Web
and Book design, Copyright, Kellscraft Studio 1999-2006 (Return to Web Text-ures) |
Click
Here to return to Golden Fleece Content Page Return to the Previous Chapter |
(HOME) |
VI. IN THE
LAND OF THE PHÆACIANS
EARIED
were the heroes now. They would have fain gone upon the island of Circe
to rest
there away from the oars and the sound of the sea. But the wisest of
them,
looking upon the beasts that were men transformed, held the Argo
far off the
shore. Then Jason and Medea came aboard, and with heavy hearts and
wearied arms
they turned to the open sea again.
No longer
had they such high hearts as when they drove the Argo between
the Clashers and into
the Sea of Pontus. Now their heads drooped as they went on, and they
sang such
songs as slaves sing in their hopeless labor. Orpheus grew fearful for
them
now. For
Orpheus knew that they were drawing toward a danger. There was no other
way for
them, he knew, but past the Island Anthemoessa in the Tyrrhenian Sea
where the
Sirens were. Once they
had been nymphs and had tended Persephone before she was carried off by
Aidoneus to be his queen in the Underworld. Kind they had been, but now
they
were changed, and they cared only for the destruction of men. All set
around with rocks was the island where they were. As the Argo
came near, the
Sirens, ever on the watch to draw mariners to their destruction, saw
them and
came to the rocks and sang to them, holding each other’s hands. They sang
all together their lulling song. That song made the wearied voyagers
long to
let their oars go with the waves, and drift, drift to where the Sirens
were.
Bending down to them the Sirens, with soft hands and white arms, would
lift
them to soft resting places. Then each of the Sirens sang a clear,
piercing
song that called to each of the voyagers. Each man thought that his own
name
was in that song. “O how well it is that you have come near,” each one
sang,
“how well it is that you have come near where I have awaited you,
having all
delight prepared for you!” Orpheus
took up his lyre as the Sirens began to sing. He sang to the heroes of
their
own toils. He sang of them, how, gaunt and weary as they were, they
were yet
men, men who were the strength of Greece, men who had been, fostered by
the
love and hope of their country. They were the winners of the Golden
Fleece and
their story would be told forever. And for the fame that they had won
men would
forego all rest and all delight. Why should they not toil, they who
were born
for great labors and to face dangers that other men might not face?
Soon hands
would be stretched out to them — the welcoming hands of the men and
women of
their own land. So Orpheus
sang, and his voice and the music of his lyre prevailed above the
Sirens’
voices. Men dropped their oars, but other men remained at their
benches, and
pulled steadily, if wearily, on. Only one of the Argonauts, Butes, a
youth of
Iolcus, threw himself into the water and swam toward the rocks from
which the
Sirens sang. But an
anguish that nearly parted their spirits from their bodies was upon
them as
they went wearily on. Toward the end of the day they beheld another
island — an
island that seemed very fair; they longed to land and rest themselves
there and
eat the fruits of the island. But Orpheus would not have them land. The
island,
he said, was Thrinacia. Upon that island the Cattle of the Sun
pastured, and if
one of the cattle perished through them their return home might not be
won.
They heard the lowing of the cattle through the mist, and a deep
longing for
the sight of their own fields, with a white house near, and flocks and
herds at
pasture, came over the heroes. They came near the Island of Thrinacia,
and they
saw the Cattle of the Sun feeding by the meadow streams; not one of
them was
black; all were white as milk, and the horns upon their heads were
golden. They
saw the two nymphs who herded the kine — Phæthusa and Lampetia, one
with a
staff of silver and the other with a staff of gold. Driven by
the breeze that came over the Thrinacian Sea the Argonauts came to the
land of
the Phæacians. It was a good land as they saw when they drew near; a
land of
orchards and fresh pastures, with a white and sun-lit city upon the
height.
Their spirits came back to them as they drew into the harbor; they made
fast
the hawsers, and they went upon the ways of the city. And then
they saw everywhere around them the dark faces of Colchian soldiers.
These were
the men of King Æetes, and they had come overland to the Phæacian city,
hoping
to cut off the Argonauts. Jason, when he saw the soldiers, shouted to
those who
had been left on the Argo, and they drew out of the harbor, fearful
lest the
Colchians should grapple with the ship and wrest from them the Fleece
of Gold.
Then Jason made an encampment upon the shore, and the captain of the
Colchians
went here and there, gathering together his men. Medea left
Jason’s side and hastened through the city. To the palace of Alcinous,
king of
the Phæacians, she went. Within the palace she found Arete, the queen.
And
Arete was sitting by her hearth, spinning golden and silver threads. Arete was
young at that time, as young as Medea, and as yet no child had been
born to
her. But she had the clear eyes of one who understands, and who knows
how to
order things well. Stately, too, was Arete, for she had been reared in
the
house of a great king. Medea came to her, and fell upon her knees
before her,
and told her how she had fled from the house of her father, King Æetes.
She told
Arete, too, how she had helped Jason to win the Golden Fleece, and she
told her
how through her her brother had been led to his death. As she told this
part of
her story she wept and prayed at the knees of the queen. Arete was
greatly moved by Medea’s tears and prayers. She went to Alcinous in his
garden,
and she begged of him to save the Argonauts from the great force of the
Colchians that had come to cut them off. “The Golden Fleece,” said
Arete, “has
been won by the tasks that Jason performed. If the Colchians should
take Medea,
it would be to bring her back to Aea and to a bitter doom. And the
maiden,”
said the queen, “has broken my heart by her prayers and tears.” King
Alcinous said: “Æetes is strong, and although his kingdom is far from
ours, he
can bring war upon us.” But still Arete pleaded with him to protect
Medea from
the Colchians. Alcinous went within; he raised up Medea from where she
crouched
on the floor of the palace, and he promised her that the Argonauts
would be protected
in his city. Then the
king mounted his chariot; Medea went with him, and they came down to
the
seashore where the heroes had made their encampment. The Argonauts and
the
Colchians were drawn up against each other, and the Colchians far
outnumbered
the wearied heroes. Alcinous
drove his chariot between the two armies. The Colchians prayed him to
have the
strangers make surrender to them. But the king drove his chariot to
where the
heroes stood, and he took the hand of each, and received them as his
guests.
Then the Colchians knew that they might not make war upon the heroes.
They drew
off. The next day they marched away. It was a
rich land that they had come to. Once Aristæus dwelt there, the king
who
discovered how to make bees store up their honey for men and how to
make the
good olive grow. Macris, his daughter, tended Dionysus, the son of
Zeus, when
Hermes brought him of the flame, and moistened his lips with honey. She
tended
him in a cave in the Phæacian land, and ever afterward the Phæacians
were
blessed with all good things. Now as the
heroes marched to the palace of King Alcinous the people came to meet
them,
bringing them sheep and calves and jars of wine and honey. The women
brought
them fresh garments; to Medea they gave fine linen and golden
ornaments. Amongst
the Phæacians who loved music and games and the telling of stories the
heroes
stayed for long. There were dances, and to the Phæacians who honored
him as a
god, Orpheus played upon his lyre. And every day, for the seven days
that they
stayed amongst them, the Phæacians brought rich presents to the heroes.
And Medea,
looking into the clear eyes of Queen Arete, knew that she was the woman
of whom
Circe had prophesied, the woman who knew nothing of enchantments, but
who had
much human wisdom. She was to ask of her what she was to do in her life
and
what she was to leave undone. And what this woman told her Medea was to
regard.
Arete told her that she was to forget all the witcheries and
enchantments that
she knew, and that she was never to practice against the life of any
one. This
she told Medea upon the shore, before Jason lifted her aboard the Argo.
|