in fact), jewels, the sword of Atlantis—

      but with each

      gift given, his need—his terror of fate—was greater

      than before.

      In the end he gave me the golden fleece itself as proof that all he owned was mine, I need not murder him. He was mad, of course. I had no intention of murdering

      him.

      And still he cringed and crawled, all bootlicking love.

      That too

      I tolerated, biding my time.

      “Not all on Argos shared or understood my patience. On the main street, on the day of the festival of Oreithyia—our chariot

      blocked

      by the milling, costumed crowd—a humpbacked

      beggarwoman

      in fetid rags, a shawl hiding all but her hawkbill nose and piercing eyes—a coarse mad creature who sang

      old songs

      in a voice like the carrion crow’s and stretched out

      hands like sticks

      for alms—leaped up at sight of me, raging, ‘Alas for

      Argos,

      kingless these many years! Thank God I’m sick with

      age

      and need not watch much longer this shameful travesty! We had here a king to be proud of once, a man as

      noble beside these pretenders

      as Zeus beside two billygoats!

      That king and his queen had a son, you think? He

      produced what seemed one—

      an arrogant, cowardly merchantry-swapper with no

      more devotion

      than a viper. The father’s throne was stolen—boldly,

      blatantly—

      his blood cried out of the earth, cried out of the beams

      and stones

      of the palace for revenge. The son raised never a finger.

      And the mother,

      poor Alkimede, my mistress once, was driven from her

      home

      to lodgings fit for a swineherd. There she lived with

      her boy,

      as long as he’d stay. It was none too long. For all her

      pleas,

      for all the great sobs welling from her heart, he must

      leave her helpless,

      friendless in a world where once she’d stood as high as any in Akhaia. ? shameless! Shame on shame he heaped on her: not on his own but in foul collusion with the very usurper who seized that throne, he must

      sail to the shores

      of barbarians, and must bear off with him on his mad

      expedition

      the finest of Akhaia’s lords! Few enough would return,

      he knew.

      O that he too had been drowned in the river with

      innocent Hylas,

      or fallen like Idmon to a maddened boar, or withered

      in Libya!

      She might have had then some comfort in death,

      though little before,

      wrapped in a winding-sheet wound by strangers,

      tumbled to her tomb

      like a penniless old farm woman. And Jason returned, joyful with his barbarous bride, and shamelessly joined

      the usurper,

      smiling on half of his father’s blood-soaked throne. See

      how

      he preaches justice and reason, preaches fidelity, trades on his great past deeds to avoid all present risks. “Do not rave,” he raves; “no shame can trouble our city. Prophesy wealth and wine! The past is obliterated! Tell us no more about crimes in the tents of our

      ancestors!

      Justice and reason, like tamed lions, have settled in

      Io
    lkos.”

      Where is his justice and reason? Where is his loudly

      bugled

      fidelity? The throne was stolen; stolen it remains. What of fidelity to fathers and mothers? What of

      fidelity

      to the dead in their winecupped graves?’

      “So the old shrew raged, shaking. Medeia, standing beside me, glared with eyes like ice. Softly, she said, ‘Who is this creature

      you allow to berate you in the streets?’ I touched her

      hand to calm her.

      “A woman who loved my mother,’ I said. Medeia was

      silent.

      It was not till another day she asked, ‘Is this accusation just, that Pelias stole your father’s throne?’ I thought, Everything is true in its time and place. But answered

      only:

      ‘I was young; my father was unsure of me. There were

      vague rumors …

      It was all a long, long time ago.’ But after that when I spoke in the assembly or debated plans with my

      fellow king,

      and Pelias had qualms, found reasons for doubt,

      objected, found cause

      for delay, she would watch him with tigress eyes.

      “Pelias, as his mind dimmed with the passing years, grew

      increasingly a burden.

      It’s a difficult thing to explain. He interfered with me

      less.

      He grew deaf as a post and nearly blind, his mind so

      enfeebled

      that in the end he relinquished all but a shadow of his

      former power.

      The trouble was, he seemed to imagine that both of us had abandoned the nuisance of government.

      Old-womanish, dim,

      he’d call me to his bedroom and beg from me stories of

      the Argonauts,

      or he’d tell me, as if we were shepherds with all

      afternoon to pass,

      tedious tales of his childhood. It proved no use to send his daughters instead, willing as they were—

      good-hearted, sheltered

      princesses with the brains of nits. It had to be me— myself or Akastos, and Akastos rarely came. I would

      stoop,

      absurd in my royal robes, by the old man’s bed, and

      listen,

      or pretend to listen, brooding in secret on Argos’ affairs. The drapes would be drawn, a whim of his daughters,

      as though he were

      some apple they hoped to preserve through the winter

      in a cool dark bin.

      He would stutter like a fond old grandmother, on and

      on. At times

      he’d recall with a start the prophecy, and he’d hastily

      offer

      his cringing act, lading on flattery, protesting his

      life-long

      love. His fingers, clinging to mine, gripped me like a

      monkey’s.

      His daughters would listen, drooping like flowers from

      slender stalks,

      and whenever they spoke it was tearfully, with a kind of

      idiot

      gratitude for the affection I showed their belovèd father. At last he’d sleep; I’d be free to leave the place.

      “I’d go to the wing of the palace I kept with Medeia and the

      children; I’d pass

      in silence among our slaves, and my heart was sullen

      with suspicion.

      Surely, I thought, they must mock me. Jason in his

      kingly robes,

      shouldered like a bull, gray eyes rolling as he sits, polite

      as a cranky old shepherd’s serving boy, by the bed of

      Pelias,

      hanging on stammered-out words. O shameless coward

      indeed!

      I would stand alone at the balustrade of marble, glare

      out

      at the sea, Orion hanging low, contemptuous.

      I was not a coward, I knew well enough,

      and it ought not to matter what others supposed.

      I governed well—no man denied it. If I wasted time on a fusty, repulsive old man, I had excellent reasons

      for it.

      I was no Herakles pummelling the seasons with passionate, mindless fists. Oh, I could admire the

      crone

      who cackled in the streets, full of rage and scorn, her loves and hates as forthright as boulders in the

      grass. No doubt

      she would, in my place, have struck down Pelias at the

      first suspicion,

      as would Herakles; or failing that, she’d have schemed

      and plotted—

      would never have seemed to accept, as I did, his right

      to the throne,

      or half of it. She’d have schemed and slaughtered,

      maintained the honor

      of Iolkos’ noble dead, whatever the cost to the living— bloodshed of factions, houses in furor, families divided, chaos for ages to come. I had no doubt that the course I’d chosen was best, my seemingly shameful

      compromise.

      Absolute passion, absolute glory, was for gods, not men. I could claim the status of a demigod, but the future

      was not

      with them.

      “Yet glaring out toward sea, resolved on a course no man of sense could conceivably mock,

      I was filled with a dangerous weariness.

      More real than the seven-story fall

      that gaped below me, more sharp to my sense than the

      quartz-domed tomb

      of Alkimede on its high hill north of the temple of Hera, or the figure of Medeia at my back, as heavy as bronze

      with anger—

      visions of flight would snatch my mind—the Argo’s

      prow

      bobbing like the head of a galloping horse, half

      smothered in foam,

      dark shapes looming out of fire-green water, then

      vanishing—

      the wandering rocks.

      “I was protected once by an old Kelt, sired by a bear on a moon-priestess, or so he claimed.

      We talked, in his shadowy hall, of freedom. His boy

      sat hunched

      by the hearthstone, listening, watching with eyes like a

      cat’s. From the beams

      of the old king’s walls hung the heads of his vanquished

      enemies,

      and above the fire, nailed firmly to the slats, hung the

      leathern arm

      of a giant. He said: ‘I see no freedom in peace and

      justice.

      I see no meaning in freedom that leaves some part of

      my soul

      in chains. I grant, it’s a noble ideal, this thing you

      purpose—

      a state well governed, where no man tromps on another

      man’s heel,

      the oppressed are aided, the orphan and the widow win

      justice in the courts,

      and each man holds to his place fox the benefit of all.

      But I’d lose

      my wind in a state so noble. I’d develop maladies— mysterious, elusive, beyond any doctor’s skill. Like a bat in a cage, I’d wither, for no clear reason, and die.’ The

      boy

      at the hearthstone smiled, sharp-eyed, heart teeming

      with thought. The king

      with mild blue eyes—cheeks painted, startling on that

      dignified face—

      shook his head slowly, amused. ‘You speak to me of

      gentle apes

      in Africa and claim their kinship. Let Argus advise us, who’d studied the world’s mechanics for most of a

      century.

      Is that indeed our line?—In this colder land we say mankind is a child of the cat, old source of our

      crankiness,

      our peculiar solitude—for though we may sometimes

      hunt in packs,

      and share the kill, if necessary, we have never hunted like brotherly wolves or bears.’ He smiled.

      ‘By an
    other legend, the gods made man from the skull

      of a rat,

      that grim and deeply philosophical scavenger who picks,

      light-footed,

      perilously cunning, through houses of the dead, spreads

      corpses’ sickness

      to all he meets, yet survives himself and laughs at

      carnage

      and takes bright trinkets from the slaughtered.

      “ ‘Be that as it may—‘ The king glanced over at his boy.’—If my

      blood’s essence

      is not the gentleness and wisdom of Zeus but, whatever

      the reason,

      has murder in it, as well as devotion and trust like

      a boy’s,

      then freedom is not for me what it is for Zeus. The

      freedom

      of the eyes is to see and the ear to hear; the freedom

      of the soul

      is to love and defend one’s friends, assert one’s power,

      behead

      one’s enemies, poison their streams.’ He smiled. ‘My

      words appall you.

      But come! It was not I who proclaimed the supreme

      value

      of liberty. I might well admire the state you dream of, where nature’s law is replaced by peace and justice—

      though I would not

      visit the place. But do not mistake these noble goods for freedom.’ He reached his hand to my knee and

      smiled again.

      Your course will no doubt prosper, Jason. Your

      philosophy has

      a ring to it, a nobility of glitter that can hardly fail to appeal to the collector rat. Ten thousand years from

      now

      men will look back to the Akhaians with pious

      admiration, and to us,

      the treacherous Kelts, as bestial and superstitious,

      to whom

      good riddance. And they may have a point, I grant. And

      yet you’ll not

      outlast us, lover of mind. From age to age, while your spires shake in the battery of the sun, we, living

      underground,

      will gnaw the animal heart, doing business as usual.’ I turned to the boy, a child with the gentleness of

      Hylas. I’d heard

      him sing, and his voice was sweeter than dawn in a

      wheat-filled valley.

      The severed heads of enemies hanging on the hall’s dark

      beams

      shed tears at his song, and the greatest of harpers,

      Orpheus himself,

      was silenced by the music’s spell. “You, too, believe all

      this?’

      I asked and smiled. For the Kelts were friends; I was

      not such a fool

      as to hope to convert their mysterious hearts and brains

      by Akhaian

      reasoning. The boy said shyly, How can I doubt what I’ve heard from the cradle up? This much at least

      seems true

      for both of you: You’d gladly fight to the death for

     


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