Jason &
the Argonauts
Jason was the son of the lawful king of Iolcus, but his uncle
Pelias had usurped the throne. Pelias lived in constant fear of losing what he
had taken so unjustly. He kept Jason's father a prisoner and would certainly
have murdered Jason at birth. But Jason's mother deceived Pelias by mourning as
if Jason had died. Meanwhile the infant was bundled off to the wilderness cave
of Chiron the Centaur. Chiron tutored Jason in the lore of plants, the hunt and
the civilized arts. When he had come of age, Jason set out like a proper hero
to claim his rightful throne.
Unknowingly, Jason was to play his part in a plan hatched on
lofty Mount Olympus. Hera, wife of almighty Zeus himself, nursed a rage against
King Pelias. For Jason's uncle, the usurper king, had honored all the gods but
Hera. Rashly had he begrudged the Queen of Heaven her due. Hera's plan was
fraught with danger; it would require a true hero. To test Jason's mettle, she
contrived it that he came to a raging torrent on his way to Iolcus. And on the
bank was a withered old woman. Would Jason go about his business impatiently,
or would he give way to her request to be ferried across the stream?
Jason did not think twice. Taking the crone on his back, he set
off into the current. And halfway across he began to stagger under her
unexpected weight. For the old woman was none other than Hera in disguise. Some
say that she revealed herself to Jason on the far shore; others claim that he
never learned of the divine service he'd performed. Jason had lost a sandal in
the swift-moving stream, and this would prove significant. For an oracle had
warned King Pelias, "Beware a stranger who wears but a single
sandal." When Jason arrived in Iolcus, he asserted his claim to the throne.
But his uncle Pelias had no intention of giving it up, particularly to a
one-shoed stranger.
Under the guise of hospitality, he invited Jason to a banquet.
And during the course of the meal, he engaged him in conversation. "You
say you've got what it takes to rule a kingdom," said Pelias. "May I
take it that you're fit to deal with any thorny problems that arise? For
example, how would you go about getting rid of someone who was giving you
difficulties?" Jason considered for a moment, eager to show a kingly knack
for problem solving. "Send him after the Golden Fleece?" he
suggested. "Not a bad idea," responded Pelias. "It's just the
sort of quest that any hero worth his salt would leap at. Why, if he succeeded
he'd be remembered down through the ages. Tell you what, why don't you
go?"
And so it came to pass that word went out the length and breadth
of Greece that Jason was looking for shipmates to embark upon a perilous but
glamorous adventure. And in spite of the miniscule chances of anyone surviving
to lay eyes upon the Fleece let alone get past the guarding dragon and return
with the prize, large numbers of heroes were ready to run the risk. These were
known as the Argonauts, after their ship, the Argo. Among them were Hercules
(or Heracles, to give him his proper Greek name) and the heroine Atalanta.
Jason had the vessel constructed by the worthy shipwright Argus, who in a fit
of vanity named her more or less after himself.
Argus had divine sponsorship in his task, Hera having enlisted
the aid of her fellow goddess Athena. This patroness of crafts secured a prow
for the vessel from timber hewn at the sacred grove of Zeus at Dodona. This
prow had the magical property of speaking - and prophesying - in a human voice.
And so one bright autumn morning the Argo set out to sea, her benches crewed by
lusty ranks of heroic rowers. And true to Pelias's fondest aspirations, it
wasn't long before big troubles assailed the company. After stopping for better
than a fortnight on an island populated exclusively by women, they put in at
Salmydessus.
The king welcomed them but was in no mood for festive
entertainment. Because he'd offended the gods, he'd been set upon by
woman-headed, bird-bodied, razor-clawed scourges known as Harpies. These
Harpies were possessed of reprehensible table manners. Every evening at
dinnertime, they dropped by to defecate upon the king's repast and hung around
making such a racket that he wouldn't have been able to eat had he the stomach
for it. As a result, King Phineus grew thinner by the hour. Fortunately two of
Jason's crew were direct descendants of the North Wind, which gave them the
power to fly. And they kindly chased the Harpies so far away that the king was
never bothered again.
In thanks, Phineus informed the Argonauts of a danger just ahead
on the route to the Golden Fleece - two rocks called the Symplegades, which
crashed together upon any ship passing between them. The king even suggested a
mechanism by which one might avoid the effects of these Clashing Rocks. If a
bird could be induced to pass between the crags first, causing them to clash
together, the Argo could follow quickly behind, passing through safely before
they were ready to snap shut again. By means of this device, Jason caused the
rocks to spring together prematurely, nipping only the tail feathers of the
bird. The Argo was able to pass between them relatively unscathed. Only her
very stern was splintered.
Once arrived in Colchis, Jason had to face a series of
challenges meted out by King Aeetes, ruler of this barbarian kingdom on the far
edge of the heroic world. He and his people were not kindly disposed toward
strangers, although on an earlier occasion he had extended hospitality to a
visitor from Jason's home town. This may have been due to the newcomer's
unorthodox mode of transportation. For he arrived on the back of a
golden-fleeced flying ram. The stranger's name was Phrixus, and he had been on
the point of being sacrificed when the ram carried him off. Having arrived
safely in Colchis, he sacrificed the ram to the gods and hung its fleece in a
grove. Aeetes gave him the hand of one of his daughters in marriage.
King Aeetes had taken a disliking to Jason on sight. He had no
particular fondness for handsome young strangers who came traipsing into his
kingdom on glorious quests featuring the trampling of his sacred grove and the
carrying off of his personal property. For King Aeetes considered the Golden
Fleece to be his own, and he was in the midst of telling Jason just what he
could do with his precious quest when he was reminded of the obligations of
hospitality by another of his daughters named Medea. Medea was motivated by
more than good manners. For Hera had been looking out for Jason's interests,
and she had succeeded in persuading her fellow goddess Aphrodite to intervene
on Jason's behalf.
It was no problem at all for the Goddess of Love to arrange that
Medea be stricken with passion for Jason the moment she first saw him. And it
was a good thing for Jason that this was so. For not only was he spared a
kingly tongue-lashing and a quick trip to the frontier, but Medea quietly
offered to help him in his latest predicament. For once her father had calmed
down, he had waxed suspiciously reasonable. Of course Jason could have the
Fleece and anything else he required in furtherance of his quest - Aeetes
couldn't imagine what had possessed him to be so uncooperative. All he required
of Jason as a simple token of good faith was the merest of farmyard chores.
There were two bulls standing in the adjacent pasture. If Jason
would be so kind as to harness them, plow the field, sow it and reap the
harvest in a single day, King Aeetes would be much obliged - and only too happy
to turn over the Golden Fleece. Oh, and there was one trifling detail of which
Jason should be aware. These bulls were a bit unusual in that their feet were
made of brass sharp enough to rip open a man from gullet to gizzard. And then
of course there was the matter of their bad breath. In point of fact, they
breathed flames. Along about this juncture Jason thought he heard his mommy,
Queen Polymede, calling. But then, as noted, Medea took him gently aside and
suggested that she might be of aid.
Quite conveniently for Jason, Medea was a famous sorceress,
magic potions being her stock in trade. She slipped Jason a salve which, when
smeared on his body, made him proof against fire and brazen hooves. And so it
was that Jason boldly approached the bulls and brooked no bullish insolence.
Disregarding the flames that played merrily about his shoulders and steering
clear of the hooves, he forced the creatures into harness and set about plowing
the field. Nor was the subsequent sowing any great chore for the now-heartened
hero. Gaily strewing seed about like a nymph flinging flowers in springtime, he
did not stop to note the unusual nature of the seed.
Aeetes, it turns out, had got his hands on some dragon's teeth
with unique agricultural properties. As soon as these hit the soil they began
to sprout, which was good from the point of view of Jason accomplishing his task
by nightfall, but bad in terms of the harvest. For each seed germinated into a
fully-armed warrior, who popped up from the ground and joined the throng now
menacing poor Jason. Aeetes, meanwhile, was standing off to the side of the
field chuckling quietly to himself. It irked the king somewhat to see his
daughter slink across the furrows to Jason's side, but he didn't think too much
of it at the time. Having proven herself polite to a fault, maybe Medea was
just saying a brief and proper farewell.
In actuality, she was once more engaged in saving the young
hero's posterior. This time there was no traffic in magic embrocations. Medea
merely gave Jason a tip in basic psychology. Jason, who it was quite clear by
now lacked the heroic wherewithal to make the grade on his own, at least had
the sense to recognize good advice. Employing the simple device suggested by
Medea, he brought the harvest in on deadline with a minimum of personal effort.
He simply threw a stone at one of the men. The man, in turn, thought his
neighbor had done it. And in short order all the seed men had turned on one
another with their swords until not one was left standing.
Aeetes had no choice but to make as though he'd give the Fleece
to Jason, but he still had no intention of doing so. He now committed the
tactical error of divulging this fact to his daughter. And Medea, still
entranced by the Goddess of Love, confided in turn in Jason. Furthermore, she
offered to lead him under cover of darkness to the temple grove where the Fleece
was displayed, nailed to a tree and guarded by a dragon. And so at midnight
they crept into the sacred precinct of Ares, god of war. Jason, ever the
hothead, whipped out his sword, but Medea wisely restrained his impetuosity.
Instead, she used a sleeping potion to subvert the monster's
vigilance. Together they made off with the Fleece and escaped to the Argo.
Setting sail at once, they eluded pursuit. Thus Jason succeeded in his heroic
challenge. And once returned to Greece, he abandoned Medea for another princess.
For though Jason had sworn to love and honor Medea for the service she had done
him, he proved as fickle in this regard as he'd been unfit for single-handed
questing.