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    Jason and Medeia

    Page 47
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      Medeia said, as if drained of emotion—the tears

      on her cheeks

      independent of her mind and heart, mechanical as

      stars turning—

      “Go to her, one of you. Tell her I repent. My war is not with women, sad fellow-sufferers.” She closed her eyes. “Do not think I don’t love that old woman. I have

      dealt with her

      more gently than I can with those I love far more.”

      And then,

      suddenly whispering in panic and squeezing her

      blue-white hands:

      “Suppose them slain. What city will receive me? what

      friend give refuge?

      None. So I still must wait, for a time, conjure some

      tower

      of defense. That too I can manage, yes. By the goddess

      Hekate,

      first and last friend welcome to my hearth, not one

      will escape me.

      Your new tie, husband—my soul’s grim fire, familiar

      heartache—

      you’ll find more bitter than the last. You’ve proved

      your cruelty.

      Prepare for mine! You’ll ere long find your sweet

      bedfellow

      a lady Hades himself might prove reluctant to fold in his arms. So I pay you for mocking derision of a princess born

      of the mightiest king on earth, a child of the sun-god’s

      race!”

      Then she left them, fleeing to her room to put on

      dry clothes,

      preparing in outer appearance for a secret and

      deadly role.

      The sewing women took up the golden cloth once more, their hearts quaking, too sick with sorrow and fear

      to speak.

      Their needles raced, in the corner Hekate in a long

      black shawl,

      sly-eyed and heavy, whiskered like a peasant,

      and each whipstitch she sewed would prove a shackle

      for the bride

      who smiled now, gazing in her mirror, in Kreon’s palace.

      The shadow

      of Hekate, rocking on the wall, became a second ghost, the black, horned god himself in the service of Medeia.

      When Jason learned, by questions to the slave Ipnolebes, what Kreon

      had done,

      he was filled with alarm—no less by the spiteful

      gloating the slave

      could scarcely hide than by knowledge of his wife.

      But he bided his time,

      watching the fiery rain, apprehensive, knowing

      well enough

      that the weather bore some message in it. He knew

      beyond doubt

      he was caught up now in a race against time. He could

      hardly guess

      in which direction the danger lay, couldn’t even be sure how grave it was; but he knew he must be in command

      when she struck—

      or best, get control before she struck—must stand

      in position

      to counter her, issue commands to protect them all.

      Yet he could not press; he dared not even suggest that

      the sceptre be granted to him

      for fear that even now the king might repent and everything be lost. He remained with Pyripta,

      smiling like a bridegroom,

      stroking her cheeks and throat, lightly kissing her

      eyelids, feigning

      the adoration he must wait for a calmer time to feel.

      The princess talked, pouring her pleasure in her new

      husband’s ear—

      talked as she never had talked before, and sometimes

      broke off

      to laugh at her chatter, yet believed his assurance and

      chattered still more.

      She had not known how much she loved him. With a

      frightened look

      she asked of his life with Medeia. He smiled and gently

      kissed her,

      silencing her. “You demand too much,” he said lightly,

      his mind

      racing down other, far darker lanes. “We have sons,”

      he said.

      “You must understand …” But catching the anger

      and jealousy flashing

      in her glance, he swiftly and easily guided her

      elsewhere. I watched,

      protected by a mist from their seeing me, and my heart

      was divided,

      loyal to the woman on the hill below, yet to Jason too, for he meant no harm, only good for them all, though

      all he was doing

      was false and tragically harmful. Again and again I felt on the verge of speaking to warn him, but each time

      fear kept me silent.

      The new solidity the gods had given was no great

      advantage,

      I knew to my sorrow. It seemed unlikely that empty

      shadows

      could harm me, or dreams turn real. Yet how could I

      doubt those bruises,

      that stabbing pain in my poor right hand, or my

      spectacles’ ruin?

      I constructed theories. Haven’t there been cases, I said

      to myself,

      when men fell down stairs while sleep-walking, and with

      broken backs

      dreamed on, explaining the pain by imagined giants?

      And might

      some action of mine inside this dream not trigger

      repercussions

      wherever it is that I really am? So I labored, guessing, and what was true I had no way of knowing, the rules

      of the vision

      kept hidden from me, however I strained to grasp them,

      sweating,

      and I kept my cowardly silence despite all nobler urges, huddling in protective mist.

      At noon, at the midday feast, his waiting ended. In the presence of kings, high priests

      in attendance,

      the goddesses Hera and Athena behind him

      (I alone saw them—

      their look triumphant and wary at once, Aphrodite

      glaring,

      furious at Jason for the love he feigned, scornful of

      her power),

      Kreon—with an endless rambling speech—allusions

      to Oidipus,

      Jokasta, Antigone—transferred his sceptre and power

      to Jason.

      Great lords of Corinth unfastened the cloak from the

      old king’s shoulders

      and draped it on Aison’s son, its wide flow covering

      the cape

      Argus had made at Lemnos. Attended by lords, he took the central chair on the dais. His kingship was ratified

      by vows

      to Zeus and Hera and the chief gods of the pantheon, such vows as no man on earth would break. And high

      in the rain

      some saw Zeus’s eagle, they thought, though others

      thought not.

      The assembled kings, his equals, came to him,

      confirming alliances

      promised to Kreon in the past, and one by one they

      bowed to him,

      taking his hands, and bowed to Pyripta beside him,

      his queen.

      Again there were drums and trumpets, and slaves

      poured wine.

      And then a thing so strange took place that no one felt certain,

      afterward,

      whether it had happened or not. All in gold, the Asian,

      Koprophoros,

      stood before Jason, solemn. He bowed to the ground

      in the fashion

      of the Orient, then bowed to Pyripta in the same manner. When he spoke, his voice was as deep and soft as the

      slow thundering

      of far-off rainclouds, a voice so changed I was filled

      with alarm.

      “So the game is ended at last, good prince,” he said,

      and smiled.

      “All you were robbed of in life, you have now back in

     
    hand, though opposed

      by more than you dreamed.” He turned to the kings

      around him. “Let men

      report it to the world’s last age that once, in a palace

      called Akhaia,

      a man, by cunning and tenacity, out-fought the gods

      of the Underworld for a city and princess, though the

      gods of Death

      were granted their prey in advance by fate. Yet lose

      they did,

      for the moment, playing too lightly—as the mighty will

      do sometimes.

      But fate, after all, is inexorable, whatever man’s power. The dagger blade has already cut deep in the

      shimmering veil;

      the dream is nearly done. Fear now no god, Jason. Fear things human, and infinitely more terrible. He smiled his scarcely perceptible smile. “If my words

      seem strange,

      ponder them after I’m gone. And so, good-day.”

      With that

      he tapped the stone floor lightly with his foot. In a flash,

      where he’d stood

      there loomed an enormous serpent whose wedge-shaped

      head struck the roof

      and whose coils were thicker than an ancient oak—

      a female serpent

      obscenely bloated with eggs; and I thought of Harmonia, noblest of queens, transformed by the Master of

      Life and Death

      to Queen of the Dead. She vanished.

      While the hall still stared, dumbfounded, Paidoboron bowed to the throne. His words were stern

      and brief:

      “Now all escape is sealed.” And immediately he, too,

      vanished,

      and there in his place stood a dragon who filled all the

      palace with fire,

      and his scales were like plates of steel. Each nail on

      his saurian claws

      was longer than a man, and his two bright fangs were

      massive stalactites,

      children of the world’s first cave. Then the dragon too

      was gone.

      Kreon, pale as a sea-ghost, clutched at his chest,

      shaking,

      and even Jason was trembling. The nobles around him

      swore

      it was Hades himself he’d contended with, or his

      surrogate, Kadmos,

      man-god ruler of the dead. They swore that Death

      and his wife

      had come for their sport and had made long-winded

      mockery

      of Kreon’s fears and Jason’s desires and the hopes of

      the sea-kings,

      the whole fierce struggle a sardonic joke. The princess

      suddenly

      cried out, waking from a vision. But at once, though

      his throat was working

      and dark blood rushing to his face, the son of Aison

      seized

      his new bride’s hand and calmed her. When his tongue

      would work, he said,

      “Don’t be afraid! I swear all this terror will prove

      some trick

      of Medeia’s. If not, you’ve heard what the two ghosts

      say: The gods

      have retired from the conflict. It’s now no more than

      mere human craft

      we must guard against. —Yet I’m certain it’s only as

      I said at first,

      some heartless illusion by Medeia, designed to

      terrify us.”

      At once they believed him, for surely the gods play

      no tricks so base,

      not even the gods of the Underworld. So they told

      themselves,

      and so, little by little, their calm was restored.

      His thick fear

      hidden in the deepest, darkest of abditoriums,

      Jason spoke lightly, driving out shadows as, long ago, he’d lightened the hearts of the Argonauts when hope

      seemed madness.

      He praised King Kreon’s long wise rule and swore

      to uphold

      his principles, and praised his visitors and vassals.

      Of those things

      nearest his heart—Idas in the dungeon, his own wife

      and children

      banished—he spoke not a syllable, biding his time.

      His eyes

      moved, as he spoke, from rafter to rafter through

      Kreon’s hall,

      secretly watching omens, a silent invasion: ravens.

      23

      Dressed exactly as he always dressed, not in regal array but hooded and wrapped against rain—for it still fell

      fierce and fiery—

      Jason went down, alone, to the vine-hung house where

      Medeia

      and the Corinthian women sewed. He rang the great

      brass ring

      and waited, restless but patient. At last the male slave

      came

      and, seeing his master, said he would bring out Medeia.

      He returned

      to the house, and after a time the princess of Aia

      came out.

      She stood in the shelter of the rainwashed eaves, and

      he called to her

      and asked her to unlock the high, wide gate.

      Medeia said only,

      “Speak from there.” He seized the bars of the

      small window

      in the gate and called, “You prove once more what

      I should have remembered:

      a stubborn disposition’s incurable. A home here

      in Corinth

      you might have yet if only you’d endure old Kreon’s will with at least some show of meekness. But no, you

      must hurl wild words.

      So you’re banished—thrown out of Corinth as a

      dangerous madwoman.

      And rightly, no doubt. Not that I too much care,

      for myself.

      Rail all you please at vilest Jason. Often as the old man’s fear of you rose, I struggled to check it.

      I would have had

      you stay. But still in your obstinate folly you must

      curse and revile

      the royal house; so it’s banishment for you—and lucky

      no worse.

      But despite all that, more faithful than you think,

      I’ve prevailed so far

      as to see that you’ll not lack gold or anything else

      in exile.

      Hardships enough you’ll suffer with your sons. So for

      all your hatred,

      take what I give you, Medeia.”

      When first he began to speak she listened with anger locked in, as if, despite her fury, she intended to answer with restraint; but as Jason

      continued, speaking

      of Kreon as king (I realized now with a shock that

      she knew

      all that happened in the palace, informed by

      black-winged spies),

      her fury broke from its prison. She screamed,

      “O vile, vile, vilest!

      Rail I may well! Do you come to me—to me, Jason? This is no mere self-assurance, no manly hardihood. It’s shamelessness! And yet I’m glad you’ve come,

      husband.

      I do have one joy left, and that’s berating you.

      As all Akhaia knows, I saved your life. I helped you tame those fiery bulls and sow that dangerous tilth. The snake wreathed coil on coil around that

      cursèd fleece

      I put to sleep for you. I fled my father and home, arranged my brother’s death and later King Pelias’ death, at his own children’s hands. Such deeds I’ve done

      for you,

      and yet you trade me away like a worn-out cow for

      a heifer,

      though I bore you sons. If you’d still been childless,

      I might perhaps

      have pardoned your wish for a second wife.

      But now farewell

      all faith—for this you know in your soul: You swore

     
    ; me oaths.

      “Come, let me ask you questions as I would a friend.

      Where should

      I turn? To my father’s house? To Aia? You know

      well enough

      how they love me there—kinsmen I betrayed for you.

      Shall I go

      to the Peliad sisters? Perhaps we can all have a good

      laugh now

      at that monstrous birthday party. You see how it is:

      by those

      who loved me at home I am now hated; and those

      who least

      deserved my wrath, I have turned to foes—for you.”

      He listened, hands on the gatebars, his head bent. When her

      rantings ceased,

      he said—not troubling to shout against the rain—

      “Again and again

      you’ve preached all that, and again and again I’ve

      allowed it to pass,

      though surely it’s true that I need thank no one but

      the goddess of love

      for the services you mention. But let that be; I find no fault with your devotion. And as for the marriage

      you hate,

      I say again what I’ve said before: with calm dispassion I made that choice, and partly for you and my sons.

      No, hear me!

      Not out of loathing for your bed, Medeia (the thought

      that galls you)

      and not through lust for a new bride or for numerous

      offspring—

      with the sons you’ve borne me I’m well content—

      but for this alone

      I’ve made my choice: to win for my family, my sons

      and you,

      such safety and comfort as only a king can be sure of.

      My plan

      is wise enough; you’d admit it if it weren’t for your

      jealousy.

      “But why do I waste my words on you? When

      nothing mars

      your love, you imagine you’re queen of the planet.

      But if some slight shadow

      clouds your happiness, the best and fairest of lots

      seems hateful,

      and the finest of houses a shanty in a field

      of thorntrees.”

      At this Medeia grew angrier still, tied hand and foot

      by arguments,

      as usual, and straining against the injustice like

      a penned-

      up bull. I could have told her the futility of trying

      to fight

      by Jason’s rules; but they looked—both of them—

      so dangerous,

      and the surrounding storm was so violent, such a

      fiery menace,

      I kept to my safe hiding place in the dark, thick vines. She said: “If you were not vile, as I’ve claimed—

      if all these things

      you say to me weren’t shameless lies—you’d have asked

      straight out for consent

      to your plan, not slyly deceived me.”

      He laughed. “No doubt you’d have helped me nobly, since even now your

     


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