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II. MEDEA
THE SORCERESS
HE
turned
away from her father’s eyes and she went into her own chamber. For a
long time
she stood there with her hands clasped together. She heard the voice of
Chalciope lamenting because Æetes had taken a hatred to her sons and
might strive
to destroy them. She heard the voice of her sister lamenting, but Medea
thought
that the cause that her sister had for grieving was small compared with
the
cause that she herself had.
She
thought on the moment when she had seen Jason for the first time — in
the
courtyard as the mist lifted and the dove flew to her; she thought of
him as he
lifted those bright eyes of his; then she thought of his voice as he
spoke
after her father had imposed the dreadful trial upon him. She would
have liked
then to have cried out to him, “O youth, if others rejoice at the doom
that you
go to, I do not rejoice.” Still her
sister lamented. But how great was her own grief compared to her
sister’s! For
Chalciope could try to help her sons and could lament for the danger
they were
in and no one would blame her. But she might not strive to help Jason
nor might
she lament for the danger he was in. How terrible it would be for a
maiden to
help a stranger against her father’s design! How terrible it would be
for a
woman of Colchis to help a stranger against the will of the king! How
terrible
it would be for a daughter to plot against King Æetes in his own
palace! And then
Medea hated Aea, her city. She hated the furious people who came
together in
the assembly, and she hated the brazen bulls that Hephæstus had given
her
father. And then she thought that there was nothing in Aea except the
furious
people and the fire-breathing bulls. O how pitiful it was that the
strange hero
and his friends should have come to such a place for the sake of the
Golden
Fleece that was watched over by the sleepless serpent in the grove of
Ares! Still
Chalciope lamented. Would Chalciope come to her and ask her, Medea, to
help her
sons? If she should come she might speak of the strangers, too, and of
the
danger they were in. Medea went to her couch and lay down upon it. She
longed
for her sister to come to her or to call to her. But
Chalciope stayed in her own chamber. Medea, lying upon her couch,
listened to
her sister’s laments. At last she went near where Chalciope was. Then
shame
that she should think so much about the stranger came over her. She
stood there
without moving; she turned to go back to the couch, and then trembled
so much
that she could not stir. As she stood between her couch and her
sister’s
chamber she heard the voice of Chalciope calling to her. She went
into the chamber where her sister stood. Chalciope flung her arms
around her.
“Swear,” said she to Medea, “swear by Hecate, the Moon, that you will
never
speak of something I am going to ask you.” Medea swore that she would
never
speak of it. Chalciope
spoke of the danger her sons were in. She asked Medea to devise a way
by which
they could escape with the stranger from Aea. “In Aea and in Colchis,”
she
said, “there will be no safety for my sons henceforth.” And to save
Phrontis
and Melas, she said, Medea would have to save the strangers also.
Surely she
knew of a charm that would save the stranger from the brazen bulls in
the
contest on the morrow! So
Chalciope came to the very thing that was in Medea’s mind. Her heart
bounded
with joy and she embraced her. “Chalciope,” she said, “I declare that I
am your
sister, indeed — aye, and your daughter, too, for did you not care for
me when
I was an infant? I will strive to save your sons. I will strive to save
the
strangers who came with your sons. Send one to the strangers — send him
to the
leader of the strangers, and tell him that I would see him at daybreak
in the
temple of Hecate.” When Medea
said this Chalciope embraced her again. She was amazed to see how
Medea’s tears
were flowing. “Chalciope,” she said, “no one will know the dangers that
I shall
go through to save them.” Swiftly
then Chalciope went from the chamber. But Medea stayed there with her
head
bowed and the blush of shame on her face. She thought that already she
had
deceived her sister, making her think that it was Phrontis and Melas
and not
Jason that was in her mind to save. And she thought on how she would
have to
plot against her father and against her own people, and all for the
sake of a
stranger who would sail away without thought of her, without the image
of her
in his mind. Jason,
with Peleus and Telamon, went back to the Argo. His comrades
asked how he had
fared, and when he spoke to them of the fire-breathing bulls with feet
of
brass, of the dragon’s teeth that had to be sown, and of the Earth-born
Men
that had to be overcome, the Argonauts were greatly cast down, for this
task,
they thought, was one that could not be accomplished. He who stood
before the
fire-breathing bulls would perish on the moment. But they knew that one
amongst
them must strive to accomplish the task. And if Jason held back,
Peleus,
Telamon, Theseus, Castor, Polydeuces, or any one of the others would
undertake
it. But Jason
would not hold back. On the morrow, he said, he would strive to yoke
the
fire-breathing, brazen-footed bulls to the plow of adamant. If he
perished the
Argonauts should then do what they thought was best — make other trials
to gain
the Golden Fleece, or turn their ship and sail back to Greece. While they
were speaking, Phrontis, Chalciope’s son, came to the ship. The
Argonauts
welcomed him, and in a while he began to speak of his mother’s sister
and of
the help she could give. They grew eager as he spoke of her, all except
rough
Arcas, who stood wrapped in his bear’s skin. “Shame on us,” rough Arcas
cried,
“shame on us if we have come here to crave the help of girls! Speak no
more of
this! Let us, the Argonauts, go with swords into the city of Aea, and
slay this
king, and carry off the Fleece of Gold.” Some of
the Argonauts murmured approval of what Arcas said. But Orpheus
silenced him
and them, for in his prophetic mind Orpheus saw something of the help
that
Medea would give them. It would be well, Orpheus said, to take help
from this
wise maiden; Jason should go to her in the temple of Hecate. The
Argonauts
agreed to this; they listened to what Phrontis told them about the
brazen
bulls, and the night wore on. When
darkness came upon the earth; when, at sea, sailors looked to the Bear
and the
stars of Orion; when, in the city, there was no longer the sound of
barking
dogs nor of men’s voices, Medea went from the palace. She came to a
path; she
followed it until it brought her into the part of the grove that was
all black with
the shadow that oak trees made. She raised
up her hands and she called upon Hecate, the Moon. As she did, there
was a
blaze as from torches all around, and she saw horrible serpents
stretching
themselves toward her from the branches of the trees. Medea shrank back
in
fear. But again she called upon Hecate. And now there was a howling as
from the
hounds of Hades all around her. Fearful, indeed, Medea grew as the
howling came
near her; almost she turned to flee. But she raised her hands again and
called
upon Hecate. Then the nymphs who haunted the marsh and the river
shrieked, and
at those shrieks Medea crouched down in fear. She called
upon Hecate, the Moon, again. She saw the moon rise above the treetops,
and
then the hissing and shrieking and howling died away. Holding up a
goblet in
her hand Medea poured out a libation of honey to Hecate, the Moon. And then
she went to where the moon made a brightness upon the ground. There she
saw a
flower that rose above the other flowers — a flower that grew from two
joined
stalks, and that was of the color of a crocus. Medea cut the stalks
with a
brazen knife, and as she did there came a deep groan out of the earth. This was
the Promethean flower. It had come out of the earth first when the
vulture that
tore at Prometheus’s liver had let fall to earth a drop of his blood.
With a
Caspian shell that she had brought with her Medea gathered the dark
juice of
this flower — the juice that went to make her most potent charm. All
night she
went through the grove gathering the juice of secret herbs; then she
mingled
them in a phial that she put away in her girdle. She went
from that grove and along the river. When the sun shed its first rays
upon
snowy Caucasus she stood outside the temple of Hecate. She waited, but
she had
not long to wait, for, like the bright star Sirius rising out of Ocean,
soon
she saw Jason coming toward her. She made a sign to him, and he came
and stood
beside her in the portals of the temple. They would
have stood face to face if Medea did not have her head bent. A blush
had come
upon her face, and Jason seeing it, and seeing how her head was bent,
knew how
grievous it was to her to meet and speak to a stranger in this way. He
took her
hand and he spoke to her reverently, as one would speak to a priestess.
“Lady,” he
said, “I implore you by Hecate and by Zeus who helps all strangers and
suppliants to be kind to me and to the men who have come to your
country with
me. Without your help I cannot hope to prevail in the grievous trial
that has
been laid upon me. If you will help us, Medea, your name will be
renowned
throughout all Greece. And I have hopes that you will help us, for your
face
and form show you to be one who can be kind and gracious.” The blush
of shame had gone from Medea’s face and a softer blush came over her as
Jason
spoke. She looked upon him and she knew that she could hardly live if
the
breath of the brazen bulls withered his life or if the Earth-born Men
slew him.
She took the charm from out her girdle; ungrudgingly she put it into
Jason’s
hands. And as she gave him the charm that she had gained with such
danger, the
fear and trouble that was around her heart melted as the dew melts from
around
the rose when it is warmed by the first light of the morning. Then they
spoke standing close together in the portal of the temple. She told him
how he
should anoint his body all over with the charm; it would give him, she
said,
boundless and untiring strength, and make him so that the breath of the
bulls
could not wither him nor the horns of the bulls pierce him. She told
him also
to sprinkle his shield and his sword with the charm. And then
they spoke of the dragon’s teeth and of the Earth-born Men who would
spring
from them. Medea told Jason that when they arose out of the earth he
was to cast
a great stone amongst them. The Earth-born Men would struggle about the
stone,
and they would slay each other in the contest. Her dark
and delicate face was beautiful. Jason looked upon her, and it came
into his
mind that in Colchis there was something else of worth besides the
Golden
Fleece. And he thought that after he had won the Fleece there would be
peace
between the Argonauts and King Æetes, and that he and Medea might sit
together
in the king’s hall. But when he spoke of being joined in friendship
with her
father, Medea cried: “Think not
of treaties nor of covenants. In Greece such are regarded, but not
here. Ah, do
not think that the king, my father, will keep any peace with you! When
you have
won the Fleece you must hasten away. You must not tarry in Aea.” She said
this and her cheeks were wet with tears to think that he should go so
soon,
that he would go so far, and that she would never look upon him again.
She bent
her head again and she said: “Tell me about your own land; about the
place of
your father, the place where you will live when you win back from
Colchis.” Then Jason
told her of Iolcus; he told her how it was circled by mountains not so
lofty as
her Caucasus; he told her of the pasture lands of Iolcus with their
flocks of
sheep; he told her of the Mountain Pelion where he had been reared by
Chiron,
the ancient centaur; he told her of his father who lingered out his
life in
waiting for his return. Medea
said: “When you go back to Iolcus do not forget me, Medea. I shall
remember you,
Jason, even in my father’s despite. And it will be my hope that some
rumor of
you will come to me like some messenger-bird. If you forget me may some
blast
of wind sweep me away to Iolcus, and may I sit in your hall an unknown
and an
unexpected guest!” Then they
parted; Medea went swiftly back to the palace, and Jason, turning to
the river,
went to where the Argo was moored. The heroes
embraced and questioned him; he told them of Medea’s counsel and he
showed them
the charm she had given him. That savage man Arcas scoffed at Medea’s
counsel
and Medea’s charm, saying that the Argonauts had become poor-spirited
indeed
when they had to depend upon a girl’s help. Jason
bathed in the river; then he anointed himself with the charm; he
sprinkled his
spear and shield and sword with it. He came to Arcas who sat upon his
bench,
still nursing his anger, and he held the spear toward him. Arcas took
up his heavy sword and he hewed at the butt of the spear. The edge of
the sword
turned. The blade leaped back in his hand as if it had been struck
against an
anvil. And Jason, feeling within him a boundless and tireless strength,
laughed
aloud. |