Read Jason and the Argonauts Online
Authors: Apollonius of Rhodes
255 (178)
the same Pellena that their grandsire Pellen
had founded on the brow of Aegialus.
Euphemus
, next, came to them from Taenarus.
He was the fleetest-footed man alive.
Europa, lordly Tityus' daughter,
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had borne him to Poseidon. He could dash
across the whitecaps of the dull gray sea
without submersing his precipitate feet.
Only his toes would touch the liquid path.
Two other of Poseidon's sons arrivedâ
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Erginus
who had left the citadel
of glorious Miletus, and superb
Ancaeus
who forsook Parthenia,
cult center of Imbrasian Hera. Both
exulted in their sea- and battlecraft.
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From Calydon came Oeneus' son,
strong
Meleager,
with
Laocoön
Oeneus' half brother. (Yes, the men
had different mothers, since Laocoön
had been begotten on a serving maid.)
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Oeneus sent him forth, old as he was,
to chaperone his son. Thus Meleager,
young as he was, made one among the heroes.
I suspect that, barring Heracles,
none of the men who went would have surpassed him
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if only he had stayed another year
back in Aetolia and reached his prime.
His mother's brother came along as wellâ
Iphiclus
son of Thestius, a man
skilled equally in close- and long-range combat.
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Palaemonius
was next to come
and join the expedition. Though reputed
the son of Lernus of Olenia,
he was in fact the
offspring of Hephaestus.
His feet, therefore, were hobbled like his father's,
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but no one ever dared to slight his brawn
and battle skills, and so he made the roster
and added more renown to Aeson's son.
Next came Phocaean
Iphitus
, the son
of Naubolus and grandson of Ornytus.
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This Iphitus, you see, had played the host
when Jason went to Delphi to consult
the Pythian oracle about the voyageâ
yes, it was there at Delphi he received
the hero at his palace as a guest.
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Zetes
and
Calaïs
were next to join.
Orithyia had borne them to the Northwind
on the frontier of blizzard-haunted Thrace.
You see, while she was whirling in a dance
beside the eddying Ilissus River,
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he snatched her up out of the land of Cecrops,
whisked her far away, and set her down
near the Erginus River on a crag
called “Rock of Sarpedon” todayâthat's where
he blanketed the maiden in a mist
and ravished her.
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Their sons arrived on flapping,
dusky wings that grew out of their ankles
(
a wonder to behold)âthose golden scales,
those feathers shimmering. The jet-black braids
that sprouted from their heads and tumbled down
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across their backs kept swaying in the wind.
Even
Acastus
âyes, the very son
of stubborn Pelias!ârefused to miss out
by staying safely in his father's palace.
Argus,
the shipwright of Athena, too.
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Both of them claimed their places on the roster.
Such were the men who rallied to assist
the son of Aeson. People took to calling
these heroes “
Minyans,” since most of them
(and many of the stronger fighters) claimed
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descent from Minyas' daughters. Jason
was Minyan himself: Alcimede
his mother was the daughter of Clymena,
and she, in turn, was Minyas' daughter.
After the slaves had placed those goods aboard
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that ships require when business forces men
to sail abroad, the heroes strode through town
to where the
Argo
stood upon a shorefront
known as Magnesian Pagasae. Though crowds
of giddy citizens had gathered round them,
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the heroes shone like starlight between clouds.
The men who watched them marching under arms
stood wonderstruck and muttered to each other:
“King Zeus above! what's Pelias' plan?
To what wild tract outside Achaean lands
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has he dispatched this large brigade of heroes?
Well, let's assume they're sailing to Aeëtes.
Even if he refuses them the fleece,
they could destroy his palace with consuming
fire in a single day. But, ah, the voyageâ
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that's the hard thing, not to be avoided,
a chore impossible to all who try.”
Thus were the townsmen talking, while the women
raised their hands and asked that heaven grant
a heartwarming conclusion to the voyage.
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Tears flowed as they lamented to each other:
“Poor Alcimede, anxiety
has come to you as well, however late.
No, you have not concluded life in splendor.
And Aeson, tooâhe's terribly unlucky.
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The honest truth is it would have been better
if he had wound up shrouded long ago
and stowed in earth and so remained unwitting
of this atrocious quest. I wish the waves
had swallowed, darkly, Phrixus and the ram
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along with that girl Helle when she drowned.
That baneful beast spoke with a human voice
only to cause Alcimede distress
and countless sorrows in the days to come.”
So they commiserated as the heroes
marched to the launch.
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At Jason's home a crowd
of serving men and women had assembled.
When his mother poured her arms around him,
poignant grief pierced every woman's bosom.
Aeson was lying on a cot, wrapped up
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in shawls because of his decrepit age,
groaning among the women.
After Jason
had done his best to soften their distress,
he bade the slaves collect his battle gear.
They heeded the command in perfect silence,
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eyes averted. But Alcimede,
who had embraced him when he first appeared,
refused to let him go, and only sobbed
with greater violence.
As a lonely maiden
clings desperately to a gray-haired nurse,
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her last remaining friend, and weeps because
she lives a heavy life without protectors,
only a stepmother who so assails her
with fickle insults and relentless scorn
that she cannot stop weeping, and her heart
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is bound and gagged by all this misery,
and she cannot sob out the countless sorrows
that throb within her, so Alcimede
was weeping, weeping, and she couldn't stop.
Squeezing her son, she wailed in despair:
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“I wish that on the day when I first heard
Pelias, much to my dismay, pronounce
his cruel commandment, I had left off living
and blacked out all my woes. Then, oh, my son,
you could have buried me with your own hands.
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That was the sole remaining expectation
I had of you, since I had long enjoyed
all other joys of motherhood. Though once
the envy of Achaean woman, I
shall now be left here like a slave to tend
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an empty palace, withering away
with missing you, the son because of whom
I had such fame and glory in the past.
For you alone, my first and last, I loosened
my bridal sash. The goddess Eileithuia
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begrudged me many children. Ah! not ever,
not even in my dreams, did I imagine
that Phrixus' escape would prove my ruin.”
So, sobbing, she exclaimed and heaved a groan,
and all her handmaids wailed in turn, but Jason
soothed her with sympathetic words:
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“Please, Mother,
don't lay such bitter pains upon yourself,
since you will not drive off distress with tears
and may well end up heaping further sorrow
upon your sorrows. Sudden are the woes
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the gods allot to mortals. Strive to bear
your portion of them, though it pains your heart.
Take courage from Athena's covenants,
from oracles (since Phoebus has delivered
highly favorable prophecies),
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and from the strength of heroes. Now stay calmly
here among your handmaids. Don't become
a bird of dire omen for the ship.
My friends and slaves will walk me to the shore.”
So he proclaimed and set out from his home
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to make the quest.
Think of Apollo striding
out of a fragrant temple and parading
through holy Delos or through Claros, Pytho,
or level Lycia along the Xanthusâ
that is how Jason strutted through the crowd.
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The townsfolk with a single voice let out
a cheer, and venerable Iphias,
priestess of Artemis the Town Protectress,
came shuffling up to him and kissed his hand.
Try as she might, she never got a word in
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because the crowd kept pressing close around him,
and she was left behind them on the roadside,
an old woman abandoned by the young,
and there was Jason shrinking in the distance.
And so he left the well-paved streets of Iolcus
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and came down to the beach at Pagasae,
and all the heroes waiting there for him
beside the
Argo
welcomed his arrival.
He stopped above the launch, and they assembled
opposite. Soon they glimpsed two men togetherâ
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Argus! Acastus!âmarching from the city.
Everyone was amazed to see them coming
in spite of Pelias' orders. Argus,
Arestor's son, had thrown around his shoulders
a rough dun-colored ox hide that was flowing
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down to his feet; Acastus, an exquisite,
two-layered cloak his sister Pelopeia
had given him. For all of his excitement,
Jason restrained himself from asking questions
and called for order, and the men sat down
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upon the furled sails and level mast,
and he proposed
the course he thought most prudent:
“All the gear a ship requires for travel
has now been snugly stowed, and there's no reason
for more delay. We will be setting forth
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soon as the proper winds are blowing. Comrades,
because our journey homeward will be shared,
and shared our voyage to Aeëtes' realm,
choose freely, now, and without prejudice
who in the crew you wish to be your leaderâ
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some man to manage details and engage in
wars and alliances with foreigners.”
So he submitted, and the young men swiveled
their eyes and stared at
mighty Heracles
sitting among them, and they all insisted
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he lead the quest. He stayed right where he sat, though,
held his right palm out, and said in answer:
“No, no, let no one offer me this honor.
I won't accept. What's more, I will prevent
the rest of you from standing for the job.
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The man who called us here should lead our party.”
Such were his mighty words, and all the heroes
assented with a single voice because
Heracles was the one who had proposed it.
The son of Aeson jumped up and addressed
his eager comrades:
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“Men, if you have truly
entrusted this position to my care,
let nothing more delay our expedition.
Come, let us first propitiate Apollo
with sacrifices, then at once prepare
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a feast. While we are waiting for the servants
who oversee my cattle stalls to drive
the largest of them here, let's drag the
Argo
down to the sea, stow all the gear aboard her,
and settle which of us will take which bench
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by drawing lots. We also should construct
a seaside shrine in honor of Apollo,
the God of Embarkation, since it was
his oracle that vowed to send me signs
and teach me all the highways of the sea,
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so long as I began my expedition
by giving sacrifices in his name.”
So he proposed and was the first to take up
the tasks at hand. The others duly rose,
stripped off their clothes, and laid them, piece by piece,
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above the surf upon a flat smooth stone
sea storms had long since scoured clean.
First off,
with Argus in the background shouting orders,
the heroes ran a triple-braided cable
snugly around the ship and pulled it taut
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from either end so that the bolts would stick
faithfully in the planking and withstand
whatever violence the sea swell sent them.
Next, they industriously dug a trench