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V.
THE ARGO
HE
heroes went the next day through the streets of Iolcus down to where the ship
lay. The ways they went through were crowded; the heroes were splendid in their
appearance, and Jason amongst them shone like a star. The people praised him, and one told the other that it would not be long until they would win back to Iolcus, for this band of heroes was strong enough, they said, to take King Æetes’s city and force him to give up to them the famous Fleece of Gold. Many of the bright-eyed youths of Iolcus went with the heroes who had come from the different parts of Greece. As
they marched past a temple a priestess came forth to speak to Jason; Iphias was
her name. She had a prophecy to utter about the voyage. But Iphias was very
old, and she stammered in her speech to Jason. What she said was not heard by
him. The heroes went on, and ancient Iphias was left standing there as the old
are left by the young. The
heroes went aboard the Argo. They took their seats as at an assembly. Then
Jason faced them and spoke to them all. “Heroes
of the quest,” said Jason, “we have come aboard the great ship that Argus has
built, and all that a ship needs is in its place or is ready to our hands. All
that we wait for now is the coming of the morning’s breeze that will set us on
our way for far Colchis. “One
thing we have first to do — that is, to choose a leader who will direct us all,
one who will settle disputes amongst ourselves and who will make treaties
between us and the strangers that we come amongst. We must choose such a leader
now.” Jason
spoke, and some looked to him and some looked to Heracles. But Heracles stood
up, and, stretching out his hand, said: “Argonauts!
Let no one amongst you offer the leadership to me. I will not take it. The hero
who brought us together and made all things ready for our going — it is he and
no one else who should be our leader in this voyage.” So
Heracles said, and the Argonauts all stood up and raised a cry for Jason. Then
Jason stepped forward, and he took the hand of each Argonaut in his hand, and
he swore that he would lead them with all the mind and all the courage that he
possessed. And he prayed the gods that it would be given to him to lead them
back safely with the Golden Fleece glittering on the mast of the Argo. They
drew lots for the benches they would sit at; they took the places that for the
length of the voyage they would have on the ship. They made sacrifice to the
gods and they waited for the breeze of the morning that would help them away
from Iolcus. And
while they waited Æson, the father of Jason, sat at his own hearth, bowed and
silent in his grief. Alcimide, his wife, sat near him, but she was not silent;
she lamented to the women of Iolcus who were gathered around her. “I did not go
down to the ship,” she said, “for with my grief I would not be a bird of ill
omen for the voyage. By this hearth my son took farewell of me — the only son I
ever bore. From the doorway I watched him go down the street of the city, and I
heard the people shout as he went amongst them, they glorying in my son’s
splendid appearance. Ah, that I might live to see his return and to hear the
shout that will go up when the people look on Jason again! But I know that my
life will not be spared so long; I will not look on my son when he comes back
from the dangers he will run in the quest of the Golden Fleece.” Then
the women of Iolcus asked her to tell them of the Golden Fleece, and Alcimide
told them of it and of the sorrows that were upon the race of Æolus. Cretheus,
the father of Æson and Pelias, was of the race of Æolus, and of the race of
Æolus, too, was Athamas, the king who ruled in Thebes at the same time that
Cretheus ruled in Iolcus. And the first children of Athamas were Phrixus and
Helle. “Ah,
Phrixus and ah, Helle,” Alcimide lamented, “what griefs you have brought on the
race of Æolus! And what griefs you yourselves suffered! The evil that Athamas,
your father, did you lives to be a curse to the line of Æolus! “Athamas
was wedded first to Nephele, the mother of Phrixus and Helle, the youth and
maiden. But Athamas married again while the mother of these children was still
living, and Ino, the new queen, drove Nephele and her children out of the
king’s palace. “And
now was Nephele most unhappy. She had to live as a servant, and her children
were servants to the servants of the palace. They were clad in rags and had
little to eat, and they were beaten often by the servants who wished to win the
favor of the new queen. “But
although they wore rags and had menial tasks to do, Phrixus and Helle looked
the children of a queen. The boy was tall, and in his eyes there often came the
flash of power, and the girl looked as if she would grow into a lovely maiden.
And when Athamas, their father, would meet them by chance he would sigh, and
Queen Ino would know by that sigh that he had still some love for them in his
heart. Afterward she would have to use all the power she possessed to win the
king back from thinking upon his children. “And
now Queen Ino had children of her own. She knew that the people reverenced the
children of Nephele and cared nothing for her children. And because she knew
this she feared that when Athamas died Phrixus and Helle, the children of
Nephele, would be brought to rule in Thebes. Then she and her children would be
made to change places with them. “This
made Queen Ino think on ways by which she could make Phrixus and Helle lose
their lives. She thought long upon this, and at last a desperate plan came into
her mind. “When
it was winter she went amongst the women of the countryside, and she gave them
jewels and clothes for presents. Then she asked them to do secretly an
unheard-of thing. She asked the women to roast over their fires the grains that
had been left for seed. This the women did. Then spring came on, and the men
sowed in the fields the grain that had been roasted over the fires. No shoots
grew up as the spring went by. In summer there was no waving greenness in the
fields. Autumn came, and there was no grain for the reaping. Then the men, not
knowing what had happened, went to King Athamas and told him that there would
be famine in the land. “The
king sent to the temple of Artemis to ask how the people might be saved from
the famine. And the guardians of the temple, having taken gold from Queen Ino,
told them that there would be worse and worse famine and that all the people of
Thebes would die of hunger unless the king was willing to make a great
sacrifice. “When
the king asked what sacrifice he should make he was told by the guardians of
the temple that he must sacrifice to the goddess his two children, Phrixus and
Helle. Those who were around the king, to save themselves from famine after
famine, clamored to have the children sacrificed. Athamas, to save his people,
consented to the sacrifice. “They
went toward the king’s palace. They found Helle by the bank of the river
washing clothes. They took her and bound her. They found Phrixus, half naked,
digging in a field, and they took him, too, and bound him. That night they left
brother and sister in the same prison. Helle wept over Phrixus, and Phrixus
wept to think that he was not able to do anything to save his sister. “The
servants of the palace went to Nephele, and they mocked at her, telling her
that her children would be sacrificed on the morrow. Nephele nearly went wild
in her grief. And then, suddenly, there came into her mind the thought of a
creature that might be a helper to her and to her children. “This
creature was a ram that had wings and a wonderful fleece of gold. The god of
the sea, Poseidon, had sent this wonderful ram to Athamas and Nephele as a
marriage gift. And the ram had since been kept in a special fold. “To
that fold Nephele went. She spent the night beside the ram praying for its
help. The morning came and the children were taken from their prison and dressed
in white, and wreaths were put upon their heads to mark them as things for
sacrifice. They were led in a procession to the temple of Artemis. Behind that
procession King Athamas walked, his head bowed in shame. “But
Queen Ino’s head was not bowed; rather she carried it high, for her thought was
all upon her triumph. Soon Phrixus and Helle would be dead, and then, whatever
happened, her own children would reign after Athamas in Thebes. “Phrixus
and Helle, thinking they were taking their last look at the sun, went on. And
even then Nephele, holding the horns of the golden ram, was making her last
prayer. The sun rose and as it did the ram spread out its great wings and flew
through the air. It flew to the temple of Artemis. Down beside the altar came
the golden ram, and it stood with its horns threatening those who came. All
stopped in surprise. Still the ram stood with threatening head and great
golden wings spread out. Then Phrixus ran from those who were holding him and
laid his hands upon the ram. He called to Helle and she, too, came to the
golden creature. Phrixus mounted on the ram and he pulled Helle up beside him.
Then the golden ram flew upward. Up, up, it went, and with the children upon
its back it became like a star in the day-lit sky. “Then
Queen Ino, seeing the children saved by the golden ram, shrieked and fled away
from that place. Athamas ran after her. As she ran and as he followed hatred
for her grew up within him. Ino ran on and on until she came to the cliffs that
rose over the sea. Fearing Athamas who came behind her she plunged down.
But as she fell she was changed by Poseidon, the god of the sea. She became a
seagull. Athamas, who followed her, was changed also; he became the sea eagle
that, with beak and talons ever ready to strike, flies above the sea. “And the
golden ram with wings outspread flew on and on. Over the sea it flew while the
wind whistled around the children. On and on they went, and the children saw
only the blue sea beneath them. Then poor Helle, looking downward, grew dizzy.
She fell off the golden ram before her brother could take hold of her. Down she
fell, and still the ram flew on and on. She was drowned in that sea. The people
afterward named it in memory of her, calling it ‘Hellespont’ — Helle’s Sea.’ “On and on the ram flew. Over a wild and barren country it flew and toward a river. Upon that river a white city was built. Down the ram flew, and alighting on the ground, stood before the gate of that city. It was the city of Aea, in the land of Colchis. “The king
was in the street of the city, and he joined with the crowd that gathered
around the strange golden creature that had a youth upon its back. The ram
folded its wings and then the youth stood beside it. He spoke to the people,
and then the king — Æetes was his name — spoke to him, asking him from what
place he had come, and what was the strange creature upon whose back he had
flown. “To the
king and to the people Phrixus told his story, weeping to tell of Helle and her
fall. Then King Æetes brought him into the city, and he gave him a place in the
palace, and for the golden ram he had a special fold made. “Soon
after the ram died, and then King Æetes took its golden fleece and hung it upon
an oak tree that was in a place dedicated to Ares, the god of war. Phrixus wed
one of the daughters of the king, and men say that afterward he went back to
Thebes, his own land. “And as
for the Golden Fleece it became the greatest of King Æetes’s treasures. Well
indeed does he guard it, and not with armed men only, but with magic powers.
Very strong and very cunning is King Æetes, and a terrible task awaits those
who would take away from him that Fleece of Gold.” So
Alcimide spoke, sorrowfully telling to the women the story of the Golden Fleece
that her son Jason was going in quest of. So she spoke, and the night waned,
and the morning of the sailing of the Argo came on. And when
the Argonauts beheld the dawn upon the high peaks of Pelion they arose and
poured out wine in offering to Zeus, the highest of the gods. Then Argo herself
gave forth a strange cry, for the beam from Dodona that had been formed into
her prow had endued her with life. She uttered a strange cry, and as she did
the heroes took their places at the benches, one after the other, as had been
arranged by lot, and Tiphys, the helmsman, went to the steering place. To the
sound of Orpheus’s lyre they smote with oars the rushing sea water, and the
surge broke over the oar blades. The sails were let out and the breeze came
into them, piping shrilly, and the fishes came darting through the green sea,
great and small, and followed them, gamboling along the watery paths. And
Chiron, the king-centaur, came down from the Mountain Pelion, and standing with
his feet in the foam cried out, “ Good speed, O Argonauts, good speed, and a
sorrow-less return.” Orpheus
sang to his lyre, Orpheus the minstrel, who knew the ways and the stories of
the gods; out in the open sea on the first morning of the voyage Orpheus sang
to them of the beginning of things. He sang
how at first Earth and Heaven and Sea were all mixed and mingled together.
There was neither Light nor Darkness then, but only a Dimness. This was Chaos.
And from Chaos came forth Night and Erebus. From Night was born Æther, the
Upper Air, and from Night and Erebus wedded there was born Day. And out of
Chaos came Earth, and out of Earth came the starry Heaven. And from Heaven and
Earth wedded there were born the Titan gods and goddesses — Oceanus, Coeus,
Crius, Hyperion, Iapetus; Theia, Rhea, Themis, Mnemosyne, gold-crowned Phoebe,
and lovely Tethys. And then Heaven and Earth had for their child Cronos, the
most cunning of all. Cronos
wedded Rhea, and from Cronos and Rhea were born the gods who were different
from the Titan gods. But Heaven
and Earth had other children — Cottus, Briareus, and Gyes. These were giants,
each with fifty heads and a hundred arms. And Heaven grew fearful when he
looked on these giant children, and he hid them away in the deep places of the
Earth. Cronos hated
Heaven, his father. He drove Heaven, his father, and Earth, his mother, far
apart. And far apart they stay, for they have never been able to come near each
other since. And Cronos married to Rhea had for children Hestia, Demeter, Hera,
Aidoneus, and Poseidon, and these all belonged to the company of the deathless
gods. Cronos was fearful that one of his sons would treat him as he had treated
Heaven, his father. So when another child was born to him and his wife Rhea he
commanded that the child be given to him so that he might swallow him. But Rhea
wrapped a great stone in swaddling clothes and gave the stone to Cronos. And
Cronos swallowed the stone, thinking to swallow his latest-born child. That child
was Zeus. Earth took Zeus and hid him in a deep cave and those who minded and
nursed the child beat upon drums so that his cries might not be heard. His
nurse was Adrastia; when he was able to play she gave him a ball to play with.
All of gold was the ball, with a dark-blue spiral around it. When the boy Zeus
would play with this ball it would make a track across the sky, flaming like a
star. Hyperion
the Titan god wed Theia the Titan goddess, and their children were Helios, the
bright Sun, and Selene, the clear Moon. And Coeus wed Phoebe, and their children
were Leto, who is kind to gods and men, and Asteria of happy name, and Hecate,
whom Zeus honored above all. Now the gods who were the children of Cronos and
Rhea went up unto the Mountain Olympus, and there they built their shining
palaces. But the Titan gods who were born of Heaven and Earth went up to the
Mountain Othrys, and there they had their thrones. Between
the Olympians and the Titan gods of Othrys a war began. Neither side might
prevail against the other. But now Zeus, grown up to be a youth, thought of how
he might help the Olympians to overthrow the Titan gods. He went
down into the deep parts of the Earth where the giants Cottus, Briareus, and
Gyes had been hidden by their father. Cronos had bound them, weighing them down
with chains. But now Zeus loosed them and the hundred-armed giants in their
gratitude gave him the lightning and showed him how to use the thunderbolt. Zeus would
have the giants fight against the Titan gods. But although they had mighty
strength Cottus, Briareus, and Gyes had no fire of courage in their hearts.
Zeus thought of a way to give them this courage; he brought the food and drink
of the gods to them, ambrosia and nectar, and when they had eaten and drunk
their spirits grew within the giants, and they were ready to make war upon the
Titan gods. “Sons of
Earth and Heaven,” said Zeus to the hundred-armed giants, “a long time now have
the Dwellers on Olympus been striving with the Titan gods. Do you lend your
unconquerable might to the gods and help them to overthrow the Titans.” Cottus,
the eldest of the giants, answered, “Divine One, through your devising we are
come back again from the murky gloom of the mid Earth and we have escaped from
the hard bonds that Cronus laid upon us. Our minds are fixed to aid you in the
war against the Titan gods.” So the
hundred-armed giants said, and thereupon Zeus went and he gathered around him
all who were born of Cronos and Rhea. Cronos himself hid from Zeus. Then the
giants, with their fifty heads growing from their shoulders and their hundred
hands, went forth against the Titan gods. The boundless sea rang terribly and
the earth crashed loudly; wide Heaven was shaken and groaned, and high Olympus
reeled from its foundation. Holding huge rocks in their hands the giants
attacked the Titan gods. Then Zeus
entered the war. He hurled the lightning; the bolts flew thick and fast from
his strong hand, with thunder and lightning and flame. The earth crashed around
in burning, the forests crackled with fire, the ocean seethed. And hot flames
wrapped the earth-born Titans all around. Three hundred rocks, one upon
another, did Cottus, Briareus, and Gyes hurl upon the Titans. And when their
ranks were broken the giants seized upon them and held them for Zeus. But some
of the Titan gods, seeing that the strife for them was vain, went over to the
side of Zeus. These Zeus became friendly with. But the other Titans he bound in
chains and he hurled them down to Tartarus. As far as
Earth is from Heaven so is Tartarus from Earth. A brazen anvil falling down
from Heaven to Earth nine days and nine nights would reach the earth upon the
tenth day. And again, a brazen anvil falling from Earth nine nights and nine
days would reach Tartarus upon the tenth night. Around Tartarus runs a fence of
bronze and Night spreads in a triple line all about it, as a necklace circles
the neck. There Zeus imprisoned the Titan gods who had fought against him; they
are hidden in the misty gloom, in a dank place, at the ends of the Earth. And
they may not go out, for Poseidon fixed gates of bronze upon their prison, and
a wall runs all round it. There Cottus, Briareus, and Gyes stay, guarding them.
And there,
too, is the home of Night. Night and Day meet each other at that place, as they
pass a threshold of bronze. They draw near and they greet one another, but the
house never holds them both together, for while one is about to go down into
the house, the other is leaving through the door. One holds Light in her hand
and the other holds in her arms Sleep. There the
children of dark Night have their dwellings — Sleep, and Death, his brother.
The sun never shines upon these two. Sleep may roam over the wide earth, and
come upon the sea, and he is kindly to men. But Death is not kindly, and
whoever he seizes upon, him he holds fast. There,
too, stands the hall of the lord of the Underworld, Aidoneus, the brother of
Zeus. Zeus gave him the Underworld to be his dominion when he shared amongst
the Olympians the world that Cronos had ruled over. A fearful hound guards the
hall of Aidoneus: Cerberus he is called; he has three heads. On those who go
within that hall Cerberus fawns, but on those who would come out of it he
springs and would devour them. Not all
the Titans did Zeus send down to Tartarus. Those of them who had wisdom joined
him, and by their wisdom Zeus was able to overcome Cronos. Then Cronos went to
live with the friendly Titan gods, while Zeus reigned over Olympus, becoming
the ruler of gods and men. So Orpheus
sang, Orpheus who knew the ways and the histories of the gods. |