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THE  LIBRARY 

OF 

THE  UNIVERSITY 

OF  CALIFORNIA 

LOS  ANGELES 


IN  MEMORY  OF 
MRS.  VIRGINIA  B.  SPORER 


is 


r- 


THE 

TEMPLE 

CLASSICS 


Edited  by 

ISRAEL 
GOLLANCZ 

M.A. 


THE^TALE 

OF.THE^ 
ARGONAUTS 
bAPOLLONIUS 

9SRH0DES 
TRANSLATED 

^''ARTHUR 
SWAYBl 


.  mm 


*/U)CCCa«PUBl/l5HeD  '  BY-  CJ-M-DeJHT 

jfiHV  •  CO :  ALDine-  Hou^e*  londoh  •  w-c- 


oc'.  1131^57 


The  Tale  of  the  Argonauts 


THE  FIRST  BOOK 

First  in  my  song  shalt  thou  be,  O  Phoebus,  the  song  that  I  sing 
Of  the  heroes  of  old,  who  sped,  at  the  hest  of  Pelias  the  king, 
When  down  through  the  gorge  of  the  Pontus-sea,  through  the 

Crags  Dark-blue, 
On  the  Quest  of  the  Fleece  of  Gold  the  strong-ribbed  Argo  flew. 

For  an  oracle  came  unto  Pelias,  how  that  in  days  to  be 
A  terrible   doom  should  be  dealt  him  of  him  whom  his   eyes 

should  see 
From  the  field  coming  in,  with  the  one  foot  only  sandal-shod. 
Nor  long  thereafter  did  Jason  fulfil  the  word  of  the  God  ; 
For  in  wading  the  rush  of  Amaurus  swollen  with  winter-tide  rain 
One  sandal  plucked  he  forth  of  the  mire,  but  the  one  was  he  fain  lo 
To  leave  in  the  depths,  for  the  swirl  of  the  waters  to  sweep 

to  the  main. 
Straightway  to  the  presence  of  Pelias  he  came,  and  his  hap  was 

to  light 
On  a  banquet,  the  which  unto  Father  Poseidon  the  king  had  dight, 
And  the  rest  of  the  Gods,  but  Pelasgian  Here  he  heeded  not. 
And  the  king  beheld  him,  and  straightway  laid  for  his  life  the  plot. 
And  devised  for  him  toil  of  a  troublous  voyage,  that  lost  in  the  sea, 
Or  lost  amid  alien  men  his  home-return  might  be. 

Of  the  ship  and  her  fashioning,  bards  of  the  olden  time  have  told 

A 

2Q4213? 


2  THE  ARGONAUTS 

How  Argus  wrought,  how  Athene  made  him  cunning-souled. 
But  now  be  it  mine  the  lineage  and  names  of  her  heroes  to  say,    20 
And  to  tell  of  the  long  sea-paths  whereover  they  needs  must  stray, 
And  the  deeds  that  they  wrought ; — may  the  Muses  vouchsafe 

to  inspire  the  lay. 
Of  Orpheus  first  will  I  smg,  of  the  child  that  Calliope  bare, 
As  telleth  the  tale,  for  she  loved  Oeagrus,  Thracia's  heir. 
By  the  peak  Pimplean  was  born  the  Song-queen's  wondrous  child  ; 
For  they  tell  how  he  charmed  by  the  voice  of  his  song  on  the 

mountains  wild 
The  stubborn  rocks  into  life,  made  rivers  their  flowing  refrain. 
And  the  wildwood  oaks  this  day  be  memorials  of  that  weird  strain  ; 
For  they  burgeon  and  bloom  by  Zone  yet  on  the  Thracian  shore, 
Ranked  orderly  line  upon  line,  the  selfsame  trees  which  of  yore,  30 
Spell-drawn  by  his  lyre,  from  Pieria  followed  the  minstrel  on. 
Such  an  one  was  the  Orpheus  that  Aison's  son  for  a  helper  won 
For  his  high  emprise,  when  he  followed  the  pointing  of  Cheiron's 

hand, — 
Orpheus,  who  ruled  o'er  the  Bistonid  folk  in  Pieria-land. 

And  swiftly  Asterion  came,  whom  Kometes  begat  by  the  side 
Of  Apidanus,  there  where  his  seaward-swirling  waters  glide ; 
In  Peiresiae  he  dwelt,  anigh  to  Phylleion's  leafy  crest. 
Mighty  Apidanus,  sacred  Enipeus,  have  thitherward  pressed 
To  mingle  the  waters,  far-severed  that  rise  from  the  earth's  deep 

breast. 
Polyphemus  forsook  Larissa,  and  unto  Jason  he  sought ;  40 

Eilatus'  son  :   in  his  youth  mid  the  Lapithan  heroes  he  fought. 
When  the  Lapithans  armed  them  for  fight,  when  the  Centaur 

host  they  quelled. 
Their  youngest  he  was  ;  but  now  were  his  limbs  sore  burdened 

with  eld. 
Yet  even  as  of  old  his  heart  with  the  spirit  of  battle  swelled. 
Nor  in  Phylake  Iphiklus  tarried  to  waste  an  inglorious  Hfe, 
Uncle  of  Aison's  child,  for  that  Aison  had  taken  to  wife 
His  sister  the  Phylakid  maiden  Alkimede  :  wherefore  strong 
Was  the  love  of  his  kin  to  constrain  him  to  join  that  hero-throng. 


THE  FIRST  BOOK  3 

Neither  Admetus  in  Pherae,  the  goodly  land  of  sheep, 
In  his  palace  would  tarry  beneath  Chalkodon's  mountain-steep.     50 

Neither  in  Alope  tarried  Echion  and  Erytus,  sons 
Of  Hermes,  wealthy  in  corn-land,  crafty-hearted  ones. 
And  their  kinsman,  the  third  with  these,  came  forth,  on  the  Quest 

as  they  hied, 
Aithalides  :   where  the  streams  of  Amphrysus  softly  slide, 
Him  Eupolemeia  the  Phthian,  Myrmidon's  daughter,  bare, 
But  offspring  of  Antianeira  the  Menetid  those  twain  were. 

Came  thither  Koronus,  forsaking  Gyrton  the  wealthy  town  : 
Right  valiant  was  Kaineus'  son,  yet  he  passed  not  his  father's 

renown. 
For  of  Kaineus  the  poets  have  sung,  how  smitten  of  Centaurs  he  died. 
Who  could  not  be  slain,  when  alone  in  his  prowess,  with  none  60 

beside. 
He  drave  them  before  him  in  rout,  but  they  rallied,  and  charged 

afresh. 
Yet  availed  not  their  fury  to  thrust  him  aback,  nor  to  pierce  his 

flesh; 
But  unconquered,  unflinching,  down  to  the  underworld  he  passed, 
Battered  from  life  by  the  storm  of  the  massy  pines  that  they  cast. 

And  came  Titaresian  Mopsus  withal,  unto  whom  was  given 
Of  Leto's  son  above  all  men  the  lore  of  the  birds  of  the  heaven. 
And  there  was  Eurydamas,  Ktimenus'  son,  which  dweltinthe  land 
Of  Dolopian  folk  :  by  the  Xynian  mere  did  his  palace  stand. 

And  from  Opus  Menoitius  fared  at  Aktor  his  father's  behest 
To   the  end   he   might   go  with   the  chieftains  of  men  on  the  70 

glorious  Quest. 
And  Eurytion  hath  followed  with  these ;   Eribotes  the  mighty 

is  gone. 
This,  Teleon's  scion,  and  that,  of  Irus,  Aktor's  son  ; 
For  in  sooth  it  was  Teleon  begat  Eribotes  the  glory-crowned. 
And  Irus,  Eurytion.     With  these  was  a  third,  OVleus,  found, 
Peerless  in  manhood,  exceeding  cunning  to  follow  the  flight 
Of  the  foe,  when  the  reeling  battalions  were  shattered  before  his 

might. 


4  THE  ARGONAUTS 

Came  the  son  of  Kanethus  the  scion  of  Abas ;  with  eager  speed 
Came  Kanthus  forth  of  Euboea  :  it  was  not  fate-decreed 
That  again  he  should  turn  and  behold  Kerinthus,  for  doomed  was  he, 
Even  he  and  Mopsus  withal,  the  wise  in  augury.  So 

To  perish  in  Libya,  lost  in  the  waste  of  a  wide  sand-sea. 
Sooth,  never  was  mischief  removed  too  far  to  be  found  of  the 

doomed  ; 
Forasmuch  as  in  Libya's  desert  were  even  these  entombed, 
As  far  from  the  Kolchian  land  as  the  space  outstretched  between 
The  sun's  uprising,  and  where  the  setting  thereof  is  seen. 

And  Klytius  and  Iphitus  gathered  to  that  great  mustering, 
Oichalia's  warders,  children  of  Eurytus,  ruthless  king. 
Who  received  of  Far-smiter  a  bow  ;  but  he  had  no  proiit  thereof. 
For  in  archery-skill  uath  the  giver's  self  he  wantonly  strove. 
And  with  these  fared  Aiakus'  sons,  yet  not  from  the  selfsame  9^ 

place. 
Nor  together,  for  far  had  they  wandered  away  from  the  home  of 

their  race, 
Aegina,  what  time  in  their  folly  the  blood  of  their  brother  they 

spilt. 
Even  Phokus :  to  Salamis  Telamon  bare  his  burden  of  guilt : 
But  Peleus  roved  till  in  Phthia  the  halls  of  the  outcast  he  built. 

And  with  these  from  Kekropia  Boutes,  a  lord  of  battle-fame, 
Stout  Teleon's  son,  and  Phalerus  the  mighty  spearman  came. 
It  was  Alkon  his  father  that  sent  him  forth  :   no  sons  save  him 
Had  the  ancient  to  cherish  his  age  and  his  light  of  Hfe  grown  dim  : 
Yet,  albeit  his  only-begotten  he  was,  and  the  last  of  his  line, 
He  sent  him,  that  so  amidst  valour  of  heroes  his  prowess  should  ^^ 

shine. 
But  Theseus,  of  all  the  sons  of  Erechtheus  most  renowned. 
At  Tainarum  under  the  earth  by  an  unseen  fetter  was  bound. 
For  he  trod  the  Path  of  Fear  with  Peirithoiis ;   else  that  Quest 
By  the  might  of  these  had  been  lightlier  compassed  of  all  the  rest. 
And  Tiphys,  Hagnias'  son,  hath  forsaken  the  Thespians  that 

dwell 
In  the  city  of  Siphas :  of  all  men  keenest  was  he  to  foretell 


THE  FIRST  BOOK  5 

The  wrath  of  the  waves  on  the  broad  sea,  keen  to  foreknow  from  afar 
The  blasts  of  the  storm,  and  to  guide  the  galley  by  sun  and  by  star. 
'Twas  Athene  Tritonis  herself  that  made  him  eager-souled 
To  join  that  muster  of  heroes  that  longed  his  face  to  behold  ;       no 
For  she  fashioned  the  sea-swift  ship,  and  Argus  but  wrought  as 

she  planned, 
Arestor's  son,  for  the  Goddess's  counsels  guided  his  hand  : 
Therefore  amongst  all  ships  unmatched  was  the  ship  that  he  made, 
Even  all  that  with  swinging  oars  the  paths  of  the  sea  have  essayed 

Came  Phlias  withal  from  Araithyriae  to  essay  the  Quest, 
From  a  wealthy  home,  for  the  toil  of  his  hands  had  the  Wine- 
god  blessed, 
His  father,  where  welleth  Asopus  up  from  the  green  hill's  breast. 

From  Argos  did  sons  of  Bias,  Areius  and  Talaus,  come. 
And  mighty  Laodokus,  fruit  of  Neleus'  daughter's  womb. 
Even  Pero,  for  whose  sake  Aiolus'  scion  Melampus  bore  lao 

In  Iphiklus'  steading  affliction  of  bonds  exceeding  sore. 

Nor  yet  did  the  prowess  of  mighty-hearted  Herakles  fail 
The  longing  of  Aison's  son  for  his  helping,  as  telleth  the  tale. 
But  as  soon  as  the  flying  rumour  of  gathering  heroes  he  heard. 
He  turned  from  the  track  that  he  trod  from  Arcadia  Argos-ward, 
On  the  path  that  he  paced  as  he  bare  that  boar  alive  from  the  glen 
Of  Lampeia,  wherein  he  had  battened,  the  vast  Erymanthian  fen. 
At  the  entering-in  of  Mycenae's  market-stead  he  cast 
From  his  mighty  shoulders  the  beast,  as  he  writhed  in  his  bonds 

knit  fast  : 
But  himself  of  his  own  will,  thrusting  Eurystheus'  purpose  aside,  130 
Hasted  away  ;   and  Hylas,  his  henchman  true  and  tried, 
Which  bare  his  arrows  and  warded  his  bow,  with  the  hero  hath  hied. 

Therewithal  hath  the  scion  of  god-descended  Danaus  gone, 
Nauplius,  born  unto  King  Klytoneus,  Naubolus'  son  ; 
And  of  Lernus  Naubolus   sprang  ;  and  Lernus,  as  bards  have 

told. 
Of  Proitus,  Nauplius'  son  ;  and  unto  Poseidon  of  old 
Amymone,  Danaus'  daughter,  who  couched  in  the  God's  embrace. 
Bare  Nauplius,  chief  in  the  seafarer's  craft  of  the  Earth-born  race. 


6  THE  ARGONAUTS 

Last  Cometh  Idmon  the  seer,  of  all  that  in  Argos  dwell, 
Cometh  knowing  the  doom  he  hath  heard  the  birds  of  heaven  foretell,  140 
Lest  the  people  should  haply  begrudge  him  a  hero's  glorious  fame : 
Yet  not  of  the  very  loins  of  Abas  the  doomed  seer  came  ; 
But  the  son  of  Leto  begat  him  to  share  the  noble  name 
Of  Aetolia's  sons,  and  in  prophecy-lore  he  made  him  wise. 
And  in  signs  of  the  fowl  of  the  heaven  and  tokens  'mid  flame  that  rise. 

Polydeukes  the  strong  did  Aetolia's  Princess  Leda  speed 
From  Sparta,  and  Kastor  cunning  to  rein  the  fleetfoot  steed. 
These  twain  in  Tyndareus'  palace,  her  dearly-beloved,  her  pride. 
That  lady  at  one  birth  bare ;  howbeit  she  nowise  denied 
Their  prayer  to  depart,  for  her  spirit  was  worthy  of  Zeus'  bride.  150 

Apharetus'  children,  Lynkeus  and  Idas  the  arrogant-souled,  ■' 

From  Arene  went  forth  :  in  their  prowess  exceeding  were  these       ! 

overbold, 
Even  both  ;  but  Lynkeus  for  eyes  of  keenest  ken  was  renowned. 
If  in  sooth  that  story  be  true,  that,  though  one  lay  underground. 
Yet  lightly  of  Lynkeus'  eyes  should  the  gloom-swathed  corpse 
be  found. 

And  with  these  Periklymenus  Neleus'  son  was  enkindled  to  fare, 
Eldest  of  all  the  sons  that  the  Lady  of  Pylos  bare 
Unto  Neleus  the  godlike  ;  and  might  unmeasured  Poseidon  gave 
To   the  prince,   and    a  boon  moreover,  that  whatso  shape  he 

should  crave, 
That,  as  he  fought  in  the  shock  of  the  meeting  ranks,  he  should  have.  160 

From  Arcadia  Amphidamas  and  Kepheus  came  for  the  Quest, 
Who  were  dwellers  in  Tegea-town,  and  the  land  that  Apheidas 

possessed. 
Two  scions  of  Aleus  ;  yea  and  a  third  followed  even  as  they  went, 
Ankaius  ;   Lykurgus  his  father  was  minded  the  lad  to  have  sent, 
Being  elder  brother  to  these,  but  himself  was  constrained  to  stay 
In  the  city  with  Aleus,  tending  the  dear  head  silver-grey. 
Howbeit  in  charge  to  his  brethren  twain  he  gave  the  lad. 
So  he  w^nt,  and  the  fell  of  a  bear  Maenalian  for  buckler  he  had. 
And  a  battle-axe  huge  his  right  hand  swung  ;  for  his  armour 
of  fight 


THE  FIRST  BOOK  7 

Had  his  old  grandsire  in  a  secret  chamber  hidden  from  sight,      170 
If  haply  so  he  might  cripple  the  wings  of  the  eagle's  flight. 

Fared  thither  Augeias  ;  they  named  him  in  songs  of  the  olden 
day 
The  Sun-god's  child,  and  the  hero  in  Elis-land  bare  sway 
In  pride  of  his  wealth :  but  he  longed  to  behold  the  Kolchian  coast. 
And  to  look  upon  mighty  Aictes  the  lord  of  the  Kolchian  host. 

Asterius  came,  and  Amphion,  the  sons  that  a  fair  queen  bore, 
When  Pellene's  king  Hyperasius  dwelt  in  the  city  of  yore 
By  Pelles  their  grandsire  built  'neath  the  cliffs  of  Achaia's  shore. 

Euphemus  from  Tainarus  came  to  be  joined  to  their  company, 
Europe's  child  ;  and  the  swiftest  of  all  men  on  Earth  was  he  :     180 
For  the  daughter  of  Tityos  the  giant  couched  in  Poseidon's  embrace; 
And  this  their  son  would  run  o'er  the  grey  sea's  weltering  face. 
Neither  sank  in  the  surge  his  fast-flying  steps,  but,  with  footsole  alone 
Bedewed  with  the  spray,  on  his  watery  path  was  he  wafted  on. 

Sons  of  Poseidon  beside  him  withal  two  other  came. 
One  leaving  Miletus  afar,  the  city  of  haughty  fame. 
Even  Erginus,  and  one  from  Imbrasian  Here's  fane 
Parthenia,  Ankaius  the  mighty ;  and  men  of  renown  were  the  twain 
In  the  craft  of  the  sea,  and  withal  in  the  toil  of  the  battle-strain. 

Hasting  from  Kalydon  Oineus'  son  to  their  muster  hath  hied,  190 
Meleager  the  stalwart ;  and  there  was  Laocoon  still  at  his  side, 
Brother  to  Oineus  ;  but  not  of  the  selfsame  womb  were  they. 
For  a  handmaid  bare  him  ;    and  him,  though  flecked  was  his 

hair  with  grey. 
For  guide  and  for  guard  to  his  son  hath  Oineus  the  old  king  sent. 
So  it  fell  that  a  beardless  lad  to  the  valorous  gathering  went 
Of  heroes ;  yet  no  man  of  all  that  came  had  the  deeds  outdone 
Of  the  lad,  save  Herakles,  if  that  he  might  but  have  tarried  on 
One  year  mid  Aetolia's  sons,  till  he  grew  to  his  strength,  I 

ween. 
Yea,  and  his  mother's  brother,  a  javelin-hurler  keen. 
And  a  warrior  tried,  when  foot  is  set  against  foot  in  the  fray,       200 
Iphiklus,  Thestius'  scion,  trod  the  selfsame  way. 

Came  Palaimonius,  whose  grandsire  was  Olenius,  and  his  sire 


8  THE  ARGONAUTS 

Lernus  in  name  ;  but  in  birth  was  he  child  of  the  Lord  of  Fire  : 

Wherefore  he  halted  in  either  foot  ;  but  his  bodily  frame 

And  his  prowess  might  no  man  contemn,  for  which  cause  also  his 

name 
Was  found  with  the  mighty  who  won  for  Jason  deathless  fame. 

Came  Iphitus,  Ornytus'  son,  from  Phokis  withal  for  the  Quest, 
Of  Naubolus'  line  :  in  the  days  overpast  was  Jason  his  guest. 
What  time  unto  Pytho  he  fared  to  inquire  of  the  high  Gods'  doom 
Touching  the  Quest ;  for  he  welcomed  him  then  in  his  mountain  210 

home. 
And  Zetes    and    Kalais  withal,  the  North-wind's   children, 

were  there. 
Whom  Oreithyia,  Erechtheus'  daughter,  to  Boreas  bare 
In  the  uttermost  part  of  wintry  Thrace ;  for  the  God  swooped  down, 
And  the  Thracian  North-wind  snatched  her  away  from  Kekrops' 

town, 
Even  as  she  whirled  in  the  dance  on  the  lawn  by  Ilissus'  flow. 
And  he  brought  her  afar  to  the  place  where  standeth  the  crag 

men  know 
For  the  Rock  of  Sarpedon,  whereby  doth  Erginus  the  river  glide  : 
And  he  shrouded  her  round  with  viewless  clouds,  and  he  made 

her  his  bride. 
And  lo,  on  the  ankles  of  these  did  quivering  pinions  unfold. 
Strong  wings,  as  in  air  they  upleapt,  a  marvel  great  to  behold,      220 
Gleaming  with  golden  scales  ;  and  about  their  shoulders  strayed, 
Down-streaming  from  neck  and  from  head  in  the  glory  of  youth 

arrayed. 
Dark  tresses  that  tossed  in  the  rushing  breezes  amidst  them  that 

played. 
Yea,  and  Akastus,  his  own  son,  had  no  will  to  abide 
That  day  with  his  mighty  sire  in  the  halls  of  Pelias'  pride. 
Nor  would  Argus  be  left,  who  had  wrought  as  Athene  guided 

his  hand  ; 
But  these  twain  needs  must  be  numbered  too  with  the  glorious  band. 
This  is  the  tale  of  the  helpers  with  Aison's  son  that  were  found : 
These  be  the  men  whom  the  folk,  even  all  which  dwelt  around. 


THE  FIRST  BOOK  9 

Called  ever  the  Minyan  Chiefs  :  for  of  those  that  went  on  the  230 

Quest 
Born  of  the  daughters  of  Minyas'  blood  were  the  most  and  the  best. 
Yea,  she  which  had  borne  this  Jason  to  emprise  perilous-wild, 
Alkimede,  also  was  daughter  of  Klymene,  Minyas'  child. 

Now  when  all  things  ready  were  made  by  the  hands  of  many 

a  thrall. 
Even  whatso  the  galley  for  sea  ready-dight  should  be  furnished 

withal. 
When  traffic  lureth  the  shipmen  afar  to  an  alien  land. 
Then  through  the  city  they  passed  to  their  ship,  where  she  lay 

on  the  strand 
Which  is  called  Magnesian  Pagasae.     Ever,  as  onward  they  strode. 
To  right  and  to  left  a  mingled  multitude  ran  :  but  they  showed 
Radiant  amidst  them  as  stars  amid  clouds  ;  and  some  'gan  cry,    240 
As  they  gazed  on  the  glorious  forms  that  in  harness  of  war  swept  by : 

*  What  is  in  Pelias'  thoughts,  King  Zeus,  that  so  goodly  a  band 
Of  heroes  is  hurled  by  him  forth  of  the  Panachaian  land  ? 

In  the  day  of  their  coming  with  ravening  fire  the  halls  shall 
they  fill 

Of  Aietes,  except  he  shall  yield  them  the  Fleece  of  his  own 
good  will. 

But  a  long  way  lieth  between,  unaccomplished  yet  is  the  toil.' 
So  spake  they  on  this  side  and  that  through  the  city  :  the 
women  the  while. 

Heavenward  uplifting  their  hands,  to  the  Gods  that  abide  for  aye 

Made  vehement  prayer  for  the    heart's  delight    of   the  home- 
coming day. 

And  one  to  another  made  answer,  and  moaned,  as  her  tears  fell  fast:  250 

*  Hapless  Alkimede,  thee  too  evil  hath  found  at  the  last ; 
Nor  to  thee  was  vouchsafed  amid  bliss  to  the  end  of  thy  days  to 

attain ! 
Woe's  me  for  Aison  the  ill-starred  ! — verily  this  had  been  gain 
For  him,  if  rolled  in  his  shroud  before  this  woeful  day. 
Deep  under  Earth,  with  the  cup  of  affliction  untasted,  he  lay  : 
And  O  that  the  darkling  surge,  when  Helle  the  maiden  died. 


10  THE  ARGONAUTS 

Had  whelmed  down  Phrixus  too  with  the  ram  !  — but  a  man's 

voice  cried 
From  the  throat  of  the  monster,  the  portent  accurst,  that  so  it 

might  doom 
For  Alkimede  sorrow  and  griefs  untold  in  the  days  to  come/ 

So  'mid  the  moan  of  the  women  marched  the  heroes  along.      260 
And  by  this  were  the  thralls  and  the  handmaids  gathered  in  one 

great  throng. 
Then  fell  on  his  neck  his  mother,  and  sharply  the  anguish-thorn 
Pierced  each  soft  breast,  the  while  his  father,  the  eld-forlorn. 
Close-swathed  as  a  corpse  on  his  bed,  lay  groaning  and  groan- 
ing again. 
But  the  hero  essayed  to  hush  their  laments  and  assuage  their  pain 
With  words  of  cheer,  and  he  spake,  *  Take  up  my  war-array,' 
To  the  thralls,  and  with  downcast  eyes  did  these  in  silence  obey. 
But  his  mother,  as  round  her  child  her  arms  at  the  first  she  had  flung, 
So  clave  she,  and  wept  without  stint :  as  the  motherless  maiden  she 

clung. 
Whose  forlorn  little  arms  clasp  fondly  her  grey  old  nurse,  when  270 

the  tide 
Cometh  up  of  her  woe  : — she  hath  no  one  to  love  her  nor  com- 
fort beside  ; 
And  a  weary  lot  is  hers  'neath  a  stepdame's  tyrannous  sway, 
Who  with  bitter  revilings  evil-entreateth  her  youth  alway : 
And  her  heart  as  she   waileth  is  cramped  as  by  chains  in  her 

frenzied  despair. 
That    she   cannot    sob    forth    the   anguish    that    struggleth    for 

utterance  there  : 
So  stintlessly  wept  Alkimede,  so  in  her  arms  did  she  strain 
Her  son  ;  and  she  cried  from  the  depths  of  her  love  and  her 
yearning  pain  : 
*  Oh,  that  on  that  same  day  when  I,  the  affliction-oppressed, 
Hearkened  the  voice  of  Pelias  the  king,  and  his  evil  behest, 
I  had  yielded  up  the  ghost,  and  forgotten  to  mourn  and  to  weep,    aSo 
That    thyself,    that  thine  own  dear  hands,  in  the  grave  might 
have  laid  me  to  sleep, 


THE  FIRST  BOOK  ii 

O  my  beloved  !  — for  this  was  the  one  wish  unfulfilled  : 
But  with  other    thy  nursing-dues  long  had  mine  heart  in  con- 
tentment been  stilled. 
And  I,  of  Achaia's  daughters  the  envied  in  days  that  are  gone, 
Like  a  bondwoman  now  in  tenantless  halls  shall  be  left  alone, 
Pining,  a  hapless  mother,  in  yearning  for  thee,  my  pride 
And  exceeding  delight  in  the  days  overpast,  for  whom  I  untied 
For  the  first  time  and  last  my  zone  ;  for  to  me  beyond  others 

the  doom 
Of  the  stern  Birth-goddess  begrudged  abundant  fruit  of  the  womb. 
Ah  me  for  my  blindness  of  heart  ! — not  once,  not    in   dreams,  290 

might  I  see 
The  vision  of  Phrixus'  deliverance  turned  to  a  curse  for  me !  ' 
So  mourned  she,  and  ever  she  moaned  amidst   of  her   speech, 

and  thereby 
Stood  her  handmaids,  and  echoed  her  wail,  an  exceeding  bitter  cry. 
But  the  hero  with  gentle  words  for  her  comfort  made  answer, 

and  spake  ; 
'  Fill  me  not  thus  overmeasure  with  anguish  of  soul  for  thy  sake, 
Mother  mine,  forasmuch  as  from  evil  thou  shalt  not  redeem  me  so 
By  thy  tears,  but  shalt  add  the  rather  woe  unto  weight  of  woe. 
For  the  Gods  mete  out  unto  mortals  afflictions  unforeseen  ; 
Wherefore  be  strong  to  endure  their  doom,  though  thine  anguish 

be  keen. 
Take  comfort  to  think  that  Athene  hereunto  our  courage  hath  300 

stirred  : 
Remember  the  oracles  :  call  to  remembrance  how  good  was  the 

word 
Of  Phoebus  :  be  glad  for  this  hero-array  for  mine  help  that  is  come. 
Now,  mother,  do  thou  with  thine  handmaids  in  quiet  abide  in 

thine  home. 
Neither  be  as  a  bird  ill-omened  to  bode  my  ship  ill-speed  ; 
And  escort  of  clansmen  and  thralls  thy  son  to  the  galley  shall  lead.' 
So  spake  he,  and  turned  him,  and  forth  of  his  halls  his  way 

hath  he  ta'en. 
And  as  goeth  Apollo  forth  of  his  incense-bearing  fane, 


12  THE  ARGONAUTS 

Through  Delos  the  hallowed,  or  Klaros,  or  Pytho  the  place  of 

his  shrine, 
Or  Lycia  the  wide,  where  the  waters  of  Xanthus  ripple  and  shine, 
So  seemed  he,  as  onward  he  pressed  through  the  throng,  and  a  310 

loud  acclaim 
Of  their  mingled  cheering  arose.     And  there  met  him  an  ancient 

dame, 
Iphias,  priestess  of  Artemis  warder  of  tower  and  wall. 
At  his  right  hand  caught  she,  and  kissed  it,  but  spake  no  word  at  all, 
For  she  could  not,  how  fain  soe'er,  so  pressed  the  multitude  on  ; 
And  she  drifted  away  to  the  fringe  of  the  crowd,  and  was  left  alone. 
As  the  old  be  left  by  the  young  :  and  he  passed  on  afar,  and  was 

gone. 
So  when  he  had  left  the  streets  of  the  city  builded  fair. 
To  the  beach  Pagasaean  he  came,  and  his  comrades  hailed  him  there 
In  a  throng  abiding  beside  the  Argo  ship  as  she  lay 
By  the  river's  mouth,  and  overagainst  her  gathered  they.  320 

And  they  looked,  and  behold,  Adrastus  and  Argus  hasting  amain 
Thitherward  from  the  city,  and  sorely  they  marvelled,  beholding 

the  twain 
Despite  the  purpose  of  Pelias  thitherward  hurrying  fast. 
On  his  shoulders  a  bull's  hide  Argus  the  son  of  Arestor  had  cast. 
Great,  dark  with  the  fell ;  but  the  prince  in  a  mantle  fair  was  arrayed, 
Twofold  :   Pelopeia  his  sister  the  gift  in  his  hand  had  laid. 
Howbeit  Jason  forbare  to  ask  them  of  this  or  of  that ; 
But  he  bade  them  for  council  sit  them  down  where  the  others  sat. 
So  there  upon  folded  sails,  and  the  mast  as  it  lay  along, 
Row  upon  row  were  the  heroes  sitting  all  in  a  throng  ;  330 

And  to  these  of  his  heart's  good  will  the  son  of  Aison  spake  : 

'  What  things  soever  it  needeth  that  sea-bound  galleys  should  take, 
All  this  ready  dight  for  our  going  lieth  in  seemly  array. 
Wherefore  for  these  things'  sake  will  we  make  no  longer  delay 
From  our  sailing,  so  soon  as  the  breezes  but  blow  for  the  voyage 

begun. 
But,  friends — since  in  hope  for  the  home-return  to  our  land  we  be 

one. 


THE  FIRST  BOOK  13 

And  one  in  the  way  we  must  take  to  Aietes,  the  path  of  the  Quest, 
Therefore  do  ye  now  choose  with  hearts  ungrudging  our  best 
To  be  chief  and  captain,  to  order  all  our  goings  aright. 
To  take  on  him  our  quarrels  with  aliens,  and  pledge  our  covenant-  340 

plight.' 
He  spake,  and  the  youths  upon  valiant  Herakles  turned  their  eyes, 
As  he  sat  in  their  midst,  and  from  all  the  heroes  did  one  shout  rise, 
Crying   *  Our  captain    be    thou !  ' — but  not  from  his    place  he 

stirred ; 
But  he  stretched  his  right  hand  forth,  and  he  answered  and  spake 

the  word  : 
'Let  no  man  offer  this  honour  to  me :   I  will  nowise  consent ; 
And  if  any  man  else  would  arise,  I  will  also  withstand  his  intent. 
The  selfsame  man  who  assembled  our  band,  let  him  too  lead.' 
He  spake  in  his  greatness  of  soul,  and  they  shouted,  praising 

the  rede 
Of  Herakles  :  then  did  Jason  the  warrior  wight  rejoice  ; 
And  he  sprang  to  his  feet,  and  he  spake  in  their  midst  with  eager  350 

voice  ; 
*  If  indeed  ye  be  minded  on  me  this  glorious  charge  to  cast, 
Let  our  voyaging  tarry  no  more  ;  suffice  the  delays  overpast. 
But  now,  even  now,  let  us  offer  to  Phoebus  the  sacrifice  meet. 
And  prepare  us  a  feast  even  here  ;  and,  while  yet  tarry  the  feet 
Of  my  thralls,  overseers  of  my  steading,  which  bear  in  charge 

my  command 
Fitly  to  choose  for  us  beasts  from  the  herd,  and  to  drive  to  the 

strand. 
We  will  launch  on  the  sea  our  ship,  we  will  set  up  her  tackling 

therein. 
And  thwart  by  thwart  cast  lots  for  the  place  each  oarsman  shall  win. 
To  Apollo,  the  Seafarers'  Saviour,  uppile  we  then  on  the  beach 
An  altar  ;  for  whatso  I  needs  must  do  hath  he  promised  to  teach,  360 
And  to  show  us  the  paths  of  the  sea,  if  first  with  sacrifice 
I  seek  unto  him,  or  ever  I  strive  with  the  king  for  the  prize.' 
So  spake  he,  and  turned  him  first  to  the  work  ;  and,  his  call 

to  obey, 


14  THE  ARGONAUTS 

The  heroes  arose,  and  their  garments  row  upon  row  heaped  they 
On  a  smooth  rock-shelf :  the  waves  of  the  sea  beat  not  thereon  ; 
But  the  dash  of  the  stormy  brine  had  cleansed  it  long  agone. 
Then,  giving  heed  to  the  counsels  of  Argus,  stoutly  they  braced 
The  ship  with  a  hawser  deftly  twisted  that  girded  her  waist ; 
For  they  strained  it  from  side  to  side,  that  the  beams  to  the  bolts 

might  hold 
Fast,  and  withstand  the  might  of  the  meeting  surge  on-rolled.      370 
And  a  trench,  in  compass  as  great  as  the  width  of  the  galley, 

they  delved ; 
And  overagainst  her  prow  to  the  sea  so  far  it  shelved 
As  the  space  that  the  hull  should  run,  by  the  might  of  their 

hands  on-sped : 
And  deepening  ever  afront  of  her  stern  they  scooped  that  bed. 
And  smoothly-shaven  rollers  they  laid  in  the  furrow  arow. 
Then  down  on  the  foremost  rollers  slowly  they  tilted  her  prow. 
That   adown   them  one  after  other  with  one  smooth  rush  she 

might  slide. 
Thereafter  above  did  they  pass  the  oars  from  side  to  side  ; 
To  the  tholes  did  they  lash  them,  outstanding  a  cubit  on  either  hand ; 
And  to  right  of  the  ship  and  to  left  at  these  did  they  take  their  stand ;  380 
And  with  chest  and  with  hands  against  them  they  bare,  and  to 

and  fro 
Went  Tiphys  the  while,  to  shout  in  the  season  the  yo-heave-ho. 
Then  gave  he  the  word  with  a  mighty  shout,  and  the  youthsforthright 
Drave  her  with  one  rush  down,  as  they  thrust  with  their  uttermost 

might, 
From  her  berth  in  the  sand,  as  with  feet  hard-straining  strongly 

they  stept 
Forcing  her  forward,  and  Pelian  Argo  seaward  swept 
Full  swiftly,  and  shouted  they  all,  as  to  right  and  to  left  they  leapt. 
And  under  the  massy  keel's  heavy  grinding  groaned  aloud 
The  rollers,  and  spirted  about  them  the  smoke  in  a  dusky  cloud 
'Neath  the  crushing  weight :  and  into  the  sea  she  slid,  and  her  crew  350 
Back  with  the  hawsers  warped  her,  and  stayed  her  as  onward 

she  flew. 


THE  FIRST  BOOK  15 

Then  the  oars  to  the  tholes  they  fitted  on  either  side,  and  the  mast 
And  the  well-fashioned  sails,  and  the  tackling  withal,  therein 
they  cast. 

But  soon  as  with  diligent  heed  they  had  ordered  all  things  so, 
First  cast  they  the  lots  for  the  thwarts  whereat  each  man  should  row. 
Allotting  one  unto  two  men  still  ;  but  the  midmost  thwart 
For  Herakles  chose  they  first,  from  the  rest  of  the  heroes  apart ; 
And  Ankaius  the  dweller  in  Tegea-town  for  his  fellow  they  chose. 
So  the  midmost  place  of  the  benches  they  left  unchallenged  to  those, 
Neither  cast  for  them  lots  ;  and  with  one  consent  of  the  voices  v-^ 

of  them 
Unto  Tiphys  was  given  the  helm  of  the  galley  of  goodly  stem. 

Then  did  they  heap  of  the  stones  of  the  shingle,  and,  nigh  at  hand 
To  the  sea,  an  altar  they  reared  to  Apollo  the  Lord  of  the  Strand, 
Who  is  called  the  L  ord  of  the  farers  a-shipboard  withal,  and  in  haste 
Billets  of  olive-wood  sapless  and  dry  thereon  they  placed. 
And  by  this  were  the  herdmen  of  Aison's  son  drawn  nigh  thereto 
Bringing  oxen  twain  from  the  herd  ;  and  these  the  young  men  drew 
And  set  them  beside  the  altar  ;  and  others  stood  thereby 
With  the  water  of  sacrifice  and  the  meal.  And  now  drew  nigh 
Jason,  and  unto  Apollo  his  fathers'  god  did  he  cry :  410 

*  Hearken,  O  King,  who  in  Pagasae  dwellest,  whose  fair  halls  be 
In  the  city  Aisonian,  named  of  my  sire,  who  didst  promise  to  me. 
When  I  sought  unto  thee  at  Pytho,  to  point  me  my  journey's  goal 
And  fulfilment ;  for  thou,  even  thou,  to  the  emprise  didst  kindle 

my  soul. 
Now  therefore  my  ship  with  my  comrades  safe  and  sound  bring  thou 
Thither,  and  back  unto  Hellas  again  :  and  to  thee  do  we  vow, 
For  as  many  of  us  as  shall  win  safe  home,  on  thine  altar  to  lay 
Burnt  offerings  so  many  of  goodly  bulls  :  therewithal  will  I  pay 
At  Pytho  thy  shrine,  and  Ortygia,  other  gifts  beyond  price. 
Come  then,  Far-smiter,  accept  at  our  hands  this  sacrifice,  420 

Which  now,  at  our  going  abroad,  for  the  sake  of  this  our  ship 
We  offer,  our  first  of  all :  and  with  prosperous  weird  may  I  slip 
The  hawsers,  by  thy  devising  ;   and  soft  bid  blow  the  breeze 
Whereby  we  may  fare  on  ever  through  calm  of  summer  seas.' 


i6  THE  ARGONAUTS 

With   the   prayer  then  cast  he  the  meal :  and  now  for  the 

slaughtering  these 
Girded  themselves,  Ankaius  the  mighty,  and  Herakles. 
And  this  with  his  club  on  the  forehead  smote  the  steer  mid-head  ; 
And  heavily  all  in  a  heap  to  the  earth  it  dropped  down  dead. 
And  Ankaius  hewed  with  his  brazen  axe  at  the  second  steer 
On  the  broad  neck  :   clean  through  the  sinews  strong  thereof  did 

it  shear  ; 
And  there  on  the  earth,  with  horns  doubled  under  its  chest,  it  lay. 
And  swiftly  their  comrades  severed  the  throats,  and  the  skins 

did  they  tiay. 
And  they  sundered  the  joints,  and  they  carved,  and  the  sacred 

thighs  they  cut  out. 
And  they  laid  them  together,  and  closely  with  fat  they  wrapped 

them  about. 
And  burnt  on  the  cloven  wood  :  drink-offerings  unmingled  of  wine 
Poured  Aison's  son  ;  and  Idmon  rejoiced,  beholding  shine 
The  splendour  that  gleamed  all  round  from  the  sacrifice  and  the 

smoke. 
As  forth  for  an  omen  of  good  in  wavering  wreaths  it  broke. 
And  the  purpose  of  Leto's  son,  nothing  doubting,  straightway  he 

spoke  : 
*  For  you  'tis  ordained  of  the  doom  of  the  Gods  and  of  each 

man's  fate 
Hither  to  win  with  the  Fleece  ;  but  meanwhile  lie  in  wait 
Toils  without  number,  as  thither  ye  fare,  and  as  backward  ye  hie 
But  for  me  by  the  hateful  doom  of  a  God  is  it  fated  to  die 
Far  hence,  I  know  not  where,  on  the  Asian  mainland  shore. 
Yea,  this  is  my  doom  :   by  birds  evil-boding  I  knew  it  before  ; 
Yet  from  my  fatherland  went  I  :  to  sail  in  your  galley  I  came, 
That  so  to  mine  house  might  be  left  the  renown  of  a  hero's  name. 
He  spake,  and  the    young    men,  hearing   the  words  of  tht 

prophet,  were  glad 
For  their  home-return,  but  for  Idmon's  doom  were  their  heart 

made  sad. 
And  so,  at  the  hour  when  the  sun  from  his  noon-halt  sinketh  adown 


THE  FIRST  BOOK  17 

And  over  the  harvest-lands  the  long  rock-shadows  are  thrown, 
As  the  sun  to  the  eventide  dusk  slow-slideth  aslant  from  the  sky, 
Even  then  did  the  heroes  all  on  the  sands  of  the  beach  pile  high 
A  couch  of  the  wildwood  leaves,  and  in  front  of  the  surf-line  hoar 
Row  upon  row  lay  down,  and  beside  them  was  measureless  store 
Of  meats,  and  of  sweet  strong  wine  which  the  cupbearers  poured 

for  them  out 
From  the  pitchers  :  thereafter  they  told,  as  each  man's  turn  came 

about. 
Story  and  legend,  as  young  men  oft  at  the  feast  and  the  bowl 
Will  take  their  delight,  when  insatiate  violence  is  far  from  their  soul. 
But  there  was  Aison's  son,  as  a  man  in  a  nightmare  dream,  460 

Struggling  with  deep  dark  thoughts,  and  as  one  distraught  did 

he  seem  ; 
And  Idas  marked  him  askance,  and  he  shouted  in  scoffing  tone  : 

*  What  thoughts  to  and  fro  in  thine  heart  art  thou  turning, 

thou  Aison's  son  ? 
Speak  out  in  our  midst  thy  mind  !    Hath  fear  in  thy  spirit  awoke 
Overmastering  thee — that  thing  which  dazeth  dastard  folk  ? 
Be  witness  my  furious  spear,  wherewithal  beyond  others  I  win 
Renown  in  the  wars — nor  is  Zeus  so  present  a  helper  therein. 
Nor  so  mighty  to  save  as  my  spear — that  on  thee  no  deadly  bane 
Shall  light,  nor  shall  any  strife  of  thine  hands  be  striven  in  vain. 
While  Idas  attendeth  thee,  not  though  against  thee  a  God  should  470 

arise. 
Such  a  helper  is  this  thou  hast  won  from  Arene  for  thine  emprise.' 
He  spake,  and  the  brimming  beaker  with  both  hands  lifted  he  up. 
And  the  strong  wine  drank  unmingled,  and  dashed  with  the  dew 

of  the  cup 
Were  his  lips  and  his  swarthy  cheeks  :  but  a  startled  clamour  broke 
From  all  together ;  and  openly  Idmon  rebuked  him,  and  spoke  ; 

*  Beshrew  thee  !  —  thy  thoughts  thus  soon  to  thyself  are  deadly 

and  fell ! 
Hath  the  strong  wine  caused  thy  reckless  heart  for  thy  ruin  to  swell 
In  thy  breast,  and  eggeth  thee  on  to  set  the  Gods  at  nought  ? 
Other  words  of  comfort  there  be  wherewithal  a  man  mighthave  sought 


i8  THE  ARGONAUTS 

To  hearten  his  friend  ;  but  thy  words  were  wholly  presumptuous-  480 

bold! 
So  blustered,  as  telleth  the  tale,  against  the  Blessed  of  old 
The  sons  of  Aloeus :  and  thou — thou  art  nothing  so  mighty  as  they 
In  manhood :  yet  both  did  the  swift  shafts  overmaster  and  slay 
Of  the  Son  of  Latona,  though  giants  they  were  and  passing  strong.' 

Then  Aphareus'  son  brake  forth  into  laughter  loud  and  long, 
And  blinking  upon  him  in  drunken  wise  flung  back  the  jeer  : 

'  Come  now,  bv  thy  deep  divination  reveal  unto  me,  thou  seer, 
If  the  Gods  for  me  also  be  bringing  to  pass  such  doom  as  that 
Which  was  dealt  of  thatfather  of  thine  to  the  sons  that  Aloeus  begat. 
And  bethink  thee  how  thou  shalt  escape  from  mine  hands  alive,  490 

if  we  find 
Thee  guilty  of  boding  a  prophecy  vain  as  the  idle  wind  !  ' 

Wrathfuller  waxed  he  in  railing  :  and  now  had  the  strife  run  high, 
But  amidst  of  their  wrangling  their  comrades  with  loud  indignant  cry, 
With  Aison's  son,  restrained  them  : — and  lo,  with  his  lyre  upheld 
In  his  left  hand,  Orpheus  arose,  and  the  fountain  of  song  upwelled. 

And  he  sang  how  in  the  beginning  the  earth  and  the  heaven 
and  the  sea 
In  the  selfsame  form  were  blended  together  in  unity, 
And  how  baleful  contention  each  from  other  asunder  tore  ; 
And  he  sang  of  the  goal  of  the  course  in  the  Armament  fixed  evermore 
For   the   stars   and   the   moon,  and   the  printless   paths   of  the  500 

journeying  sun. 
And  how  the  mountains  arose,  how  rivers  that  babbling  run. 
They  and  their  Nymphs,  were  born,  and  whatso  moveth  on  Earth  ; 
And  he  sang  how  Ophion  at  first,  and  Eurynome,  Ocean's  birth, 
In  lordship  of  all  things  sat  on  Olympus'  snow-crowned  height ; 
And  how  Ophion  must  yield  unto  Kronos'  hands  and  his  might, 
And  she  unto  Rhea,  and  into  the  Ocean's  waves  plunged  they. 
O'er  the  blessed  Titan-gods  these  twain  for  a  space  held  sway, 
While  Zeus  as  yet  was  a  child,  while  yet  as  a  child  he  thought. 
And  dwelt  in  the  cave  Dictaean,  while  yet  the  time  was  not 
When  the  Earth-born  Cyclops  the  thunderbolt's  strength  to  his  510 
hands  should  give. 


THE  FIRST  BOOK  19 

Even  thunder  and  lightning  :  by  these  doth  Zeus  his  glory  receive. 
Low  murmured  the  lyre,  and  slept,  and  the  voice  divine  was  still : 
But  moveless  the  heads  of  them  all  are  bending  forward,  and  thrill 
Their  eager-listening  ears,  through  the  hush  as  they  strain,  in  thrall 
To  the  spell ;  such  wondrous  glamour  the  song  hath  cast  over  all. 
And  a  little  thereafter  they  mingled,  even  as  is  meet  and  right, 
The  wine,  and  poured  on  the  tongues  where  the  altar-fires  blazed 

bright. 
Then  turned  they  to  sleep,  and  around  them  were  folded  the 

wings  of  the  night. 
But  when  radiant  Dawn  with  her  flashing  eyes  on  the  steeps 

looked  down 
Of  Pelion's  crests,  and,  washed  by  the  wind,  the  forelands  that  frown  520 
Over  the  tossing  sea  rose  sharp  and  clear  to  view. 
Then  Tiphys  awoke,  and  he  hasted  the  Argo's  hero-crew 
To  hie  them  aboard,  and  to  range  the  oars  in  order  due. 
And  a  weird  dread  cry  from  the  haven  of  Pagasae  rang  to  them;  yea. 
From  Pelian  Argo  herself  came  a  voice,  bidding  hasten  away  : 
For  within  her  a  beam  divine  had  been  laid,  which  Athene  brought 
From  the  oak  Dodonaean,  and  into  the  midst  of  her  stem  was  it 

wrought. 
So  the  heroes  went  up  to  the  thwarts,  and  twain  after  twain  arow, 
Even  as  fell  the  places  by  lot  but  a  little  ago. 

Orderly  ranged  sat  down,  and  by  each  was  his  harness  of  fight.    530 
On  the  midmost  Ankaius,  and  next  him  Herakles'  giant  might 
Sat,  and  beside  him  he  laid  his  club ;  and  the  keel  of  the  ship 
Under  his  massy  tread  plunged  deep.     And  now  did  they  slip 
The  hawsers,  and  poured  on  the  sea  the  wine.     Tear-dimmed 

that  day 
Were  Jason's  eyes,  from  the  fatherland-home  as  he  turned  them 

away. 
And  these — as  the  youths  that  inPy  tho  begin  unto  Phoebus  the  dance, 
In  Ortygia,  or  there  where  Ismenus'  ripples  in  sunlight  glance, 
Hand  in  hand  to  the  notes  of  the  lyre  his  altar  around 
With  rhythmical  fall  of  the  feet  swift-circling  beat  the  ground, — 
So  smote  with  the  oars,  by  the  lyre  of  Orpheus  timing  the  stroke,  540 


20  THE  ARGONAUTS 

The  sea's  wild  water,  and  over  the  blades  the  surges  broke. 
And  on  this  side  and  that  with  the  foam  the  dark  brine  seething 

flashed ; 
Like  muttered  thunder  it  sounded  by  strokes  of  the  mighty  up- 
dashed. 
And  glanced  in  the  sun  like  flame,  as  the  ship  winged  onward 

her  flight, 
Their  armour  :  the  wake  far-weltering  ever  behind  gleamed  white. 
As  an  oft-trodden  path  through  a  grassy  plain  lieth  clear  in  sight. 
And  all  the  Gods  that  day  from  the  height  of  the  heaven  looked 

down 
On  the  ship,  and  the  might  of  the  demigod  heroes,  the  men  of 

renown. 
Sailing  the  sea  ;  and  afar  on  the  crests  of  the  hill-tops  lone 
The  Maids  of  the  Mountain,  the  Pelian  Nymphs,  in  amaze  looked  on  550 
At  the  work  of  Athene  Itonis,  the  heroes'  goodly  array. 
As  the  ashen  blades  in  their  hands  kept  time  with  measured  sway. 
Yea,  and  there  came  one  down  from  the  mountain's  height  to  the 

shore. 
Even  Cheiron,  Philyra's  son,  and  plashed  the  surf- wash  hoar 
On  his  feet,  as  his  broad  hand  waving  many  a  farewell  sent. 
And  he  shouted,  '  Good  speed,  and  a  sorrowless  home-return  !  ' 

as  they  went. 
And  there  was  his  wife,  with  Peleus'  babe  in  her  arms  held  high, 
Achilles,  waving  a  greeting  as  sped  his  sire  thereby. 

So  when  they  had  rounded  the  headland,  and  left  the  haven 
behind 
By  the  cunning  and  wisdom  of  Hagnias'  son  the  prudent  of  mind, —  560 
Even  of  Tiphys,  who  swayed  in  the  master-craftsman's  grip 
The  helm  smooth-shaven,  to  guide  unswerving  the  course  of  the 

ship, — 
Then  set  they  up  in  the  centre-block  the  towering  mast. 
And  on  either  hand  strained  taut  the  stays,  and  they  lashed  them  fast; 
And  the  sail  they  unfurled  therefrom,  from  the  yard-arm  spread- 
ing it  wide. 
And  a  breeze  shrill-piping  upsprang,  and  the  sheets  upon  either  side 


THE  FIRST  BOOK  21 

O'er  the  polished  pins  on  the  deck  then  cast  they  in  order  meet ; 
And  past  the  long  Tisaian  ness  did  they  restfully  fleet. 
And  Orpheus,  in  song  whose  rhythmical  cadence  kept  time  to  the  lyre, 
Sang  of  the  Saviour  of  Ships,  the  Child  of  the  Glorious  Sire,      570 
Artemis,  she  that  hath  those  crags  of  the  sea  in  her  keeping, 
The  Lady  that  wardeth  lolkos-land.     And  the  fishes  leaping 
Up  from  the  deep  sea  came,  and,  drawn  by  the  spell  of  the  lay. 
Both  small  and  great  followed  gambolling  over  the  watery  way. 
And  as  when  in  the  track  of  a  shepherd,  the  warder  of  flocks  on 

the  wold, 
Follow  sheep  that  have  fed  to  the  full  of  the  grass,  a  throng  untold, 
And  he  goeth  before  with  his  shrill  reed  piping  them  home  to  the 

fold. 
As  sweetly  he  fluteth  a  shepherd's  strain, — so  over  the  seas 
Followed  the  fishes  :  on  wafted  her  ever  the  chasing  breeze. 

And  ere  long  melting  in  haze  the  Pelasgians'  land  of  corn         580 
Sank  out  of  sight ;  and  past  Mount  Pelion's  cliffs  were  they  borne 
Aye  running  onward;  and  sank  in  the  offing  the  Sepian  strand, 
And  sea-girt  Skiathos  rose,  and  a  far-away  gleam  of  sand. 
The  Peiresian  beach  and  Magnesian,  clear  in  the  summer  air 
On  the  mainland  ;  and  lo,  the  barrow  of  Dolops  :  at  eventide  there 
Beached  they  the  ship,  for  against  them  the  veering  breeze  had 

turned. 
And  they  honoured  the  dead,  and  victims  of  sheep  in  the  gloam- 
ing they  burned. 
While  the  sea-surge  stormily  tossed.     Two  days  to  and  fro  on 

the  shore 
They  loitered,  but  ran  on  the  third  their  galley  asea  once  more  ; 
And  the  broad  sail  spread  they  on  high,  and  the  keel  from  the  590 

strand  shot  away : 
Men  call  it  <  The  Launching  of  Argo  ' — Aphetai — unto  this  day. 

Onward  they  ran,  ever  onward  :  they  left  Meliboia  behind  ; 
They  caught  but  a  glimpse  of  the  foam-flecked  beach  of  the 

stormy  wind  : 
And  with  dawnmg  on  Homole  looked  they,  and  lo,  it  was  loom- 
ing anigh  ; 


22  THE  ARGONAUTS 

Broad-couched  on  the  breast  of  the  waters  it  layas  theypassed  it  by. 
Thereafter  full  soon  by  the  outfall  of  Amyrus'  flood  must  they  fly. 
Eurymene  then,  and  the  surf-tormented  gorges  they  spied 
Of  Olympus'  and  Ossa's  seaward  face  :  wind-wafted  they  ride 
By  the  slopes  of  Pallene  ;  beyond  Kanastra's  foreland-height 
They  passed,  running  lightly  before  the  breath  of  the  breeze  in  600 

the  night. 
And  before  them  at  dawn  on-speeding  the  pillar  of  Athos  rose. 
The  Thracian  mountain  :  its  topmost  peak's  dark  shadow  it  throws 
Far  as  a  merchantman  goodly-rigged  in  a  day  might  win. 
Even  to  Lemnos'  isle,  and  the  city  Myrine  therein. 
And  the  wind  blew  all  that  day  till  the  folds  of  the  darkness  fell, 
Blew  ever  fresh,  and  the  sail  strained  over  the  broad  sea-swell. 
Howbeit  the  wind's  breath  failed  them  at  going  down  of  the  sun  : 
So  to  Lemnos  the  craggy,  the  Sintian  isle,  by  rowing  they  won 

There  all  the  men  of  the  nation  together  pitilessly 
By  the  violent  hands  of  the  women  were  slain  in  the  year  gone  by  ;  610 
Forasmuch  as  the  hearts  of  the  men  from  their  lawful  wives  had 

turned. 
And  in  love  for  their  captive  handmaids  with  baleful  passion  they 

burned, 
Maids  that  themselves  from  the  Thracian  land  in  foray  had  brought 
Oversea  ; — 'twas  the  wrath  of  the  Cyprian  Queen  that  curse  had 

wrought. 
Because  that  for  long  they  had  left  her  unhonoured  by  sacrifice  : — 
Ah  hapless,  whose  hungering  jealousy  craved  that  woeful  price ! 
For  not  with  the  captives  their  husbands  alone  for  the  sin  did 

they  slay, 
But  every  male  therewithal,  lest  perchance  in  the  coming  day 
Out  of  these  might  arise  an  avenger  for  that  grim  murder's  sake. 
In  one  alone  for  an  aged  sire  did  compassion  awake,  620 

Hypsipyie,  daughter  of  Thoas,  the  king  of  the  folk  of  the  land. 
In  an  ark  did  she  send  him  to  drift  o'er  the  sea  from  the  murder-strand. 
If  he    haply    might   'scape.     And    fisher-folk    saved   him  and 

brought  to  the  isle 
Which  men  call  Sikinus  now,  but  Oinoe  named  it  erewhile  ; 


THE  FIRST  BOOK  23 

For  from  Sikinus  folk  renamed  it,  the  child  whom  the  Maid  of 

the  Spring, 
Oinoe,  bare,  when  she  couched  in  love  with  Thoas  the  king. 

So  it  came  to  pass  that  for  these  to  tend  the  kine,  and  to  wear 
War-harness  of  brass,  and  to  furrow  the  wheat-bearing  land  with 

the  share. 
In  the  eyes  of  them  all  seemed  task  more  light  than  Athene's  toil 
Wherewithal  were  their  hands  aforetime  busy  ;   yet  all  the  while  630 
Across  the  broad  sea  ever  they  cast  and  anon  their  eyes 
With  a  haunting  fear  lest  the  Thracian  sails  in  the  offing  should  rise. 
So  when  they  beheld  the  Argo's  oars  flashing  down  to  their  coast. 
Forth  from  the  gates  of  Myrine  straightway  in  one  great  host 
Clad  in  their  harness  of  battle  down  to  the  beach  they  poured 
Like  unto  ravening  Thyiads :  they  weened  that  the  Thracian  horde 
Were  come  :  and  there  was  Hypsipyle  clad  in  the  war-array 
Of  Thoas  her  father  :  and  all  these  speechless  with  wildered  dismay 
Streamed  down, — such  panic  was  wafted  about  them  all  that  day. 

But  forth  of  the  galley  the  while  had  the  chieftains  sent  to  the  shore  04» 
Aithalides,  their  herald  swift,  the  man  who  bore 
Charge  of  their  messages,  yea,  and  the  wand  they  committed  to  him 
Of  Hermes  his  sire,  who  had  given  him  memory  never  made  dim 
Of  all  things  : — yea,  nor  forgetfulness  swept  even  now  o'er  his  soul 
Of  long-left  Acheron's  flow,  where  the  torrents  unspeakable  roll. 
For  the  doom  of  his  spirit  is  fixed,  to  and  fro  evermore  is  it  swept. 
Now  numbered  with  ghosts  underground,  now  back  to  the  light 

hath  it  leapt. 
To  the  beams  of  the  sun  among  living  men: — but  why  should  I  tell 
The  story  of  Aithalides  that  all  men  know  full  well  ? 
Of  him  was  Hypsipyle  won  to  receive  that  sea-borne  array  650 

As  waned  the  day  to  the  gloaming::  yet  not  with  the  new-born  day 
Unmoored  they  the  ship  for  the  North-wind's  breathing  to  waft 

away. 
Through  the  city  the  daughters  of  Lemnos  into  the  folkmote 

pressed. 
And  there  sat  down,  as  Hypsipyle's  self  sent  forth  her  behest. 
So  when  they  were  gathered  in  one  great  throng  to  the  market-stead. 


24  THE  ARGONAUTS 

For  their  counselling  straightway  she  rose  in  the  midst  of  them 
all,  and  she  said  ; 

*  Friends,  now,   an  ye  will,  good   store   of  gifts  to  the  men 

give  we. 
Even  such  as  is  meet  that  thefarers  a-shipboard  should  bear  oversea. 
Even  meats  and  the  sweet  strong  wine,  that  without  our  towers  so 
They  may  bide,  nor  for  need's  sake  passing  amidst  of  us  to  and  fro  660 
May  know  of  us  all  too  well,  and  our  evil  report  shall  go 
Afar,  for  a  terrible  deed  have  we  wrought,  and  in  no  wise,  I  trow. 
Good  in  their  sight  shall  it  seem,  if  they  haply  shall  hear  the  tale. 
Lo,  this  is  our  counsel,  and  this,  meseemeth,  best  shall  avail. 
But  if  any  amidst  you  hath  counsel  that  better  shall  serve  our  need 
Let  her  rise  ;  for  to  this  have  I  summoned  you,  even  the  giving 
of  rede.' 
So  spake  she,  and  sat  her  down  on  the  ancient  chair  of  stone 
That  of  old  was  her  sire's,  and  Polyxo  her  nurse  uprose  thereupon. 
On  her  wrinkle-shrivelled  feet  she  halted  for  very  eld 
Bowed  over  a  staff ;  but  with  longing  for  speech  the  heart  in  her  670 

swelled. 
And  hard  by  her  side  were  there  sitting  ancient  maidens  four. 
Virgins,  whose  heads  with  the  thin  white  hair  were  silvered  o'er. 
And  amidst  of  the  folkmote  stood  she,  and  up  from  her  crook- 
bowed  back 
Feebly  a  little  she  lifted  her  neck,  and  in  this  wise  spake  : 

*  Gifts,  even  as  unto  the  lady  Hypsipyle  seemeth  meet, 

Send  we  to  the  strangers,  for  thus  were  it  better  their  coming  to  greet. 
But  you — by  what  art  or  device  shall  ye  save  your  souls  alive 
If  a  Thracian  host  burst  on  you,  or  cometh  in  battle  to  strive 
Some  other  foe  ? — there  be  many  such  chances  to  men  that  befall, 
Even  as  now  yon  array  cometh  unforeseen  of  us  all.  680 

But  if  one  of  the  Blessed  should  turn  this  affliction  away,  there 

remain 
Countless  afflictions  beside,  far  worse  than  the  battle's  strain. 
For  when  through   the  gates  of  the  grave    the   older    women 

have  passed. 
And  childless  the  younger  have  won  to  a  joyless  eld  at  the  last. 


THE  FIRST  BOOK  25 

How  then  will  ye  live,  O  hapless  ? — what,  will  the  beasts  freewilled 
On   their  own  necks  cast  the  yoke,  to  the  end  that  your  lands 

may  be  tilled  ? 
And    the  furrow-sundering   share   will  they  drag    through    the 

heavy  loam  ? 
And,  as  rolleth  the  year  round,  straight  will  they  bring  you  the 

harvest  home  ? 
Now,  albeit  from  me  the  Fates  still  shrink  as  in  loathing  and  fear, 
Yet  surely  on  me,  when  the  feet  draw  nigh  of  another  year,  690 

The  earth  shall  lie,  when  the  burial  rites  have  been  rendered  to  me. 
Even  as  is  due,  and  the  evil  days  I  shall  not  see. 
But  for  you  which  be  younger,  I  counsel  you,  give  good  heed 

unto  this, 
For  that  now  at  your  feet  an  open  way  of  deliverance  there  is, 
If  ye  will  but  commit  your  dwellings  and  all  your  spoil  to  the  guard 
Of  the  strangers,  yea,  and  your  goodly  city  for  these  to  ward/ 
She  spake,  and  with  clamour  the  folkmote  was  filled,  for  good 

in  their  eyes 
Was  the  word,  and  straightway  thereafter  again  did  Hypsipyle  rise, 
And  her  voice  pealed  over  the  multitude,  stilling  the  mingled  cries  ; 

*  If  in  sooth  in  the  sight  of  you  all  well-pleasing  is  this  same  rede,  700 
Unto  the  ship  straightway  a  messenger  hence  will  I  speed.' 

To  Iphinoe  which  waited  beside  her  spake  she  her  hest : 
*  Up,  Iphinoe,  and  to  yonder  man  bear  this  my  request. 
That  he  come  to  our  town,  even  he  who  is  chief  of  the  strangers' 

array. 
For  the  word  that  pleaseth  the  heart  of  my  people  to  him  would  I  say. 
Yea,  and  his  fellows  bid  thou  to  light  in  friendship  down 
On  our  shore,  if  they  will,  and  to  enter  undismayed  our  town.' 
She   spake,   and  dismissed  the  assembly,  and  homeward   she 
wended  her  way ; 
But  Iphinoe  to  the  Minyans  went ;  and  they  bade  her  say 
What  was  the  mind  wherewithal  she  was  come,  and  what  her  need.  710 
And  straightway  she  told  them  the  words  of  her  message  with 
eager  speed  : 

*  The  daughter  of  Thoas,  Hypsipyle,  sent  me  hither  away 


26  THE  ARGONAUTS 

To  summon  the  lord  of  your  ship,  and  the  captain  of  your  array, 
That  the  will  of  her  folk  she  may  tell  him,  their  heart's  desire 

this  day. 
Yea,  and  his  fellows  she  biddeth  to  light  in  friendship  down 
On  our  shore,  if  they  will,  and  to  enter  undismayed  our  town.' 
So  spake  she,  and  fair  in  the  sight  of  them  all  was  the  word 
that  she  said  ; 
For  they  deemed  that  Hypsipyle  reigned  in  the  room  of  Thoasdead, 
His  daughter,  his  well-beloved  ;  and  they  hasted  Jason  to  meet 
The  island-queen,  and  they  dight  them  to  follow  their  captain's  feet.  720 
Then  he  flung  o'er  his  shoulders  the  web  by  the  Goddess 
Itonian  wrought ; 
In  the  clasp  of  a  brooch  were  the  folds  of  the  purple  of  Pallas  caught. 
Which  she  gave,  when  for  Argo's  building  the  keel-props  first 

she  dight. 
And  taught  him   with   rule  of  the  shipwright  to  measure  her 

timbers  aright. 
More  easy  it  were  in  sooth  on  the  sun  at  his  rising  to  gaze 
Than  to  fasten  thine  eyes  on  the  flush  of  its  glory,  its  splendour- 
blaze. 
For  the  fashion  thereof  in  the  midst  was  fiery  crimson  glow, 
And  the  top  was  of  purple  throughout ;  and  above  on  the  marge 

and  below 
Picture  by  picture  did  many  a  broidered  marvel  show. 

For  therein  were  the  Cyclopes  bowed  o'er  theii*  work  that  730 
perisheth  not. 
Forging  the  levin  of  Zeus  the  King,  and  so  far  was  it  wrought 
In  its  fiery  splendour,  that  yet  of  its  flashes  there  lacked  but  one  : 
And  the  giant  smiths  with  their  sledges  of  iron  were  smiting  thereon; 
While  forth  of  it  spurts  as  of  flaming  breath  ever  leapt  and  anon. 

And  there  were  the  sons  of  Asopus'  daughter  Antiope  set, 
Amphion  and  Zethus  :  and  Thebe,  with  towers  ungirded  as  yet. 
Stood  nigh  them  ;  and  lo,  the  foundations  thereof  were  they  lay- 
ing but  now 
In  fierce  haste.     Zethus  had  heaved  a  craggy  mountain's  brow 
On  his  shoulders  :  as  one  hard  straining  in  toil  did  the  image  appear. 


THE  FIRST  BOOK  27 

And  Amphion  the  while  to  his  golden  lyre  sang  loud  and  clear,  740 
On-pacing  ;  and  twice  so  great  was  the  rock  that  followed  anear. 
And  next  Kythereia  with  tresses  heavily  drooping  was  shown  ; 
And  the  buckler  of  onset  of  Ares  she  bare  :  from  her  shoulder 

the  zone 
Of  her  tunic  over  her  left  arm  fell  with  a  careless  grace 
Low  over  her  breast ;  and  ever  she  seemed  on  the  shield  to  gaze, 
On  the  face  that  out  of  its  brazen  mirror  smiled  to  her  face. 

And  therein  was  a  herd  of  shaggy  kine  ;  for  the  winning  thereof 
Elektryon's  sons  and  Teleboan  raiders  in  battle  strove  : 
For  these  were  defending  their  own  ;  but  the  Taphian  rovers 

were  fain 
To  rob  them;  and  drenched  was  the  dewy  meadow  with  that 750 

red  rain. 
But  with  that  overmastering  host  were  the  herdmen  striving  in  vain. 
And  therein  had  been  fashioned  chariots  twain  in  the  race  that 

sped. 
And  Pelops  was  guiding  the  car  that  afront  in  the  contest  fled ; 
And  Hippodameia  beside  him  rode  that  fateful  race. 
And  rushing  behind  him  Myrtilus  scourging  his  steeds  gave  chase  ; 
And  Oinomaus  with  him  had  couched  his  lance  with  a  murderous 

face. 
But,  as  snapt  at  the  nave  the  axle,  aslant  was  he  falling  in  dust, 
Even  as  at  Pelops'  back  he  was  aiming  the  treacherous  thrust. 

And  therein  was  Phoebus  Apollo,  a  slender  stripling  yet. 
Shooting  at  him  who  the  ravisher's  hand  to  the  veil  had  set  760 

Of  his  mother,  at  Tityos  the  giant,  whom  Elare  bare  ;  but  the  Earth 
Nursed  him,  and  hid  in  her  womb,  and  gave  to  him  second  birth. 
And  Phrixus  the  Minyan  was  there  ;  and  it  seemed  that  unto 

the  ram 
He   verily  hearkened ;  it  seemed  that  a  voice  from  the  gold- 
fleeced  came. 
Thou  wert  hushed  to  behold  them — wouldst  cheat  thy  soul  with 

the  hope  that  perchance 
Forth  of  the  lifeless  lips  would  break  the  utterance 
Of  speech — ay,  long  wouldst  thou  gaze  in  expectation's  trance. 


28  THE  ARGONAUTS 

Such  was  the  gift  of  Athene,  the  Goddess  Itonian's  toil. 
And  a  lance  far-leaping  he  grasped  in  his  right  hand,  given  erewhile 
Of  the  maid  Atalanta  on  Mainalus' height  for  the  pledge  of  a  friend.  770 
Gladly  she  met  him,  for  sorely  her  soul  desired  to  wend 
On  the  Quest :   howbeit  the  hero  himself  withheld  the  maid. 
For  the  peril  of  bitter  strife  for  her  love's  sake  made  him  afraid. 

So  he  hied  him  to  go  to  the  town,  as  the  radiant  star  to  behold 
Which  a  maid,  as  she  draweth  her  newly- woven  curtain's  fold, 
Beholdeth,  as  over  her  dwelling  upward  it  floateth  fair  ; 
And   it  charmeth  her  eyes,  flashing   out  of  the  depths  of  the 

darkling  air 
Flushed  with  a  crimson  glory  :  the  maid's  heart  leapeth  then 
Lovesick  for  the  youth  who  is  far  away  amid  alien  men. 
Her  betrothed,  unto  whom  her  parents  shall  wed  her  on  some  780 

glad  day  : 
So  as  a  star  was  the  hero  treading  the  cityward  way. 

So  when  he  had  passed  through  the  gates,  and  within  the  city 
he  came. 
The  women  thereof  thronged  after,  and  wafted  him  blithe  acclaim. 
Having  joy  of  the  stranger  :  but  earthward  ever  his  eyes  he  cast. 
Pacing  unfaltering  on  till  he  came  to  the  palace  at  last 
Of  Hypsipyle  :   then  at  the  hero's  appearing  the  maids  flung  wide 
The  gates  and  the  fair-fashioned  boards  of  the  leaves  on  either  side. 
Then  through  the  beautiful  hall  did  Iphinoe  lead  on 
Swiftly,  and  caused  him  to  sit  on  a  tinsel-glittering  throne 
Facing  the  Queen  ;  and  H^^sipyle  turned  her  eyes  away,  790 

For  the  maiden  blood  flushed  hot  in  her  cheek.     But  her  shame 

that  day 
Tied  not  her  tongue,  and  with  crafty-winsome  words  did  she  say  : 

'  Stranger,  wherefore  so  long  have  ye  tarried  without  our  towers  ? 
Forasmuch  as  no  man  dwelleth  within  this  city  of  ours ; 
But  these  have  betaken  them  hence  to  dwell  on  the  Thracian  shore, 
And  there  are  they  ploughing  the  wheat-bearing  lands.      I  will 

tell  thee  o'er 
The  evil  tale,  to  the  end  ye  also  may  understand. 
In  the  days  when  Thoas  my  father  was  king  o'er  the  folk  of  the  land. 


THE  FIRST  BOOK  29 

My  people  in  ships  from  Lemnos  over  the  sea-ridges  rode, 
And  harried  the  homes  of  the  Thracians  that  overagainst  us  abode  ;  800 
And  with  booty  untold  they  returned,  and  with  many  a  captive  maid. 
But  the  curse  of  a  baneful  Goddess  upon  them  now  was  laid  ; 
For  the  Cyprian  caused  on  their  souls  heart-ruining  blindness  to  fall, 
That  they  hated  their  lawful  wives,  and  forth  from  bower  and  hall 
At  the  beck  of  their  folly  they  drove  the  Lemnian  matrons  away, 
And  beside  those  spear-won  thralls  in  the  bed  of  love  they  lay — 
Cruel  ones  !      Sooth,  long  time  we  endured  it,  if  haply  again, 
Though  late,  their  hearts  might  be  turned ;  but  our  wrong  and 

our  bitter  pain 
Waxed  evermore  twofold  ;  and  the  children  of  true-born  blood 
In  our  halls  were  dishonoured,  and  grew  up  amidst  us  a  bastard  brood.  810 
Yea,  and  our  maids  unwedded,  and  widowed  wives  thereto, 
Uncared  for  about  our  city  wandered  to  and  fro. 
No  father  had  heeded,  no,  never  so  little,  his  daughter's  plight, 
Not  though  before  his  eyes  he  beheld  her  slain  outright 
By  a  tyrannous  stepdame's  hands  :  and  sons  would  defend  no  more 
A  mother  from  outrage  and  shame,  as  they  wont  in  the  days  of  yore. 
No  love  for  a  sister  then  the  heart  of  the  brother  bore. 
But  only  the  handmaid-thralls  in  the  home  found  grace  in  their  sight. 
In  the  dance,  in  the  market-place,  and  whenso  the  banquet  was  dight. 
Till  at  last  some  God  in  our  hearts  this  desperate  courage  awoke,  820 
No  more  to  receive  them,  when  back  they  returned  from  the 

Thracian  folk. 
Our  towers  within,  that  so  they  might  heed  the  right,  or  begone 
Hence  to  another  land,  even  they  and  their  thralls  war-won. 
Then  required  they  of  us  their  sons,  even  what  manchild  soe'er 
Had  been  left  in   the  town,  and  returned  unto  Thrace  ;  and  to 

this  day  there 
The  Lemnian  men  on  the  snowy  Thracian  corn-lands  dwell. 
Then  tarry  ye  sojourning  here  :  and  if  haply  it  please  thee  well 
To  abide  in  the  land,  and  it  seem  to  thee  good,  of  a  surety  thine 
Shall  be  Thoas  my  father's  honour.      I  ween  this  land  of  mine 
Thou  shalt  scorn  not,  for  passing  fruitful  it  is  above  all  the  rest    830 
Of  the  myriad  isles  that  lie  on  the  broad  Aegean's  breast. 


30  THE  ARGONAUTS 

But  come  now,  go  to  thy  galley,  and  tell  these  words  of  ours 
Unto  thy  comrades,  nor  longer  tarry  without  our  towers.' 

She  ended,  with  fair  words  veiling  the  deed  of  murder  dread 
Done  on  the  men  ;   and  the  hero  answered  the  queen,  and  he  said  : 
'  H}'psipyle,  passing  welcome  this  thy  request  shall  be 
Which  thou  tenderest  us,  whose  desire  withal  is  now  unto  thee. 
Back  through  thy  towni  will  I  come,  when  an  end  I  have  made  to  say 
x^ll  this  to  my  fellows  in  order  :  howbeit  let  all  the  sway 
And  the  lordship  be  thine  in  the  island.      I   make  not  in  scorn  840 

my  request, 

But  a  sore  task  thrusteth  me  onward  still,  and  I  may  not  rest.' 
He  spake,  and  the  queen's  right  hand  hath  he  touched,  and  aback 

to  the  strand 
He  hath  turned  him  to   go  ;  and  around   him   the  maidens  on 

either  hand 
Danced  blithely,  a  throng  unnumbered,  till  forth  of  the  gates  he 

had  strode. 
Thereafter  the  women  loaded  them  wains  smooth-running,  and  rode 
Down  to  the  beach,  and  gifts  of  greeting  they  bare  good  store, 
When  now  to  his  fellows  the  hero  had  told  the  message  o'er. 
Which  H^'psipyle  spake  unto  him  when  she  sent  and  bade  him  come. 
And  with  little  ado  the  maidens  drew  the  heroes  home 
To  their  halls;  for  sweet  desire  did  the  Lady  of  Cyprus  awake,  S50 
For  a  grace  to  Hephaistus  the  Lord  of  Craft,  that  Lemnos  might 

take 
New  life,  and  unruined  be  peopled  of  men  once  more  for  his  sake. 
Now  into  Hypsipyle's  royal  palace  Aison's  son 
Hath  passed,  and  the  rest,  as  it  happed  unto  each  man,  so  are 

they  gone, 
Save  Herakles  only ;  for  still  with  the  ship  would  the  hero  abide, 
For  he  willed  it  so,  and  a  few  his  chosen  comrades  beside. 
And  straightway  rejoiced  the  city  with  dance  and  with  festival, 
And  was  filled  with  sacrifice-steam  to  the  Deathless  :  but  most 

ofall     ^;i-^,r'■^ 
Honoured  they  Here's  glorious  son,  and  atonement's  price 
To  the  Cyprian  Queen  they  paid  with  song  and  with  sacrifice.      860 


THE  FIRST  BOOK  31 

And  ever  from  day  unto  day  did  the  heroes  their  sailing  forbear, 

Loth  to  depart;   and  long  had  they  tarried  loitering  there, 

But  Herakles  gathered  his  comrades,  and  drew  from  the  women 

apart. 
And  with  words  of  upbraiding  he  spake,  and  rebuked  them  in- 
dignant of  heart : 
*  What,  sirs,  is  it  blood  of  kindred  spilt  that  maketh  us  roam 
From  our  land  ? — or  came  ye,  because  that  ye  found  no  brides  at 

home, 
Hitherward,  scorning  the  maidens  of  Greece  ?     Doth  it  please 

you  to  toil 
Here  dwelling,  and  driving  the  plough  through  the  soft  smooth 

Lemnian  soil  ? 
Good  sooth,  but  little  renown  shall  we  win  of  our  tarrying 
Here  long  time  with  the  stranger  women  !      No  God  will  bring  870 
That  Fleece  unto  us,  nor  wrest  from  its  warder,  for  our  request ! 
Forth  let  us  go  each  man  to  his  place — him  leave  ye  to  rest 
All  day  on  Hypsipyle's  couch,  till  he  people  from  shore  to  shore 
Lemnos  with  menfolk  :  great  his  renown  shall  be  therefor !  ' 

So  did  he  chide  with  the  band  ;  was  none  dared  meet  his  eye. 
Neither  look  in  his  face,  nor  was  any  man  found  that  essayed  reply. 
But  straight  from  his  presence,  to  make  their  departing   ready, 

they  went 
In  haste  ;  and  the  women  came  running,  so  soon  as  they  knew 

their  intent. 
And  as  when  round  beautiful  lilies  the  wild  bees  hum  at  their  toil. 
From   their   hive   in   the   rock   forth    pouring;    the   dew-sprent 880 

meadow  the  while 
Around  them  rejoiceth,  and  hovering,  stooping,  now  and  again 
They  sip  of  the  sweet  flower-fountains — in  such  wise  round  the  men 
Forth  streamed  the  women  with  yearning  faces,  making  their  moan ; 
And  with   hands   caressing  and  soft   sad  words  did  they  greet 

each  one. 
Beseeching  the  Blessed  to  grant  them  a  home-coming  void  of  bane. 
Yea,  so  doth  Hypsipyle  pray,  as  her  clinging  fingers  strain 
The  hand  of  Jason,  and  stream  her  tears  with  the  parting-pain  : 


32 


THE  ARGONAUTS 


'  Go  thou,  and  thee  may  the  Gods  with  thy  comrades  scathless 

bring 
Back  to  the  home-land,  bearing  the  Fleece  of  Gold  to  the  kiog, 
Even  as  thou  wilt,  and  thine  heart  desireth  :   and  this  mine  isle,    89c 
And  my  father's  sceptre  withal,  shall  wait  for  thee  the  while. 
If  haply,  thine  home-coming  won,  thou  wouldst  choose  to  come 

hither  again. 
Thou  couldst  gather  from  other  cities  a  host  unnumbered  of  men 
Lightly — ah,  but  the  longing  shall  never  awaken  in  thee  ; 
Yea,  and  mine  own  heart  bodeth  that  this  shall  never  be  ! 
Yet  O  remember  Hypsipylc  whilst  thou  art  far  away, 
And  when  home  thou  hast  won  ;  and  leave  me  a  word  that  thy 

love  shall  obey 
With  joy,  if  the  Gods  shall  vouchsafe  me  to  bear  a  son  to  my  lord.' 
Lovingly  looked  on  her  Aison's  son,  and  he  spake  the  word: 
*  Hypsipyle,  so  may  the  Gods  bring  all  these  blessings  to  be !       90c 
Howbeit  a  better  wish  than  this  frame  thou  for  me  ; 
Forasmuch  as  by  Pelias'  grace  it  sufficeth  me  still  to  live 
In  the  home-land — only  the  Gods  from  my  toils  deliverance  give  I 
But  and  if  to  return  to  the  land  of  Hellas  be  not  my  doom. 
Afar  as  I  sail,  and  a  fair  manchild  be  the  fruit  of  thy  womb. 
To  Pelasgian  lolkos  send  him,  when  boyhood  and  manhood  be  met, 
To  my  father  and  mother,  to  solace  their  grief, — if  living  yet 
Haply  he  find  them, — that  so,  in  the  stead  of  the  prince  their  son, 
They  may  win  in  their  halls  a  dear  one,  to  brighten  the  hearth 

left  lone.' 
He  spake,  and  was  gone  ;  and  afront  of  his  fellows  he  strode  to  91c 

the  ship. 
And  the  rest  of  the  chiefs  followed  on,  and  the  oars  in  their 

hands  did  they  grip. 
Row  upon  row  as  they  sat ;  and  the  hawsers  did  Argus  cast 
Loose  from  the  rock  brine-lashed  ;   and  mightily  then  and  fast 
Fell  they  to  smiting  with  oars  long-bladed  the  seething  wave. 
And  at  even  by  Orpheus'  counsel  the  keel  ashore  they  drave 
On  the  isle  of  Elektra  the  daughter  of  Atlas,  that  there  they 

might  learn 


THE  FIRST  BOOK  33 

The  mystic  rites  whose  unveihng  is  not  soul-daunting  nor  stern, 
And  safeUer  so  might  voyage  over  the  chill  grey  sea : — 
No  more  will  I  speak  of  the  Hidden  Things — but  a  blessing  be 
Upon  that  same  isle,  and  the  Gods  there  dwelling,  to  whom  belong  920 
Those  rites  whereof  it  is  not  vouchsafed  that  we  tell  in  song. 
And  from  thence  o'er  the   Black    Sea's   depths  unfathomed 
they  sped  with  the  oar. 
To  leftward  keeping  the  land  of  Thrace,  and  to  rightward  the  shore 
Of  Imbros  overagainst  it ;  and,  even  as  sank  the  sun, 
Unto  the  long  sea-foreland  of  Chersonese  they  won. 
There  did  the  strong  swift  south-wind  blow,  and  the  sail  they  spread 
To  the  breeze,  and  into  the  outward-rushing  waters  they  sped 
Of  Athamas'  daughter  :   and  lo,  astern  with  the  morning  light 
The  outsea  lay,  and  along  Rhoeteion's  beach  in  the  night 
They  coasted,  and  still  on  their  right  the  land  Idaean  lay.  930 

And  they  left  Dardania  behind,  and  Abydos-ward  steered  they. 
By  Perkote  in  that  same  night,  and  Abarnis'  stretches  of  sand 
Onward  they  glided,  and  past  Pityeia  the  hallowed  land. 
And  the  selfsame  night,  as  with  sails  and  with  oars  sped  Argo  on, 
Through  the  sea-gorge  darkly-swirling  of  Hellespont  they  won. 
Now  within  the  Propontis  an  island  there  is,  both  high  and  steep ; 
Short  space  from  the  corn-blest  Phrygian  land  doth  it  rise  from 

the  deep 
Seaward-sloped  :  to  the  mainland  stretched  a  neck  of  land 
Low  as  the  wash  of  the  sea  ;  so  the  place  hath  a  twofold  strand. 
i  And  beyond  the  water  floods  of  Aisepus  the  river  they  lie.  940 

j  The  Hill  of  the  Bears  it  is  called  of  them  that  dwell  thereby. 
I  And  cruel  oppressors  and  fierce  have  there  their  robber-hold, 
'  Earth-born,  a  marvel  great  for  the  dwellers  around  to  behold. 
Six  mighty  arms  each  monster  uplifteth  against  a  foe, 
;  Even  two  from  his  brawny  shoulders  that  spring,  and  therebelow 
1  Four  other,  that  out  of  his  sides  exceeding  terrible  grow. 
Now  Dolian  men  on  the  isthmus  abode,  and  about  the  plain  ; 
And  amidst  them  did  Kyzikus,  hero-son  of  Aineus,  reign. 
The  son  whom  Ainete,  the  daughter  of  godlike  Eusorus,  bare. 
But  these  men  the  E  arth-bor  n  giants,  how  mighty  and  dreadful  soe'er,  950 


34  THE  ARGONAUTS 

In  no  wise  harried :  their  shield  and  defender  Poseidon  became, 
For  himself  had  begotten  of  old  the  first  of  the  Dolian  name. 
Thitherward  Argo,  as  chased  by  the  Thracian  breezes  she  fled, 
Pressed,  and  the  goodly  haven  received  her  as  onward  she  sped. 
And  their  light-weight  anchor-stone  did  they  cast  away  thereby 
By  Tiphys'  behest,  and  they  left  it  beside  the  fountain  to  lie, 
By  Artakia's  spring  ;   and  another  they  chose,  huge,  meet   for 

their  need. 
Howbeit  their  first,  by  Archer  Apollo's  oracle-rede, 
The  Ionian  Nele'ids  laid  thereafter,  a  hallowed  stone. 
In  the  shrine  of  Athene,  Jason's  friend,  as  was  meet  to  be  done.  9< 
And  in  all  lovingkindness  the  Dolians  came,  and  to  meet  them 

pressed 
K  yzikus'self,  when  their  lineage  he  heard,and  was  ware  of  the  Quest, 
And  knew  what  heroes  were  these  ;  and  with  glad  guest-welcome 

they  met. 
And  besought  them  to  speed  in  their  rowing  a  short  space  onward  yet, 
And  to  fasten  the  hawser  within  the  city's  haven  fair. 
To  Apollo  the  Lord  of  Landing  they  builded  an  altar  there : 
By  the  strand  they  upreared  it,  and  there  did  the  smoke  of  the 

sacrifice  rise  ; 
And  sweet  strong  wine  did  the  king's  self  give  them,  their  need 

to  suffice. 
And  sheep  therewithal :  for  an  oracle  rang  in  his  ears — *  In  the  day 
When  a  godlike  band  of  heroes  shall  come,  meet  thou  their  array  97 
With  welcome  of  love,  and  thou  shalt  not  bethink  thee  at  all  of 

the  fray.' 
And,  like  unto  Jason,  the  soft  down  bloomed  on  the  young  king's 

chin  ; 
Neither  yet  was  he  gladdened  with  laughter  of  children  his  halls 

within  ; 
For  the  pangs  of  the  travailing  hour  not  yet  to  his  bride  had 

been  known, 
Even  to  the  lady  born  of  Merops,  Perkosius'  son, 
Fair-tressed  Kleite.      But  now  had  she  passed  from  her  sire's  hails 

forth 


THE  FIRST  BOOK  35 

On  the  mainland-shore,  when  he  won  her  with  gifts  of  priceless  worth. 
But  for  all  this  left  he  his  bridal  bower  and  the  bed  of  his  bride, 
And  arrayed  them  a  banquet,  and  cast  from  his  heart  all  fear  aside. 
And  they  questioned  each  other,  the  king  and  the  heroes.     Of 980 

them  would  he  learn 
The  end  whereunto  they  voyaged,  and  Pelias'  bidding  stern. 
Of  the  dwellers  around,  and  their  cities,  they  asked  and  were  fain 

to  be  taught 
Touching  all  the  gulf  of  Propontis  the  wide:  but  the  king  knew  nought 
Beyond  to  tell  them,  albeit  with  eager  desire  they  sought. 
So  at  dawn  did  they  climb  huge  Dindymus'  sides,  with  purpose  togaze 
With  their  own  eyes  over  the  unknown  sea  and  her  trackless  ways; — 
But  forth  of  the  outer  haven  first  their  galley  they  rowed  ; — 
Still  Jason's  Path  is  it  named,  that  mountain-track  they  trode. 
But  the  earth-born  giants  the  while  rushed  down  from  the 

mountain-side. 
And  the  seaward  mouth  they  blocked  of  the  haven  of  Chytos  the  990 

wide 
With  crags,  like  men  that  lie  in  wait  for  a  wolf  in  his  lair. 
Howbeit  with  them  that  were  younger  had  Herakles  tarried  there ; 
And  he  leapt  to  his  feet,  and  against  them  his  back-springing 

bow  did  he  strain. 
One  after  other  he  stretched  them  on  earth  ;  and  the  giants  amain 
Heaved  up  huge  jagged  rocks,  and  hurled  them  against  their  foe. 
Yea,  for  that  terrible  monster-brood  was  nurtured,  I  trow, 
Of  Here,  the  bride  of  Zeus,  for  a  trial  of  Herakles. 
Therewithal  came  the  rest  of  their  fellows,  returning  to  battle 

with  these 
Or  ever  they  won  the  mountain-crest.      To  the  slaughter  they  fell 
Of  the  Earth-born  brood,  those  heroes  ;  with  arrows  some  did  100c 

they  quell. 
And  some  on  the  points  of  their  spears  they  received,  until  they 

had  slain 
All  that  to  grapple  of  fight  had  rushed  so  furious-fain. 
i  And  even  as  when  the  woodmen  with  axes  have  smitten,  and  throw 
The  long  beams  down  on  the  strand  of  the  sea  ranged  row  upon  row, — 


36  THE  ARGONAUTS 

For  the  brine-sodden  wood  shall  grip  the  strong  bolts  faster  so, — 
Even  so  at  the  entering-in  of  the  foam-fringed  haven  they  lay 
One  after  other  ;  some  in  a  huddled  heap  where  the  spray 
Dashed  over  their  heads  and  their  breasts,  the  while,  stretched 

high  on  the  land, 
Stiffened  their  limbs  :  there  were  some  yet  again,  whose  heads 

on  the  sand 
Rested,  the  while  in  the  heaving  waters  swayed  their  feet ; —       j 
But  doomed  were  they  all  alike  for  the  birds'  and  the  fishes'  meat. 
And  the  heroes,  so  soon  as  the  peril  afar  from  their  emprise 

was  driven, 
Cast  loose  the  hawsers  of  Argo  before  the  breezes  of  heaven. 
Forth  shot  she,  and  onward  they  drave,  fast  cleaving  the  broad 

sea-swell. 
All  day  under  canvas  she  ran  :   howbeit,  as  twilight  fell 
No  longer  the  wind-rush  steadily  held,  but  the  veering  blast 
Caught  them,  and  swept  them  aback,  till  it  brought  them  again 

at  the  last 
To  the  guest-fain  Dolian  men.      Then  stepped  they  ashore  in 

the  gloom 
Of  the  night ;  and  unto  this  day  is  it  called  the  Rock  of  Doom 
Round  which  the  hawsers  of  Argo  in  blind  haste  now  did  they  pass;  i 
Neither  did  any  man  deem  that  the  selfsame  island  it  was  ; 
Nor  yet  were  the  Dolians  ware  that  again  in  the  night  to  their  coast 
The  heroes  were  come,  but  haply  they  weened  that  a  Makrian  host 
Of  Pelasgian  men  for  war  had  sailed  to  their  land  overseas  : 
Wherefore  their  armour  they  donned,  and  uplifted  their  hands 

against  these. 
And  with  onset  of  spears  and  with  clashing  of  shields  met  they 

in  the  strife, 
Like  to  the  vehement  blast  of  flame  which  hath  leapt  into  life 
Mid  the  copses  dry,  and  the  red  tongues  climb :  and  the  battle- 
din  then 
Fearful  and  furious  fell  in  the  midst  of  the  Dolian  men. 
Nor  may  Kyzikus  now  overleap  his  weird,  and  aback  from  the  war  loj 
Win  home  to  the  bower  of  love  and  the  arms  of  his  bride  any  more. 


THE  FIRST  BOOK  37 

But,  even  as  he  turned  on  him,  full  on  the  king  leapt  Aison's  son. 
And  stabbed  in  the  midst  of  his  breast,  and  shattered  was  all  the  bone 
Around  the  spear,  and  falling  in  death-throes  down  on  the  sands 
He  filled  up  the  measure  of  Fate.  To  escape  her  resistless  hands 
Is  vouchsafed  unto  none  :  as  a  wide  snare  compassed  we  are 

with  her  bands. 
Even  so,  as  he  weened  that  the  bitterness  now  of  death  was  past 
At  the  hands  of  the  heroes,  lo,  in  her  gin  were  his  feet  caught  fast 
In  the  night,  as  he  battled  with  them,  and  many  a  champion  withal 
Was  slain  with  the  king  ;  by  Herakles'  hands  did  Telekles  fall,  1040 
And  fell  Megabrontes  ;  and  Sphodris  Akastus  overthrew  ; 
And  Zelys,  Gephyrus  withal,  the  battle-swift  Peleus  slew. 
Telamon's  ashen  spear  through  Basileus'  heart  is  thrust ; 
Died  Promeus  by  Idas,  and  Klytius  laid  Hyakinthus  in  dust ; 
And  the  Tyndarids  twain  slew  Phlogius,  slew  Megalossakes  ; 
And  valiant  Itymoneus  fell  before  Oineus'  son  amid  these, 
And  Artakes  with  him,  a  chieftain  of  men  :  and  unto  this  day 
Unto  all  these  slain  do  the  people  the  worship  of  heroes  pay. 
Then  wavered  the  ranks  and  broke  ;  then  fled  they  in  panic  affright, 
As  before  the  swift-winged  hawks  doth  a  cloud  of  doves  take  flight.  1050 
Through  the  gates  in  a  huddled  rout  they  poured,  and  the  town 

straightway 
With  the  war-yell  was  filled,  and  backward  rolled  was  the  woe- 
ful fray. 
But  at  dawn  were  they  ware,  both  these  and  those,  of  the  cure- 
less ill. 
Of  the  ruinous  error  ;  and  now  did  bitter  anguish  fill 
The  Minyan  heroes,  beholding  before  them  Aineus'  child 
Stretched  in  the  dust,  and  Kyzikus  lying  blood-defiled. 
For  three  whole  days  with  rending  of  hair  did  they  mourn  his  doom, 
Even  they  with  the  Dolian  folk.      Thereafter  about  his  tomb 
Three  times  in  their  brazen  armour  the  round  of  lament  did  they 

pace, 
And  buried  him  :  funeral  games  held  they  in  the  selfsame  place,  1060 
:  As  was  meet,  in  the  meadow-plain  where  yet  before  the  eyes 
Of  the  folk  of  the  latter  day  doth  the  heap  of  his  grave-mound  rise. 


38  THE  ARGONAUTS 

Yea,  neither  would  Kleite  his  wife  any  more  mid  the  living  abide, 
Forlorn  of  her  lord ;  but  a  woefuller  evil  she  added  beside 
To  the  evil  done,  when  clasping  her  neck  with  the  noose  she  died. 
Ah,  but  the  Wildwood  Maids  made  moan  for  the  beautiful  dead  ; 
And  of  all  the  tears  that  to  earth  from  their  eyes  for  her  sake 

they  shed 
A  fountain  the  Goddesses  made,  and  the  name  of  it  far  and  wide 
Hath  been  heard,  even  Kleite,  the  name  of  a  most  unhappy  bride. 
Ah,  that  was  the  darkest  day  that  from  Zeus  did  ever  befall 
The  daughters  and  sons  of  the  Dolian  race,  and  in  none  of  them  all 
Was  there  spirit  to  taste  of  food,  and  their  hands  for  a  weary  while 
By  reason  of  grief  hung  down,  and  forgat  the  millstone's  toil : 
But  theii-  hves  dragged  on,  while  untouched  of  the  fire  was  the 

food  that  they  ate. 
Yea,  the  Ionian  folk  that  in  Kyzikus  dwell  even  yet. 
When  they  pour  drink-offerings  year  by  year,  at  the  city's  mill        | 
Grind  ever  their  corn,  for  the  querns  in  the  houses  of  mourning 

are  still.  ' 

And  the  wild  winds  woke  at  the  sound  of  their  mourning  to      ' 

shriek  and  to  rave 
Twelve  days,  twelve  nights;  and  prisoned  by  wrath  of  wind  and  wave 
Tarried  the  heroes  from  sailing,  until,  on  the  thirteenth  night,       io8 
When  the  rest  of  the  wanderers  lay  for  the  last  time  bowed  by 

the  might 
Of  slumber  on  that  drear  shore,  while  watch  and  ward  was  kept 
Of  Akastus  and  Mopsus  Ampykus'  son  over  them  that  slept, — 
Then  over  the  golden  head  of  Aison's  son  did  there  fly 
A  kingfisher  :  clear  through  the  hush  his  happy-boding  cry 
Rang  for  the  lulling  of  winds  ;   and  Mopsus  hearkening  caught 
The  shore-bird's  note,  and  he  knew  it  with  happy  omen  fraught. 
And  a  God's  hand  guided  its  wing,  that  it  wheeled  and  shot  to 

the  height 
Of  the  Argo's  stern,  and  thereon  hath  it  stayed  its  arrowy  flight. 
And  the  seer  touched  Jason,  there  on  the  fleeces  soft  as  he  lay     1091 
Of  the  sheep,  and  from  slumber  he  roused  him  with  haste,  and 

thus  did  he  say  ; 


THE  FIRST  BOOK  39 

*  Aison's  son,  thou  must  climb  to  the  temple  that  standeth  there 
On  Dindymus'  rugged  height,  and  make  to  the  Mother  thy  prayer, 
The  fair-throned  Mother  of  all  the  Blest :  and  the  stormy  blast 
Shall  be  stilled.      For  but  now  hath  a  cry  by  mine  ears  on  the 

night-wind  passed. 
The  weird  sea-kingfisher's  cry  ;  and  around  thy  slumbering  head 
Wheeling  its  flight,  it  uttered  the  thing  that  my  lips  have  said. 
For  swayed  by  her  power  be  the  winds,  and  the  sea,  and  the 

earth  below, 
Yea  also  Olympus  crowned  with  the  everlasting  snow. 
And  to  her,  when  to  heaven  from  her  hills  she  ascendeth,  dothnoo 

Zeus  give  place, 
Even  Kronos'  son  himself,  and  all  the  Deathless  Race 
Of  the  Blessed  in  reverence  bow  before  her  awful  face.' 

So  spake  he  :  to  hear  that  word  the  heart  of  Jason  leapt. 
Gladsome  he  sprang  from  his  couch,  and  his  comrades,  there  as 

they  slept. 
Did  he  waken  in  haste  ;   and  he  told,  as  they  gathered  around 

him  to  hear, 
The  prophecy  spoken  of  Mopsus  Ampykus'  son,  the  seer. 
Then  steers  from  the  byre  the  young  men  drave,  and  with  speed 

they  pressed 
Up  the   steep  hill-path  with  the  beasts,  till   they  won   to  the 

mountain's  crest. 
From  the  Rock  of  Doom  did  others  the  hawsers  of  Argo  slip : 
To  the  Thracian  haven  they  rowed,  and  leapt  to  the  strand  ;  mo 

and  the  ship 
There  guarded  they  left,  for  there  tarried  behind  of  their  fellows 

a  few. 
And  from  Dindymus  saw  they  the  Makrian  cliffs,  and  full  in  view 
The  stretch  of  the  Thracian  Coast  oversea  on  this  side  lay. 
And  the  Bosporus  misty-dim,  and  the  blue  hills  far  away 
Of  Mysia-land,  and  the  river  Aisepus  on  that  side  flowed, 
And  the  town  and  the  plain  Nepeian  of  Adresteia  showed. 
Then  found  they  the  sturdy  stock  of  a  vine  in  the  forest  that  grew, 
A  tree  exceeding  old :  with  the  axes  the  same  did  they  hew 


40  THE  ARGONAUTS 

For  the  Mountain-goddess's  sacred  image  :  with  cunning  skill 
Of  the  craftsman  did  Argus  carve  it ;  and  so  on  the  rugged  hill 
Did  they  set  it  up  :  for  the  shrine  thereof  stood  tall  oaks  round, 
Which  of  all  trees  root  them  the  deepest  beneath  the  face  of  the 

ground. 
Then  of  loose  stones  built  they  an  altar  :  with  leaves  from  the 

oaken  spray 
They  wreathed  it  around,  and  the  sacrifice  thereupon  did  they  lay. 
On  the  Mother  majestic,  on  Dindyme's  Queen,  the  while  did 

they  call. 
Who  dwelleth  in  Phrygia  :  on  Tityas  they  cried,  on  Kyllene  withal, 
Who  alone  be  called  the  Dispensers  of  Doom — bv  the  judgment-seat 
Of  the  Mother  Idaean  who  sit — by  all  that  priesthood  of  Crete, 
The  Daktvlians  of  Ida,  born  in  the  cave  Dictaean  of  yore 
When  the  Nvmph  Anchiale  clutched  in  the  throes  of  travail,  and  tore 
With  the  fingers  of  either  hand  the  earth  by  Oaxus'  shore. 
Knelt  Aison's  son  to  the  Goddess,  and  prayed  her  with  earnest  cries 
To  turn  the  tempest  away,  on  the  fiame  of  the  sacrifice 
As    he    poured    the    wine.      And    the    vouths    therewithal    at 

Orpheus'  command 
Trode  round  her  altar  the  measure,  an  armour-sheathed  band, 
And  clashed  with  their  swords  on  their  shields,  that  the  sound 

that  boded  them  ill 
Might  be  lost  in  the  air,  the  wail  for  the  dead,  which  the  people  still 
In  grief  for  their  king  sent  up  ;   for  which  cause  unto  this  day 
With  timbrel  and  drum  the  Phrygians  worship  to  Rhea  pay. 
And  the  Goddess  of  them  that  sought  her  was  found,  and  in-  i 

clined  her  ear 
To  the  sacrifice-prayer  :  of  her  grace  did  tokens  of  good  appear. 
For  the  trees  shed  fruit  in  abundance  down,  and  around  their  feet 
The  earth  mid  her  tender  grass  with  fiowers  unsowTi  was  sweet. 
And  the  beasts  of  the  \vildwood  came,  forsaking  thicket  and  lair. 
Fawning  with  swaying  tails  :  and  another  marvel  there 
Did  the  Goddess  create,  for  that  Dindymus  never  theretofore 
With  watersprings  flowed  ;   but  now  did  a  sudden  torrent  pour 
From  her  thirsty  crest,  and  the  Fountain  of  Jason  they  name  it  still, 


THE  FIRST  BOOK  41 

The  folk  that  in  after  days  dwell  round  that  sacred  hill. 
In  the  Goddess's  honour  a  feast  on  the  Bears'  Hill  then  dight  they,  "50 
And  Rhea  the  all-majestic  they  hymned  :  but  at  dawn  of  the  day 
Stilled  were  the  wind  s,  and  with  oars  from  the  island  sped  they  away. 
Then  hero  was  kindled  with  hero  in  gallant  contention  to  try 
Who  last  should  be  spent  and  refrain ;  for  the  peace  of  a  wind- 
less sky 
Laid  level  the  swirls  of  the  sea,  and  lulled  to  sleep  the  wave. 
And  putting  their  trust  in  the  calm,  ever  onward  and  onward 

they  drave 
The  ship  by  their  might ;  and  with  her,  through  the  brine  as  she 

darted  and  leapt. 
Not  even  the  storm-footed  steeds  of  Poseidon  the  pace  had  kept. 
Howbeit  the  surges  awoke  as  from  sleep,  as  the  keen  blasts  blew, 
Which  swooped  from  the  river-gorges  as  day  to  the  evenfall  drew  :  1160 
And  the  heroes  forspent  with  toiling  refrained,  save  only  one 
Who  by  might  of  his  hands  tugged  onward  his  weary  comrades  alone; 
Even  Herakles  :  quivered  the  strong-knit  beams  as  he  strained 

to  the  stroke. 
But  when,  as  they  fled  by  the  mainland-shore  of  the  Mysian  folk. 
And  Rhyndakus'  outfall  they  sighted,  and,  huge  against  the  sky, 
Aigaion's  cairn,  past  Phrygia  a  little,  and  slipped  thereby, 
Even  then,  through  the  furrows  of  roughened  surge  as  he  tugged 

and  tore. 
Snapped  he  the  ashen  blade,  and,  grasping  the  half  of  the  oar 
Yet  in  his  hands,  back  Herakles  fell,  and  the  half  swept  down 
The  tossing  wake  of  the  ship.     But  he  rose,  and  with  angry  frown  1170 
Sat  gazing  around,  for  his  hands  endured  not  idle  to  lie. 

'Twas  the  hour  when  the  delver  or  ploughman  aback  from  the 
field  doth  hie 
With  joy  to  his  hut,  and  his  soul  sore  craveth  the  eventide  meat, 
And  bow  on  the  threshold  his  knees,  and  totter  his  weary  feet. 
All  dust-besprent  he  beholdeth  his  cramped  hands  worn  with  toil. 
With  many  a  curse  reviling  the  taskmaster  Belly  the  while, — 
Then  came  they  to  where  in  the  land  Kianian  nestle  her  homes 
'Neath  Arganthone,  where  Kios  against  the  sea-tide  foams. 


42  THE  ARGONAUTS 

Then  as  friends  greet  friends  did  the  Mysians  with  kindly  welcoming 
Meet  them,  the  people  that  dwelt  in  the  land,  and  gifts  did  they  bring,  i 
Even  sheep,  and  wine  without  stint  therewithal  gave  they  for 

their  need. 
Then  sapless  logs  did  some  of  them  gather,  and  grass  from  the  mead 
Did  some  bring  in,  whereof  great  store  for  their  couches  they  mowed, 
The  while  in  the  hands  of  some  the  whirling  iire-sticks  glowed. 
Some  mingled  the  wine  in  the  mazer,  and  ready  the  feast  they  dight, 
Doing  sacrifice  to  Apollo  as  deepened  the  shades  of  night. 

But  Zeus'  son  spake  to  his  comrades  meetly  the  feast  to  prepare  : 
But  into  the  forest  himself  hath  hied,  to  the  end  that  there. 
Or  ever  he  supped,  for  the  grip  of  his  hands  he  might  fashion  an  oar. 
Then  found  he  a  pine  as  he  roved,  and  scant  was  the  burden  it  bore  ngo 
Of  boughs,  nor  with  heavy-clustering  leaves  was  its  shade  made  dim; 
But  like  to  the  shaft  it  rose  of  a  poplar  tall  and  slim  : 
Even  such  was  the  measure  thereof  to  behold  in  height  and  in  girth. 
Swiftly  his  arrow-fraught  quiver  hath  Herakles  cast  to  the  earth 
With  the  shafts  therein :  from  his  shoulders  the  lion's  hide  did 

he  strip. 
With  his  brass-heavy  club  at  its  roots  he  smote,  till  he  loosed 

earth's  grip. 
Low  down  did  he  grasp  the  stem  about  with  either  hand, 
Putting  trust  in  his  might :  with  shoulder  against  it  thrust  did  he  stand 
With  feet  wide  set.     From  the  ground,  deep-rooted  albeit  it  grew, 
Hath  his  grip  upheaved  it  with  all  the  clods  that  clave  thereto,    i 
And  as  when  unawares  the  mast  of  a  ship,  in  the  very  hour 
When  Orion's  storm-fraught  setting  is  working  in  baleful  power. 
Is  struck  from  on  high  by  a  tempest's  swiftly-swooping  squall. 
And  with  snapped  stays  rent  from  its  box,  and  the  wedges  there- 
withal. 
Even  so  he  upwrenched  that  tree  ;  and  he  gathered  up  arrows 

and  bow, 
And  the  lion's  hide,  and  his  club;  and  he  hasted  him  backward  to  go. 
But  Hylas  the  while  with  a  pitcher  of  brass  from  the  throng 
hath  hied 
Seeking  a  spring's  pure  flow  ;  for  the  feast  of  the  eventide 


THE  FIRST  BOOK  43 

To  draw  for  him  water  against  his  return,  and  withal  to  prepare 
With  speed  all  things  for  the  time  when  again  his  lord  should  1210 

be  there. 
For  in  suchlike  service  did  Herakles  nurture  the  lad  and  train 
From  the  day  when,  a  captive  child,  by  the  hero's  hand  he  was  ta'en 
From  the  home  of  his  father  Theodamas,  slain  in  Dryopian  land 
Without  ruth,  when  he  dared  for  his  ploughteam's  sake  'gainst 

the  hero  to  stand. 
For  it  fell,  as  Theodamas  clave  with  the  share  the  fallow  field, 
That  mischief  befell  him  ;  for  Herakles  came,  and  he  bade  him 

to  yield 
The  heifer  he  ploughed  withal  unto  him  in  his  heart's  despite  : 
For  against  the  Dryopian  folk  was  he  seeking  occasion  of  fight. 
For  their  bane,  forasmuch  as  reckless  of  right  in  the  land  dwelt 

they  : — 
But  the  story  thereof  should  lead  me  far  from  my  song  astray.     1220 
So  in  haste  to  the  fountain  he  hied  him,  and  Pegae  hight  that  spring 
Of  the  people  that  dwell  in  the  field  thereabout :  and  the  dancing- 
ring 
Of  the  Nymphs,  as  it  chanced,  was  there ;  for  all  these  loved 

full  well- 
Even  all  the  Nymphs  that  about  that  fair  hill  wont  to  dwell — 
In  hymns  through  the  night-tide  ringing  to  chant  unto  Artemis  still. 
But  they  which  inherit  the  mountain-crest,  or  the  rushing  rill, 
And  the  Forest-haunters,  were  ranged  from  the  fountain  far  away. 
But  it  fell  that  the  Water-nymph  came  floating  up  that  day 
From  the  depths  of  the  fair-flowing  spring  : — lo,  over  her  bendeth 

his  face 
In  the  rosy  flush  of  its  beauty,  its  manifold  winsome  grace.  1230 

For  the  full  moon  casting  her  beams  from  the  height  of  the  firmament 
Smote  him,  and  faintness  of  love  on  her  soul  the  Cyprian  sent, 
And  scarce  she  unravelled  her  thoughts  in  sweet  confusion  blent. 
But  over  the  fountain's  brim  as  aforetime  aslant  hath  he  bowed, 
And  plunged  in  the  ripple  the  pitcher  :  the  water  gurgled  loud 
As  into  the  echoing  brass  it  poured  ;  and  the  Fountain-maid 
Her  left  arm  slid  from  the  depths,  and  around  his  neck  was  it  laid 


44  THE  ARGONAUTS 

In  her  yearning  to  kiss  those  dainty  lips,  while,  clutched  by  her  right, 
Drawn  down  was  his  arm,  and  through  swirling  eddies  he  sank 
from  the  light. 
But  his  cry  as  he  sank  was  heard  of  one  of  his  comrades  alone  12 
Who  trod  that  fountainward  path,  Polyphemus,  Eilatus'  son, 
To  meet  that  giant  hero  when  back  he  should  fare  to  the  feast. 
By  Pegae,  following  the  cry,  hath  he  rushed,  like  a  wildwood  beast 
Unto  whom  from  far  away  hath  been  wafted  the  bleating  of  sheep. 
And  with  famine  afire  he  pursueth  ;   howbeit  he  may  not  leap 
On  the  prey,  for  already  the  shepherds  have  penned  them  safe 

from  the  foe  ; 
And  in  vehement  rage  must  he  moan  and  howl,  till  aweary  he  grow ; 
So  Eilatus'  son  made  vehement  moan,  and  he  roamed  to  and  fro 
About  the  place  ;   and  his  voice  rang  piteous,  broken  with  woe. 
Then  suddenly  drew  he  his  mighty  blade,  and  he  rushed  to  pursue,  1250 ! 
If  perchance  he  were  seized  of  beasts,  or  from  ambush  a  robber-crew 
Had  leapt  on  him  faring  alone,  and  were  haling  afar  their  prey. 
Then,  even  as  he  shook  in  his  hand  his  naked  sword,  in  the  way 
Came  Herakles'  self  to  meet  him,  a  giant  form  that  sped 
To  the  ship  through  the  gloom  ;  and  he  knew  him,  and  straight- 
way a  tale  most  dread 
He  told,  while  laboured  with  heavy  panting  his  heart,  and  he  said: 
'  God  help  thee,  that  I  first  bring  to  thee  tidings  of  bitter  pain  ! 
Hylas  hath  gone  to  the  spring,  and  returned  not  alive  again  ! 
Or  robbers  have  seized  him,  and  hale  him  away  to  captivity, 
Or  evil  beasts  are  rending  : — I  heard  but  now  his  cry.'  1260 

Upon  Herakles'  temples  then  did  the  great  sweat-gouts  upstart. 
As  he  heard  him  speak,  and  the  dark  blood  curdled  about  his  heart. 
In  fury  in  flung  to  the  earth  the  pine,  and  along  that  path 
Rushed,  whithersoever  his  feet  might  hurry  his  aimless  wrath. 
And  as,  stung  by  a  gadflv,  a  bull  rusheth  onward  frenzy-stirred 
Forsaking  the  meadows  and  marshlands,  the  while  of  herdsman 

or  herd 
He  taketh  no  heed,  pressing  on  in  his  wild  course  now  without  check, 
Now  making  a  moment's  stand,  and  uplifting  his  massive  neck. 
He  uttereth  bellowings,  mad  with  the  sting  of  the  cruel  breese  ; 


THE  FIRST  BOOK  45 

So  he  in  his  frenzy  now  would  be  plying  his  strong  swift  knees  127c 
Unresting,  and  now  from  his  toil  would  he  cease  for  a  moment's  space, 
And  shouted : — the  mighty  voice  rang  far  through  the  lonely  place. 

Eftsoons  the  morning-star  rose  over  the  mountain's  crest, 
And  the  winds  swept  down  from  the  gorges  ;   and  Tiphys   cried 

on  the  rest 
To  get  them  aboard  in  haste,  and  to  hearken  the  wind's  behest. 
So  with  eager  speed  they  embarked,  and  the  anchor-stones  of  the  ship 
Heaved  they  aboard,  and  the  hawsers  thereof  in  haste  did  they  slip. 
And  the  midst  of  the  sail  bellied  out  with  the  blast,  and  far  away 
From  the  sea-strand  with  joy  byPoseidon's  foreland  wafted  were  they. 
But  it  fell,  in  the  hour  when  the  dawn  glad-eyed  from  the  heaven  128c 

doth  beam. 
From  the  east  uprising,  and  all  the  earth-ways  clearer  gleam. 
And  the  dewy  wolds  are  a-sparkle  beneath  her  flashing  sheen, 
Then  were  they  ware  of  those  that  forsaken  unwares  had  been. 
Then  mighty  contention  arose,  and  an  indignation-burst 
Most  vehement-fierce,  that  any  should  go,  and  forsake  the  first 
Of  their  comrades  inprowess.   But  Aison's  son  distraught  withamaze 
Spake  never  a  word  or  bad  or  good  in  their  evil  case  ; 
But  devouring  his  soul  he  sat  'neath  wilderment's  heavy  load. 
Then  Telamon's  wrath  waxed  hot,  and  thus  with  the  prince  he  chode: 

*Ha!     sit   thou   there   at   thine  ease! — good  sooth,  for  thy  129c 
profit  was  this. 
That  Herakles  thus  should  be  left ;  thou  givest  no  counsel,  I  wis, 
Lest  haply  his  glory  in  Hellas  should  overshadow  thee, 
If  the  Gods  per  adventure  vouchsafe  us  the  home-return  to  see!  — 
What  pleasure  in  words  ? — I  will  go,  I  only,  with  none  of  these 
Thy  comrades,  who  plotted  with  thee  this  treason  to  Herakles.' 

He  spake,  and  on  Tiphys  Hagnias'  son  he  rushed,  and  his  ire 
Gleamed  through  his  eyes  as  the  leaping  flame  of  the  ravening  fire. 
And  now  to  the  land  of  the  Mysian  men  had  they  won  back  again 
In  despite  of  the  driving  surge,  and  the  head-wind's  ceaseless  strain ; 
But  the  two  winged  sons  of  Thracian  Boreas  rose  thereupon,  130« 
And  with  fierce  stern  words  from  his  purpose  withheld  they 
Aiakus'  son. 


46  THE  ARGONAUTS 

Unhappy  they! — grim  vengeance  thereafter  did  Herakles  wreak 
Upon  these  who  withheld  the  rest  which  were  fain  for  the  lost  to  seek . 
For  when  from  the  games  over  Pelias  dead  they  were  wending  again 
Homeward,  in  Tenos  the  sea-girt  he  slew  them  ;   and  heaped 

o'er  the  slain 
The  earth,  and  above  that  grave-mound  reared  he  pillars  twain, 
The  one  whereof,  a  marvel  exceeding  for  men  to  behold. 
Sways  to  and  fro  in  the  blast  when  the  North-wind  whistleth  cold. 
Ay,  so  in  the  after-time  these  things  were  ordained  to  be. 
But  now  did  Glaukus  appear  unto  them  from  the  depths  of  the  sea,  131°  I 
The  servant  of  Nereus  divine,  the  far-discerning  seer. 
High  out  of  the  waves  his  shaggy  head  and  his  breast  did  he  rear 
Even  to  the  waist,  and  his  brawny  hand  did  the  God  stretch  out 
To  the  keel  of  the  ship,  and  unto  her  eager  crew  did  he  shout : 

*  Wherefore  be  ye  thus  purposed  against  great  Zeus'  decrees 
Unto  Aietes'  city  to  bring  bold  Herakles  ? 
Lo,  this  is  his  weird — in  the  land  of  Argos  labouring 
To  accomplish  toils  full  twelve  for  Eurystheus  the  tyrannous  king. 
And  to  dwell  with  the  Deathless  Ones,  if  he  bring  to  fulfilment  yet 
A  few  more  toils  :  grieve  ye  not  therefore  with  vain  regret.  1320 
Polyphemus'  weird  likewise  is  to  rear,  where  Kios  doth  fall 
Into  the  sea,  'mid  the  Mysians  a  glorious  city's  wall, 
And  to  find  in  the  Chalybes'  land  the  doom  that  endeth  all. 
But  Hylas  a  Goddess-nymph  of  her  love  for  her  spouse  hath  taken. 
For  whose  sake  wandered  away  those  twain  unawares  forsaken.' 

Then  downward  he  plunged,  and  he  wrapped  him  about  with 

the  waves  white-wreathing. 
And  around  him  the  darkling  water  foamed  in  eddies  seething. 
And  he  loosed  from  his  hand  the  hollow  ship  through  the  brine  to  flee ; 
And  the  heroes  were  glad  :  then  rose  up  Telamon  hastily. 
And  Aiakus'  son  unto  Jason  strode,  and  his  hand  did  he  take       1330 
In  the  compassing  grasp  of  his  own,  and  embraced  him,  and  thus 

he  spake : 

*  Be  nowise  wroth  with  me,  Aison's  son,  if  folly-distraught 
I  have  sinned  in  mine  ignorance :  anguish  exceeding  upon  me 

hath  wrought 


THE  FIRST  BOOK  47 

To  utter  an  arrogant  word  which  I  could  not  refrain  :  let  us  cast 
To  the  winds  my  transgression,  and  knit  be  our  hearts  as  in  days 
overpast.' 
Answered  him  Aison's  son,  and  in  courteous  wise  spake  he : 
<  Ah,  friend,  of  a  truth  'twas  a  bitter  word  that  thou  spakest  to  me, 
When  thou  saidst  in  the  midst  of  us  ail  that  a  traitor  I  was  unto  him 
Who  to  me  was  a  friend! — yet  I  will  not  nurse  wrath  brooding  grim, 
Though  vexed  was  my  soul  at  the  first ;  since  not  as  for  flocks  of  sheep  1340 
Didst  thou  chafe  and  wast  wroth,  nor  for  hoarded  wealth  of  a 

treasure-heap, 
But  all  for  a  comrade's  sake.    I  were  fain  thou  would st  champion  so 
Even  me,  if  need  should  be  ever,  against  another  foe.' 

He  spake,  and  they  sat  them  down,  as  in  days  overpast  made  one. 
But  their  lost — by  the  counsel  of  Zeus,  Polyphemus  Eilatus'  son 
Was  doomed  mid  the  Mysian  men  to  build  a  city,  to  bear 
The  name  of  the  river  thereby  :  but  aback  must  Herakles  fare 
At  Eurystheus'  labours  to  toil.      But  he  threatened  in  anger  hot 
To  waste  the  Mysian  land,  if  her  folk  for  him  found  not 
What  doom  upon  Hylas  had  lighted,  if  dead  or  alive  he  were.      1350 
And  pledges  they  gave  for  the  lost,  in  that  sons  most  noble  and  fair 
Of  their  people  they  chose,  and  for  hostages  gave,  and  an  oath 

they  swore 
That  they  would  not  refrain  from  the  toil  of  the  search  for  evermore. 
Wherefore  for  tidings  of  Hylas  the  Kians  unto  this  day. 
For  Theiodamas'  son,  of  the  stranger  inquire  :  the  warders  aye 
Guard  Trechis  the  fair-built ;  for  there  did  the  hero  cause  to  abide 
The  sons  that  they  sent  for  their  ransom  to  turn  his  fury  aside. 
And  the  wind  all  day  bare  onward  the  galley  and  all  night 

through 
With  a  fresh  strong  blast  :  but  when  dawning  arose,  the  breath  of 

it  blew 
No  whit  any  more  ;  and  they  spied  jutting  forth  from  a  curve  of  1360 

the  land 
A  foreland,  and  broad  to  behold  that  dark  height  swelled  from 

the  strand. 
So  they  bent  to  the  oars,  and  at  sunrise  the  keel  up-furrowed  the  sand. 


THE  SECOND  BOOK 

There  were  there  steadings  of  cattle,  and  Amykus'  farms  were 

there, 
Proud  king  of  Bebrykian  men,  whom  erst  a  wood-nymph  bare  ; 
For  Bithynian  MeHe  couched  with  Poseidon  the  Lord  of  Birth. 
Overweening  was  this  their  son  above  all  the  children  of  Earth, 
Who  even  on  wayfaring  strangers  his  tyrannous  ordinance  laid 
That   they   should  not  depart   from  his   land  till   that  trial   of 

prowess  were  made 
Against  him  with  the  fist :  and  neighbours  full  many  he  smote 

that  they  died. 
And  now  to  the  galley  he  came  ;  but  he  scorned  in  the  height 

of  his  pride 
To  inquire  of  them  wherefore  they  voyaged,  or  ask  what  men 

were  they  : 
But  with  sudden  defiance  he  challenged  them  all,  and  thus  did  i 

he  say  : 
*  Sea-rovers,  hearken  the  thing  that  is  meet  and  right  ye  should 

know. 
This  is  the  ordinance — none  may  depart,  from  my  country  to  go, 
Even  none  who  hath  come  to  Bebrykia's  folk  out  of  alien  lands. 
Or  ever  against  mine  hands  he  hath  lifted  in  battle  his  hands. 
Choose  for  you  therefore  the  mightiest  man  of  all  your  array. 
And  set  ye  him  here  for  the  strite  of  the  fist  against  me  this  day. 
But  and  if  ye  shall  shrink  from  the  trial,  and  trample  my  laws 

underfoot. 
Verily  mighty  constraint  shall  pursue  you  with  bitter  pursuit.' 
So  spake  he  in  pride  overweening,  and  came  upon  them  as  they 

heard 

48 


THE  SECOND  BOOK  49 

Fierce  anger,  but  most  by  his  threatening  vaunt  Polydeukes  was  20 

stirred. 
Straightway  he  stood  for  his  fellows'  champion  forth,  and  he  cried  : 
*  Peace ! — threaten   not   us,   whatsoever  the  name   that  hath 

puffed  thee  with  pride. 
With  brutal  mishandling  : — yea,  unto  these  thy  laws  will  we  bow. 
Even  I  right  willingly  offer  me — lo,  I  will  meet  thee  now.' 

Roundly  he  spake  ;  and  with  rolling  eyes  glared  on  him  the  king 
As  a  lion  javelin-smitten,  when  out  on  the  mountains  the  ring 
Of  the  hunters  hemmeth  him  round  ;  but,  albeit  encompassed  about 
By  the    throng,   he    heedeth    them    not,   but    his    glance   ever 

searcheth  him  out. 
Him  only,  which  wounded  him  first,  yet  quelled  him  not  with 

the  stroke. 
Then  Tyndareus'  son  laid  by  his  goodly-woven  cloak  30 

Of  delicate  threads,  a  gift  of  remembrance  for  sweet  days  past 
Of  a  daughter  of  Lemnos.     His  mantle's  dark  folds  Amykus  cast, 
With  the  clasps  thereof,  to  the  ground,  and  the  shepherd's  staff 

that  he  bore, 
The  rugged  olive  his  hand  from  the  windy  hill-slope  tore. 
Then  looked  they,  and  chose  for  the  combat  a  spot  that  was  good 

in  their  sight ; 
And  all  their  companions  they  bade  sit  down  to  left  and  to  right. 
Then  stood  they  forth,  nor  in  form  nor  in  stature  alike  to  behold  : 
But  the  one  might  be  seed  of  Typhoeus  the  fell,  or  a  monster  of  old, 
Ay,  even  as  one  of  the  giant  brood  of  Earth,  which  she  bare 
To  wreak  upon  Zeus  her  wrath  :  but  Tyndareus'  son  showed  fair  40 
As  the  star  of  the  heaven,   whose  loveliest  beams  through  the 

fading  blue 
Shine  in  the  eventide,  when  the  wings  of  the  night  drop  dew. 
Even  such  was  the  child  of  Zeus,  and  the  soft  down  bloomed  on 

his  chin. 
And  bright  were  his  dancing  eyes  :  but  waxed  his  breast  within 
His  fury  and  might  like  a  wild  beast's  rage  ;  and  he  struck  out  fast 
With  his  hands,  making  trial  if  swift  were  their  play,  as  in  days 

overpast, 


50  THE  ARGONAUTS 

Uncramped  by  the  stress  of  toil  and  the  strain  of  the  weary  oar. 
But  Amykus  proved  not  his  Hmbs,  but  he  glared  on  his  foe  evermore 
Standing  in  silence  aloof,  and  he  yearned  in  eager  mood 
To  smite  and  bespatter  the  hero's  breast  with  the  spurting  blood,  so 
And  between  them  Lykoreus,  Amykus'  henchman,  cast  on  the 

ground 
In  front  of  their  feet  the  fighting-gauntlets  with  thongs  overbound. 
Strips  of  the  raw  hide,  dry,  all  ridged  with  wrinkles  were  they. 
Then  unto  the  hero  the  giant  with  arrogant  words  'gan  say : 

*  Whichsoever  thou  wilt,  lo,  freely  and  willingly  grant  I  to  thee, 
Without  casting  of  lots,  that  thou  mayst  not  hereafter  murmur  at  me. 
Now  bind  them  about  thine  hands  ;  thou  shalt  learn,  and  to  others 

shall  tell 
How  featly  I  carve  the  tough  bull-hides,  how  passing  well 
I  wield  them  withal,  to  bedabble  with  blood  the  jaws  of  men.' 

He  spake,  but  the  hero  scorned  with  wrangling  to  answer  again  :  60 
And  he  made  no  ado,  but  the  pair  lying  nighest  his  feet,  the  same 
Lightly  smiling  he  took.  Then  unto  him  Kastor  came. 
And  Talaus  the  mighty,  the  scion  of  Bias :  they  bound  on  his  wrists 
The  gauntlets  in  haste,  oft  bidding  him  play  the  man  in  the  lists. 
And  to  Amykus  Ornytus  came  and  Aretus ;  but  naught  knew  they — 
Fools  ! — that  they  girded  a  doomed  man  then  for  his  latest  fray. 
So  when  they  were  ready,  and  forth  in  the  lists  stood  face  to  face. 
Straightway  in  front  of  their  bodies  their  brawny  hands  did  they 

raise. 
Then  closed  they,  and  matched  their  might  in  the  grim  play  furiously. 
And  now  the  Bebrykian  king,  as  a  charging  wave  of  the  sea         70 
With  storm-roughened  crest  overarcheth  a  ship,  and  would  surely 

o'erwhelm. 
But  that  scantly  she  'scapeth  by  wisdom  of  him  that  swayeth  the 

helm. 
When  over  her  bulwark  to  hurl  itself  mad  is  the  surge  of  the  wave  ; 
So  followed  he  hard  upon  Tyndareus'  son  to  daunt  him  :  he  gave 
No  respite.     The  hero  by  cunning  keeping  him  scatheless  aye 
Baffled  his  every  rush  :  well  marked  he  his  brutal  play. 
To  wot  if  the  giant  in  might  were  haply  resistless,  or  no. 


THE  SECOND  BOOK  51 

So  ever  he  faced  him  and  warded,  and  flashed  back  blow  for  blow. 
And  even  as  when  the  shipwrights  with  hammers  mightily  swinging 
Smite  on  the  beams  of  a  galley,  driving  the  clamps  close-clinging  so 
Sharply  together,  that  bang  upon  clang  cometh  crashing  and  ringing, 
And  the  air  is  a-shiver  ;  so  crack  'neath  the  buffets  the  cheeks 

of  the  twain. 
So  crash  their  jaws,  and  so  clatter  their  teeth  as  the  swift  blows  rain. 
Nor  flinch  they  nor  falter,  but  facing  each  other  smite  they  amain. 
Till  spent  are  they  both,  and  for   laboured  panting  they  needs 

must  refrain. 
Then  standing  apart  for  a  little  they  wiped  from  their  foreheads  away 
The  streaming  sweat,  while  their  deep  chests  heaved  with  the 

toil  of  the  fray. 
Then  each  against  other  again  they  rushed,  as  when  on  the  lea 
Two  bulls  for  a  heifer  are  fighting  in  fury  of  rivalry. 
Then  mid  their  battle  did  Amykus  up  to  his  full  height  spring     qo 
Like  an  ox-slayer  straining  a-tiptoe-— downward  the  weight  did 

he  swing 
Of  his  gauntleted  hand  on  the  hero  ;  but  swerving  swift  from  the 

stroke 
By  a  turn  of  his  head  hath  he  foiled  him,  hath   caught  on  his 

shoulder  and  broke 
Its  force, — he  hath  slipped  past  the  knee  of  the  giant  his  knee, — 

he  hath  rushed 
With  his  whole  weight  dashing  his  fist  'neath  his  ear,  and  the 

bones  hath  he  crushed. 
That  for  agony  down  on  his  knees  he  sank,  and  the  Minyans'  shout 
Rang  ;  and  with  one  great  gasp  was  the  giant's  life  poured  out. 

Uprose  the  Bebrykian  men  to  avenge  the  wild  king's  fall : 
And  full  upon  Polydeukes  as  one  man  rushed  they  all 
With  rugged  clubs  and  with  javelins  tossing  in  furious  hands.        100 
But  his  comrades  afront  of  him  closed,  and  they  drew  their  keen- 
whetted  brands 
Out  of  their  scabbards  :  and   Kastor  the   first  with  the  sword- 
sweep  cleft 
The  head  of  a  foe,  as  against  him  he  rushed ;  and  to  right  and  to  left 


52  THE  ARGONAUTS 

Upon  either  shoulder  aslant  did  the  ghastly  halves  of  it  fall. 

Polydeukes  o'erthrew  the  giant  Itymoneus,  Mimas  wdthal ; 

For,  weaponless,  one  with  a  sudden  leap  did  he  spurn  on  the  breast 

With  his  foot,  and  in  dust  he  fell ;  and  one,  as  to  conflict  he  pressed, 

Over  the  left  brow  smote  he  with  swift  right  hand,  and  he  tare 

The  eyelid  away,  that  it  left  the  wretch's  eyeball  bare. 

x\nd  Oreides,  Amykus'  henchman,  a  brawny  champion,  i 

Stabbed  with  his  lance  at  the  flank  of  Talaus,  Bias'  son  ; 

Howbeit  he  slew  him  not,  but  sliding  along  the  skin 

The  brass  sped  under  his  belt,  neither  tasted  the  flesh  within. 

And  Aretus  at  Iphitus  smote  with  a  club  of  the  knotted  oak, 

That  Eurytus'  scion,  the  battle-bider,  reeled  from  the  stroke. 

Howbeit  not  yet  was  the  hero  doomed  unto  deadly  bane  ; 

Nay,  soon  was  the  smiter's  self  by  Klytius'  sword  to  be  slain. 

Then  did  Ankaius  the  dauntless  son  of  Lykurgus  in  haste 

Swing  up  his  mighty  axe,  and  around  his  left  arm  cast 

The  bear's  dark  fell  for  a  shield,  and  amidst  the  Bebrykian  array  120 

In  fury  of  onset  he  plunged,  and  beside  him  charged  to  the  fray 

Aiakus'  sons,  and  Jason  the  valiant  leapt  to  the  flght.  | 

And  as  when  mid  the  folds  the  grey  wolves  scare  in  huddled  atfright        , 

Vast  throngs  of  sheep  on  a  wintry  day,  having  rushed  on  the  pen       ] 

By  the  keen-nosed  dogs  unscented,  unmarked  of  the  shepherd's  ken; 

And  in  fury  they  seek  to  leap  the  fence,  and  to  seize  the  prey, 

Glaring  and  glaring,  a  fierce-eyed  ring  ;  and,  shrinking  away 

Upon  every  side,  on  each  other  trample  the  sheep  ;   even  so 

Drave  they  in  ghastly  rout  the  haughty  Bebrykian  foe. 

And  as  when  bee-keepers  or  shepherds  fill  with  the  stifling  smoke  130 

The  cleft  of  a  rock  where  dwell  the  honey-fashioning  folk. 

And  the  bees  for  a  while  all  thronging  within  their  cavern-home. 

Murmur  with  muffled  hum,  till,  driven  at  last  therefrom 

By  the  murky  fume,  they  pour  from  the  crag,  and  they  flee  away  ; 

Even  so  not  long  they  abode,  but  scattered  in  disarray 

Through  Bebrykia  bearing  the  tidings  of  Amykus'    doom  did 

they  fly. 
Fools  ! — nothing  they  knew  of  another  woe  even  then  drawn  nigh 
All  unforeseen,  for  their  orchards  were  wasted  in  that  same  hour. 


THE  SECOND  BOOK  53 

And  amidst  of  their  hamlets  did  Lykus'  ravening  spears  devour, 
And  the  Mariandynians  slew,  forasmuch  as  their  king  was  afar,    140 
For  that  aye  for  the  iron-bearing  land  were  the  nations  at  war. 
So  now  had  the  spoilers  fallen  on  garth  and  byre  and  fold ; 
While  seaward  the  heroes  headed  their  sheep  in  throngs  untold, 
And  this  one  to  that  one  cried  the  while  they  drave  the  prey  : 

*  Bethink  ye,  what  price  had  they  paid  for  their  felon  folly  to-day. 
If  haply  a  God  had  but  brought  our  Herakles  hither  to  aid  ! 
Ha  !  surely  had  he  but  been  here,  no  trial,  I  ween,  had  been  made 
Of  strife  with  the  fists ;  but  so  soon  as  the  caitiff  drew  nigh  to 

proclaim 
His  ordinance,  straightway  the  club  should  have  made  him  forget 

the  same. 
Even  as  he  spake  it,  yea,  and  forget  the  might  of  his  hand.  150 

Ah,  but  we  left  him,  we  left  him,  alone  on  a  desolate  strand, 
And  we  sailed  away  oversea  : — full  soon  shall  we  know,  each  one, 
Our  baneful  folly,  seeing  our  mightiest  champion  is  gone  !  ' 

But  the  counsels  of  Zeus  had  wrought  all  this,  beyond  their  ken. 
So  here  through  the   night  they  abode,  and  the  hurts  of   the 

wounded  men 
They  tended,  and  slew  to  the  Gods  everlasting  the  sacrifice  ; 
And  a  mighty  supper  they  dight :  fell  sleep  upon  no  man's  eyes, 
By  the  bowl  as  they  sat  and  the  blazing  altar  the  long  night  through. 
With  their  golden  locks  enwreathed  with  the  leaves  of  a  bay  that  gre  w 
Hard  by  the  strand,  about  whose  stem  was  their  hawser  bound.        160 
And  to  Orpheus'  lyre  they  chanted;  their  voices'  blended  sound 
Rang  tunefully  :  all  the  breathless  beach  lay  tranced  with  the  spell 
Of  the  song  ;  for  of  Zeus  of  Therapnae's  child  did  the  sweet 

hymn  tell. 
Over  the  dusky  hills  did  the  light  of  the  new  sun  leap, 
As  he  rose  from  his  far  sea-bourn,  as  he  roused  the  shepherds 

from  sleep. 
Then  from  the  stem  of  the  bay  did  the  heroes  their  hawser  uncoil, 
And  they  laid  in  the  galley  so  much  as  sufficed  for  their  need  of 

the  spoil  ; 
And  before  the  breeze  up  swirling  Bosporus'  flood  they  steered. 


54  THE  ARGONAUTS 

There  steep  and  high  the  surge,  as  a  mountain's  crown  upreared 
Afront  of  the  prow,  rusheth  on  them  as  leapeth  a  beast  on  the  prey,  —  ^7° 
Higher,  still  higher  upheaved  to  the  clouds  :  thou  wouldst  verily 

say, 
'  They  cannot  escape  grim  doom,  for  that  full  o'er  the  galley's  side 
Swingeth  its  madding  crest  like  a  cloud !  '     Yet  a  bark  may  ride 
Safe  even  o'er  such,  if  she  have  but  a  helmsman  good  at  need. 
x-\nd  by  Tiphys'  steering-craft  even  so  did  the  heroes  speed 
Through  the  peril  unscathed,  yet  sore  dismayed.     So  the  wild  day 

passed. 
And  the  night ;  and  with  dawn  on  Bithynia's  shore  the  anchor 

they  cast. 
There  hard  by  the  sea  had  Phineus  Agenor's  son  his  abode. 
Who  endured  above  all  men  trouble  and  anguish,  a  baleful  load. 
For  a  spirit  of  prophecy  Leto's  son  had  bestowed  of  old 
On  him  ;  yet  he  thrust  all  reverence  aside,  and  to  mortals  foretold 
The  sacred  purpose  of  Zeus,  the  mind  of  Heaven's  King. 
Therefore  did  Zeus  requite  him  with  eld  long-lingering  ; 
And  he  took  from  his  eyes  the  pleasant  light,  and  he  suffered  him  not 
To  have  joy  of  the  meats  untold  which  the  dwellers  around  aye 

brought, 
What  time  to  his  halls  they  resorted  the  purpose  of  heaven  to  hear. 
But  out  of  their  caverns  of  cloud  ever  suddenly  swooping  anear 
The  Harpies  would  snatch  them  away  from   his   lips  and  his 

hands  evermore 
With  their  talons,  and  whiles  was  there  left  unto  him  of  all  that  store 
No  whit,  and  whiles  but  a  crumb,  that  for  torment  his  life  might  ^90 

be  spared. 
And  they  poured  over  all  a  loathly  stench  :  was  none  that  dared, 
I  say  not,  to  carry  thereof  to  his  mouth,  but  even  to  stand 
Far  off,  so  foully  the  remnants  reeked  of  the  banquet  banned. 
But  now,  on  his  ears  as  their  voices  and  tramp  of  their  coming 

brake. 
He  knew  that  the  men  were  at  hand  whereof  Zeus'  oracle  spake 
That  their  coming  should  bring  for  him  respite,  in  peace  to  eat  his 

bread. 


THE  SECOND  BOOK  55 

And  he  rose  from   his   couch,  as  a  shadowy  dream  might  rise 

from  a  bed, 
Bowed  over  his  staff,  and  with  wrinkled  feet  'gan  creep  to  the  door 
Groping  along  the  walls  ;  and  for  helplessness  trembled  sore 
And  for  age  his    limbs  as    he    moved,  and   with  filth  was  his  200 

parched  skin 
All  leprous,  and  nought  save  this  enwrapped  the  bones  within. 
So  forth  of  the  hall  he  came,  and  he  bowed  on  the  threshold-stone 
His  weary  knees  ;   and  a  swoon,  like  a  dark  pall  over  him  thrown, 
Enshrouded  him  ;  under  his  feet  him  seemed  that  the  earth  reeled 

round  ; 
And  he  lay  in  a  strengthless  trance,  and  his  lips  could  frame  no  sound. 
And  the  heroes  beheld  him,  and  round  about  in  a  throng  they  pressed 
And  marvelled ;  until  at  the  last  the  man  from  the  depth  of  his  breast 
Drew  laboured  and  difficult  breath,  and  uttered  his  prophecy  : 

*  Hearken,  ye  noblest  of  Hellas'  sons,  if  ye  verily  be 
The  self-same  heroes  that  Jason  leadeth  forth  on  the  Quest  210 

Of  the  Golden  Fleece  in  Argothe  ship  at  a  King's  grim  hest. 
Of  a  surety  ye  be  :   my  soul  hath  knowledge  of  everything 
By  her  divination  yet.      Thanks  therefore  to  thee,  O  King, 
O  Son  of  Leto,  I  render  from  depths  of  affliction  and  woe  ! 

0  friends,  by  the  Suppliants'  Zeus,  who  is  ever  the  sternest  foe 
Of  transgressors — for  Phoebus'  sake,  and  in  awful  Here's  name 

1  beseech — by  the  Gods  I  implore  you  in  whose  care  hither  ye  came. 
Help  me  :  deliver  from  anguish  a  most  ill-fated  man. 

Neither  hasten  away  uncaring  and  leave  me  in  bale  and  ban. 

As  ye  find  me  :  for  not  on  mine  eyes  alone  hath  the  fierce  foot  trode  320 

Of  the  Vengeance-fiend,  and  I  drag  to  the  end  eld's  weary  load  ; 

But  a  curse  more  bitter  than  all  still  hangeth  over  mine  head. 

For  the  Harpies  are  wont  evermore  to  snatch  from  my  lips  my  bread. 

Swooping  adown  from  a  den  of  destruction,  a  viewless  lair. 

Neither  find  I  any  device  for  mine  help  :  nay,  easier  it  were 

To  escape  the  ken  of  mine  own  heart's  thoughts  when  I  crave  to 

be  fed. 
Than  theirs  ;  so  swift  through  the  welkin  on  hovering  wings  are 

they  sped. 


56  THE  ARGONAUTS 

But  if  haply  ever  they  leave  but  a  morsel  of  meat  on  my  board, 
It  reeketh  with  most  unendurable  strength  of  a  stench  abhorred. 
No  man,  no,  not  for  an  instant,  might  dare  draw  nigh  to  the  same,  230 
Not  though  in  his  breast  were  a  heart  forged  all  of  adamant  frame. 
But  me  of  a  surety  doth  hard  compelling  of  hunger  constrain 
To  abide,  and  abiding  to  stay  this  famine's  gnawing  pain. 
But  those  my  tormentors,  an  oracle  saith,  shall  be  made  to  flee 
By  Boreas'  sons  ;  neither  strangers  shall  my  deliverers  be. 
If  indeed  I  be  Phineus,  renowned  among  men  in  the  days  long  gone 
For  my  wealth  and  my  soothsaying  lore,  if  Agenor  called  me  son. 
If  the  sister  of  these,  Kleopatra,  when  over  the  Thracians  I  reigned, 
Came  to  mine  halls,  a  bride  by  a  royal  bride-price  gained.' 

So  ended  Agenor's  son,  and  compassion's  o'ermastering  pain    240 
Thrilled  all  the  heroes,  but  chiefly  the  North-wind's  scions  twain. 
Brushing  the  tears  from  their    ej^es  they  drew  nigh  him,  and 

Zethes  spake ; 
And  the  hand  of  the  grief-worn  sire  in  his  hand  with  the  word 

did  he  take  : 

*  O  hapless,  none  other  is  more  afflicted  than  thou,  I  trow, 
Among  men! — ah,  wherefore  on  thee  is  there  heaped  such  a 

burden  of  woe  ? 
Baleful  in  sooth  was  the  folly  wherewith  through  thy  prophecy-lore 
Against  Gods  thou  transgressedst :  for  this  was  their  anger  ex- 
ceeding sore. 
Howbeit  our  spirit  within  us,  although  we  be  fain,  is  afraid 
To  help  thee,  if  on  us  indeed  a  God  this  honour  hath  laid. 
For  to  dwellers  onEarth  the  rebukes  of  Immortals  be  plain  to  discern;  250 
And  we  dare  not  chase  yon  Harpies  from  thee,  howsoever  we  yearn 
For  thine  help,  in  the  hour  of  their  coming,  except  thou  swear 

to  us  first 
That  for  this  we  shall  lose  not  the  high  Gods'  favour,  as  men  accurst.' 

So  spake  he  :  the  stricken  in  years  uplifted  and  opened  wide 
His  sightless  eyes  straightway,  and  with  swift  words  Phineus  replied: 

*  Hush  ! — thrust  not  such  thoughts,  my  son,  on  a  spirit  affliction- 

filled  ! 
Be  witness  Latona's  son,  who  taught  to  me  gracious- willed 


THE  SECOND  BOOK  57 

Prophecy-lore  ;  and  be  witness  this  mine  ill-starred  doom, 
And  this  dark  cloud  on  mine  eyes,  and  the  Gods  of  the  Under- 
world Gloom, — 
May  their  curse,  if  I  die  with  a  lie  on  my  tongue,  be  upon  me  260 

for  aye  !  — 
That  on  you  no  wrath  of  the  Gods  shall  descend  for  your  help 

this  day.' 
Then  by  the  oath  were  they  kindled  to  help  him,  and  fled 

their  fears. 
And  the  young  men  straightway  made  ready  the  meat  for  the 

stricken  in  years, — 
The  last  ordained  for  the  Harpies'  spoil, — and  anigh  to  him  stood 
Those  twain,  to  smite  with  the  sword  those  fiends  when  they 

swooped  on  the  food. 
Then  first  his  hands  on  the  meats  did  he  lay,  that  grey-haired  sire ; — 
But  sudden  as  bitter  blasts,  or  as  flashes  of  levin-fire. 
Unawares  from  the  clouds  they  had  darted,  and  swooping  adown 

they  yelled 
Their  awful  scream,  fierce-eager  for  prey  ;  but  the  heroes  beheld, 
And  shouted  amidst  of  their  onrush.     The  fiends  at  the  challenge  270 

of  war 
Swift  ravined  the  meats  from  the  boards,  and  over  the  sea  afar 
Soared  they  away,  but  there  did  their  foul  sick  stench  remain. 
Then    straightway  hard    on    their  track  did  the  North-wind's 

scions  twain 
Uplifting  their  swords  follow  after  them  fast,  for  with  tireless  might 
Zeus  filled  them  :  howbeit  they  had  not  prevailed  to  follow  their 

flight 
But  with  Zeus's  help,  for  that  faster  than  Zephyrus'  blasts  they 

darted 
Evermore,  when  on  Phineus  they  swooped,  and  whene'er  from 

the  wretch  they  departed. 
And  as  when  on  the  mountain-ridges  keen  hounds  cunning  in  chase 
On  the  track  of  the  horned  goats  or  the  deer  hard-following  race 
Swiftly,  and  ever  a  little  behind  the  prey  as  they  strain,  280 

Snap  at  the  haunch  of  the  quarry,  and  clash  their  teeth  in  vain  ; 


58  THE  ARGONAUTS 

So  Zetes  and  KalaVs  rushed  ever  nearer  with  eager  grip, 
Clutched  at  them,  smote  at  them,  missed  but  by  sword-point  or 

finger-tip. 
Yea,  even  despite  Heaven's  will  had  they  rent  them  limb  from  limb. 
Overtaking  them  far  away  where  the  Floating  Islands  swim, — 
But  Iris  the  Storm-foot  beheld  them,  and  douTiward  she  plunged 

from  the  sky 
Through  a  whirlwind  of  air,  and  with  words  of  restraining  aloud 
did  she  cry  : 
'  Sons  of  the  North-wind,  forefended  it  is  that  ye  smite  with 
the  sword 
The  Harpies,  great  Zeus's  hounds  ;  but  myself  will  pronounce 

the  word 
Of  the  oath  that  shall  hold  them  from  lighting  again  on  the  290^ 
ancient's  board.'  I 

Then  spake  she  the  words  of  the  Oath  of  the  Styx,  the  oath 
most  dread 
Unto  all  the  Gods,  whose  reverence  guardeth  the  words  once  said, 
That  the  Harpies  should  never  thereafter  draw  nigh  unto  Phineus' 

hall. 
To  the  home  of  Agcnor's  son,  for  so  was  it  doomed  to  befall. 
To  the  oath  then  yielded  the  heroes,  and  backward  they  turned 

their  flight 
Unto  the  ship  ;  and  the  Strophads,  the  Isles  of  Return,  were 

they  hight 
Therefrom,  which  of  old  the  Floating  Isles  had  been  called  of  men. 
And  the  Harpies  and  Iris  parted,  and  into  their  cavern-den 
In  Krcte,  the  land  of  Minos,  they  plunged  :  but  Olvmpus-ward 
Uplifted  'twixt  heaven  and  earth  on  her  swift  wings  Iris  soared.  3^ 

But  the  heroes  bathed  and  anointed  the  skin  all  fouled  and  sere 
Of  the  ancient  the  while  ;   and  the  choice  of  the  fatlings  they 

slew  for  their  cheer, 
Of  the  flock  which  they  bare  away  of  the  spoil  of  Amykus  dead. 
So  when  in  the  halls  a  plenteous  eventide-feast  they  had  spread, 
They  feasted  ;  and  Phineus  amidst  them  was  like  unto  them  that 
dream. 


THE  SECOND  BOOK  59 

As  from  ravenous  hunger  he  cheered  his  heart,  so  strange  did 

it  seem. 
So  there,  when  with  meats  and  with  wine  they  had  satisfied  all 

their  need, 
Through  the  long  night  kept  they  vigil,  and  waited  for  Boreas*  seed. 
And  the  ancient  sat  in  their  midst  in  the  ruddy  glow  of  the  fire  ; 
And  he  told  of  their  voyaging's  bourn,  and  the  end  of  their  desire  :  310 

*  Give  ear  unto  me  : — forefended  it  is  that  ye  hear  all  through 
Your  fate  : — whatsoe'er  seemeth  good  to  the  Gods  I  will  hide 

not  from  you. 
Mad  was  I  of  yore,  when  I  spake  unto  Earth's  sons  Zeus's  will 
In  all  points  unto  the  end  :  for  this  is  his  pleasure  still 
To  reveal  unto  men  his  oracles  short  of  the  fulness  of  doom, 
That  so  they  may  lean  on  the  Gods,  and  faith  and  prayer  have  room. 
The  Rocks  Kyanean  first,  when  that  gotten  ye  are  from  me. 
In  the  place  where  the  two  seas  meet,  the  Dark  Blue  Crags, 

shall  ye  see. 
Through  that  dread  pass  no  pilot,  I  ween,  hath  prevailed  to  go  ; 
For  rooted  they  are  not  to  earth  on  foundations  of  rock  therebelow  ;  320 
But  with  rush  and  recoil  unceasingly  each  against  other  they  clash  : 
High  over  them  archeth  the  crested  brine,  and  the  foam-feathers 

flash 
From  the  seething  cauldron:  the  precipice-foreland  thundereth  aye. 
Wherefore  to  this  my  counsel  give  good  heed,  and  obey. 
If  indeed  with  prudent  soul  and  with  fear  of  the  Gods  on  high 
Ye  essay  this  Quest,  that  by  doom  self-sought  ye  may  not  die 
As  the  fool,  nor  in  rashness  of  youth  essay  to  rush  thereby. 
First  with  a  bird,  with  a  white-winged  dove,  shall  ye  make  assay. 
Speeding  her  flight  from  the  ship's  prow.     If  she  shall  win  her  way 
Safe  'twixt  the  Crags  of  Terror,  and  out  to  the  open  sea,  33° 

No  longer  thereafter  from  daring  the  selfsame  path  shrink  ye  ; 
But  grip  ye  the  oars  in  your  hands,  and  put  forth  your  uttermost 

might 
Cleaving  the  gorge  of  the  sea,  for  that  safety's  deliverance-light 
Shall  not  be  in  prayer  so  much  as  the  strength  of  your  hands  and 

the  strain. 


6o  THE  ARGONAUTS 

Wherefore  let  all  else  be,  and  toil  ye  with  might  and  main 

Boldly  :   but  ere  then  pray  as  ye  list ;   I  say  not  nay. 

But  and  if  the  death-trap  clutch  in  the  midst  the  dove,  and  slay, 

Then  sail  ye  aback  ;  for  better  by  far  it  is  that  ye 

Should  yield  to  the  Deathless.    The  evil  fate  should  ye  nowise  flee 

Of  the   Rocks — no,  not  though  fashioned  of  iron   your  Argo  340 

should  be. 
O  wretches,  dare  not  to  transgress  the  warning  my  tongue  hath  given. 
Though  thrice  so  much  ye  account  me  abhorred  of  the  Dwellers 

in  Heaven — 

Yea,  though  it  were  more  than  thrice — as  I  am  by  my  grievous  sin. 
Yet  dare  not  to  flout  the  omen,  to  thrust  your  galley  therein  ! 
And  these  things  shall  fall    as    they  haply   shall  fall.      But  if 

scatheless  ye  shun 
The  rush  of  the  Clashing  Rocks,  and  the  Pontus  Sea  shall  be  won. 
Sailing  therefrom,  the  Bithynians'  land  to  your  right  shall  ye  keep. 
Ever  heedfuUy  standing  out  from  the  reefs,  until  ye  shall  sweep 
Round  the  outfall  of  swift-flowing  Rheba,  and  round  the  head- 
land dark. 
And  within  the  haven  of  Thyne's  isle  shall  anchor  your  bark.  350 
Thence  turn  ye  aback  for  a  little  space  o'er  the  long  sea-swell, 
Till  ye  beach  your  keel  on  the  strand  where  the  Mariandynians  dwell. 
Thereby  is  a  path  through  darkness  descending  to  Hades'  hall, 
And  the  Cape  Acherusian  towereth  upward,  a  giant  wall. 
And  swirling  Acheron  cleaving  the  mountain's  heart  unseen 
Suddenly  poureth  forth  his  flood  from  a  mighty  ravine. 
Thereby  many  column-hills  of  the  Paphlagonian  shore 
Shall  ye  pass,  the  nation  whose  king  was  in  Enete  born  of  yore, 
E  ven  Pelops;  and  yet  do  they  boast  them  spr  ungfrom  his  princely  line. 
And  a  headland  there  is,  looking  full  where  the  circling  Bear  360 

doth  shine, 
A  crag  exceeding  steep,  and  Karambis  it  hath  to  name. 
The  blasts  of  the  North-wind  are  sundered  about  the  crest  of  the 

same. 
So  sheer  doth  it  spring  from  the  sea,  so  sharply  it  cleaveth  the  air. 
Now  when  ye  have  rounded  the  same,  lo,  stretcheth  before  you  there 


THE  SECOND  BOOK  6i 

A  great  beach  :  far  at  the  end  of  the  gleaming  strand's  long  sweep 
'Neath  a  jutting  foreland  the  waters  of  Halys  seaward  leap 
Terribly  roaring  ;   and  hard  thereby  doth  Iris  go, 
A  lesser  river,  whose  swirls  soft-rippling  gently  flow. 
And  onward  from  thence  is  the  bend  of  a  huge  cape  towering  high 
Up  from  the  land,  and  the  mouth  of  the  river  Thermodon  thereby,  370 
Where  the  height  Themiskyrian  watcheth  the  sleeping  bay  at  its  side, 
Cometh  murmuring  still  of  her  journeyings  over  the  mainland  wide. 
There  is  the  plain  of  Doias,  the  cities  three  rise  near 
Of  the  Amazon  Maids  :  then  they  whose  lot  is  of  all  most  drear, 
The  Chalybes,  dwell  in  a  rugged  land  on  a  stubborn  soil, 
Smithying-craftsmen  ;   in  forging  of  iron  ever  they  toil. 
And  anigh  to  them  dwell  Tibarenians,  lords  of  many  sheep. 
Past  Zeus  the  Defender  of  Strangers,  the  fane  upon  Genete's  steep. 
And  next  unto  these,  on  their  marches,  the  Mossyncecians  dwell 
In  a  land  of  forests,  in  many  a  mountain-cradled  dell,  380 

Whose  homes  be  in  towers  of  timber,  fashioned  and  carven  well. 
But  coast  past  these,  and  beach  your  keel  on  a  smooth  isle  :  there 
Beat  back  with  your  uttermost  cunning  the  ravening  scourge  of  the  air, 
Those  birds,  which  in  countless  multitudes  haunt,  men  say,  the  strand 
Of  the  desolate  isle  ; — therein  doth  a  temple  of  Arcs  stand 
Of  stone,  which  was  built  by  the  queens  of  the  Amazon  war-array, 
Otrere  and  Antiope,  what  time  they  marched  to  the  fray ; — 
For  there  shall  a  help  for  your  need  from  the  bitter  sea  arise 
Unlooked-for  :  wherefore,  abide  there,  with  kindly  intent  I  advise. 
But  now  what  do  I,  transgressing  again  ? — what  need  that  I         390 
Should  tell  to  you  every  whit  of  the  tale  of  my  prophecy  ? 
Onward  away  from  the  isle,  on  the  mainland  shore's  far  side, 
The  Philyrans  dwell,  and  beyond  the  Philyran  folk  abide 
The  Makrones,  and  next,  the  Becheirian  tribes,  a  host  untold. 
Next  after  these  the  Sapeirians'  land  shall  your  eyes  behold. 
Next  these  the  Bezyrans,their  neighbours,dwell ;  and  beyond,at  last, 
Even  the  warrior  Kolchians  :  yet  shall  ye  speed  on  past 
Your  galley,  till  stayed  at  the  uttermost  bourn  of  the  sea  ye  are. 
There  over  the  mainland  Kytaian,  from  Amaranth  mountains  afar, 
And  over  the  plain  Kirkaian  rolling  evermore,  400 


62  THE  ARGONAUTS 

His  broad  flood  into  the  sea  doth  eddying  Phasis  pour. 

Into  the  selfsame  river's  mouth  your  galley  bring  : 

Then  on  the  towers  shall  ye  look  of  Kytaian  Aietes  the  king, 

And  the  War-god's  grove  dim-shadowed.     And  high  on  a  dark 

oak-tree 
Hangeth  the  Fleece  ;  and  a  dragon,  a  monster  fearful  to  see, 
Ever  glareth  around,  keeping  watch  and  ward  :   never  dawn  doth 

arise. 
Neither    darkness    descendeth,  when   sweet   sleep  quelleth    his 

ruthless  eyes.' 
Even  so  did  he  speak  :  straightway  as  they  heard  were  they 

thrilled  with  fear. 
Long  speechless  they  sat,  till  brake  at  the  last  that  silence  drear 
Aison's  son,  sore  wildered  that  boding  of  evil  to  hear  :  410 

*  O  ancient,  now  hast  thou  come  to  the  bourn  of  the  toils  we 

must  know 
On  the  sea,  and  hast  told  us  the  token,  by  trust  wherein  we  may  go 
Through  the  baleful  rocks,  and  win  unto  Pontus  :  but  if  once  more, 
If  through  these  we  escape,   we   shall  homeward    return  unto 

Hellas'  shore. 
Exceeding  fain  were  I  this  also  to  learn  of  thee. 
How  shall  I  do  ? — how  track  such  a  measureless  path  o'er  the  sea, 
Who   am   but   a   youth,    and   with   youths  ? — and   behold,    this 

Kolchian  land 
At  the  ends  of  the  earth  doth  lie,  on  the  great  sea's  uttermost  strand.' 
So  did  he  cry  ;  but  answered  the  ancient,  and  spake  yet  again  : 
'  My  son,  when  once  thou  hast  safely  fled  through  the  Rocks  of  4 

Bane, 
Fear  not,  for  a  God  shall  show  thee  another  voyaging-track 
From  Aia  :  yea,  after  Aia  guides  shalt  thou  nowise  lack. 
But,  friends,  of  the  guileful  aid  of  the  Cyprian  Queen  take  thought ; 
For  of  her  unto  glorious  issues  shall  all  your  toils  be  wrought. 
And  now  of  the  things  yet  lying  beyond  these  ask  me  nought.' 
So  answered  Agenor's  son  ;  and  lo,  those  twain  stood  nigh. 
The  sons  of  the  Thracian   North-wind,  swooping  adown  from 

the  sky. 


THE  SECOND  BOOK  63 

On  the  threshold  their  swift  feet  set  they ;  and  straight  from  his 

carven  chair 
Each  hero  upsprang,  beholding  the  champions  suddenly  there. 
Eager  for  tidings  were  they  ;  and  Zetes,  still  as  he  drew  430 

Hard  breath  from  the  toil  of  the  hunting,  told  them  how  far  they 

flew 
Chasing  them,  told  how  Iris  restrained  them  at  point  to  slay  ; 
Of  the  oaths  which  the  Goddess  gave  of  her  grace  ;  how  in  sore 

dismay 
'Neath  Dicte's  cliff  in  a  cavern  vast  they  had  plunged  out  of  sight. 
Then  were  the  heroes  all  in  the  mansion  filled  with  delight 
For  the   tidings,   and  Phineus  withal.      Then  spake  unto  him 

straightway 
Aison's  son,  and  with  love  overflowing  his  soul  'gan  say  : — 
*  Of  a  surety  a  God,  O  Phineus,   there  was,  in  compassion 

that  bent 
To  look  on  thy  grievous  affliction,  and  us  from  afar  he  sent 
Hither,  that  Boreas'  sons  might  drive  thy  tormentors  from  thee.  440 
Now  if  he  would  give  but  light  to  thine  eyes,  such  gladness  in  me 
Would  stir,  as  though  with  the  Fleece  I  were  come  to  mine 

home,  I  trow.' 
He  spake,  but  the  head  of  the  ancient  sank,  and  he  answered  low : 
*  Nay,  Aison's  son,  it  is  past  recall :  no  dawn  shall  arise 
Balm-breathing  on  them,  for  blasted  are  these  my  sightless  eyes. 
Nay,  death  let  a  God  bestow  right  speedily,  rather  than  this  ; 
Then,  when  I  am  dead,  shall  I  enter  at  last  into  perfect  bliss.' 

So  spake  they,  and  each  unto  other  the  answering  speech  returned. 
And  amidst  of  their  converse  in  no  long  space  the  dawn-flush 

burned 
Of  the  Child  of  the  Mist :    then   gathered  the  neighbours   to  45° 

Phineus'  door 
Which  in  time  past  day  by  day  wont  thither  to  come  evermore  ; 
And,  despite  the  curse,  from  their  own  a  portion  of  meat  each 

brought. 
And  to  all  did  the  ancient — yea,  to  the  poor  whose  hands  bare 

nought — 


64  THE  ARGONAUTS 

Speak  kindly  his  oracles ;  yea,  from  afflictions  many  he  freed 
By  his  soothsaying  :  wherefore  they  came,  and  they  ministered 

unto  his  need. 
And  came  with  the  rest  Paraibius,  he  that  was  dearest  of  all 
Unto  him,  and  with  joy  was  he  ware  of  the  presences  thronging 

the  hall. 
For  the  ancient  to  him  long  since  had  foretold  that  a  chieftain-band, 
Unto  Aietes'  city  faring  from  Hellas-land, 

On  the  beach  of  the  Thynian  coast  should  make  their  hawsers  fast,  46c 
And  by  these  should  the  Harpies  of  Zeus  be  restrained  from 

tormenting  at  last. 
So  with  words  of  wisdom  and  love  the  ancient  gladdened  each  heart 
Ere  he  let  them  go  ;   but  Paraibius  suffered  he  not  to  depart, 
But  bade  him  abide  with  the  chieftains,  and  sent  him,  making  request 
Of  his  friend  to  go  to  the  flock,  and  to  bring  the  goodliest 
Of  the  sheep  unto  him.    So  when  to  perform  his  behest  he  had  sped. 
To  the  chieftains  gathered  there  spake  Phineus,  and  lovingly  said  : 

'  O  friends,  not  every  man  is  overweening  of  mood, 
Neither  forgetful  of  kindness  ;  so  loyal  of  heart  and  so  good  1 

Is  yon  man.      Hither  he  came  on  a  day  to  inquire  of  his  fate  :      47c 
For,  when  never  so  hard  he  toiled,  sore  labouring  early  and  late,     1 
Yet  ever  his  need  grew  greater,  his  poverty  waxed  alway, 
With  leanness  wasting  his  frame  :  day  followed  on  evil  day 
Yet  worse  :  no  respite  there  was  to  his  weariful  pain.     But  herein 
Was  this  man  paying  the  debt  of  his  father's  ancient  sin. 
For  once  on  the  mountains  alone  the  trees  of  the  forest  felling 
He  had  set  at  nought  the  prayers  of  a  Nymph  in  an  oak-tree  dwelling. 
For  with  earnest  entreaty  she  moaned  her  request,  and  besought 

him  with  tears 
To  spare  that  trunk  which  had  grown  with  her  growth,  where- 
with through  the  years 
Of  long  generations  her  life  was  bound  ;   but  in  folly  and  pride     48< 
Of  his  youthful  arrogance  hewed  he  on  :  and  the  Tree-nymph  died. 
Wherefore   the    Wood-maid   caused  that   her  death   thereafter 

should  be 
For  a  curse  unto  him  and  his  children.  And  I,  when  he  came  unto  me, 


THE  SECOND  BOOK  65 

Knew  of  the  ancient  sin  ;  and  an  altar  I  bade  him  raise 
To  the  Thynian  Nymph,  and  atonement-victims  to  give  to  the  blaze, 
Praying  to  'scape  from  the  weird  pronounced  on  his  father  of  yore. 
Then,  when  from  the  doom  of  the  Goddess  deliverance  came, 

never  more 
Forgat  he  me,  nor  neglected  :  and  sorely  against  his  will 
From  my  doors  do  I  send  him  fain  to  attend  mine  afflictions  still.' 

So  spake  Agenor's  son  ;  and  straightway  returned  again  490 

His  friend  with  fatlings  twain  from  the  flock.      Rose  Jason  then 
And  rose  the  North-wind's  sons  at  the  ancient  prophet's  word. 
Eftsoons  called  they  on  the  name  of  Apollo  the  Prophecy-lord ; 
Then  slew  they  the  sheep  on  the  hearth  as  sloped  the  sun  to  the 

west. 
And  the  younger  men  of  their  band  made  ready  the  plenteous  feast. 
So  when  they  had  eaten,  they  turned  to  their  rest,  as  each  man  chose. 
By  the  hawsers  of  Argo  these,  through  the  mansion  in  clusters  those. 
But  at  dawn  the  Etesian  breezes  blew,  which  o'er  every  land 
Equally  blow  in  their  season  by  Zeus's  high  command. 

Kyrene,  'tis  told,  in  the  meads  where  Peneios'  waters  roll        500 
Pastured  her  sheep  in  the  olden  days ;  for  dear  to  her  soul 
Were  her  maidenhood  and  her  couch  unstained  :  but,  even  as  she 

strayed 
By  the  stream  with  her  flock,  did  Apollo  snatch  from  the  earth 

the  maid 
From  Haimonia  afar,  and  mid  Chthonian  Nymphs  did  he  set  her 

down. 
Where  over  their  Libyan  haunts  the  steeps  Myrtosian  frown. 
There  did  she  bear  Aristaius,  and  Phoebus'  son  did  they  call 
In  Haimonia  the  Shepherd  Lord,  and  the  Mighty  Hunter  withal; 
For  the  God  of  his  love  to  a  Nymph  transformed  her,  and  made 

her  there 
The  Lady  of  the  Land,  long-lived  :  but  his  child  he  bare, 
A  babbling  infant  yet,  to  be  nurtured  in  Cheiron's  cave.  510 

And  to  him,  when  he  grew  unto  manhood,  a  bride  the  Muses  gave  ; 
And  cunning  in  healing  they  taught  him,  with  prophecy- wisdom 

they  fed  ; 


66  THE  ARGONAUTS 

And  their  tender  of  sheep  did  they  make  him,  that  all  their  flocks 

he  led, 
In  the  plain  Athamantian  of  Phthia  that  pastured,  by  Othrys'  side, 
And  where  the  sacred  streams  of  the  river  Apidanus  glide. 
But  when  Sirius  glared  on  the  isles  of  Minos  with  scorching  blaze, 
Neither  came  to  the  dwellers  therein  any  respite  for  manv  days, 
For  this  Aristaius  they  sent,  by  the  Archer-god's  command, 
To  avert  the  plague  ;  and  he  left  at  his  father's  behest  the  land 
Of  Phthia,  and  dwelt  in  Kos,  and  assembled  thither  the  folk        520 
Of  Parrhasia,  even  the  people  sprung  from  Lykaon's  stock. 
So  to  Rain-giver  Zeus  he  builded  a  mighty  altar  there. 
And  he  offered  sacrifice  meet  to  the  star  of  the  fiery  glare 
On  the  hills,  and  to  Zeus  himself  the  son  of  Kronos ;   and  so 
O'er  the  earth  from  Zeus  the  cool  Etesian  winds  yet  blow 
For  forty  days  :  and,  or  ever  the  red  Dog-star  doth  rise. 
The  priests  in  Kos  unto  this  day  offer  him  sacrifice. 

So  telleth  the  tale :  and  there  were  the  heroes  constrained  to  stay 
Land-bound  by  the  selfsame  winds.    But  the  Thynians  day  by  day, 
Of  their  love  for  Phineus,  brought  to  them  gifts  of  abundant  cheer.  5^0 
And  thereafter  unto  the  Blessed  Twelve  did  the  wanderers  rear 
On  the  further  strand  an  altar,  and  victims  offered  they  there 
Ere  they  entered  the  sea-swift  galley  to  row  :  yet  forgat  not  to  bear 
In  Argo  a  trembling  dove,  but  Euphemus  clutched  her  fast 
In  his  hand,  as  with  terror  she  shrank  and  cowered ;  and  so  at  the  last 
Loose  from  the  Th^'nian  land  the  hawsers  twain  they  cast. 

Yet  not  unmarked  of  Athene  onward  again  did  they  fare  : 
Swiftly  her  feet  hath  she  set  on  a  cloud  light-floating  in  air 
Which  should  waft  her  along,  for  she  caused  that  the  weight 

divine  it  bore. 
So  seaward  she  swept  to  the  help  of  the  toilers  at  the  oar.  540 

And  as  when  one  roveth  afar  from  his  own  land, — oftentimes  thus 
We  men  in  our  hardihood  wander,  and  no  land  seemeth  to  us 
Too  far  away,  but  all  paths  lie  within  our  ken, — 
And  he  thinketh  upon  his  home,  and  all  in  a  moment  then 
Him  seemeth  the  track  over  sea  and  o'er  land  thereunto  lieth  plain. 
And  the  eyes  of  his  soul  in  his  eager  pondering  thitherward  strain  ; 


THE  SECOND  BOOK  67 

Even  so  swiftly  the  Daughter  of  Zeus  through  the  welkin  hath  sped, 
Till  her  feet  on  the  perilous  strand  of  the  coast  Bithynian  tread. 
So  when  they  were  come  to  the  narrow  gorge  of  the  winding  strait 
Where  to  right  and  to  left  stern  cliffs  pent  in  that  grim  sea-gate,  530 
Then  the  swirling  rush  of  the  surf  dashed,  bursting  up  from  below, 
O'er  the  ship  as  she  went,  and  onward  in  sore  dismay  did  they  row. 
And  now  the  thud  of  the  rocks,  as  each  against  other  they  clashed. 
Ceaselessly  smote  on  their  ears,  and  thundered  the  cliffs  brine-lashed. 
Even  then  Euphemus  uprose  firm-grasping  the  dove  in  his  hand. 
And  on  to  the  prow  he  strode,  and  the  oarsmen  obeyed  the  command 
Of  Tiphys  Hagnias'  son,  that  they  rowed  with  might  and  main 
To  drive  the  Argo  betwixt  the  rocks  through  the  perilous  lane. 
Putting  their  trust  in  their  strength  ;  and  the  crags,  as  asunder 

they  leapt. 
Opening  they  saw — of  all  men  last — round  a  bend  as  they  swept.  560 
And  their  spirit  was  melted  within  them  : — but  now  Euphemus 

hath  sped 
The  flight  of  the  wings  of  the  dove  :  each  man  uplifted  his  head, 
Watching  what  now  should  befall  : — on,  onward  between  them,  on 
Flew  she  ;  but  face  to  face  those  charging  walls  of  stone 
Came  rushing  together,  and  crashed,  and  the  seething  brine  uproared 
Vast-volumed  like  to  a  cloud  ;  and  the  madding  sea-gulf  roared 
With  an  awful  voice,  and  thundered  the  welkin  wide  all  round. 
And  out  of  the  caverns  under  the  rugged  cliffs  the  sound 
Of  a  hollow  rumbling  came,  as  the  sea  surged  inward ;  and  high 
O'er  the  cliffs  from  the  dashing  waves  did  the  spurts  of  the  white  570 

foam  fly. 
The  ship  broached-to  in  the  wave-rush:  shorn  by  the  rocks  was  the  tip 
Of  the  dove's  tail-feathers  ;  but  onward  she  flew,  by  the  death- 
gin's  grip 
Unscathed.      Loud  shouted  the  oarsmen  ;  and  Tiphys  cried  to 

them  then 
To  row  with  their  might,  for  the  crags  were  parting  asunder  again. 
But  for  trembling  they  faltered  in  rowing,  until  the  indraught  caught 
The  ship   in  the  strength  of  its  sweep  back-swinging ;  and  lo, 
they  were  brought 


68  THE  ARGONAUTS 

Betwixt  those  rocks.     Then  fell  upon  all  most  ghastly  dread, 
For  destruction  that  none  could  escape  was  hanging  above  each  head. 
Even  now  through  the  gap  wide  Pontus  to  right  and  to  left  was 

beheld : 

But  all  unawares  at  their  bows  a  mighty  surge  upswelled  580 

Overbowed  like  a  precipice-fro\\Ti ;  and  they  saw  as  the  green 

arch  gleamed, 
And  with  cowering  heads  did  they  shut  their  eyes — to  their  souls 

it  seemed 
That  down  on  the  ship's  whole  length  it  would  leap,  and  overwhelm ; 
But,  while  yet  to  the  rowing  she  laboured,  did  Tiphys'  touch  on 

the  helm 
Ease  her,  and  under  the  keel  hath  it  rolled,  as  leapt  the  prow  : 
High  hath  it  lifted  the  stern,  and  afar  hath  it  swept  her  now 
From  the  rocks,  and  the  galley  'twixt  earth  and  heaven  was 

tossed  on  high. 
But  Euphemus  strode  down  the  line  of  the  rowers  with  cheering  cry 
To  bend  to  the  oars  with  their  uttermost  might :  and  they  tore 

through  the  deep 

The  blades  with  a  shout.    And  far  as  a  ship  to  the  stroke  will  leap,  590 
Even  twice  so  far  leapt  Argo  away,  and  the  tough  oars  bent 
Like  bended  bows,  such  might  to  the  stroke  the  heroes  lent. 
On-rushing,  up-towering,  a  breaker  came,  overarched  like  a  cave  ; 
But  suddenly  light  as  a  roller  she  rode  the  furious  wave. 
Forward  through  yawning  gulfs  she  plunged;  but  caught  was  her  prow 
By  a  whirlpool  sea-rush  betwixt  the  Clashers  : — on  each  side  now 
Swaying  forward  they  thundered,  and  shivered  the  hull  to  the 

coming  shock. 
Then  did  Athene  backward  thrust  one  massy  rock 
With  her  left  hand,  touching  their  bark  with  her  right  to  speed 

her  through  ; 
On,  like  a  winged  arrow  'twixt  billow  and  air  she  flew.  600 

Yet  shorn  away  was  the  tip  of  the  galley's  arching  stern 
By  the  rocks  in  their  clash  never-resting.     Then  chd  Athene  return 
Far  up  to  Olympus  soaring,  when  now  their  peril  was  past. 
But  the  Crags  in  the  selfsame  place  that  moment  were  rooted  fast 


THE  SECOND  BOOK  69 

Each  hard  against  other  for  ever,  as  fated  they  were  to  remain 
By  the  Blest,  when  a  man  in  his  ship  should  have  passed  there- 
through unslain. 
And   now  for  the  first  from  dismay  blood-curdling   did  those 

breathe  free. 
Now  gazing  around  on  the  sky,  now  o'er  the  expanse  of  sea 
Far  stretching  away  ;  for  they  weened  that  from  Hades  safe  they 

had  fled. 
Then  first  of  them  Tiphys  brake  that  awe-struck  hush,  and  he  said;  610 

*  Now  I  deem  we  have  'scaped  it,  we  and  the  Argo,  in  very  deed : 
And  herein  none  other,  save  only  Athene,  hath  helped  us  at  need, 
Who  breathed  into  Argo  spirit  divine,  when  Argus  the  wright 
Knit  her  with  bolts,  that  she  could  not  be  trapped  in  doom's  despite. 

0  Aison's  son,  for  the  best  of  thy  king  no  more  fear  thou. 
Since  a  God  hath  vouchsafed  unto  us  to  flee  all  scatheless  now 
Through  yonder  rocks  :  yea,  all  thy  toils  which  are  yet  to  be  done 
Shall  lightly  be  compassed,  as  Phineus  foretold,  Agenor's  son.' 

So  spake  he  ;   and  forward  past  the  Bithynian  land  he  sped 
The  ship  right  on  through  the  midst  of  the  sea.     But  Jason  said — 620 
And  sad  was  his  voice  and  low  as  he  answered  the  hero-chief; — 

*  Ah,  Tiphys,  to  what  end  thus  wouldst  thou  hearten  me  in 

my  grief? 

1  have  sinned;  with  baneful  and  cureless  madness  have  I  transgressed. 
For  I  ought,  in  the  very  hour  when  Pelias  uttered  his  best, 

To  have   straightway  refused  this  Quest,  yea,  though   I  were 

doomed  to  die 
By  the  hands  of  tormentors,  limb  from  limb  hewn  pitilessly. 
But  exceeding  dread  and  cares  unendurable  now  be  mine. 
With  haunting  fear  as  I  sail  the  sea's  chill  paths  of  brine 
In  the  ship,  and  with  haunting  fear  wheresoever  we  set  our  feet 
On  the  land,  for  that  foes  evermore  on  every  shore  do  we  meet.  630 
And  ever,  when  past  is  the  day,  through  a  night  of  sighs  I  wake. 
Even  from  the  hour  when  first  ye  gathered  for  Jason's  sake, 
For  all  things  aye  taking  thought.     With  a  light  heart  cheerily 
Thou  speak'st,  who  for  nought  but  thine  ov/n  life  needest  to 

care ;  but  I 


70  THE  ARGONAUTS 

For  mine  own  care  never  a  jot ;  but  for  this  man  and  tiiat  man's  bane, 
And  for  thee,  and  for  other  my  comrades  I  bear  this  burden  of  pain, 
Lest  haply  never  I  bring  you  alive  unto  Hellas  again.' 

So  spake  he,  trying  the  heroes'  souls  ;  but  with  words  of  cheer 
Shouted  they  :  glowed  his  heart  that  gallant  chiding  to  hear. 
And  again  he  uplifted  his  voice,  and  he  hailed  that  hero-crew :    640 

*  O  friends,  your  manful  spirit  hath  quickened  my  courage  anew. 
V/herefore,  not  though  through  abysses  of  Hades  my  way  should  be, 
Will  I  suffer  that  dread  shall  lay  hold  on  my  soul,  so  steadfast  do  ye 
Abide  amid  heart-wringing  terror — yea,  seeing  that  now  through 

the  strait 
Of  the  Clashing  Rocks  we  have  sailed,  I  trow  there  lieth  in  wait 
No  terror  hereafter  like  unto  this,  if  in  truth  we  obey 
The  counsel  of  Phineus  the  seer,  as  we  track  the  printless  way.' 
So  spake  he  ;  from  words  of  misgiving  their  lips  thenceforth 

they  refrained  : 
But  they  fell  to  the  ceaseless  labour  of  rowing  ;  and  quickly  they      I 

gained  | 

Rheba  the  swift-flowing  river  :   Kotone's  height  they  descried,     6501 
And  shortly  thereafter  past  the  Headland  Dark  did  they  glide.        ' 
Thereby  was  Phylleis'  outfall,  where  in  the  days  bygone 
In  the  halls  of  his  palace  Dipsakus  welcomed  Athamas'  son,  ' 

What  time  from  Orchomenus-city  he  fled,  on  the  winged  ram  borne. 
A  Nymph  of  the  Mead  was  his  mother  :  the  tyrant's  arrogant  scorn 
He  loathed,  but  contented  beside  his  father's  streams  dwelt  he 
With  his  mother,  and  pastured  his  sheep  in  the  meadows  beside 

the  sea. 
And  quickly  they  sighted  his  shrine,  and  the  broad  low  banks  of 

the  stream. 
And  the  plain,  and  of  Kalpc's  deep-flowing  waters  they  caught 

the  gleam 
For  a  moment,  and  passed  it  by,  and  still,  when  the  daylight  waned,  660 
'Neath  the  stars  of  the  windless  night  at  the  tireless  oars  they  strained. 
And  even  as  ploughing  oxen  cleaving  the  rain-soaked  soil 
Labour  the  furrows  adown,  and  abundant  sweat  of  their  toil 
Streameth  from  flank  and  from  neck,  and  aye  from  beneath  the  yoke 


THE  SECOND  BOOK  71 

Are  the  tired  beasts  turning  their  eyes  askance;  and  as  furnace-smoke 
In  hot  gasps  snort  they  the  breath  from  their  mouths  ;  and,  deep 

in  the  clay 
Thrusting  their  hoofs,  at  the  plough  they  tug  through  the  live- 
long day  ; 
So  toiled  those  heroes  tugging  the  oars  through  the  brine  alway. 

When  the  dawn  divine  not  yet  hath  arisen,  nor  utter  night 
Reigneth,  but  over  the  darkness  stealeth  a  faint  grey  light, —       670 
The  twilight-tide  is  it  named  of  slumber-stinted  men, — 
Into  a  desolate  Thynian  island's  haven  then 
They  ran,  and  with  weary  toil  sore-spent  won  they  to  the  strand. 
And  to  them  lo,  Leto's  son,  coming  up  from  the  Libyan  land. 
As  he  fared  to  the  countless  folk  of  the  Hyperborean  race. 
Appeared  ;  and  his  tresses  golden-gleaming  about  his  face. 
Ever,  as  onward  he  moved,  in  the  breezes  floated  and  swung. 
In  his  left  hand  held  he  the  silver  bow,  and  his  quiver  slung 
From  his  shoulders  was  gleaming  adown  his  back  :  and  the  isle 

all  o'er 
Quaked  'neath  his  feet,  and  surged  the  billow  high  on  the  shore.  63o 
Then  fell   on  them  'wildered  fear   as   they  looked  :    was  none 

dared  turn 
His  face  to  gaze  with  his  eyes  on  the  God's  eyes  lovely  and  stern. 
But  with  heads   bowed  down  to   the   earth    they   stood :   and 

onward  he  passed 
Faring  afar  through  the  air  to  the  sea.      Then  Orpheus  at  last 
After  long  hush  spake,  and  he  cried  to  the  hero-chieftains  all : 

'  Come  now,  an  ye  will,  this  island  the  Sacred  Isle  let  us  call 
Of  Apollo  the  Dawn-god,  seeing  at  dawning  revealed  to  our  eyes 
O'er  the  isle  he  hath  passed.    Such  things  as  we  have  let  us  sacrifice. 
On  the  shore  upbuilding  an  altar  :  and  if  in  the  days  to  come 
To  Haimonia-land  he  vouchsafe  us  return,  safe-speeding  us  home,  690 
Then  with  the  thighs  of  horned  goats  will  we  pay  our  vow. 
But  with  sacrifice-steam  and  libation  I  bid  you  propitiate  now 
The  God.     Be  gracious,  O  King  manifested !  — be  gracious  thou! ' 

So  did  he  counsel :  an  altar  with  speed  'gan  these  uppile 
Of  shingle,  and  those  through  the  island  wandered,  seeking  the  while 


72  THE  ARGONAUTS 

If  they  haply  might  light  on  a  fauTi,  or  the  wild  goat's  restless 

brood 
That  in  multitudes  seek  their  pasturage  far  in  the  depths  of  the  wood. 
And  Leto's  son  unto  these  gave  booty ;  and  carving  out 
The  thighs,  on  the  altar  they  laid  them  with  fat-folds  wrapped  about : 
And  thevburnt  them,  hailing  Apollo  the  L  ordof  the  Fair  Dayspring.  700 
And  around  the  blaze  they  stood  in  a  wide  encompassing  ring  : 

'  All  hail,  fair  Healer  Apollo !      Hail,  thou  Healer  of  Bane ! ' 
Thev  sang  :  and  amidst  them  Oeagrius'  goodly  son  hath  ta'en 
The  Bistonian  lyre,  and  uplifted  his  voice  in  the  clear-ringing  lay. 
Singing  how  on  the  rocky  flanks  of  Parnassus  once  on  a  day 
Delphine  the  monster  the  young  God  slew  with  his  arrow-flight. 
When  he  yet  was  a  beardless  youth,  rejoicing  in  locks  of  light : — 
*  Be  gracious !  '  he  sang, '  Unshorn,  O  King,  be  thy  tresses  aye. 
Ever  unravaged,  as  Heaven's  will  is !      One  only  may  lay 
Love-lingering  hands  thereupon,  even  Leto  Koeus'  child.'  710 

And  the  daughters  of  Pleistus  oft,  the  Korykian  Nymphs  of  the  wild, 
Caught  up  the  refrain — '  Hail,  Healer  !  '  their  gladdening  echoes 

ring. 
So  born  was  the  lovely  hvmn  that  to  Phoebus  yet  men  sing. 
Then,  when  with  the  dance  and  the  song  they  had  honoured 
the  God,  they  swore. 
By  the  holy  libations  taking  the  oath,  that  evermore 
They  would  stand  each  one  by  his  fellow,  and  help  in  unity. 
On  the  victims  laid  they  their  hands  as  they  spake  ;  and  vet  may 

ye  see 
A  temple  to  gracious  Unity  there,  which  their  own  hands  reared 
In  the  day  that  they  took  for  their  wayfaring-fellow  the  God- 
dess revered. 
And  now  when  the  dawn  of  the  third  day  came,  a  fresh  strong  720 
wind 
From  the  west  upsprang,  and  they  left  the  island-clilfs  behind. 
Overagainst  the  mouth  of  the  river  Sangarius  then. 
And  the  land  exceeding  rich  of  the  Mariandynian  men. 
The  streams  of  Lykus,  the  mere  of  Anthemoisia — these 
They  sighted,  and  ran  thereby,  and  ever  the  sheets  in  the  breeze 


THE  SECOND  BOOK  73 

Quivered,  and  all  the  tackling,  as  onward  they  sped  their  flight. 
But  at  dawn — forasmuch  as  the  wind  had  fallen  asleep  in  the  night  — 
Gladly  the  haven  they  won  of  the  Acherusian  Head. 
Upward  it  soareth  to  heaven  with  cliifs  no  foot  may  tread, 
Fronting  the  sea  Bithynian  ;   below  it  the  craggy  rocks  73° 

Ever  lashed  by  the  brine  stand  rooted  :  around  them  with  thunder- 
shocks 
Ever  crashes  the  wallowing  surge  ;  and  above  the  turmoil  on  high 
Wide-spreading  planes  on  the  brow  of  the  mountain  rest  on  the  sky. 
And  aba  ck  of  the  headland,  and  sloped  therefrom  away  from  the  shore 
Is  a  glen  in  a  hollow :  therein  is  a  cave,  even  Hades'  Door, 
With  forest  and  rocks  overroofed,  and  thereout  an  icy  breath. 
Chill-blowing  unceasingly  up  from  unfathomed  abysses  of  death, 
Freezeth  the  dews  evermore,  neither  melteth  the  glistering  rime 
From  the  leaves,  till  the  hour  when  the  sun  to  his  noonday  height 

doth  climb. 
And  o'er  that  headland  grim  doth  silence  never  brood,  740 

But  it  murmureth  ever  with  sound  confused  of  the  booming  flood 
And  of  leaves  that  shiver  in  blasts  from  the  mountain-clefts  that  blow. 
There  also  the  outfall  is  of  the  river  Acheron's  flow : 
Through  the  heart  of  the  headland  bursting  it  hurleth  its  flood  to 

the  sea 
Eastward,  through  yawning  chasms  plunging  suddenly. 
But  *  Saviour  of  Sailors '  in  days  thereafter  called  they  its  name, 
Even  Megaran  folk  of  Nisaia,  when  seeking  a  home  they  came 
In  the  Mariandynian  land  ;  for  deliverance  from  peril  it  gave 
Unto  them  and  their  ships  from  the  stress  of  stormy  wind  and  wave. 
Through  the  gorge  of  the  cape  Acherusian  ran  the  heroes  their  prow,  75o 
And  seaward-facing  abode  ;  for  the  wind  had  lulled  but  now. 

Nor  long  unmarked  of  Lykus,  the  lord  of  the  selfsame  land, 
And  the  Mariandynian  folk,  they  came,  that  hero-band, 
The  slayers  of  Amykus,  seeing  their  rumour  before  them  had  run  : 
So  a  league  with  the  wanderers  made  they  because  of  the  great 

deed  done. 
And,  for  Prince  Polydeukes,  they  hailed  him  as  though  of  the 
Gods  he  were, 


74  THE  ARGONAUTS 

Thither  flocking  from  every  side  ;  for  through  many  a  stormy  year 
Had  they   warred  with   the   proud   Bebrykians,  and  faced  the 

battle-blast. 
So  they  went  up  into  the  city,  and  all  together  they  passed 
Into  Lykus'  palace,  and  that  day  through  by  the  meat  and  the  bowl  76« 
In  all  lovingkindness  they  sat,  and  with  converse  gladdened  their 

soul. 
And  Aison's  scion  his  lineage  told,  and  the  names  of  the  rest 
Of  the  hero-helpers  withal,  and  the  tale  of  Pelias'  hest ; 
And  how  the  women  of  Lemnos  in  kindness  dealt  with  them  well ; 
And  of  all  that  in  Kyzikus,  land  of  the  Dolian  men,  befell ; 
How  to  Mysia  they  came,  and  to  Kios,  where  Herakles  lion-souled 
Sore  loth  they  forsook  ;  and  the  words  of  the  Sea-god  Glaukus  he 

told; 
And  how  they  laid  the  Bebrykian  people  and  Amykus  low ; 
And  of  Phineus'  prophecies  told  he  and  all  his  weary  woe  ;  j 

And  how  they  escaped  through  the  Crags  Dark-blue,  and  beheld  770 

on  the  isle  ' 

Leto's  son  :  and  still,  as  he  told  all,  Lykus  the  while 
Hearkened  in  gladness  of  soul  ;  but  with  grief  did  the  heart  of 

him  ache 
For  Herakles  left  behind,  and  unto  them  all  he  spake  : 

*  O  friends,  what  a  hero's  help   ye   have  lost  for  the  way  ye 

must  go 
Far-sailing  to  halls  of  Aietes! — myself  have  beheld  him,  and  know 
What  manner  of  man  he  was  ;  for  in  Daskylus'  halls  did  he  stand, 
Even  here  in  the  halls  of  my  sire,  when  he  marched  through  the 

Asian  land 
Afoot,  that  belt  of  the  battle-revelling  queen  to  win, 
Hippolyte  :  then  did  he  find  me  with  youth's  soft  down  on  my  chin. 
Here,  when  Priolaus  my  brother  was  unto  his  grave-mound  borne, —  73o 
Who  was  slain  by  our  Mysian  foes,  and  for  whom  the  people  mourn 
With  exceeding  piteous  dirges  from  that  day  forth, — in  the  lists 
Against  Titias  the  strong  he  stood,  and  prevailed  in  the  strife  of 

the  fists 
Over  him  who  amidst  of  our  young  men  never  his  match  had  found 


THE  SECOND  BOOK  75 

In  stature  and  might :  but  Herakles  dashed  his  teeth  on  the  ground. 
Beneath  my  father's  sceptre  withal  the  Mysians  he  bowed, 
And  the  Phrygians,  for  hard   by   our  marches  their  fields  our 

foemen  ploughed. 
And  the  tribes  of  Bithynians  he   smote,  and  won  their  land  by 

his  might, 
Even  to  the  outfall  of  Rheba,  and  unto  Kolone's  height. 
And  the  Paphlagonians  of  Pelops  yielded,  nor  faced  that  foe,        79° 
Even  all  round  whom  Billaios'  darkling  waters  flow. 
Then  came  the  Bebrykians  ;   and  Amykus'  lawless  tyranny, 
While  Herakles  dwelt  afar,  reft  these  my  possessions  from  me. 
Long  carving  out  of  my  land  huge  cantles,  till  stretched  the  line 
Of  their  bounds  to  the  meads  where  Hypius'  deep-flowing  waters 

shine. 
But  ye  made  them  to  pay  requital  for  all :  it  was  not,  I  wot. 
But  by  will  of  the  Gods  that  war  by  Tyndareus'  son  was  brought 
That  day  on  Bebrykia's  sons,  when  their  champion  giant  he  slew. 
Wherefore  what  thanks  soever  Lykus  may  render  to  you 
With  joy  will  I  render  ;  for  meet  and  right  it  is  that  the  weak,  800 
When  the  strong  for   their  helping   arise,  by  deeds  their  thanks 

should  speak. 
Lo,  Daskylus  now  will  I  bid  that  he  be  of  your  company, 
Even  my  son,  and  if  this  man  your  fellow  in  wayfaring  be. 
With  kindly  greeting  shall  all  men  hail  you,  and  welcome  fain 
Through  all  your  way,  till  the  mouth  of  the  river  Thermodon  ye 

gain. 
But  to  Tyndareus'  sons  on  the  Acherusian  foreland's  steep 
A  temple  on  high  will  I  rear  :  far  off  across  the  deep 
Shall  seafarers  mark  that  fane,  and  to  these  in  prayer  shall  they  call. 
Rich  fields  of  the  fertile  plain  will  I  set  apart  withal 
Unto  them,  as  unto  the  Gods,  without  the  city-wall.'  810 

Even  so  through  the  livelong  day  at  the  banquet  revelled  they  on. 
But  with  dawning  down  to  the  strand  they  hied  them,  in  haste  to 

be  gone. 
Then  went  with  them  Lykus,  and  gifts  in  their  galley  to  bear 

gave  he 


76  THE  ARGONAUTS 

Without  number,  and  sent  his  son,  their  voyaging  comrade  to  be. 

There  did  the  doom  fate-spoken  descend  upon  Abas'  son, 
Idmon,  in  soothsaying  peerless  :   but  safety  for  him  was  there  none 
In  his  soothsaying  lore,  for  that  now  must  he  die  by  the  doom 

decreed. 
For  it  chanced  that  there  lay  in  a  reedy  river's  water-mead. 
Cooling  his  flanks  and  his  mighty  belly  wallowed  in  mire, 
A  wild  boar  gleaming-tusked,  so  baleful  a  monster  and  dire  820 

That  of  him  were  the  meadow-haunting  Nymphs  themselves  adread. 
No  man  knew  his  lair  ;  alone  in  the  fen  wide-stretching  he  fed. 
But  it  chanced  unto  Abas'  son  o'er  the  marshy  rises  to  fare 
Of  the  plain,  and  the  beast  on  a  sudden,  forth  of  his  unseen  laii* 
High-leaping  out  of  the  reed-bed,  gashed  in  his  sidelong  rush 
His  thigh,  that  the  sinews  were  severed,  and   snapped  was  the 

bone  by  the  tush. 
With  one  sharp  cry  to  the  earth  he  fell,  and  with  answering  shout 
His  comrades  ran  to  the  stricken  ;  and  Peleus  in  haste  thrust  out 
With  his  hunting-spear,  as  the  murderous  monster  fled  to  the  fen. 
Then  turned  he,  and  charged  full  on  them;  but  Idas  stabbed 830 

him  then. 
And  harshly  screaming  he  fell  impaled  on  the  keen  spear -head. 
There  on  the  earth  as  he  lay,  unheeded  they  left  him  dead. 
But  their    friend    to    the    galley    in    death-throes    gasping  his 

comrades  bore 
Sore  grieved  :  but  he  died  in  their  arms  or  ever  they  reached 

the  shore. 
Then  from  their  voyaging  stayed  they,  they  cared  not  now 

to  depart : 
To  their  dead  friend's  burial  turned  they  in  heaviness  of  heart. 
For   three  whole  days  they  wailed,  and  their  dead,  when   the 

fourth  day  broke, 
Did  they  bury  as  one  of  the  princes  ;  and  Lykus  and  all  his  folk 
Had  part  in  the  woeful  rites  ;  and  victims  of  sheep  not  a  few, 
As  meet  and  right  for  the  dead  it  is,  by  his  grave  they  slew.         840 
And  a  barrow  that  standeth  yet  unto  this  man  there  did  they  raise, 
And  a  token  is  there,  to  be  seen  by  the  men  of  the  unborn  days. 


THE  SECOND  BOOK  77 

A  galley's  roller  of  olive-wood  ;  into  leaf  doth  it  break 
But  a  little  below  Acherusia's  height  :  and — if  I  may  speak. 
This  too  by  the  power  of  the  Muses  that  stirreth  within  my  breast — 
To  Boeotian  men  and  Nisaian  Apollo  spake  his  behest, 
Worship  to  him  as  unto  their  city's  protector  to  pay, 
And  around  that  ancient  olive  a  city's  foundations  to  lay. 
But  by  this  is  tradition  dim,  and  they  render  the  honour-meed 
Unto  one  Agamestor,  and  not  unto  Idmon,  Aiolus'  seed.  850 

Now  who  was  the  next  that  died  ? — for  the  heroes  again  in  grief 
Another  earth-mound  heaped  for  another  perished  chief: 
Yea,  there  be  memorials  twain  of  the  wanderers  yet  high-reared. 
Now  telleth  the  tale  how  Tiphys  the  Hagniad  died  ;   for  his  weird 
Was  to  voyage  no  further  thereafter  ;  but  him,  far  away  from  his 

home. 
Short  sickness  hushed  into  sleep,  the  endless  sleep  of  the  tomb. 
While  yet  were  the  death-rites  rendered  to  Abas'  son  by  the  folk  : 
And  grief  unendurable  seized  them  for  this  new  ruin-stroke. 
Yea,  and  when  hard  by  the  seer  him  too  they  had  buried  there, 
On  the  shore  of  the  sea  did  they  cast  them  adown  in  utter  despair,  860 
Rolled  in  their  mantles  from  head  to  foot,  all  hushed  :  no  part 
Had  meat  nor  drink  in  their  thoughts  ;  but  in  bitterness  of  heart 
They  spake  not,  for  hope  of  returning  was  dead  in  each  man's  breast. 
And  for  grief  had  they  gone  no  further,  had  there  made  end  of 

the  Quest, 
But  that  Here  enkindled  exceeding  courage  within  the  soul 
Of  Ankaius,  whom  Astypaleia,  where  Imbrasus'  waters  roll. 
Bare  to  the  Sea-god,  a  man  most  deft  in  the  steering  of  ships. 
So  now  unto  Peleus  he  turned  him,  and  spake  with  eager  lips  : 

'  Is  it  well  done,  Aiakus'  son,  that,  forgetting  the  great  work,  we 
On  an  alien  shore  should  linger  and  linger  ? — I,  even  he  870 

Whom  Jason  brought  on  the  Quest  of  the  Fleece  from  Parthenia 

afar. 
Have  knowledge  of  shipsj — yea,  even  beyond  my  cunning  in  war. 
W^herefore,  as  touching  the  plight  of  our  ship,  no  whit  fear  thou. 
Yea,  others  in  steering  deft  came  hitherward  with  us,  I  trow  : 
Whomsoever  of  these  at  the  helm  we  set,  no  hurt  shall  befall 


78  THE  ARGONAUTS 

Our  seafaring.     Haste  then,  and  unto  our  fellows  tell  forth  all, 
And  unto  the  high  emprise  arouse  them  with  heartening  word.' 
So  spake  he  ;   the  soul  of  the  other  with  gladness  exceeding 

was  stirred. 
No  whit  did  he  tarry,  but  straight  in  the  midst  of  them  all  did 

he  say, 

*  Ho,  friends !  — why  cherish  we  thus  a  bootless  sorrow  for  aye  ?  sso 
For  I  ween  these  twain  by  the  doom  first  drawn  with  their  life's 

lot  died  : 
But  in  this  our  array  there  be  found  with  us  other  helmsmen  beside, 
Yea,  many  an  one  :  let  us  put  them  to  proof:  make  we  no  stay  ; 
But  rouse  ye  unto  the  deed,  and  cast  your  griefs  away.' 

But  in  helpless  despair  unto  him  did  the  son  of  Aison  say  : 
*  O  Aiakus'  son,  these  helmsmen  of  thine — now  where  be  they  ? 
For  they  which  concerning  their  cunning  therein  once  vaunted  loud, 
Even  these  yet  more  than  I  with  vexation  of  spirit  are  bowed. 
For  us  then,  as  for  the  dead,  ill  doom  doth  mine  heart  foretell,  i 
Whose  lot  shall  be  never  to  win  to  the  town  of  Aictes  the  fell,  SqoI 
No,  neither  ever  again  to  pass  through  the  grim  sea-gate  i 

To  the  land  of  Hellas  returning  ;   but  now  shall  an  evil  fate,  I 

As  we  wax  old  deedless,  enshroud  us  nameless  and  fameless  here.'      I 
He  spake  :   but  Ankaius  eagerly  proffered  himself  to  steer  ' 

The  sea-swift  ship  ;  for  within  him  the  power  of  the  Goddess 

was  strong. 
Erginus  and  Nauplius  then,  and  Euphemus  forth  from  the  throng 
Strode,  eager  all  for  the  helm  :  but  their  comrades  drew  back  these, 
For  that  none  would  they  have  but  Ankaius  to  guide  them  over 

the  seas. 
So  then  on  the  twelfth  dav  hied  them  adown  the  Argo's  crew 
At  dawn  ;   for  the  West-wind  now,  the  mighty  wafter,  blew.       e'^'o 
Speedily  out  of  the  Acheron's  mouth  with  the  oars  they  passed, 
And  they  shook  the  broad  sail  forth  to  the  wind,  and  far  and  fast 
With  outspread  canvas  cleaving  the  leagues  of  summer  wave. 
By  the  outfall  of  Kallichorus  the  river  sudftly  they  drave. 
The  place  where  the  child  Nysaian  of  Zeus,  as  the  tale  doth  tell, 
When,  leaving  the  tribes  of  the  Indians,  in  Thebe  he  came  to  dwell. 


THE  SECOND  BOOK  79 

Held  revel,  and  dances  in  front  of  the  cave  did  the  God  array 
Wherein,  through  the  nights  unsmiling,  in  hallowed  slumber  he  lay. 
Wherefore  the  people  called  it  the  River  of  Dances  Fair, 
And  the  cavern  the  Bedchamber,  seeing  a  God  once  slumbered  91° 

there. 
Thereafter  espied  they  the  barrow  of  Sthenelus,  Aktor's  son, 
Who,  when  from  valorous  battle  against  the  Amazon 
He  was  turning  aback, — for  with  Herakles  thither  to  war  had 

he  hied, — 
By  an  arrow  was  smitten,  and  there  on  the  surf-lashed  sea-strand 

died. 
Nor  yet  for  a  space  did  they  sail  on  thence  ;  for  Persephone,  won 
By  his  prayers  and  tears,  sent  forth  the  spirit  of  Aktor's  son 
A  moment  to  gaze  upon  men  of  passions  like  to  his  own. 
So  he  mounted  the  crest  of  his  barrow  :  on  Argo  looked  he  down, 
Even  such  to  behold  as  when  to  the  war  he  went.      On  his  head 
His  beautiful  helm  four-crested  flashed  with  its  plume  blood-red.  920 
Then  down  into  blackness  of  darkness  returned  he  :  they  looked 

thereon. 
And  marvelled.     Then  by  the  word  of  prophecy  Ampykus'  son, 
Mopsus,  caused  them  to  land,  and  to  pay  drink-offerings  due. 
So  furled  they  the  sail  in  haste,  and  the  hawsers  forth  they  threw  ; 
And  there  on  the  strand  round  Sthenelus'  grave-mound  gathered 

they. 
Drink-offerings  they  poured,  and  the  fatlings  of  sacrifice  did  they 

slay. 
And,  besides  the  libations,  an  altar  they  built,  laying  thighs  on 

the  blaze 
To  Apollo  the  Saviour  of  Ships  ;  and  his  lyre  did  Orpheus  upraise 
And  dedicate  ;  wherefore  the  <  Lyre '  from  that  day  called  they 

the  place. 
Then  straight,  when  the  wind  blew  strong,  did  they  board  the  <?3o 

galley  again. 
And  they  dropped  the  sail  from  the  yard,  and  the  feet  thereof  did 

they  strain 
On  either  hand  with  the  sheets  ;  and  over  the  sea  did  she  fly 


So  THE  ARGONAUTS 

Swift-racing,  as  when  some  hawk  through  the  welkin  soaring  high 
To  the  breeze  committeth  his  wings,  and  is  borne  fast :  onward 

sweeping 
He  stirreth  them  not,  on  restful  pinions  in  mid-heaven  sleeping. 
And  lo,  by  the  streams  of  Parthenius'  seaward-murmuring  water, 
Most  softly-sliding  of  rivers,  they  passed,  where  Leto's  Daughter, 
What  time  from  the  hunting  she  cometh,  ere  up  to  the  heaven 

she  go. 
In  its  lovely  ripples  cooleth  her  limbs  from  the  summer-glow. 
Then  through  the  night-tide  onward  and  onward  unresting  they  sped.  940 
Past  Sesamus,  past  the  long  Erythinian  steeps  they  fled  ; 
By  Krobialus  and  by  Kromne,  Kytorus  the  forest-crowned ; 
Then,  as  the  sun's  shafts  glanced  o'er  the  waters,  swept  they  around 
Karambis  ;  and  still  by  an  endless  strand  the  oars  they  plied 
Through  the  livelong  day,  and  on  through  the  night,  when  the 

daylight  died. 
On  the  shore  of  Assyria  they  landed,  where  Zeus  to  Sinope, 

the  child 
Of  Asopus,  had  given  a  home.      By  his  own  rash  promise  beguiled 
Zeus'  self  bestowed  on  the  maiden  the  gift  of  her  maidenhood. 
For  he  longed  for  her  love,  and  he  promised  that,  whatsoever 

she  would. 
He  would  give  her  her  heart's  desire,  and  he  sealed  the  pledge  950 

with  his  nod  : 
And  she  in  her  subtlety  asked  her  maidenhood  of  the  God. 
So  in  like  wise  made  she  a  mock  of  Apollo,  whose  soul  was  fain 
Of  her  couch,  and  of  Halys  the  river  withal.     Nor  did  any  man 

gain 
His  desire,  in  the  arms  of  love  to  embrace  her,  and  humble  her 

pride. 
Now  there  did  noble  Trikkaian  De'imachus'  sons  abide, — 
Even  three,  Deileon,  Autolykus,  Phlogius  withal,  were  these, — 
Since  the  day  when  they  wandered  away  from  the  host  of  Herakles. 
And  these,  when  they  marked  draw  near  the  warrior-chiefs'  array, 
Went  shoreward  to  meet  them,  and  told  them  in  all  truth  who 

were  they. 


THE  SECOND  BOOK  8i 

Neither  willed  they  there  to  abide  any  longer,  but  fared  with  the  960 

crew 
In  Argo,  so  soon  as  the  cloud-dispelling  south-wind  blew. 
So  in  their  company  went  they  borne  by  the  breeze  swift-blowing, 
And  Halys  the  river  they  left,  and  Iris  beside  him  flowing, 
And  the  river-delta  land  of  Assyria  :  the  selfsame  day 
They  rounded  the  headland  that  sheltered  the  Amazons'  harbour- 
bay. 
Melanippe,  Aretus'  child,  forth-faring,  by  ambuscade 
Of  Herakles  there  was  caught,  and  her  sister  Hippolyte  paid 
For  her  ransom  the  Belt  of  renown,  the  splendour-gleaming  band  : 
So  the  hero  sent  her  back,  and  she  gat  no  hurt  of  his  hand. 
In  the  harbour  that  beareth  her  name,  where  seaward  Thermodon  970 

pours 
Ran  they  ashore,  for  that  contrary  now  was  the  wind  to  their  course. 
That  river — on  earth  there  is  not  his  like  ;   there  is  none  that 

doth  spread 
Over  the  land  so  many  streams  from  his  fountain-head. 
There  should  lack  but  four  of  a  hundred,  if  one  should  tell  them  o'er 
Each  after  each,  and  from  one  true  fountain  do  all  these  pour. 
Down  from  the  mountains  high  to  the  plains  it  sendeth  its  rills, 
From  the  heights  which  be  called,  men  say,  the  Amazonian  Hills. 
Thence  over  the  hilly  country  inland-straying  they  flow 
Ever  onward,  albeit  their  paths  in  manifold  windings  go 
This  way  and  that  evermore,  wheresoever  on  low-lying  ground   980 
They  may  light,  so  roll  they  along  ;  and  this  one  afar  shall  be  found. 
And  that  one  anear  ;  and  nameless  many  an  one  is  lost 
Swallowed  up  in  the  sands  ;  and  a  blended  remnant  of  all  that  host 
Into  perilous  Pontus  plunge  with  arching  crests  high-tossed. 
And,  there  as  they  tarried,  in  battle  against  the  Amazon  horde 
Had  they  closed,  and  in  that  grim  strife  had  blood  been  as  water 

outpoured  ; 
For  all  ungentle  the  Amazons  are,  neither  have  they  regard 
Unto  justice,  the  terrible  ones  who  the  plain  Doiantian  ward  ; 
But    the  deeds  of    the    War-god  they    love,    and    outrage  of 
tyrannous  scorn  ; 

F 


82  THE  ARGONAUTS 

For  the  daughters  of  Ares  they  are,  of  the  Nymph  Harmonia  born :  99^ 
For  she  bare  to  the  Man-destroyer  the  battle-revelHng  maids, 
When  their  couch  was  spread  mid  the  folds  of  Alkmonian  forest- 
glades  : — 
But  again  from  Zeus  'gan  blow  the  breath  of  the  fair  south-wind ; 
So  sped  by  the  blast  they  left  the  rounded  foreland  behind, 
While  the  Themiskyreian  Amazons  yet  were  arming  for  war  : 
For  in  one  great  city  assembled  they  dwelt  not,  but  sundered  afar 
From  their  fellows  throughout  the  land  were  the  tribes  of  them 

parted  in  three  ; 
In  the  one  place  Themiskyreians,  whose  queen  was  Hippolyte 
In  that  old  time  ;  and  there  the  Lykastians  dwelt,  and  anon 
Dart-hurling  Chadisians  yonder.     The  next  day  sped  they  on,    locx 
And  at  nightfall  unto  the  land  of  the  Chalyban  men  they  won. 

That  folk  drive  never  the  ploughing  oxen  afield  :  no  part 
Have  they  in  the  planting  of  fruit  that  as  honey  is  sweet  to  the  heart ; 
Neither  lead  they  the  pasturing  flocks  over  meadows  a-glitter  with 

dew  : 
But  the  ribs  of  the  stubborn  earth  for  the  treasure  of  iron  they  hew, 
And  by  merchandise  of  the  same  do  they  live:  never  dawning  broke 
Bringing  respite  of  toil  unto  them,  but  ever  midst  mirk  of  smoke 
And  flame  at  the  forge  are  they  moiling  and  plying  the  weary  stroke. 
Round  the  headland  of  Zeus  the  All-begetter  swept  they  then  ; 
And  safely  they  sped  by  the  land  of  the  Tibarenian  men.  ioi< 

When  a  woman  in  that  land  beareth  a  child  to  her  lord,  on  his  bed 
Doth  her  husband  cast  him  adown,  and  he  groaneth  with  close- 
swathed  head 
As  in  anguish  of  travail,  the  while  the  woman  with  tender  care 
Doth  nurse  him  and  feed,  and  for  him  the  child-birth  bath  doth 
prepare. 
The  Sacred  Mountain  thereafter,  and  that  land  passed  they  by 
Wherein  the  Mossynoecians  dwell  amid  mountains  high 
In  their  towers  of  timber  goodly-wrought,  and  they  call  the  same 
*  Mossyni,'  wherefrom  moreover  the  nation  hath  gotten  its  name. 
Strange  is  the  justice  of  these,  and  customs  uncouth  have  they. 
Whatsoe'er  we  be  wont  to  do  before  men  in  the  sight  of  the  day,  1020 


THE  SECOND  BOOK  83 

Or  the  market-stead,  all  this  they  perform  their  houses  within  ; 
And  whatso  we  do  in  our  chambers  apart,  they  account  it  not  sin 
Without,  in  the  midst  of  the  streets  of  their  city,  to  do  unblamed. 
No  modesty  have  they  in  love,  but  as  rooting  swine  unshamed. 
No  whit  abashed  for  the  eyes  of  beholders  that  stand  thereby, 
On  the  earth  for  their  bed  of  love  with  their  women  un wedded 

they  lie. 
In  their  loftiest  block-house  sitteth  their  king,  and  holdeth  his  court, 
Decreeing  his  righteous  judgments  to  them  that  thither  resort. 
Ah,  luckless  wight ! — if  perchance  in  his  sentence  he  swerve  from 

the  right. 
Unto  prison  they  hale  him,  therein  to  fast  till  falleth  the  night.      1030 

These  passed  they  by,  and  well-nigh  overagainst  the  shores 
Of  the  Isle  of  Ares  they  cleft  them  a  path  with  unresting  oars 
Through  the  livelong  day,  for  the  gentle  breeze  in  the  gloaming 

died. 
Then  all  in  a  moment  one  of  the  War-god's  birds  they  espied, 
Which  haunt  that  isle,  through  the  welkin  darting  high  overhead  ; 
And  behold,  his  pinions  he  shook,  and  down  on  the  ship  as  she  sped 
A  feather  keen  hath  he  shot :  to  the  leftward  shoulder  it  sprang 
Of  O'lleus  :  he  dropped  from  his  hands  his  oar  at  the  sudden  pang 
Of  the  stroke,  and  they  marvelled  all  when  the  feather-arrow 

they  saw. 
But  the  shaft  from  the  flesh  did  his  rowing-mate  Eribotes  draw  ;  1040 
And  he  bound  up  the  wound  ;  for  his  baldric-band  he  unclasped, 

that  bare 
His  sword-sheath  hanging  beside  him.  Sweeping  on  through  the  air 
Came  another  of  those  fell  birds  :  but  already  the  bow  was  bent 
Of  the  hero  Klytius,  Eurytus'  son  :  from  the  string  hath  he  sent 
A  swift-flying  arrow  against  that  fowl,  and  the  shaft  struck  home. 
Down  whirling  beside  the  swift  ship  splashed  the  bird  in  the  foam. 
Then  cried  Amphidamas  Aleiis'  son,  and  thus  spake  he  : 

*  Nigh  to  us  now  is  the  Island  of  Ares  :  ye  know  it,  who  see 
Yon  fowl  of  ravin  ;  and  little  shall  arrows  avail  us,  I  trow. 
To  win  us  a  peaceful  landing  thereon  ;  but  contrive  we  now  1050 

Some  other  device  for  our  help,  if  indeed  we  be  minded  to  land, 


84  THE  ARGONAUTS 

Remembering  Phineus'  word,  and  the  sightless  seer's  command. 

For  not  great  Herakles'  self,  to  Arcadia-land  when  he  came, 

Availed  with  his  arrows  to  drive  away  those  birds  that  swam 

The  Stymphalian  mere  :   yea,  I  with  mine  eyes  beheld  that  thing. 

But  he  stood  on  a  crag  exceeding  high,  loud-clattering 

With  clash  and  clang  in  his  hands  his  brazen  battle-gear  ; 

And  far  away  did  they  flee  wild-screaming  in  panic  fear. 

Wherefore  contrive  we  now  even  such  device  as  his, — 

Yea,  I  will  speak  it,  who  heretofore  have  thought  upon  this  : —  io6 

Set  we  upon  our  heads  our  helmets  of  lofty  crest. 

And  changing  about  in  turn  let  the  half  of  us  row,  and  the  rest 

With  polished  lances  and  bucklers  fence  the  galley  about  ; 

And  all  with  one  accord  upraise  ye  a  mighty  shout, 

That  the  birds  by  the  noise  may  be  scared,  by  the  wild  unwonted 

cry, 
As  they  look  on  our  nodding  crests  and  the  bright  spears  tossed 

on  high. 
And  if  through  the  storm  of  their  shafts  to  the  island  itself  we 

shall  win. 
Then  with  clashing  of  brazen  bucklers  raise  yea  mighty  din.' 
So  spake  he,  and  good  in  the  sight  of  them  all  that  counsel 

seemed. 

On  the  heads  of  the  heroes  straightway  the  brazen  helmets  gleamed  107c 
Terribly  flashing  ;  above  them  tossed  the  plumes  blood-red. 
And  the  half  of  them  now  in  their  turn  the  galley  with  oars  on- 
sped  ; 
And  with  lances  and  shields  did  the  rest  for  Argo  a  covering  raise. 
And  as  when  with  tiling  a  man  hath  roofed  his  dwelling-place. 
For  a  beauty  upon  his  abode  and  a  fence  from  the  rain  thereto. 
And  close-set  each  after  each  are  they  ranged  in  order  due  ; 
Even  so  did  they  lock  their  shields,  so  roofed  they  the  galley  o'er. 
And  as  when  from  a  warrior-throng  upriseth  the  onset-roar, 
When  the  ranks  are  sweeping  on,  when  the  squadrons  in  battle 

close. 
Even  so  from  the  galley  on  high  to  the  welkin  the  shout  of  1080 

them  rose. 


THE  SECOND  BOOK  85 

Now  none  of  the  birds  yet  saw  they  :  but  when,  as  they  touched 

the  strand 
Of  the  island,  they  clashed  on  their  bucklers,  straightway  on 

every  hand 
From  the  earth  by  tens  of  thousands  uprose  they  in  sudden  dread. 
And  as  when  by  the  Son  of  Kronos  the  hail  thick-falling  is  shed 
From  the  clouds  on  a  town  and  its  dwellings ;  the  house-abiders 

the  while. 
As  they  hearken  the  clatter  that  rattles  unceasing  on  timber  and  tile, 
Untroubled  are  sitting  :  the  stormy  tide  hath  smitten  the  roof 
Not  unforeseen  ;  long  since  had  they  made  all  tempest-proof: 
So  on  the  men  thick-showering  feather-shafts  did  they  pour. 
As  they  darted  on  high  o'er  the  sea  to  the  hills  on  the  farther  shore,  i 
Now  what  was  the  purpose  of  Phineus  in  bidding  that  hero-array 
Land  on  the  War-god's  isle  ?     What  help  against  the  day 
Of  their  need  were  they  destined  to  win  of  their  tarrying  there 

on  the  way  ? 
The  sons  of  Phrixus  unto  Orchomenus  voyaging 
Had  been  sent  from  Aia  forth  by  Kytaian  Aietes  the  king. 
In  a  galley  of  Kolchis  they  sailed,  that  the  measureless  wealth 

might  be  theirs 
Of  their  sire,  for  in  death  had  he  so  commanded  these  his  heirs. 
And  exceeding  nigh  that  day  to  the  isle  had  they  drawn  ;  but  lo, 
The  might  of  the  wind  of  the  north  did  Zeus  awaken  to  blow. 
Marking  with  rain  the  watery  path  of  Arcturus  the  star.  ' 

Yet  through  the  day-tide  he  stirred  but  the  leaves  on  the  mountains 

afar, 
Breathing  but  lightly  over  the  uttermost  ends  of  the  sprays : 
But  at  night  on  the  sea  he  descended,  a  tempest-Titan,  to  raise 
The  surge  with  his  blasts  wild-shrieking  :  a  black  mist  shrouded 

the  sky. 
And  never  the  gleam  of  a  star  might  the  mariners'  ken  descry 
Through  the  clouds,  but  over  the  sea's  face  brooded  murky  gloom. 
And  the  sons  of  Phrixus  quaking  for  fear  of  a  horrible  doom 
Were  helplessly  hurled  o'er  the  surges,  and  drenched  with  the 

flying  spume. 


86  THE  ARGONAUTS 

Andthe  sail  by  the  might  of  the  blast  was  snatched  away,  and  crashed 
Their  ship's  hull,  shattered  in  twain  by  the  breakers  thereover  J 

that  dashed. 
Then  by  the  Gods'  own  prompting  they  clutched,  and  as  one 

man  clung 
Those  four  to  a  mighty  spar, — for  that  many  an  one  had  been  flung 
Wide  from  the  scattered  wreck, — firm-knit  by  the  strong  bolts' 

clasp  ; 
And  on  to  the  isle,  evermore  but  a  little  beyond  death's  grasp, 
The  waves  and  the  sweep  of  the  tempest  bare  them  in  misery. 
Then  burst  forth  rain  :  no  tongue  could  tell  it, — it  rained  on  the  sea, 
On  the  island  ;  and  overagainst  the  island  the  floods  of  it  fell 
Over  all  the  land  where  the  lawless  Mossyncecians  dwell. 
And  along  with  the  massy  beam  the  sweep  of  the  surges  bore 
The  sons  of  Phrixus  on  to  the  island's  rocky  shore  i 

In  the  black  dark  night.     But  the  floods  of  Zeus-descended  rain 
Ceased  with  the  dawn  :  and  they  met  full  soon,  those  companies 

twain. 
Then  Argus  first  found  voice,  and  to  Argo's  crew  spake  he : 

*  We  beseech  you  by  All-beholder  Zeus,  whosoever  ye  be 
Of  men,  to  have  mercy  and  succour  us  now  in  our  helplessness  ; 
For  buffeted  long  have  we  been  on  the  sea  by  the  rough  winds'  stress, 
Till  sundered  and  shattered  the  beams  of  our  crazy  galley  were. 
By  your  knees  we  entreat  you  then,  if  ye  haply  will  hearken  our 

pra)Tr, 
To  cover  our  nakedness  now,  and  to  take  us  whither  ye  go  : 
As  youths  taking  pity  on  youths,  compassionate  ye  our  woe ! 
O  reverence  ye  the  strangers  and  suppliants  for  Zeus's  sake. 
Who  is  L  ord  of  the  stranger  and  suppliant — yea,  both  names  we  take, 
Even  strangers  and  suppliants  of  Zeus  ;  and  over  us  all  is  his  eye.' 

But  with  heedful  questioning  then  did  Aison's  son  reply. 
For  he  weened  that  fulfilment  of  Phineus'  prophecy  now  was  nigh  : 

*  All  these  will  we  give  straightway  with  kindly  heart  and  hand. 
But  prithee  now  answer  me  truth,  and  tell  how  name  ye  the  land 
Wherein  ye  be  dwellers ; — for  what  need  thus  have  ye  sailed  the  sea  ? 
And  your  names  of  renown  tell  out,  and  the  lineage  whereof  ye  be.' 


THE  SECOND  BOOK  87 

Then  Argus,  as  one  in  despairing  wretchedness,  answered  low  : ' 
*  How  Phrixus  the  Aiolid  came  unto  Aia  from  Hellas,  I  trow. 
Yourselves  have  certainly  heard,  have  heard  ere  this  the  renown 
Of  Phrixus,  who  came  on  a  day  to  Aietes'  fortress-town 
Bestriding  the  ram  which  Hermes  created  all  of  gold : 
Yea,  and  the  fleece  thereof  this  day  may  ye  yet  behold  ; 
For  the  ram  by  the  beast's  own  counsel  a  sacrifice  did  he  give 
To  Kronion  the  Fugitives'  Zeus.     And  him  did  Aietes  receive 
In  his  palace,  and  gave  him  to  wife  his  daughter  Chalkiope, 
Nor  for  gifts  of  wooing  he  asked,  in  the  joy  of  his  heart  and  the  glee. 
Of  these  twain  we  be  the  children  ;  but  Phrixus  our  father  hath  died,  ^ 
An  old  man  stricken  with  years,  in  Aietes'  halls  of  pride. 
And  straightway  we,  giving  heed  to  the  word  that  our  father  spake, 
To  Orchomenus  journey,  Athamas'  goods  in  possession  to  take. 
And  if,  as  thy  word  was,  thou  wouldst  that  our  names  be  made 

known  unto  thee. 
Behold,  Kytisorus  is  this  man  named,  and  Phrontis  he  ; 
And  yonder  is  Melas,  and  Argus  me  myself  shall  ye  call.' 

He  spake,  and  for  this  forgathering  glad  were  the  heroes  all : 
And  they  ministered  unto  them,  marvelling  much  :  but  Jason  again 
Spake  as  was  meet  and  right,  for  his  heart  of  the  tidings  was  fain  : 

*  Lo  now,  of  a  surety  kinsmen  ye  are  of  my  sire,  which  have  prayed 
That  with  merciful  hearts  we  would  look  upon  this  your  affliction, 

and  aid. 
For  of  one  blood,  even  brethren,  Kretheus  and  Athamas  were ; 
And  Kretheus'  grandson  am  I,  with  these  my  companions  who  fare 
From  the  selfsame  Hellas,  and  unto  Aietes'  city  I  sail. 
But  of  all  these  things  to  commune  shall  another  time  avail. 
But  now  put  raiment  upon  you :  it  came  to  pass,  I  trow. 
By  devising  of  Gods  that  ye  came  to  mine  hands  in  your  sore  need  so.' 

So  spake  he,  and  out  of  the  ship  he  gave  them  raiment  to  don. 
And  all  together  now  unto  Ares'  fane  are  they  gone 
For  the  sacrificing  of  sheep,  and  in  all  haste  round  about 
The  altar  they  ranged  them,  which  stood  that  roofless  fane  without. 
An  altar  of  pebbles  :  within  was  a  mighty  stone  upreared, 
A  holy  thing,  which  of  yore  the  Amazons  all  revered. 


8S  THE  ARGONAUTS 

And  it  was  not  their  wont,  from  the  further  strand  when  they 

came  o'er  the  deep, 
On  this  same  altar  to  burn  in  sacrifice  oxen  nor  sheep  ; 
But  horses  they  slew,  and  for  this  great  herds  were  they  wont  to  keep. 
There  sacrificed  they,  and  they  ate  of  the  flesh  of  the  victims  slain. 
Then  Aison's  son  in  their  midst  uprose,  and  he  spake  yet  again  : 
'  Zeus'  self  upon  all  things  looketh,  nor  ever  escape  we  his  ken 
Of  a  surety,  such  as  be  god-revering  and  righteous  men.  j 

Even  so  your  father  delivered  he  out  of  the  murderous  hand 
Of  a  stepdame,  and  gave  to  him  measureless  wealth  in  a  far-away 

land  : 
And  even  so  you  also  scatheless  again  did  he  save 
From  the  baleful  storm.    Now  in  this  ship,  whithersoever  ye  crave, 
This  way  or  that,  may  ye  fare  ;  or  aback  unto  Aia's  shore. 
Or  the  wealthy  city  that  godlike  Orchomenus  builded  of  yore. 
For  our  ship  did  Athene  fashion,  and  clave  her  beams  with  the  brass 
By  Pelion's  crest,  and  her  fellow-craftsman  our  Argus  was. 
But  that  your  galley  was  shattered,  and  whelmed  in  ruining  surge, 
Ere  nigh  to  the  rocks  ye  came,  the  which  in  the  wild  sea-gorge  ^ 
Each  against  other  the  livelong  day  are  clashing  amain. 
But  go  to  now,  be  ye  helpers  with  us  ;   for  lo,  we  be  fain 
To  bring  that  Fleece  of  Gold  to  the  land  of  Hellas  again. 
Be  our  voyaging  guides.    Lo,  thus  do  I  sail  to  atone  for  their  deed 
Who   would  sacrifice   Phrixus,  and  brought  Zeus'  wrath  upon 

Aiolus'  seed.' 
So  spake  he  exhorting,   and   ceased ;  but   with   horror  they 

heard  that  thing, 
For  they  deemed  they  should  find  Aietes  nowise  a  gentle  king 
Who  would  win  that  Fleece  of  the  Ram.     Then  Argus  spake 

the  word, 
In  vexation  of  spirit  that  these  unto  suchlike  quest  should  bestirred : 

'  O  friends,  so  far  as  availeth  our  strength,  no  whit  at  all  i: 

Our  help  shall  fail  ^-ou  at  need,  what  trial  soever  befall. 
But  terribly  armed  is  Aietes  with  murderous  cruelty  ; 
Wherefore  I  dread  exceedingly  thither  to  fare  oversea. 
And  he  vaunteth  himself  the  Sun-god's  seed,  and  around  him  dwell 


THE  SECOND  BOOK  89 

The  Kolchian  tribes  untold.     In  the  awful  onset-yell, 
And  in  giant  strength,  might  he  match  him  with  Ares'  self  in  the  fray. 
Nay,  nay,  not  easy  it  is  to  take  that  Fleece  away 
From  Aietes,  so  mighty  a  serpent  around  and  about  it  is  coiled, 
Deathless  and  sleepless.     The  Earth  brought  forth  that  dragon- 
child 
Mid  Caucasus'  glens,  where  the  Rock  Typhonian  standeth  :  they  1210 

say 
There  Typhon,  smitten  by  levin-bolts  of  Zeus,  in  the  day 
When  against  Kronion  he  lifted  his  brawny  hands  in  fight, 
Dropped  from  his  head  hot-gushing  the  gore,  and  in  such  ill  plight 
To  the  hills  and  the  Plain  Nisaian  he  came,  and  to  this  day  there 
'Neath  the  waters  whelmed  doth  he  lie  of  the  dark  Serbonianmere.' 
So  spake  he,  and  many  a  face  of  them  that  heard  grew  white 
To  know  what  manner  of  emprise  was  this.    But  spake  forthright 
Peleus,  and  answered  with  words  of  gallant  chiding,  and  said : 

*  Nay,  good  my  friend,  not  thus  let  thy  spirit  be  over-adread, 
For  that  not  so  lacking  in  prowess  be  we,  that  our  hearts  should  fear  1220 
To  make  trial  of  manhood  against  Aietes  in  battle-gear. 
Nay,  but  I  trow  we  also  have  somewhat  of  cunning  in  war 
Which  thitherward  fare  ;  for  by  blood  of  the  kin  of  the  Blessed 

we  are. 
If  therefore  in  all  lovingkindness  he  yield  not  the  Fleece  of  Gold, 
Little,  I  ween,  shall  avail  him  his  Kolchian  tribes  untold.' 

In   such  wise  each   unto  other  they  spake,  and  in  such  wise 

replied. 
Til)  they  turned  to  their  rest,  fulfilled  of  the  feast  of  the  eventide. 
And  at  dawn,  when  they  wakened  from  slumber,  a  light  wind 

softly  blew  ; 
And  they  hoised  up  the  sail :  in  the  breeze  of  the  morning  the 

canvas  drew. 
And  away  from  the  War-god's  Island  sped  they  far  and  fast ;      1230 
And  now  at  the  falling  of  night  by  Philyra's  island  they  passed. 
There  Kronos,  Ouranos'  son,  what  time  in  Olympus  he  reigned 
O'er  the  Titans,  and  Zeus  yet  a  babe  in  the  Cretan  Cave  was 

sustained 


90  THE  ARGONAUTS 

In  life  by  the  priests,  the  Curetes  of  Ida, — with  Philyra  lay 
When  he  baffled  Rheia's  watch  ;  but  the  Goddess  amidst  of  their 

play 
Came  suddenly  on  them :  and  Kronos  leapt  from  the  dalliance-bed, 
And  away  in  the  form  of  a  steed  of  tossing  mane  he  sped. 
But  Ocean's  daughter  forsook  that  land  and  folk  in  her  shame ; 
And  unto  the  long  Pelasgian  ridges  Philyra  came. 
Where  Cheiron  the  monster,  the  half  of  him  horse,  but  otherwhere 
Goodly  to  see  as  a  God,  for  a  pledge  of  love  she  bare. 

Thence  past  the  Makronian  people,  and  past  the  far-stretching 

land 
Of  Becheirans  they  ran,  past  overweening  Sapeirans'  strand. 
And  past  the  Byzerans  thereafter ;  for  forward  cleaving  the  seas 
Went  rushing  the  prow  evermore,  on-borne  by  the  gentle  breeze. 
And  to  them,  as  they  sped  by,  opened  a  Pontic  gulf  cleft  deep  ; 

And  lo,  the  Caucasian  mountains'  precipice-wall  rose  steep 

Sheer  cliffs  ;  and  Prometheus  there,  with  his  limbs  to  the  rough 

rocks  gripped 
By  brazen  gyves,  whose  knots  no  writhings  have  riven  nor  slipped. 
Fed  with  his  liver  an  eagle  that  aye  swooped  back  on  the  prey,    i 
High  over  their  mast  at  even  a  whir  and  a  rush  heard  they ; 
And  anigh  to  the  clouds  they  beheld  it ;  yet  even  from  that  far  height 
Did  it  shake  the  sail  with  the  fanning  of  those  vast  pinions'  flight : 
For  the  form  and  the  measure  thereof  was  like  no  fowl  of  the  air, 
But  aspolishedoars  most  huge  its  swift-swaying  wing-feathers  were. 
Nor  long  thereafter  they  heard  an  exceeding  bitter  cry. 
As  torn  was  Prometheus'  liver,  and  rang  the  vault  of  the  sky 
With  his  screaming,  until  again  from  the  mountain  darting  back 
They  marked  where  the  ravening  eagle  sped  on  the  selfsame  track. 
And  at  nightfall,  by  guidance  of  Argus,  the  broad-flowing  stream  126c 

did  they  gain 
Of  Phasis,  and  there  was  the  uttermost  bourne  of  the  Pontic  main. 
Then  straightway  the  sail  they  furled,  and  the  yard-arm  let 

they  fall. 
And  stowed  in  the  mast-trough  then ;  and  the  mast  unstepped 

they  withal. 


THE  SECOND  BOOK  91 

And  lowered  in  haste,  till  it  lay  along  :  then  rowed  they  fast 
Into  the  river's  mighty  stream  ;   round  the  prow  as  they  passed 
He  surged  as  he  yielded  them  way  ;  and  they  had  on  the  left- 
ward hand 
High  Caucasus  now,  and  the  city  Kytaian  of  Aia-land  ; 
And  to  rightward  the  plain  and  the  holy  grove  of  the  War-god  lay 
Where  keepeth  the  serpent  watch  and  ward  on  the  Fleece  alway, 
As  it  hangeth  amidst  of  the  thick-leaved  boughs  of  an  oak  outspread.  1270 
And  Aison's  son  himself  from  a  golden  chalice  shed 
Into  the  river  libations  of  sweet  unmingled  wine 
Unto  Earth,  to  the  Gods  of  the  land,  to  the  Spirits  of  Heroes  divine 
Which  had  died,  and  with  bowed  knees  prayed  them  their  sorrow- 
less  help  to  give 
Of  their  grace,  and  with  welcome  propitious  the  hawsers  of  Argo 

receive. 
Then  straightway  Ankaios  spake  the  word  to  his  fellows,  and  cried  : 
*  Lo  now,  to  the   Kolchian  land  have  we   won,   where   the 
waters  glide 
Of  Phasis  : — the  time  is  come  for  counsel,  to  choose  our  part, 
If  with  soft  words  now  we  shall  make  assay  of  Aietes'  heart, 
Or  if  other  endeavour  perchance  shall  avail  us  in  this  our  need.'  1280 

So  spake  he,  and  Jason  thereon  commanded,  by  Argus'  rede, 
To  a  backwater  leaf-overshadowed  to  run  the  galley  aside, 
And  to  warp  her  up  to  the  anchor-stone,  oiF-shore  to  ride : 
Now  the  place  was  anigh  to  them  then.      So  slept  they  there 

through  the  night, 
And  soon  to  their  longing  eyes  appeared  the  dawning's  light. 


THE    THIRD   BOOK 

Come,  Erato,  now,  stand  by  me  :  of  thy  lips  let  me  be  taught 
In  what  manner  thereafter  Jason  the  Fleece  to  lolkos  brought 
Through  the   love   of  Medea  :  for  thou   in   the  things  by  the 

Cyprian  ordained 
Hast  part,   and   maidens  unwedded  by  thine  enchantments  are 

chained  ; 
Wherefore  it  is  that  a  name  that  telleth  of  love  thou  hast  gained. 

So  there  in  the  close-pleached  covert  of  river-reeds  unseen 
Did  the  heroes  in  ambush  wait.      Then  marked  them  Here  the 

queen 
And  Athene  withal ;  and  aloof  from  Zeus'  self  turned  they  aside. 
And  the  rest  of  the  Gods  everlasting,  and  into  a  chamber  they  hied 
For  counsel  :   and  first  spake  Here,  to  try  Athene  therein  :  lo 

*  Thyself  now  first,  O  daughter  of  Zeus,  our  counsel  begin. 
What  needeth  to  do  ?    Wilt  thou  frame  some  subtle  device,  that 

these 
May  win  from  Aietes  and  bear  unto  Hellas  the  Golden  Fleece  ? 
Or  with   words   shall  they  overpersuade  him,  with  soft  speech 

melt  him  to  ruth  ? 
Now  nay,  for  a  proud  and  haughty  scorner  he  is  in  sooth : 
Yet  it  may  not  in  any  wise  be  that  our  emprise  turn  aside.' 

So  did  she  speak  ;  and  straightway  to  her  Athene  replied  : 
'  Yea,  mine  heart  even  as  thine  herein  was  pondering 
When  with  questions  thou  searchedst  me.  Here.      Howbeit,  as 

touching  the  thing, 
Not  yet  in  mine  heart  have  I  found  this  wile,  which  shall  help  20 

the  need 

92 


THE  THIRD  BOOK  93 

Of  the  soul  of  the  chieftains  :  and  yet  have  I  mused  upon  many 

a  rede/ 
She  spake ;  and  their  eyes  on  the  threshold  before  their  feet 

they  cast, 
As  they  pondered  of  this  and  of  that,  till  Here  cried  at  the  last — 
For  a  thought  in  her  heart  had  birth,  and  her  word  was  first  again : — 

*  Let  us  hence  to  the  Cyprian  Queen  ;  and  when  we  be  come, 

we  twain 
Will  pray  her  to  bid  her  son,  if  perchance  he  will  do  this  deed. 
At  Aietes'  sorceress-daughter  a  shaft  from  his  bow  to  speed. 
And  bewitch  her  with  love  for  Jason  :  by  her  devising,  I  trov/, 
Bearing  the  Fleece  away  unto  Hellas  the  hero  shall  go.' 

She  spake  ;  and  her  counsel  of  wisdom  pleased  Athene  well ;  30 
And  she  answered — and  now  from  her  lips  soft  words  of  per- 
suasion fell : — 

*  Here,  my  father  begat  me  unweeting  of  shafts  of  love  : 
Nothing  I  know  of  desire,  or  the  magic  spells  thereof. 

But  if  this  word  pleaseth  thyself,  of  a  truth  will  I  go  with  thee. 
Yet  thou  must  speak  our  request  when  the  Cyprian's  face  we  see.' 
Then  soared  they  away,  and  unto  the  mighty  palace  they  came 
Of  Kypris  ;  her  lord  the  Halt-foot  God  had  builded  the  same 
For  his  bride,  when  he  led  her  forth  from  the  halls  of  Zeus  of  yore. 
So  they  entered  the  courts,  and  under  the  chamber-corridor 
Stood,  where  the  hands  of  the  Goddess  the  couch  of  Hephaistus  40 

prepared. 
But  he  at  the  dawning  thence  to  his  forges  and  anvils  had  fared 
In  the  cavern  wide  of  a  sea- washed  isle,  where  he  aye  wrought  on 
With  the  fire-blasts  fashioning  manifold  marvels  :   but  she  alone 
Facing  the  doors  of  the  palace  sat  in  a  carven  chair. 
Over  her  shoulders  white  had  she  loosened  the  waves  of  her  hair. 
And  a  golden  comb  through  their  ripples  she  drew,  and  now 

would  she  braid 
The  long  plaits  up  ;  but  before  her  beheld  she  the  twain,  and 

she  stayed 
Her  hand,  and  she  rose  from  her  throne,  and  she  bade  them 

within  her  hall. 


94  THE  ARGONAUTS 

And  on  couches  she  caused  them  to  sit ;  thereafter  herself  withal 
Sat  down,  and  her  uncombed  tresses  coiled  she  about  her  head  ;  50 
And  smiling  innocent-arch  to  the  Goddesses  twain  she  said  : 
*  Dear  sisters,  what  purpose  or  need  hath  brought  you  hither 

at  last 
Who  have  tarried  so  long  afar  ?    Why  come  ye  ?     In  days  overpast 
Not  oft  hath  your  presence  been  here — too  great  for  such  as  I !  ' 

Then  unto  her  did  Here  with  stately  speech  reply ; 
*  Thou  mockest,  the  while  our  heart  with  calamity's  shadow  is  dark, 
For  that  even  now  in  Phasis  the  river  moored  is  the  bark 
Of  Aison's  son,  and  the  rest  on  the  Quest  of  the  Fleece  that  have 

come. 
For  all  their  sakes — for  that  nigh  is  the  deed  and  the  hour  of  doom — 
Exceeding  sorely  we  fear,  but  most  for  Aison's  son.  60 

Him  I — yea,  though  unto  Hades  now  he  were  voyaging  on 
To  break  those  fetters  of  brass  wherewithal  Ixion  is  bound — 
Will  deliver,  so  far  as  strength  in  these  my  limbs  is  found. 
Lest  Pelias  should  laugh,  having  'scaped  the  doom,  his  iniquity's 

price, 
Who  in  pride  of  his  heart  hath  left  me  unhonoured  with  sacrifice. 
Yea,  and  before  that  Jason  was  passing  dear  unto  me, 
Even  since,  when  Anaurus'  outfall  in  full  flood  poured  to  the  sea, 
In  the  day  when  men's  heart-righteousness  fain  would  I  prove 

and  know, 
Coming  back  from  the  hunting  he  met  me  ;  and  all  overmantled 

with  snow 
Were  the  mountain-ridges  and  towering  peaks,  and  adown  from  70 

them  poured 
The  winter-tide  floods,  and  the  rolling  torrents  rattled  and  roared  ; 
And  he  pitied  the  grey  old  crone,  and  he  took  me  up  at  my  prayer. 
And  over  the  seaward-madding  flood  on  his  shoulders  he  bare. 
Therefore  I  honour  him  now,  and  will  honour :  unharmed  shall 

he  be 
Of  Pelias'  spite, — yea,  though  his  return  be  unaided  of  thee.' 

So  spake  she ;  the  lips  of  Kypris  could  frame  no  word  for  a  space, 
In  her  awe  to  behold  great  Here  asking  of  her  a  grace. 


THE  THIRD  BOOK  95 

And  with  courteous-gentle  speech  then  spake  she  answering : 

*  O  Goddess  dread,  may  there  never  be  found  any  viler  thing 
Than  Kypris,  if  I  shall  set  at  naught  desire  of  thine  So 
Or  in  word  or  in  deed,  whatsoever  these  frail  hands  of  mine 

May  avail ;  and  for  all  that  I  do  nor  thank  nor  requital  would  I.' 
So  spake  she ;  and  Here  again  in  her  wisdom  made  reply : 

*  It  is  nowise  for  lack  of  might  that  we  come,  nor  of  strength  of  hand. 
But  thou  to  thy  child  in  peaceful  quietness  speak  thy  command 
To  bewitch  Aietes'  daughter  with  love  for  Aison's  seed  ; 

For  if  she  with  her  counsel  shall  help  him,  with  loving  favour  lead, 
Lightly,  I  ween,  shall  the  hero  win  the  Fleece  of  Gold, 
And  return  to  lolkos,  seeing  the  maiden  is  subtle-souled.' 

So  did  she  speak  ;  and  the  Lady  of  Cyprus  answered  thereto  :  9° 

*  Here,  Athene,  my  child  would  render  obedience  to  you 
More  than  to  me  :  in  your  presence  a  little  abashed  shall  he  be, 
Bold  boy  though  he  be  : — but  nothing  at  all  he  regardeth  me. 
But  ever  he  striveth  against  me,  and  laugheth  mine  bests  to  scorn. 
Yea,  I  am  minded,  by  that  his  naughtiness  overborne. 

His  evil-sounding  shafts  and  his  bow  therewithal  to  break 
Full  in  his  sight :  for  of  late  this  threat  in  his  anger  he  spake, 
That,  if  I  refrained  not  mine  hands  while  his  passion  within  him 

was  strong. 
My  scathe  upon  mine  own  head  should  be,  upon  me  the  wrong.' 

So  spake  she  ;  the  Goddesses  smiled,  and  each  in  her  fellow's  eyes  loc 
Looked  :  but  again  she  spake,  and  her  speech  was  burdened  with 
sighs  : 

*  Unto  others  my  griefs  be  for  laughter  alone,  and  I  ought  not  so 
To  tell  them  to  all  : — enough  that  mine  heart  must  its  bitterness 

know. 
Howbeit,  if  this  be  all  your  soul's  desire  this  day, 
I  will  try,  and  with  soft  words  win  him  :  he  shall  not  say  me  nay.' 
She  spake  ;  and  with  touch  caressing  did  Here  her  sHm  hand  take. 
And,  softly  smiling  the  while,  she  answered,  and  thus  she  spake  ; 

*  Even  so,  Kythereia,  with  speed  perform  thou  this  our  request 
As  thou  sayest ;  and  vex  not  thyself,  neither  strive  with  angered 

breast 


96  THE  ARGONAUTS 

With  thy  child :  from  his  troubling  of  thee  hereafter  shalt  thou 

have  rest/ 
She  spake,  and  she  rose  from  her  seat,  and  Athene  passed  at  her  side, 
As  forth  they  sped  and  away,  they  twain  :   but  the  Cyprian  hied 
To  Olympus,  and  down  its  ridges,  seeking  her  child,  she  passed. 
And  in  Zeus's  fruitful  orchard-close  she  found  him  at  last, 
Not  alone,  Ganymedes  was  with  him,  the  boy  whom  Zeus  on  a  day 
From  earth  unto  heaven  had  brought  to  abide  with  Immortals  for  aye. 
When  he  greatly  desired  his  beauty.     With  golden  dice  these  two 
Were  playing,  even  as  boys  like-minded  be  wont  to  do. 
And  already  Eros  the  greedy  the  palm  of  his  left  hand  pressed, 
Filled  full  with  the  golden  spoils  of  his  winning,  against  his  breast,  12 
Standing  upright ;  the  while  a  sweet  flush  mantled  and  glowed 
O'er  the  bloom  of  his  cheeks  :  but  the  other  was  crouching  on  bent 

knees  bowed 
In  downcast  silence :  he  had  but  twain  ;  on  the  earth  he  flung 
One  after  other,  by  Eros's  gibing  laughter  stung. 
But,  even  as  fared  the  former,  he  lost  them,  the  last  of  his  dice  ; 
And  with  empty  and  helpless  hands  he  went ;  and  his  down-drooped 

eyes 
Marked  not  the  coming  of  Kypris.     Before  her  child  did  she  stand. 
And  with  loving  chiding  she  spake,  as  she  laid  on  his  lips  her  hand  : 
*  Why  smil'st  thou  in  triumph,  thou  naughty  varlet  ?     Hast 

thou  not  beguiled 
Thy  playmate  r — and  fairly  hast  thou  overcome  that  innocent  child  ?  ly 
Go  to  now,  accomplish  my  bidding,  the  thing  that  I  shall  ask  ; 
And  the  plaything  exceeding  fair  of  Zeus  shall  requite  thy  task, 
Which  was  fashioned  by  Adresteia  his  nurse  for  her  babe's  delight. 
When,  a  child,  he  thought  as  a  child,  in  the  cave  'neath  Ida's  height. 
A  ball  fair-rounded  it  is  :  no  goodlier  toy,  I  wot, 
Couldst  thou  get  thee  mid  all  the  marvels  by  hands  of  Hephaistus 

wrought. 
Of  gold  be  the  zones  of  it  fashioned  ;  and  round  each  several  one 
Twofold  be  the  seams  of  broidery-thread  that  encircling  run. 
But  the  stitches  thereof  be  hidden  :  there  coileth  around  them  all 
A  spiral  of  blue.     From  thine  hand  if  thou  cast  it  on  high,  that  ball  14c 


THE  THIRD  BOOK  97 

Even  as  a  star  shall  flash  through  the  air  in  a  fiery  glow. 

This  will  I  give  thee — but  thou  must  bewitch  with  a  shaft  from 

thy  bow 
Aietes'  daughter  with  love  for  Jason.      But  see  that  herein 
Thou  tarry  not ;  else  a  meaner  requital  than  this  shalt  thou  win.' 

So  spake  she,  and  welcome  the  word  was  ;  with  gladness  he 
heard  that  thing  : 
And  he  cast  away  those  toys,  and  with  eager  hands  did  he  cling 
Clasping  the  Goddess's  raiment  about  on  either  side. 
And  he  pleaded  with  her  even  then  to  bestow  it :  but  Kypris  replied 
With  gentle  words, — and  his  cheeks  unto  hers  she  drew  the  while, 
And  clasping  him  close  she  kissed  him,  and  answer  she  made  150 
with  a  smile  : 

'  Be  witness  now  thy  beloved  head,  yea,  also  mine. 
That  I  will  not  defraud  thee  :  indeed  and  in  truth  the  gift  shall 

be  thine. 
When  the  heart  of  Aietes'  daughter  is  pierced  by  thine  arrow  divine.' 

Then  gathered  he  up  his  dice,  and  the  tale  of  them  heedfully  told. 
And  he  cast  them  into  his  mother's  glistering  bosom-fold. 
By  his  baldric  of  gold  he  slung  from  his  shoulder  the  quiver  that  leant 
On  a  tree-trunk,  and  took  the  bow  for  sorrow  of  mortals  bent. 
From  the  fruitful  orchard  of  Zeus's  palace  forth  did  he  fare. 
And  thereafter  came  to  Olympus'  portals  high  in  air. 
Thence  is  a  sheer-descending  path  from  the  height  of  the  sky  ;    160 
And  there  the  Poles,  twin  mountains,  uplift  their  heads  on  high, 
Precipice-steeps,  earth's  loftiest-towering  crests,  whereon 
With  his  earliest  rays  at  the  dawning  uplifted  resteth  the  sun. 
Far  under,  the  life- sustaining  earth  and  the  cities  slept 
Of  men,  and  the  sacred  rivers  ;  anon  before  him  upleapt 
Hill-peaks,  and  outspread  the  sea,  through  the  wide  air  on  as  he 
swept. 

Now  the  heroes  apart  on  the  thwarts  of  their  galley  in  ambush  yet. 
Where  the  backwater  gleamed  of  the  river,  for  taking  of  counsel 

were  met : 
And  the  son  of  Aison  himself  was  speaking,  and  all  they  heard. 
As  row  upon  row  in  their  places  they  sat,  and  none  spake  word  :  170 

G 


98  THE  ARGONAUTS 

'  O  friends,  of  a  truth  the  thing  that  seemeth  good  in  mine  eyes, 
That  will  I  utter  ;  howbeit  with  you  the  fulfilment  lies. 
This  Quest  all  share,  and  in  counsel  and  speech  all  ye  have  part. 
Whosoever  in  silence  withholdeth  his  rede  and  the  thoughts  of 

his  heart, 
Let  him  know,  he  only  bereaveth  of  home-return  our  Quest. 
Now  I  counsel  that  ye  by  the  ship  with  your  war-gear  abide  at  rest. 
But  I,  even  I,  will  go  forth  first  to  Aietes'  hall. 
I  will  take  but  the  sons  of  Phrixus,  and  twain  of  the  rest  therewithal. 
And  I,  when  I  meet  him,  with  words  will  first  make  trial,  to  know 
If  he  haply  for  lovingkindness  the  Fleece  of  Gold  will  bestow,    i 
Or  will  grant  it  not,  but  in  pride  of  his  might  will  set  us  at  naught. 
For  so,  when  the  lesson  of  evil  first  by  himself  hath  been  taught. 
Shall  we  then  advise  us,  whether  the  ordeal  of  battle  to  try. 
Or  if  other  device  shall  avail  us,  refraining  the  onset-cry. 
But  let  us  not  rashly,  or  ever  persuasion  be  put  to  the  test, 
Despoil  this  man  of  his  own  possession  : — nay,  it  were  best 

To  come  before  him,  and  first  with  speech  his  grace  to  win : 

Yea,  oft  fair  speech  hath  prevailed  in  a  matter,  and  lightly — wherein 
Little  had  prowess  availed — for  that  winsomely  it  stole 
On  the  heart :  yea  hereby  Phrixus  wrought  on  the  grim  king's  soul,  ^ 
When  a  stepdame's  guile  and  the  sacrifice-stroke  of  a  father  he  fled. 
To  receive  him  :  in  no  man's  breast  is  shame  so  utterly  dead. 
But  he  honoureth  Guest- ward  Zeus,  and  regardeth  his  ordinance 
dread.' 

Then  praised  they  with  one  accord  the  counsel  of  Aison's  seed. 
Nor  did  any  man  turn  therefrom,  to  utter  another  rede. 
Then  called  he  on  Phrixus'  children  to  follow,  and  chose  of  his  band 
Telamon  and  Augeias ;  moreover  himself  took  Hermes'  wand. 
Forthright  from  the  ship  over  water  and  reed-fringed  river-side 
Passed  they,  and  out  beyond  o'er  the  swell  of  the  plain  they  hied. 
The  Plain  Kirkaian,  I  wot,  is  it  called,  and,  row  upon  row,         2< 
Willows  and  osiers  there  exceeding  many  grow. 
Mid    their    topmost    brand  es    cord-bound    corpses    be  hanging 

there  ; 
For  to  Kolchians  unto  this  day  an  abomination  it  were 


THE  THIRD  BOOK  99 

To  burn  on  the  pyre  their  men  which  have  died  ;  nor  yet  in  the 

ground 
Is  their  wont  to  lay  them,  and  heap  thereover  the  token-mound. 
But  in  hides  untanned  of  oxen  they  roll  them,  and  hang  midst  trees 
Without  the  city.     Yet  earth  hath  equal  share  in  these 
With  the  air  ;  for  in  graves  of  the  earth  be  they  wont  their 

women  to  lay. 
Lo,  this  is  their  custom,  and  this  their  ordinance  for  aye. 

Now,  anigh  as  they  drew,  did  Here  with  loving  thought  for  210 

the  men 
Spread  thick  mist  all  through  the  city,  that  so  they  might  'scape 

the  ken 
Of  the  thousands  there,  to  Aietes'  hall  while  fared  they  on. 
And  when  from  the  plain  to  Aietes'  city  and  palace  they  won, 
Then  straightway  Here  scattered  again  that  cloudy  haze. 
At  the  entrance  they  stood,  and  they  looked  on  the  courts  of 

the  king  in  amaze, 
On  the  gateways  wide,  and  the  columns  that  all  around  the  walls 
In  ordered  lines  uprose  ;  and  high  on  the  roofs  of  the  halls 
Did  a  coping  of  stone  upon  rows  of  brazen  triglyphs  lie. 
And  over  the  threshold  in  peace  they  went.     And  hard  thereby 
Were  garden-vines  in  fulness  of  blossom,  mantled  o'er  220 

With  green  leaves,  high  uplifted  in  air.     And  fountains  four 
Ever-flowing  beneath  them  ran,  which  were  delved  with  magic  spell 
By  Hephaistus,  the  one  whereof  did  with  gushing  of  milk  upwell, 
And  the  second  with  wine,  and  the  third  with  incense-breathing  oil. 
And  with  water  the  fourth  ran  ;   steaming  for  heat  did  the  same 

upboil 
At  the  setting-tide  of  the  Pleiads  ;  but  out  of  its  rock-hewn  cave 
Cold  even  as  ice  in  their  rising-season  bubbled  the  wave. 
Even  such  were  the  marvellous  works  that  Hephaistus  the  craft- 
wise  God 
Fashioned  within  Kytaian  Aietes'  palace-abode. 
And  he  wrought  for  him  brazen-footed  bulls,  and  their  mouths  230 

were  of  brass. 
And  the  terrible  splendour  of  blazing  flame  the  breath  of  them  was. 


loo  THE  ARGONAUTS 

Moreover  a  plough  of  unbending  adamant,  all  in  one, 

Did  he  forge  for  him,  making  therein  his  requital  of  thanks  to  the  Sun, 

Who  had  taken  him  up  in  his  chariot,  faint  from  the  Phlegra  fight. 

There  also  was  builded  the  inner  court,  and  around  it  were  pight 

Many  chambers  on  either  hand  with  two-leaved  doors  fair-dight ; 

And  without  them  a  rich-wrought  corridor  ran  to  left  and  to  right ; 

And  athwart  them  the  loftiest  buildings  rose  upon  either  side. 

Whereof  one  over  its  fellows  uplifted  its  crest  of  pride  : 

Therein  with  his  queen  Aietes  abode,  the  lord  of  the  land ;  : 

And  thereby  did  the  mansion  fair  of  his  son  Absyrtus  stand. 

Whom  a  Nymph  Caucasian,  Asterodeia,  bare  to  his  bed 

Or  ever  he  led  Eiduia  home,  his  wife  true-wed. 

Daughter  of  Tethys  and  Ocean,  even  their  youngest  one  : 

But  the  sons  of  the  Kolchians  gave  him  a  new  name,  Phaethon, 

*  The  Shining,'  for  all  the  youths  were  in  beauty  by  him  outshone. 

In  the  rest  did  the  handmaid-train  and  Aietes'  daughters  abide, 

Chalkiope  and  Medea.     And  now  had  Medea  hied 

From  her  chamber  forth  to  her  sister's;  for  Here  restrained  her 

that  day 
That  she  went  not  abroad  :  but  little  she  wont  theretofore  to  stay  250 
In  the  palace,  but  all  day  long  in  the  temple  of  Hekate 
Her  conversation  she  had,  for  the  Goddess's  priestess  was  she. 
And  she  saw  them,  and  cried  aloud ;  and  suddenly  heard  was  her  call 
Of  Chalkiope  :  and  her  handmaids  down  at  their  feet  let  fall 
Their  yarn  and  their  threads,  and  forth  of  the  chamber  ran  they  all 
In  a  throng,  and  amidst  them  the  mother  :  and  there  beholding 

her  sons 
She  cast  up  her  hands  in  her  gladness  ;  and  those  re-given  ones 
Greeted  their  mother,  and  lovingly  gazed  on  her,  folding  her  round 
With  their  arms,  till  her  words  mid  sobbings  broken  utterance  found: 

*  So  then  ye  were  not  to  leave  me  in  lonely  childless  pain,         260 
And  to  wander  afar  ;  and  fate  hath  turned  you  backward  again. 
O  hapless  I ! — what  yearning  for  Hellas  awoke  in  your  breasts, 
By  some  strange  woeful  madness,  at  Phrixus  your  father's  behests  ? 
Bitter  affliction  did  he  ordain,  when  dying  he  lay. 
For  mine  heart ! — O  why  to  Orchomenus'  city  far  away — 


THE  THIRD  BOOK  loi 

Whosoe'er  this  Orchomenusbe — for  Athamas'  wealth  should  ye  go, 
Leaving  your  mother  alone  to  bear  her  burden  of  woe  ? ' 

So  spake  she,  and  last  came  forth  Aietes  hastening, 
And  came  Eiduia  herself,  the  wife  of  Aietes  the  king, 
WhentheoutcryofChalkiope  she  heard.    And  the  court  straightway  270 
Was  filled  with  a  noisy  throng  ;  for  some  of  the  thralls  'gan  flay 
A  huge  ox,  some  with  the  brass  'gan  cleave  the  billets  dry. 
And  some  with  thefire'ganheatthebaths.    There  was  nonethereby 
That  lagged  in  his  task,  as  they  toiled  beneath  that  stern  king's  eye. 
But  Eros  the  while  through  the  mist-grey  air  passed  all  unseen 
Troubling  them,  even  as  heifers  that  hear  the  piping  keen 
Of  the  gadfly — *the  breese'  do  the  herders  of  oxen  name  the  thing. 
In  the  forecourt  beneath  the  lintel  swiftly  his  bow  did  he  string  : 
From  his  quiver  took  he  a  shaft  sigh-laden,  unshot  before : 
With  swift  feet  all  unmarked  hath  he  passed  the  threshold  o'er,  280 
Keen-glancing  around :  he  hath  glided  close  by  Aison's  son  : 
He  hath  grasped  the  string  in  the  midst,  and  the  arrow-notch 

laid  thereon. 
Straightway  he  strained  it  with  both  hands  sundered  wide  apart, 
And  he  shot  at  Medea  ;  and  speechless  amazement  filled  her  heart. 
And  the  God  himself  from  the  high-roofed  hall  forth-flashing 

returned 
Laughing  aloud.     Deep  down  in  the  maiden's  bosom  burned 
His  arrow  like  unto  flame  ;  and  at  Aison's  son  she  cast 
Side-glances  of  love  evermore ;  and  panted  hard  and  fast 
'Neath  its  burden  the  heart  in  her  breast,  nor  did  any  remem- 
brance remain 
Of  aught  beside,  but  her  soul  was  melted  with  rapturous  pain.       290 
And  as  some  poor  daughter  of  toil,  who  hath  distaff  ever  in  hand, 
Heapeth  the  slivers  of  wood  about  a  blazing  brand 
To  lighten  her  darkness  with  splendour  her  rafters  beneath,  when 

her  eyes 
Have  prevented  the  dawn;  and  the  flame,  upleaping  in  wondrous  wise 
From  the  one  little  torch,  ever  waxing  consumeth  all  that  heap  ; 
So,  burning  in  secret,  about  her  heart  did  he  coil  and  creep. 
Love  the  destroyer  :  her  soft  cheeks'  colour  went  and  came. 


102  THE  ARGONAUTS 

Pale  now,  and  anon,  through  her  soul's  confusion,  with  crimson 

aflame. 
Now  when  ready-dight  was  the  banquet  by  labour  of  handmaid 

and  thrall. 
And  by  steaming  baths'  refreshment  their  faces  were  lightened  30c 

withal. 
Gladly  they  feasted  and  drank  till  their  souls  were  satisfied. 
Thereafter  unto  the  sons  of  his  daughter  Aietes  cried  : 
And  this  was  the  word  of  his  mouth,  as  inquisition  he  made : 

*  Ye  sons  of  my  daughter  and  Phrixus,  the  man  unto  whom  I  paid 
Honour  above  all  men  that  have  stood  mine  halls  within. 

How  came  ye  to  Aia  returning  : — did  some  dark  curse  of  sin 
Break  short  in  the  midst  your  escape  ?    Ye  would  not  hear  nor  obey 
Me,  when  I  set  before  you  the  endless  length  of  the  way. 
For  I  marked  it,  when  once  I  was  whirled  in  my  father  the  Sun- 
god's  car. 
In  the  day  wherein  he  wafted  my  sister  Kirke  afar 
Unto  Hesperia-land,  till  the  chariot  at  last  made  stay 
On  the  Tyrrhene  mainland-shore,  where  even  unto  this  day 
She  abideth,  exceeding  far  from  the  land  where  the  Kolchians  dwell. 
What  profit  or  pleasure  in  words  ?     Speak  out  and  plainly  tell 
What  happed  in  the  midst  of  your  journey,  and  say  who  these 

men  be 
That  have  come  with  you  hither.     And  where  from  your  galley 
ashore  came  ye  ? ' 
So  did  he  question  ;  and  answered  him  Argus  before  the  rest — 
But  his  heart  misgave  him  concerning  the  son  of  Aison's  quest ; — 
With  soft  words  spake  he,  seeing  that  he  was  the  elder-born : 

*  Aietes,  that  our  ship  full  quickly  asunder  was  torn 

By  stormy  blasts,  and  we,  unto  beams  of  the  wreck  as  we  clung, 
On  the  beach  of  the  War-god's  Isle  by  the  sweep  of  the  surges 

were  flung 
In  the  murky  night.      Some  God  from  destruction  redeemed  us, 

I  trow  ; 
For  even  the  birds  of  Ares,  that  wont  to  haunt  ere  now 
That  desolate  isle  of  the  sea,  even  these  we  found  no  more  ; 


THE  THIRD  BOOK  103 

But  these  men  drave  them  away  when  they  landed  the  day  before 
From  their  galley  ;  and  there  by  the  purpose  of  Zeus,  compassionate 
Of  our  plight,  were  they  kept  from  departing,  or  bound  perad- 

venture  by  fate. 
Straightway  to  our  need  with  food  and  with  raiment  they  ministered, 
So  soon  as  the  name  of  Phrixus  the  far-renowned  they  heard,      330 
Yea,  and  thine  own  :  for  unto  thy  town  be  they  voyaging. 
And  if  thou  wouldst  know  their  need,  I  will  hide  not  from  thee 

the  thing. 
A  certain  king  being  fain  with  exceeding  vehement  spite 
From  his  land  and  possessions  to  drive  this  man,  forasmuch  as  in 

might 
Of  his  hands  he  was  peerless  amongst  the  heroes  of  Aiolus'  seed, 
Sendeth  him  hither  on  desperate  venture.      For  fate  had  decreed 
That  Aiolus'  line  shall  escape  not  the  soul-afflicting  ire 
Of  implacable  Zeus,  and  his  wrath,  and  the  curse  unendurably  dire, 
And  the  vengeance  for  Phrixus,  till  cometh  to  Hellas  the  Fleece 

of  Gold. 
And  his  ship  did  Pallas  Athene  fashion  :  not  such  is  her  mould  340 
As  the  fashioning  is  of  the  ships  that  be  found  'mid  the  Kolchian 

folk— 
Whereof  our  hap  was  the  vilest,  for  even  at  a  touch  it  broke 
Of  the  raging  surge  and  the  wind  ; — but  this  ship  holdeth  fast, 
Gripped  by  her  bolts,  through  the  buffeting  fury  of  every  blast. 
And  swiftly  alike  she  runneth  before  the  wind,  and  when 
She  is  sped  by  the  oars  unresting  in  hands  of  stalwart  men. 
He  hath  gathered  within  her  whatso  mightiest  heroes  there  are 
In  Achaia-land,  and  hath  come  to  thy  city  from  wandering  far 
By  cities,  by  dread  sea-gulfs,  if  thou  haply  wouldst  grant  his  request. 
That  the  thing  he  desireth  may  be  :  for  nowise  he  cometh  to  wrest  350 
Aught  from  thine  hands  by  force  :  he  is  minded  to  pay  unto  thee 
Fair  quittance  for  this  thy  gift.      Of  the  bitter  enmity 
Of  the  Sauromatai  hath  he  heard  ;  he  will  quell  them  to  bow  to 

thy  sway. 
And  their  name  and  their  lineage,  if  fain  thou  wouldst  hear  them, 

as  thou  dost  say, 


104  THE  ARGONAUTS 

What  men  they  be,  I  will  tell  to  thee  all  in  order  due. 

This  man,  for  whose  helping  assembled  from  Hellas  a  hero-crew, 

Jason  they  call  him,  the  son  of  Aison,  Kretheus'  seed. 

Now,  if  this  man  of  Kretheus'  lineage  cometh  in  very  deed, 

Of  a  truth  by  the  father's  blood  shall  he  be  of  kin  unto  us, 

For  that  Kretheus  and  Athamas  both  were  the  children  cf  Aiolus,  36c 

And  Phrixus  moreover  was  child  of  Athamas,  Aiolus'  son. 

And,  if  aught  thou  know'st  of  the  Sun-god's  seed,  lo,  here  is  one, 

Augeias ;  and  Telamon  this,  the  son  of  the  mighty  in  fame 

Aiakus  ;  yea,  and  of  Zeus's  loins  great  Aiakus  came. 

And  in  like  wise  all  the  rest,  which  have  hither  companionedhis  way. 

The  sons  and  the  grandsons  they  are  of  the  Gods  which  abide 

for  aye.' 
So  Argus  Gpake  :  butthewrath  of  the  kingwaxedhotashe  heard, 
And  his  soul  like  a  stormy  sea  with  a  tempest  of  fury  was  stirred. 
Fuming  he  spake — with  the  sons  of  his  daughter  above  the  rest 
Was  he  wroth,  for  he  weened  that  of  these  had  Jason  been  moved  370 

to  the  Quest  : 
And  the  light  of  his  anger  leapt  from  his  eyes  as  levin-flame  : 
*  And  will  ye  not  straightway  be  gone  from  my  sight,  ye  felons 

of  shame, 
And  depart  from  the  land  afar  with  the  guile  of  your  treachery, 
Ere  a  bitter  Fleece  and  a  bitter  Phrixus  here  ye  see, 
With  your  friends  back  faring  to  Hellas  :     Not  for  the  Fleece 

come  ye ! 
Nay,  but  my  sceptre  and  kingly  honour  ye  come  to  take ! 
Now,  if  ye  had  broken  not  bread  at  my  table  or  ever  ye  spake, 
Your  tongues  had  I  surely  cut  out,  and  had  hewn  from  the  wrist 

each  hand, 
And  had  sent  you  forth  with  naught  but  your  feet  to  fare  through 

the  land : 
So  should  ye  refrain  you  thereafter  from  coming  on  suchlike  quest !  —  380 
Lo,  and  the  lies  ye  have  spoken  concerning  the  Gods  ever-blest !  ' 
So  passioned  the  king  :   but  even  to  its  depths  the  spirit  burned 
Of  Aiakus'  son,  and  hotly  his  soul  within  him  yearned 
To  fling  back  a  deadly  defiance.      But  Jason,  or  ever  he  spake. 


THE  THIRD  BOOK  105 

Stayed  him,  and  gently  speaking  an  answer  of  peace  did  he  make  : 

<  Bear  with  me,  Aietes,  as  touching  this  Quest:  no  such  wild  dream 

To  thy  city  and  halls  hath  brought  us  as  thou  peradventure  dost  deem. 

Nought  such  do  we  covet : — what  man  of  his  will,  from  an  alien 

to  wrest 
His  possessions,  would  fare  over  such  wide  seas  ?     By  the  ruth- 
less behest 
Of  a  tyrannous  king  was  I  hitherward  sent,  and  the  doom  of  a  God.  390 
Show  favour  to  this  our  entreaty  ;   and  so  will  I  publish  abroad 
Thy  name  and  thy  glory  all  Hellas  through.     Yea,  ready  we  are 
To  render  for  this  unto  thee  requital  of  service  in  war, 
Whether  it  be  that  ye  fain  would  bow  the  Sauromatans'  pride 
Under  your  sceptred  sway,  or  whatso  nation  beside.' 

Then  ceased  he,  with  gentle  utterance  proffering  love:  but  the  king 
A  twofold  purpose  the  while  in  his  soul  was  pondering. 
Whether  to  make  assault  on  them  then  and  there,  and  to  slay, 
Or  to  put  their  might  to  the  test.     And  he  counted  the  better  way, 
Thus  as  he  pondered,  the  second,  and  answered  in  subtlety  :         400 

'  Stranger,  what  hast  thou  to  do  to  tell  all  this  unto  m.e  ? 
For  if  ye  be  seed  of  the  Gods  in  truth,  or  if  ye  which  have  hied 
To  the  aliens'  land  be  peers  of  Aietes  in  aught  beside, 
I  will  give  thee  to  bear  away,  if  thou  wilt,  the  Fleece  of  Gold, 
When  first  I  have  tried  thee.   Nought  I  begrudge  to  the  hero-souled, 
Even  as  ye  tell  me  of  him  that  in  Hellas  beareth  sway. 
And  the  test  of  your  valour  and  prowess  shall  be  a  certain  essay. 
Which    mine    own  hands  compass,  fraught    though  it  be  with 

deadly  bane. 
Two  brazen-footed  bulls  have  I  :  on  the  War-god's  plain 
They  pasture:  the  breath  from  their  mouths  in  flames  of  fire  doth  410 

stream. 
These  yoke  I,  and  drive  through  the  War-god's  stubborn  glebe 

that  team, 
Four    ploughgates ;     and    even    to     the    end    my    ploughshare 

cleaveth  it  fast. 
No  seed  of  the  Lady  of  Corn  in  the  fuiTOws  thereof  do  I  cast, 
But  the  teeth  of  a  terrible  serpent  ;  and  up  from  the  earth  they  grow 


io6  THE  ARGONAUTS 

In  fashion  of  armed  men ;  but  straightway  I  lay  them  low 
With  the  thrusts  of  my  spear,  as  around  me  they  throng,  a  battle-ring. 
With  the  dawning  I  yoke  my  team,  and  I  cease  from  mine  harvesting 
At  the  eventide  hour.  And  thou,  if  thou  bring  such  deeds  to  pass, 
That  day  shalt  win  this  Fleece,  as  thy  king's  commandment  was. 
But  I  give  it  thee  not  ere  then  ;  neither  hope    it ;  for  shame  42c 

should  it  be 
That  a  mighty  champion  should  yield  to  a  man  that  is  worser 
than  he.' 

So  spake  he  :  but  silent  the  hero  sat,  with  his  eyes  on  the  ground. 
Speechless  he  sat  :  no  help  for  the  desperate  evil  he  found. 
Long  time  he  communed  with  his  heart ;  no  way  through  the 

darkness  gleamed 
To  take  on  him  stoutly  the  task,  for  a  mighty  deed  it  seemed. 
But  late  and  at  last  he  spake,  and  he  answered  warily  : 

'  Full  straitly,  Aietes,  within  thy  right  art  thou  shutting  me. 
Yet  this  will  I  dare,  this  emprise  mighty  beyond  all  thought ; 
Yea,  though  my  doom  be  to  die  :  for  a  man  may  light  upon  nought 
More  dread  to  encounter  than  ruthless  fate's  overmastering  hand,  43° 
Which  hitherward  also  constrained    me  to    come    at    a    king's 
command.' 

So  spake  he,  filled  with  despair;  but  the  king  made  answer  to  him. 
Sore  troubled  there  as  he  sat,  with  words  exceeding  grim  : 

*  Come  then  to  the  gathering,  thou  who  art  fain  this  toil  to  essay. 
But  if  thou  shalt  fear  on  the  necks  of  the  oxen  the  yoke  to  lay, 
Or  if  from  the  deadly  harvesting  backward  thou  shrink  in  dismay, 
Then  will  I  look  unto  this,  that  another,  taught  by  thee. 
May  shudder  to  come  in  such  malapert  sort  to  a  mightier  than  he.' 

Roundly  he  spake,  and  he  ceased  ;  and  Jason  uprose  from  his  seat. 
And  Augeias  and  Telamon  with  him;  but  followed  them  only  the  feet  44c 
Of  Argus  ;  for  even  at  the  moment  a  sign  to  his  brethren  he  cast 
There  in  their  place  to  tarry :  so  forth  of  the  hall  they  passed. 
But  the  son  of  Aison  outshone  all  there  in  wondrous  wise 
In  goodlihead  and  in  grace  :  ever  wandered  the  maiden's  eyes 
Askance  unto  him,  as  she  stealthily  parted  her  veil's  soft  gleam. 
And  her  heart  was  a  smouldering  fire  of  pain;  and  her  soul,  as  a  dream,   I 


THE  THIRD  BOOK  107 

Stole  after  her  love,  flitting  still  in  his  track  as  his  feet  fared  on. 
So  they  from  the  halls  in  exceeding  vexation  of  spirit  are  gone. 
But  Chalkiope,  from  the  wrath  of  Aietes  shrinking  in  dread, 
Hastily  unto  her  bower  with  those  her  sons  had  fled.  450 

And  Medea  thereafter  followed  ;  and  surged  like  a  rushing  river 
The    thoughts    through    her    breast — the    thoughts    that    Love 

awakeneth  ever. 
And  before  her  eyes  the  vision  of  all  evermore  she  had — 
Himself,  even  like  as  he  was,  and  the  vesture  wherein  he  was  clad. 
How  he  spake,  how  he  sat  on  his  seat,  how  forth  of  the  doors  he 

strode. 
And  she  dreamed  as  she  mused  that  all  the  world  beside  had  showed 
None  other  such  man.      In  her  ears  evermore  the  music  rung 
Of  his   voice,   and  the  words  that  in  sweetness  of  honey  had 

dropped  from  his  tongue. 
And  she  trembled  for  him,  lest  the  bulls  or  Aietes  himself  might  slay 
Her  beloved,  and  took  up  a  mourning  for  him,  as  though  he  lay  460 
Dead  even  now ;  and  adown  her  cheeks  soft-stealing  tears 
Flowed,  of  her  measureless  pity,  her  burden  of  haunting  fears. 
And  she  mourned,  and  the  low  lamentation  wailed  from  her  tor- 
tured breast : 

*  Why,  wretch  that  I  am,  is  this  anguish  upon  me  ? — or  be  he 

the  best 
Of  heroes,  who  now  is  to  perish,  or  be  he  the  vilest  of  all. 
Let  him  go  to  his  doom  ! — yet  O  that  on  him  no  scathe  might  fall ! 
Oh  might  it  be  so,  thou  Daughter  of  Perseus,  Goddess  revered  ! 
Oh  might  he  but  win  home,  'scaping  his  doom  ! — but  if  this  be 

his  weird. 
By  the  bulls  to  be  overmastered,  or  ever  it  be  too  late 
Might  he  know  it,  that  I  be  not  forced  to  exult  o'er  the  thing  470 

that  I  hate  !  ' 
So  was  the  maiden  distraught  by  the  cares  that  racked  her  mind. 
But  when  those  others  had  left  the  folk  and  the  city  behind. 
On  the  path  whereby  at  the  first  from  the  river-plain  they  had  gone. 
Even  then,  and  with  these  words,  Argus  spake  unto  Aison's  son  : 

*  This  counsel  of  mine,  O  Aison's  son,  thou  wilt  haply  despise : 


loS  THE  ARGONAUTS 

Yet  in  desperate  strait  to  forbear  from  the  trial  seemeth  not  wise. 
Thou  hast  heard  me  tell  of  a  maiden  that  practiseth  sorcery 
Under  the  teaching  of  Perseus'  daughter  Hekate. 
Now  if  we  might  win  her  to  help  us,  thou  needest  not  fear  any  more 
To  be  vanquished  in  this  thine  endeavour  : — howbeit  my  fear  is  sore  48 
Lest  haply  my  mother  will  take  not  upon  her  to  move  her  thereto. 
Yet  in  any  wise  back  will  I  wend  to  essay  what  entreaty  may  do:; 
For  over  us  all  alike  is  destruction  hanging  this  day.' 

So  spake  he  in  kindness  of  heart,  and  in  answer  did  Jason  say : 
*  Dear  friend,  if  this  seemeth  good  in  thy  sight,  I  say  not  nay. 
Hasten  thou  then,  and  with  words  of  weight  to  thy  mother  pray 
Till  thou  stir  her  to  help  us  : — howbeit  a  pitiful  hope  is  the  best 
For  our  home-return,  if  this  in  the  keeping  of  women  must  rest.' 

So  spake  he  ;  and  soon  to  the  backwater  came  he  :  with  hearts 
full  fain 

Did  their  comrades  greet  them,  and  question,  beholding  them  again.  49c 
But  unto  them  Aison's  son  in  heaviness  spake  the  word  : 

*  O  friends,  the  heart  of  Aietes  the  ruthless  is  wholly  stirred 
With  anger  against  us  :   of  all  those  things  whereof  ye  inquire 
Nor  for  me  nor  for  you  appeareth  the  goal  of  our  desire. 
Two  brazen-footed  bulls  on  the  "War-god's  plain,  he  saith. 
Pasture  ;  in  flames  of  fire  from  the  mouths  of  them  streameth  the 

breath  : 
And  with  these  must  I  plough  him  ploughgates  four  ofa  fallow  field; 
And  seed  ofa  serpent's  jaws  will  he  give,  and  for  crop  shall  it  yield 
Earth-born  warriors  in  harness  of  brass.     In  the  selfsame  day 
These  must  I  slay.     And  of  this — for  I  found  no  better  way,      500 
In  mine  heart  as  I  pondered — I  promised  outright  to  make  essay.' 
He  spake,  and  it  seemed  unto  all  an  impossible  task.     For  a  space 
Silent  they  sat,  and  each  man  gazed  in  his  fellow's  face. 
By  despair  bowed  down,  by  calamity  crushed,  till  Peleus  at  last 
With  stout  words  spake  to  hearten  the  heroes  all  aghast : 

*  Full  time  is  it  now  to  be  counselling  what  we  shall  do.  In  rede 
Small  profit,  I  trow,  shall  be  found  ;  strong  hands  must  help  our  need. 
If  thou  then  art  minded  to  yoke  the  bulls  of  Aietes  the  king, 

O  hero  Aison's  son,  and  thine  heart  is  good  for  the  thing. 


THE  THIRD  BOOK  109 

Up  then,  and  keep  thy  promise,  and  gird  up  thy  loins  for  the  toil.  510 
But  if  aught  thine  heart  mistrusteth  her  manhood,and  feareth  the  foil, 
Neither  goad  thyself  on,  nor  yet  for  another  of  these  look  round 
As  thou  sitt'st  in  their  midst :  for  one  that  shall  nowise  flinch 

hath  been  found. 
Even  I ;  for  the  bitterest  pang  is  but  death,  to  which  all  men  are 

bound.' 
So  spake  Aiakus'  son  ;  and  Telamon's  spirit  was  stirred. 
And  swiftly  in  haste  he  uprose ;  and  Idas  uprose  for  the  third 
With  heart  uplifted  ;  and  rose  the  sons  of  Tyndareus  then  ; 
And  rose  with   them  Oineus'  son,  who  was  numbered  among 

strong  men, 
Albeit  not  yet  so  much  as  the  tender  down  on  his  chin 
Showed ;  with  such  hero-might  was  his  spirit  uplifted  within.      520 
But  the  rest  unto  these  gave  place,  and  were  still :  then  spake 

straightway 
Argus  to  these  for  the  contest  that  longed,  and  thus  did  he  say : 
*  Friends,  haply  to  this  may  we  come  at  the  last :  but  ere  that  be, 
Help  for  oui-  need  shall  be  found  with  my  mother,  it  seemeth  me. 
Wherefore  refrain  you  a  little  yet,  how  eager  soever. 
And  abide  in  the  ship  as  aforetime  :  for  better  it  is  to  forbear, 
Than  reckless-hearted  to  choose  the  path  to  destruction's  lair. 
In  the  halls  of  Aietes  nurtured  a  certain  maiden  doth  dwell 
Whom  Hekate  taught  strange  cunning  in  herbs  of  the  witch-wife's 

spell, 
Even  all  that  on  solid  land  or  in  fleeting  water  grow.  530 

And  therewith  she  turneth  to  balm  the  fireblast's  fervent  glow. 
And  rivers  in  mid  rush  roaring  she  suddenly  causeth  to  stand. 
And  constraineth  the  stars  and  the  paths  of  the  holy  moon  with 

a  band. 
Of  her  we  bethought  us,  the  while  from  the  palace  we  trod  the  way, 
If  haply  my  mother,  seeing  that  sisters  born  be  they. 
Could  persuade  this  maiden,  that  so  for  the  contest  her  help  she 

may  lend. 
And  if  this  thing  appeareth  good  in  your  eyes,  of  a  truth  will  I  wend 
To  the  palace-hall  of  Aietes  aback  this  selfsame  day 


no  THE  ARGONAUTS 

To  try  her  : — a  God  perad venture  will  help  when  I  make  essay.' 
He  spake,  and  the  Gods  of  their  kindness  sent  forth  a  sign  in  5^ 

their  sight ; 
For  a  fearful  dove  from  the  might  of  a  hawk  swift-winging  her  flight 
From  on  high  into  Jason's  bosom  fell  in  her  panic  affright. 
But  the  hawk  swooped  blindly,  and  fluttered  impaled  on  the  high 

stern-crest. 
Then  on  Mopsus  a  spirit  of  prophecy  came,  and  he  cried  to  the  rest: 

*  Unto  you,  O  friends,  by  the  will  of  the  Gods  this  token  is  sent; 
For  in  none  other  wise  shall  ye  better  interpret  the  sign's  intent 
That  we  seek  to  the  maiden,  and  woo  her  with  speech  of  entreaty  fair 
With  our  uttermost  wit ;  and  I  ween  she  will  not  reject  our  prayer, 
If  Phineus  foretold  that  your  home-return  should  be  brought  to  pass 
With  help  of  the  Cyprian  Goddess.  Her  gentle  bird  it  was 
That  escaped  from  destruction.     As  now  mine  heart  doth  in 

vision  foresee 
As  touching  this  omen,  O  that  so  in  the  end  it  may  be  ! 
Friends,  let  us  cry  to  the  Queen  of  Kythera  to  help  our  need  ; 
And  straightway  obey  ye  the  counsel  of  Argus  with  diligent  heed.' 
He  spake,  and  the  young  men  praised  it,  calling  to  mind  the  word 
Of  Phineus  the  prophet ;  but  Idas  alone  rose  anger-stirred 
Shouting  aloud  in  his  fierceness  of  wrath,  and  thus  did  he  say : 

*  Out  on  it! — were  women  our  voyaging-fellows  through  all 

that  way  ? 
We  men  that  be  calling  on  Kypris  now  for  our  help  to  arise. 
And  not  on  the  War-god's  mighty  strength  ? — and  by  turning  56 

your  eyes 
On  doves  and  on  hawks  shall  ye  'scape  from  the  toil,  shall  ye  win 

the  prize  ? 
Away  ! — let  the  deeds  of  war  no  more  in  your  hearts  find  place. 
But  the  cunning  in  pleading  that  winneth  a  weakling  maiden's  grace !  ' 
Even  so  hot-hearted  he  spake  ;  and  many  of  them  that  heard 
Low  murmured  thereat  ;  howbeit  none  of  them  answered  a  word. 
Then  sat  he  down  yet  scowling  in  wrath  ;  and  rose  thereupon 
Jason  to  stir  them  to  deeds,  and  thus  spake  Aison's  son : 

*  Let  Argus  be  sent  from  the  ship,  seeing  all  commend  this  thing  ; 


THE  THIRD  BOOK  in 

But  let  us  which  remain  from  her  hiding-place  in  the  river  bring 
And  openly  moor  to  the  shore  our  galley  ;  for  now  gone  by        570 
Is  the  time  for  hiding  as  cravens  that  cower  from  the  onset-cry.' 

So  did  he  speak  ;  and  he  hasted  the  feet  of  Argus  again 
To  return  to  the  city  with  speed,  and  the  hawsers  drew  they  then 
Out  of  the  stream  inboard  at  Aison's  son's  command  ; 
And  a  little  above  the  backwater  rowed  they  the  galley  aland. 
But  Aietes  assembled  for  council  the  Kolchian  men  in  haste 
Aloof  from  his  halls,  in  the  place  where  they  gathered  in  days 

overpast. 
Devising  against  the  Minyans  trouble  and  treachery  grim. 
And  he  purposed,  so  soon  as  the  bulls  should  have  torn  him  limb 

from  limb, — 
This  man  who  had  taken  upon  him  the  heavy  task  to  fulfil, —      580 
To  hew  the  oak-grove  down  that  crested  the  shaggy  hill, 
And  to  burn  the  ship  and  her  crew,  that  so  amid  fume  and  flame 
They  might  vent  that  insolence  forth  for  a  king's  defiance  that  came. 
Yea,  and  he  had  not  received,  he  said,  even  Aiolus'  son 
In  his  halls  in  his  sorest  need,  even  Phrixus,  the  man  who  outshone 
All  strangers  in  courtesy  and  in  fear  of  the  Gods  on  high. 
But  that  Zeus'  self  sent  unto  him  his  messenger  down  from  the  sky, 
Even  Hermes,  bidding  him  give  to  the  stranger  the  welcoming  hand. 
How  much  less  therefore,  when  pirate-rovers  came  to  his  land. 
Should  they  long  'scape  griefs  of  their  own,  the  caitiffs  whose  590 

only  toil 
Was  to  stretch  forth  their  hands  in  the  taking  of  other  men's 

goods  for  a  spoil. 
And  to  weave  dark  webs  of  guile,  and  on  herdmen  folk  to  fall 
With  soul-dismaying  shouts,  and  to  harry  steading  and  stall  ? 
Yea,  and  the  sons  of  Phrixus  should  render  to  him  therebeside 
Meet  penalty,  they  who  had  dared  in  returning  thither  to  guide 
Felons,  consorting  with  men  which  were  minded  to  drive  even  him 
L  ight-hearted  from  honour  and  sceptre ;  as  spake  that  prophecy  grim. 
The  warning  whereof  he  heard  from  his  father  the  Sun  erewhile. 
Bidding  him,  *  See  thou  beware  of  thine  offspring's  secret  guile, 
And  the  plots  of  thy  seed,  and  the  curse  of  their  crafty  iniquity ; '  6od 


112  THE  ARGONAUTS 

For  which  cause  also  he  sent  them,  even  as  they  craved,  oversea, 
By  their  father's  behest,  to  Achaia  a  long  way  : — yet  there  came 
On  his  soul  no  shadow  of  fear  of  his  daughters,  lest  these  should  frame 
Treason  :  no  fear  of  his  son  Absyrtus  his  heart  had  chilled  ; 
But  he  said, '  In  the  children  of  Chalkiope  shall  the  curse  be  fulfilled.' 
And  bodings  of  awful  revenge  on  the  strangers  foamed  on  his  lip 
In  his  fury  ;  for  loudly  he  threatened  to  hale  to  the  flames  their  ship 
And  her  crew,  that  none  through  the  meshes  of  ruin's  net  might  slip. 
But  Argus  had  gone  to  the  halls  of  Aietes  the  while,  and  with  speech 
Of  manifold  pleading  now  did  the  prince  his  mother  beseech         ^ 
To  pray  to  Medea  to  help  them  ;   yea,  and  herself  theretofore 
Was  full  of  the  selfsame  thought,  but  the  fear  on  her  soul  lay  sore 
L  est  haply  fate  should  -wdthstand,  and  in  vain  she  should  speak  her  fair, 
For  her  dread  of  her  fatlier's  deadly  wrath  ;  or  if  to  her  prayer 
She  should  yield,  yet  all  should  be  brought  to  light,  and  her  deeds 

laid  bare. 
Now  the  maiden  had  cast  her  dowTi  on  her  couch,  and  slumber 

deep 
Of  her  anguish  relieved  her  ;  but  straightway  dreams  came  haunt- 
ing her  sleep. 
Such  visions  dark  and  deceitful  as  trouble  the  anguish-distraught. 
For  it  seemed  that  the  stranger  had  taken  upon  him  the  task ; 

but  she  thought 
That  it  was  not  the  Fleece  of  the  Ram  that  he  longed  to  win  for  6 

a  prize. 
Nor  yet  for  the  sake  of  this  had  he  fared  in  any  wise 
To  Aietes'  city,  but  only  to  lead  her,  his  wedded  wife. 
Unto  his  home  ;  and  she  dreamed  that  herself  did  wrestle  in  strife 
"With  the  bulls,  and  exceeding  lightly  the  mighty  labour  she  wrought. 
Howbeit  thereafter  her  parents  set  their  promise  at  naught. 
For  that  not  to  their  child,  but  to  him,  was  the  challenge  to  yoke 

that  team. 
Wherefore  contention  of  wrangling  clashed  through  her  troubled 

dream 
'Twixt  her  sire  and  the  strangers  :  and  lo,  in  her  hand  the  decision 

they  laid, 


THE  THIRD  BOOK  113 

That  the  issue  should  follow  her  will,  and  the  thoughts  of  the 

heart  of  the  maid. 
And  straightway  the  stranger  she  chose;  all  reverence  thrust  she  aside  630 
For  her  parents  ;  and  measureless  anguish  seized  them,  and  loud 

they  cried 
In  their  fury,  and  sleep  forsook  her  at  that  heart-thrilling  sound. 
And  all  a-quiver  with  fear  she  upstarted  :  she  stared  all  round 
On  the  walls  of  her  chamber  ;  her  fluttering  spirit  back  to  her  breast 
Scarce  drew  she :  the  words  like  a  panic-struck  throng  through 

her  pale  lips  pressed  : 
*  O  wretched  I ! — how  nightmare  visions  my  spirit  appal  ! 
I  fear  me  lest  awful  ills  from  the  heroes'  voyage  befall : 
And  my  heart,  my  heart  for  the  stranger  is  tossed  in  a  storm  of 

dismay. 
Let  him  woo  some  girl  in  his  own  Achaia  far  away. 
And  be  maidenhood  mine,and  mine  in  the  house  of  my  parents  to  stay!  640 
Yet — yet — though  mine   heart  be  by  love   made   reckless,  the 

desperate  deed 
I  will  try  not  unbid  by  my  sister — never  ! — except  she  plead 
With  Medea  to  help  in  the  toil,  in  her  anguish  of  fear  for  the  sake 
Of  her  sons  :  this  might  peradventure  assuage  my  sore  heart-ache.' 
She  spake,  and  she  rose  from  her  bed,  and  she  opened  her 

chamber  door 
Barefooted,  in  vesture  of  linen  alone  ;  and  she  yearned  full  sore 
To  go  to  her  sister,  and  over  the  threshold  stole  the  maid : 
Yet  lingering — lingering — long  at  the  door  of  the  chamber  she  stayed 
Held  by  her  shame.     Then  backward  in  sudden  panic  she  fled, 
Andintoher  bower  she  darted,  and  shrank  to  the  shadows  in  dread.  650 
And  backward  and  forward  her  purposeless  feet  ever  paced  in  vain  ; 
For  whenso  she  braced  her  to  go,  shame  fettered  her  feet  with  its 

chain. 
And  ever  as  shame  plucked  back,  bold  passion  spurred  her  amain. 
Thrice  she  essayed,  thrice  stayed  she  ;  but  now  at  the  fourth  essay 
Down  on  her  bed  on  her  face  did  she  cast  her,  and  writhing  she  lay. 
And  as  when  some  bride  in  her  desolate  bower  for  her   lord 

maketh  moan, 

H 


114  THE  ARGONAUTS 

Unto  whom  her  brethren  and  parents  espoused  her  a  little  agone 
And  for  shame  and  for  thinking  on  him  awhile  she  cannot  face 
The  eyes  of  her  handmaids,  but  silent  she  sits  in  a  secret  place. 
Some  doom  hath  destroyed  him,  or  ever  the  crown  of  their  desire  6' 
Was  attained  of  these  :  and  there  in  her  chamber,  with  heart  on  fire 
Stilly  she  sitteth  and  weepeth,  beholding  her  couch  left  lorn  ; 
Stilly — for  fear  of  the  mock  of  the  women, the  laugh  of  their  score 
Like  her  did  Medea  make  moan  :  but  with  sob  and  with  broken  cry 
While  yet  she  lamented,  it  chanced  one  heard  as  she  passed  thereby, 
Which  had  been  from  a  child  a  handmaid  tending  her  lady's  bower 
So  she  told  it  to  Chalkiope  :  now  she  sat  in  the  selfsame  hour 
With  her  sons,  devising  to  win  her  sister  to  help  their  need ; 
And  she  hearkened  the  strange  tale  told  of  the  handmaid  with 

diligent  heed. 
Neither  put  it  lightly  aside  ;  but  she  hastened  in  startled  dismay  6; 
Forth  of  her  bower  and  on  to  the  bower  where  the  maiden  lay 
Anguish-racked,  while  her  frenzied  fingers  tore  each  cheek. 
And  her  eyes  all  drowned  in  tears  she  beheld,  and  thus  did  she  speak  : 

*  Ah  me,  Medea,  ah  me  ! — and  why  art  thou  weeping  so  ? 
What  hath  befallen  ? — how  came  to  thine  heart  this  terrible  woe  ? 
Is  it  some  disease  heaven-sent  that  hath  suddenly  smitten  thy  frame  ? 
Or  what,  hast  thou  heard  some  deadly  threat  from  our  father  that 

came 
Touching  me  and  my  sons  ?     Would  God  I  had  never  so  much 

as  seen 
My  parents'  home,  nor  the  town,  but  my  dwelling  afar  had  been 
At  the  ends  of  the  earth,  where  never  was  heard  the  Kolchian  68 

name !  ' 
She  spake  :  but  Medea's  cheeks  flushed  crimson  ;  and  maiden 

shame 
From  the  answer  she  yearned  full  sore  to  render  withheld  her  long. 
And  now  was  the  word  awake,  and  fluttered  upon  her  tongue. 
And  backward  anon  to  her  breast  it  flew  like  a  startled  bird. 
And  often  she  parted  her  lovely  lips  to  utter  the  word  ; 
Yet  fainted  her  voice  on  the  threshold  of  speech  :  but  at  last  of 

her  guile 


THE  THIRD  BOOK  115 

Thus  spake  she — and  ever  the  bold  Loves  thrust  her  onward  the 
while  : 

*  O  Chalkiope,  mine  heart  for  thy  sons  is  disquieted  sore, 
Lest  my  father  destroy  them  forthright  with  the  men  from  the 

alien  shore  ; 
So  ghastly  a  dream,  while  a  moment  I  slumbered,  but  now  did  I  see —  ^9° 
And  oh  may  the  Gods  forefend  that  the  vision  accomplished 

should  be. 
Forbid  that  thy  love  for  thy  sons  should  be  made  heart-anguish 

to  thee  !  ' 
So  spake  she,  proving  her  sister,  longing  to  hear  her  pray, 
Unprompted  of  her,  for  her  help  for  her  sons  in  the  evil  day. 
Strong  anguish  swept  o'er  the  mother's  soul  like  a  surging  tide, 
For  her  terror  at  that  she  had  heard,  and  with  fervent  beseeching 

she  cried : 

*  Yea,  and  to  this  same  end  did  I  come  with  eager  speed. 

If  with  me  thou  wouldst  haply  devise  and  prepare  some  help  for 

our  need. 
But  swear  thou  by  Earth  and  by  Heaven  that  thou  wilt  conceal 

in  thine  heart 
Whatsoever  I  say  unto  thee,  and  wilt  bear  therein  thy  part.  7co 

By  the  Blessed  I  pray  thee,  by  thine  own  soul,  by  thy  parents'  name, 
That  thou  see  not  my  sons  in  torment  destroyed  by  a  doom  of  shame 
Horribly  :  else  with  my  dear-loved  sons  will  I  die,  and  come 
A  hateful  vengeance-spirit  to  haunt  thee  from  Hades'  home !  ' 

So  spake  she,  and  straightway  gushed  her  tears  in  torrent  flow  ; 
And  around  her  knees  did  she  fling  her  arms  in  a  passion  of  woe. 
And  adown  on  her  bosom  she  bowed  her  head  ;  and  there  they  two 
Over  each  other  made  piteous  lament,  and  the  dim  halls  through 
Went  wailing  low  the  sound  of  anguished  women's  cry. 
And  to  her  disquieted  sorely  Medea  made  reply :  710 

*  God  help  thee  ! — what  healing  can  I  bring  thee  ? — what  talk 

is  thine 
Of  horrible  curses  and  vengeance-spirits!  — would  God  it  were  mine. 
Mine  by  a  power  firm-stablished,  to  save  thy  sons  from  bane ! 
Be  witness — the  mighty  oath  of  the  Kolchians,  the  oath  thou  art  fain 


u6  THE  ARGONAUTS 

I  should  swear — be  witness  the  broad-arched  Heaven,  and  the 

Earth  below, 

Mother  of  Gods,  that,  so  far  as  the  bounds  of  my  strength  may  go, 

I  will  fail  thee  not,  if  thy  prayer  be  a  boon  that  man  may  bestow.' 

So  spake  she,  and  Chalkiope  made  answer  to  her,  and  she  said  : 

*  Now  couldst  thou  not  dare  for  the  stranger — himself  too  asketh 

thine  aid — 
By  v.'We  or  by  wisdom  achievement  of  this  emprise  to  win 
For  the  sake  of  my  sons  ?     Lo,  now  is  his  messenger  Argus  within, 
Praying  that  I  would  essay  to  win  for  them  help  of  thy  grace. 
In  the  mid-court  left  I  him  when  I  came  to  seek  thy  face.' 

So  spake  she,  and  bounded  within  her  Medea's  heart  for  delight : 
Her  fair  skin  suddenly  crimsoned,  and  swam  before  her  sight 
A  mist,  as  she  flushed  and  burned;  and  answer  she  made  thereunto  : 

'  Chalkiope,  according  to  that  which  is  pleasing  to  you, 
Even  so  will  I  do.    May  I  see  with  mine  eyes  the  dawn  not  again. 
Nor  mayst  thou  behold  me  long  in  the  land  of  living  men. 
If  I  count  aught  dearer  to  me  than  the  lives  of  thee  and  thine, 
Even  thy  sons  :  for  verily  these  be  brethren  mine. 
My  kinsmen  beloved,  my  childhood-playmates :  myself  I  call 
Thine  own,  own  sister,  my  sister's  own  little  daughter  withal. 
Since  even  as  them  the  baby  me  to  thy  breast  didst  thou  hold : 
So  still  have  I  heard  the  tale  by  the  lips  of  my  mother  told. 
But  go  thou,  in  silence  bury  this  my  kindness,  that  so 
I  may  work  out  unwares  to  my  parents  my  promise.     At  dawn 

will  I  go 
Unto  Hekate's  fane,  to  bear  thither  the  drugs  that  shall  cast  a  spell 
On  the  bulls  for  the  stranger  for  whose  sake  all  this  strife  befell.' 
So  the  mother  returned  from  the  chamber,  and  spake  to  her  74c 
sons  full  fain 
Of  her  sister's  help.      But  now  did  the  tide  of  shame  again 
And  of  terrible  fear  o'er  the  soul  of  Medea  in  solitude  rise, 
That  she  in  her  sire's  despite  for  a  man  such  deeds  should  devise. 

Then  night  drew  darkness  over  the  earth  ;   on  the  lonely  sea 
The  sailors  gazed  from  their  ships  on  the  Bear  and  the  flashing  three 
Of  Orion  ;  and  came  upon  every  wayfarer  longing  for  sleep, 


THE  THIRD  BOOK  117 

And  on  each  gate-warder  ;  and  mothers,  that  daylong  wont  to  weep 
For  children  dead,  with  the  peace  of  slumber  were  folded  around. 
No  barking  of  dogs  through  the  city  there  was  any  more,  no  sound 
Of  voices,  but  all  the  blackening  gloom  was  with  silence  bound.  750 
But  not  o'er  Medea  did  sleep  sweet  dews  of  forgetfulness  shake  ; 
For  many  a  care  in  her  yearning  for  Jason  held  her  awake, 
Adread  of  the  mighty  strength  of  the  bulls,  'neath  the  fury  of  whom 
He  must  die  in  the  War-god's  acre,  must  die  by  a  shameful  doom. 
And  with  thick  fast  throbbings  struggled  the  heart  in  her  breast  al  way ; 
As  when  on  the  wall  of  a  dwelling  the  leaping  sunbeams  play 
Flung  up  from  the  water  that  into  a  caldron  but  now  fell  plashing, 
Or  into  a  pail,  and  hither  and  thither  the  sunbeam  flashing 
In  lightning  eddy  and  flicker  is  dancing  in  mad  unrest. 
So  quivered  and  fluttered  the  heart  within  the  maiden's  breast.     760 
And  the  tears  from  her  eyes  were  flowing  for  ruth,  and  through 

all  her  frame 
Like  a  smouldering  fire  her  anguish  burned,  and  coiled  its  flame 
Round  every  fine-strung  nerve,  and  thrilled  to  her  beating  brain 
Where  sharpest  of  all  the  pang  strikes  in,  when  the  shafts  of  pain 
Are  shot  to  the  heart  by  the  Loves  that  rest  them  never  from  harm. 
And  now  did  she  say  that  the  drugs  she  would  give  that  should 

bind  with  a  charm 
The  bulls,  and  now  would  she  not,  but  with  him  would  she  cease 

to  live. 
Swift  changed  her  mood  :  she  would  not  die,  she,  nor  the  drugs 

would  she  give. 
But  in  silence  endure  her  fate,  the  curse  that  was  doomed  to  betide. 
Then,  there  as  she  sat,  she  wavered  this  way  and  that,  and  she  cried :  770 

'  Oh  hapless  I,  whether  this  way  or  that  into  ruin  I  fall ! 
On  every  hand  is  despair  for  my  soul :  no  help  is  at  all 
From  woe,  but  it  burneth,  a  furnace  unquenched ! — would  God 

it  had  been 
Mine  to  be  slain  ere  this  by  the  shafts  of  the  Huntress-queen, 
Or  ever  I  saw  him,  or  came  to  Achaia-land  the  sons 
Of  Chalkiopc,  whom  a  God,  or  the  awful  Avenging  Ones 
Hither,  for  sorrow  to  us,  and  for  many  a  tear,  have  led ! 


ii8  THE  ARGONAUTS 

— Let  him  perish  amidst  of  the  struggle,  if  this  be  his  weird,  to 

be  sped 
On  the  fallows  of  doom  ! — for  how  shall  I  'scape  my  parents'  ken 
As  the  drugs  I  prepare  ?     With  what  manner  of  words  shall  1 7^ 

blind  them  then  ? 
What  wile,  what  cunning  device  for  mine  hero's  help  shall  I  find  ? 
If  I  see  him  apart  from  his  friends,shall  I  meet  him  with  greeting  kind? 
O  ill-starred  ! — though  he  should  die,  yet  cannot  I  hope  that  so 
Assuaging  should  come  of  my  pain:  nay,this  should  be  but  for  my  woe 
If  he  of  his  life  were  bereft — oh,  get  thee  behind  me,  shame  ! 
Beauty,  avaunt ! — So  scatheless  by  mine  endeavour  he  came 
Out  of  peril,  then  might  he  fare  wheresoever  seemeth  him  best. 
But  for  me — on  the  selfsame  day  when  triumphant  he  bideth  the  test. 
Then  let  me  die,  from  the  rafters  straining  my  neck  in  the  noose. 
Or  tasting  of  poisons  that  rend  the  soul  from  the  body  loose.         7< 
Ah,  but  after  my  dying  !  — what  scoffs  and  what  mocks  will  they  fling 
On  my  grave ! — and  far  and  near  how  every  city  will  ring 
With  the  tale  of  my  doom  ;  and  from  lip  to  lip  shall  be  tossed  the  jeer. 
And  a  mock  shall  I  be  in  the  mouths  of  the  daughters  of  Kolchis 

that  sneer, 
"  Lo,  she  that  so  lovingly  cared  for  a  man  of  an  alien  race 
That  she  died!  — lo,  she  that  on  home  and  on  parents  heaped  disgrace. 
Giving  reins  to  her  lust !  "     What  shame  should  not  be  loaded  on 

me? 
Ah  me,  my  infatuate  folly  !  — better  by  far  should  it  be 
In  this  same  night  to  forsake  my  life  these  chambers  within 
By  a  fate  of  mystery,  'scaping  from  slander's  fiendish  din,  8c 

Or  ever  that  hideous  befouling,  that  nameless  defilement,  I  win  ! 

She  spake,  and  she  rose,and  a  casket  she  brought,wherein  there  lay 
Many  a  drug,  some  helpful  to  heal,  some  mighty  to  slay. 
On  her  knees  she  laid  it,  and  brake  into  weeping  :  her  bosom-fold 
Was  wet  with  her  tears ;  from  the  wounds  unstanched  of  her 

heart  they  rolled. 
As  she  bitterly  wailed  for  her  fate  :  and  her  soul  was  exceeding  fain 
To  choose  her  a  murderous  drug,  and  to  taste  oblivion  of  pain. 
And  the  eager  fingers  now  of  the  hapless  maid  'gan  part 


THE  THIRD  BOOK  119 

The  bands  of  the  casket,  to  take  it  forth — but,  with  sudden  start, 
With  an  awful  fear  of  Hades  the  hateful  shuddered  her  heart.      8io 
Long  spellbound  sat  she  in  speechless  horror  :  around  her  thronged 
Visions  of  all  sweet  things  for  the  which  through  life  she  had  longed. 
She  thought  of  the  hours  delightsome  the  lot  of  the  living  that  fill, 
And  she  thought  of  her  merry  playmates,  even  as  a  maiden  will. 
And  sweeter  than  ever  was  grown  the  sun  unto  her  to  behold — 
No  marvel,  seeing  she  yearned  for  all  so  passionate-souled ! 
So  she  put  from  her  knees  the  casket,  and  laid  it  down  again 
All  changed  by  the  promptings  of  Here  :  no  more  did  she  waver  then 
In  her  purpose  ;  but  now  did  she  long  for  the  dawning  with  speed 

to  awake. 
For  the  dayspring  to  rise,  that  so  to  her  hero  the  drugs  she  might  take  820 
For  the  spell,  as  her  covenant  pledged  her,  and  meet  him  face  to  face. 
And  many  a  time  she  unbarred  the  doors  of  her  chamber,  to  gaze 
Forth  for  the  far  faint  gleam,  and  welcome  flashed  upon  her 
The  Child  of  the  Mist,  and  throughout  the  city  the  folk  'gan  stir. 
Then  Argus  spake  to  his  brethren,  bidding  them  there  to  abide 
To  learn  the  mind  of  the  maiden,  and  how  should  her  purpose  betide ; 
But  himself  turned  backward  again,  and  unto  the  galley  he  hied. 
Now  soon  as  the  maiden  beheld  the  splendour  of  dawn  outrolled 
O'er  the  heavens,  gathered  she  up  with  her  hands  her  tresses  of  gold. 
Which  over  her  shoulders  in  careless  disarray  hung  loose  :  830 

And  she  bathed  her  feverish  cheeks,  and  with  perfume  shed  from 

the  cruse 
All  nectar-scented  her  body  shone  ;  and  a  robe  fair-wrought 
She    donned,   and  with    brooches    cunningly-fashioned  its  folds 

upcaught. 
And  the  cloud  of  a  veil  did  she  cast  o'er  her  head  unearthly  fair, 
And  as  silver  it  shimmered  :  she  trode  the  floors  of  the  palace  there 
Pacing  unfaltering  to  and  fro,  forgetful  of  all 
Those  heaven-sent  woes  at  the  door,  and  of  others  that  yet 

should  befall. 
And  she  summoned  her  bower-maidens ;  twelve  by  tale  were  they  : 
Throughthe  nightattheentering-inof  herodorouschamberthey  lay. 
Young  as  herself,  nor  yet  on  the  bridal  couch  embraced.  84c 


120  THE  ARGONAUTS 

And  these  she  commanded  to  harness  the  mules  to  the  wain  in  haste 
To  bear  their  lady  to  Hekate's  passing-beautiful  fane. 
Wherefore  the  bower-maidens  hasted  and  harnessed  the  mules  to 

the  wain. 
And  Medea  the  while  took  forth  from  the  casket  a  drug  of  might, 
The  magic  root  that  they  say  is  the  Herb  of  Prometheus  hight. 
For  if  any  with  midnight  sacrifice  upon  Daira  shall  call, 
The  only-begotten,  and  smear  his  body  therewithal, 
No  stroke  of  brazen  weapon  shall  wound  the  flesh  of  him. 
No,  nor  from  blazing  fire  shall  he  flinch  ;   but  his  strength  of  limb 
And  his  prowess  throughout  that  day  shall  ail  their  might  confound.  85 
First-born  it  upshot  from  the  clod  in  the  hour  when  dropped  to 

the  ground 
From  the  ravening  eagle' s  beak,  where  the  crags  of  Caucasus  frowned, 
The  ichor,  the  blood  of  a  God,  of  Prometheus  in  torments  bound. 
And  the  flower  of  it  blossomed  a  cubit  the  face  of  the  earth  above  : 
As  the  glow  of  the  crocus  Corycian,  so  was  the  hue  thereof, 
Upborne  upon  pale  stalks  twain,  and  below  in  its  earthy  bed 
The  root  thereof  as  flesh  new-severed  was  crimson-red. 
And  the  blood  thereof,  like  a  mountain-oak's  dark  sap,  in  a  shell 
From  Caspian  strand  she  gathered,  to  weave  thereof  a  spell, 
When  seven  times  she  had  bathed  her  in  waters  unresting  that  glide,  S6c 
And  seven  times  upon  Brimo  the  Nursing-mother  had  cried — 
Night-wandering  Brimo,  the  Underworld  Goddess,  the  Queen 

of  the  dead — 
Andinduskyvesturecladthrough  the  blacknessofnightdidshe  tread. 
And  the  dark    earth  shuddered  and  quaked  deep  down  with 

muttering  moan, 
As  the  Titan  root  was  severed  ;  yea,  and  lapetus'  son 
In  frenzy  of  heart-wringing  agony  groaned  a  fearful  groan. 
This,  from  the  casket  ta'en,  in  her  odorous  girdle  she  laid, 
The  girdle  enclasping  the  waist  divinely  sweet  of  the  maid. 
Then  forth  of  the  portal  she  paced,  and  she  set  her  foot  on  the  wain. 
And  beside  her  went  upon  either  hand  bower-maidens  twain.       870 
To  her  left   hand  gave  they  the  reins,  and  the  fair-fashioned 

whip  hath  she  ta'en 


THE  THIRD  BOOK  121 

In  her  right ;  and  adown  through  the  city  she  drave ;  and  the 

rest  of  the  train 
Of  her  handmaids  laid  their  hands  on  the  wain,  behind  it  to  run 
Adown  the  highway  broad,  for  their  tunics  delicate-spun 
Each  maiden  had  kilted  up  above  her  ivory  knee. 
'Twas  as   when,   where    Parthenius'   soft-flowing   ripples    slide 

through  the  lea, 
Or  as  when,  coming  up  from  her  bath  in  Amnisus'  crystalline  water, 
High-borne  on  her  golden  chariot  rideth  Latona's  Daughter, 
Driving  betwixt  the  hills  the  fleetfoot  roes  of  her  car, 
To  greet  the  sacrifice-steam  of  a  hecatomb  afar  ;  880 

And  the  Nymphs  in  throngs  upon  throngs  attend  her,  gathering  some 
By  the  green  well-head  of  Amnisus'  self,  and  others  that  come 
By  the  glens  and  the  fountain-flashing  heights  ;  and  fawn  and  whine 
The  cowering  beasts,  as  onward  cometh  the  presence  divine ; 
So  through  the  city  they  sped,  and  to  this  side  and  that  of  the  street 
The  people   made   way,   neither   dared  they   the   eyes    of  the 

princess  to  meet. 
But  when  she  had  left  behind  her  the  city's  fair-paved  ways, 
And  was  now  drawn  nigh,  as  she  drave  through  the  plain,  to 

the  holy  place. 
Then  from    the    smooth-running  wain  she  stept    to    the  earth 

straightway 
In  haste  ;  and  unto  her  maidens  thus  did  Medea  say  :  890 

*|0  friends,  I  have  verilygrievously  sinned,  for  I  took  no  thought 
To  have  nought  to  do  with  the  strangers  whose  wandering  feet 

have  sought 
Our  land  : — lo  now,  with  amazement's  perplexity  smitten  sore 
Is  all  the  city,  that  none  of  the  women,  which  heretofore 
Hitherward  have  assembled  day  by  day,  be  now  gathered  here. 
But  seeing  that  we  be  come,  and  that  none  beside  draweth  near, 
Come  then,  with  delightsome  song  without  stint  or  stay  let  us  sing 
To  our  soul's  satisfying,  and  pluck  we  the  lovely  flowers  that  spring 
Mid  the  tender  grass  ;  and  in  this  same  hour  on  the  homeward  way 
Will  we  wend.     Ye  also  with  many  a  gift  shall  return  this  day   900 
Homeward,  if  now  with  mine  heart's  desire  ye  will  gladden  me. 


122  THE  ARGONAUTS 

For  the  pleading  of  Argus  prevaileth  with  me,  and  of  Chalkiope: — 
But  hide  in  your  hearts  that  ye  hear  from  me ;  let  your  lips  be  dumb, 
Lest  to  my  father's  ears  peradventure  the  story  should  come  : — 
They  beseech  me  to  take  rich  gifts,  and  to  save  in  his  emprise  fell 
Yon  stranger  who  took  it  upon  him  the  might  of  the  bulls  to  quell. 
Yea,  and  their  counsel  was  good  in  mine  eyes,  that  I  bade  him  appear 
In  my  presence  this  day,  alone,  with  none  of  his  comrades  near. 
That  we  may  divide  those  presents  amongst  us,  if  haply  he  bring 
The  gifts  in  his  hand,  and  may  give  him  a  spell-drug,  a  balefuller  thing  c 
Than  the  strength  of  the  bulls.      But  stand  ye  aloof  when  he 

draweth  anigh.' 
So  spake  she,  and  pleased  them  all  her  counsel  of  subtlety. 

Now  Argus  apart  from  his  comrades  had  sundered  Aison's  son. 
So  soon  as  he  heard  from  his  brethren  how  that  Medea  had  gone 
Forth  in  the  misty  dawning  to  fare  unto  Hekate's  fane  ; 
And  over  the  plain  did  he  lead  him,  and  Mopsus  companioned 

the  twain, 
Ampykus'  son,  most  wise  to  interpret  the  tokens  aright 
Of  the  coming  of  birds,  and  the  signs  to  discern  oftheir  parting  flight. 
Never  yet  had  there  been  such  a  man  in  the  days  of  the  men  of  old — 
Nor  of  them  of  the  lineage  of  Zeus,  nor  the  champions  hero-souled9^ 
Which  sprang  from  the  blood  of  the  rest  of  the  Gods  that  endure 

for  aye — 
Such  a  man  as  the  bride  of  Zeus  made  Jason  to  be  that  day 
In  glory  of  bodily  presence,  in  witchery  of  his  tongue. 
And  ever  his  comrades  gazing  upon  him  in  wonderment  hung 
On  his  radiance  of  manifold  grace:  and  glad  for  the  way  they  should 

wend 
Waxed  Ampykus'  son,  as  foreboding,  I  trow,  how  all  should  end. 
Now  there  is  by  the  path  through  the  plain,  as  ye  draw  to 

the  temple  anigh, 
A  poplar  that  waveth  his  tresses  of  countless  leaves  on  high  ; 
And  thereon  had  the  crows  ever-babbling  pitched  as  it  were  their 

tent. 
Whereof  one,  clapping  her  pinions,  beneath  her  as  these  twain  went,  ^3 
The  counsel  of  Here  chanted,  mid  high  boughs  swayed  to  and  fro  : 


THE  THIRD  BOOK  123 

*  L  o  there,  what  a  pitiful  seer  !  — even  that  which  the  children 

know 
His  wit  can  in  no  wise  conceive,  how  that  no  word  sweet  and  dear 
Maiden  will  murmur  to  man,  while  strangers  be  loitering  near  ! 
Avaunt,  vile  prophet  and  witless  !  — on  thee  not  the  Cyprian  Queen, 
On  thee  not  the  gentle  Loves  of  their  kindness  are  breathing,   I 
ween  !  ' 
So  ceased  the  voice  of  her  chiding,  and  Mopsus  smiled  to  hear 
The  heaven-sent  cry  of  the  bird,  and  spake  to  the  heroes  the  seer  : 

*  Now  pass  thou  on  to  the  Goddess's  temple :  therein  shalt 

thou  find 
The  maiden,  O  Aison's  son  :  thou  shalt  prove  her  passing  kind  940 
By  the  promptings  of  Kypris,  who  also  thine  helper  shall  be  in 

thy  toil. 
Even  as  prophesied  Phineus,  Agenor's  son,  erewhile. 
But  we  twain,  Argus  and  I,  thy  coming  again  will  abide 
Aloof,  yea,  in  this  same  place  :  but  thou,  with  none  beside. 
With  wise  words  plead  with  the  maiden,  and  win  her  thy  will  to  do.' 
So  in  his  wisdom  he  spake,  and  the  others  consented  thereto. 
But    Medea — her    thoughts    unto    nought    else  turned,  upon 

nought  could  be  stayed. 
Howsoever  she  sang — but  never  a  song,  howsoe'er  she  essayed, 
Pleased  her,  that  long  its  melody  winged  her  feet  for  the  dance  ; 
But  ever  she  faltered  amidst  them,  her  eyes  ever  wandered  askance  950 
Away  from  the  throng  of  her  maidens  unresting ;  and  over  the  ways, 
Turning  aside  her  cheeks,  far  off  ever  strained  she  her  gaze. 
O  the  heart  in  her  breast  oft  fainted,  whenever  in  fancy  she  heard 
Fleet  past  her  the  sound  of  a  footfall,  the  breath  of  a  breeze  as 

it  stirred. 
But  it  was  not  long  ere  the  hero  appeared  to  her  yearning  eyes 
Stately  striding,  as  out  of  the  ocean  doth  Sirius  uprise. 
Who  climbeth  the  sky  most  glorious  and  clear  to   discern  from 

afar. 
But  unto  the  flocks  for  measureless  mischief  a  baleful  star  : 
Even  so  came  Aison's  son  to  the  maiden  glorious  to  see, — 
But  with  Jason's  appearing  dawned  on  her  troublous  misery.         96c 


124  THE  ARGONAUTS 

Then  it  seemed  as  her  heart  dropped  out  of  her  bosom  ;  a  dark 

mist  came 
Over  her  eyes,  and  hot  in  her  cheeks  did  the  blushes  flame. 
Nor  backward  nor  forward  a  step  could  she  stir  :  all  strength  was  gone 
From  her  knees  ;  and  her  feet  to  the  earth  seemed  rooted  ;  and  one    ! 

after  one 
Her  handmaidens  all  drew  back,  and  with  him  was  she  left  alone. 

So  these  twain  stood — all  stirless  and  wordless  stood  face  to  face  : 
As  oaks  they  seemed,  or  as  pines  upsoaring  in  stately  grace, 
Which  side  by  side  all  still  mid  the  mountains  rooted  stand 
When  winds  are  hushed  ;  but  by  breath  of  the  breeze  when  at 

last  they  are  fanned. 
Stir  they  with  multitudinous  murmur  and  sigh — so  they  97' 

By  love's  breath  stirred  were  to  pour  out  all  in  their  hearts  that  lay. 

Then  Aison's  son  beheld  how  the  maiden's  soul  was  adread 
With  wilderment  heaven-sent,  and  kindly-courteous  he  said  : 

'  Wherefore,  O  maiden,  dost  fear  me  so  sorely,  alone  as  I  am  ? 
Never  was  I  as  the  loud-tongued  blusterers,  void  of  shame, 
No,  not  when  aforetime  I  dwelt  in  mv  fatherland  oversea : 
Wherefore  be  thou  not,  maiden,  over-abashed  before  me, 
That  thou  shouldst  not  inquire  whatsoever  thou  wilt,  or  utter 

thy  mind. 
But,  seeing  we  twain  be  met  with  friendly  hearts  and  kind 
In  a  place  where  sin  is  of  heaven  accurst,  in  a  hallowed  spot,       98c 
Speak  thou,  and  question  withal  as  thou  wilt :  but  beguile  me  not 
With  pleasant  words,  forasmuch  as  thou  gavest  thy  promise  erewhile 
To  thy  sister,  to  give  me  the  charm  that  I  long  for,  the  herbs  of  guile.      | 
I  beseech  thee  in  Hekate's  name — for  the  sake  of  thy  parents  I  pray,     | 
And  of  Zeus,  that  o'er  stranger  and  suppliant  stretcheth  his  hand     i 

alway  ! 
Lo,  a  suppliant  am  I,  a  stranger  withal,  which  am  come  to  thee 

here. 
In  sore  straits  bending  the  knee  ;  for  in  this  my  task  of  fear 
Shall  I  nowise  prevail,  except  I  be  holpen  of  thine  and  thee. 
And  to  thee  will  I  render  requital  of  thanks  in  the  days  to  be — 
As  is  meet  and  right  for  them  in  a  far-away  land  which  dwell — 99a 


THE  THIRD  BOOK  125 

Making  glorious  thy  name  and  thy  fame,  and  mine  hero-companions 

shall  tell 
The  story  of  thy  renown,  when  to  Hellas  again  they  have  won  ; 
Yea,  and  the  heroes'  wives  and  mothers,  who  now  make  moan 
For  us,  I  ween,  on  the  strand  as  they  sit  by  the  sighing  brine  : 
And  to  scatter  in  air  their  bitter  affliction  is  thine — is  thine  ! 
Not  I  were  the  first — was  Theseus  not  saved  from  the  ordeal  grim 
By  Minos'  child  for  her  kindness'  sake  which  she  bare  unto  him, 
Ariadne,  born  of  the  Sun-god's  daughter  Pasiphae  ? 
But  she,  when  slumbered  the  wrath  of  Minos,  over  the  sea 
Sailed  with  the  hero,  forsaking  her  land.     The  Immortals  divine  1000 
Loved  well  that  maid  :  in  the  midst  of  the  firmament  set  is  her  sign, 
A  crown  of  stars,  which  they  name  Ariadne's  diadem, 
All  night  circling  amidst  of  the  signs  that  the  heavens  begem. 
Thou  also  shalt  have  of  the  Gods  like  thanks,  if  thou  shalt  redeem 
From  destruction  so  goodly  a  host  of  heroes — ah,  needs  must  it  seem 
That  through  form  so  lovely  as  thine  should  the  beauty  of  kindness 

beam !  ' 
Extolling  her  so  spake  he;  and  her  eyelids  drooped,  while  played 
A  nectar-smile  on  her  lips  ;  and  melted  the  heart  of  the  maid 
By  his  praising  uplifted  :  her  eyes  are  a  moment  upraised  to  his  eyes, 
And  all  speech  faileth  :  no  word  at  the  first  to  her  lips  may  rise  ;  loio 
But  in  one  breath  yearned  she  to  speak  forth  all  her  joy  and  her  pain. 
And  with  hand  ungrudging  forth  from  her  odorous  zone  hath  she 

ta'en 
The  charm,  and  he  straightway  received  it  into  his  hands  full  fain. 
Yea,  now  would  she  even  have  drawn  forth  all  her  soul  from  her 

breast. 
And  had  laid  it  with  joy  in  his  hands  for  her  gift,  had  he  made  request, 
So  wondrously  now  from  the  golden  head  of  Aison's  son 
Did  Love  out-lighten  the  witchery-flame  ;  and  her  sweet  eyes  shone 
With  the  gleam  that  he  stole  therefrom,  and  her    heart  glowed 

through  and  through 
Melting  for  rapture  away,  from  the  lips  of  the  rose  as  the  dew 
At  the  sun's  kiss  melteth  away,  when  the  dayspring  is  kindled  anew.  1020 
And  these  twain  now  on  the  earth  were  fixing  their  eyes  abashed, 


126  THE  ARGONAUTS 

And  anon  yet  again  their  glances  each  on  the  other  they  flashed, 
As  with  radiant  eyeHds  they  smiled  a  heart-beguiling  smile  : 
And  bespake  him  the  maiden  at  last,  yet  scarce  after  all  this  while  : 
*  Give  thou  heed  now,  that  my  counsel  may  haply  be  for  thine  aid. 
What  time  at  thy  coming  my  father  within  thine  hands  shall  have  laid 
The  crop  of  the  serpent's  jaws  for  thy  sowing,  the  teeth  of  bane. 
Then  shalt  thoii  watch  for  the  hour  when  the  night  is  sundered  in 

twain. 
Then  thou,  when  first  in  the  river's  tireless  flow  thou  hast  bathed. 
Alone,  with  none  other  beside  thee,  in  night-hued  vesture  swathed, : 
Shalt  dig  thee  a  rounded  pit,  and  over  the  dark  earth-bowl 
Shalt  thou  slaughter  a  ewe,and  shalt  burn  the  unsevered  carcase  whole 
On  a  pyre,  the  which  on  the  very  brink  of  the  pit  thou  hast  piled, 
And  propitiate  only-begotten  Hekate,  Perseus'  child. 
Out  of  a  chalice  pouring  the  hive-stored  toil  of  the  bee. 
So  when  thou  hast  sought  the  grace  of  the  Goddess  heedfully. 
Then  turn  thee  to  pass  from  the  pyre,  and  beware  lest  any  sound 
Or  of  footfalls  behind  thee  startle  thee,  so  that  thou  turn  thee  round. 
Or  of  having  of  hounds,  lest  all  that  is  wrought  be  undone  thereby. 
And  thyself  to  thine  hero-companions  never  again  draw  nigh.       lo. 
And  in  water  at  dawn  shalt  thou  steep  this  herb,  and  thy  limbs 

shalt  thou  bare. 
And  even  as  with  oil  shalt  anoint  thee  therewith;  and  prowess  there 
Shalt  thou  find,  and  strength  exceeding  great :  thou  wouldst  no- 
wise say 
That   with   men  thou  couldst  match  thee  in  might,  but    with 

Gods  that  abide  for  aye. 
Therewithal  be  thy  lance  and  thy  buckler  besprent  with  the  magic 

dew. 
And  thy  sword  :  then  shall  not  the  spear-heads  prevail  to  pierce 

thee  through 
Of  the  Earth-bom  men,  nor  the  fiery  breath  of  the  bulls  of  bane 
Unendurably  darting.     Yet  no  long  time  shalt  thou  thus  remain. 
But  only  for  that  same  day  :   notwithstanding  flinch  not  thou 
From  the  toil ;  and  another  thing  yet  for  thine  help  will  I  tell  to  lo; 

thee  now  : 


THE  THIRD  BOOK  127 

So  soon  as  the  mighty  bulls  thou  hast  yoked,  and  by  manifold  toil 
And  by  strength  of  thine  hands  hast  sped  the  share  through  the 

stubborn  soil, 
And  adown  the  furrows  the  bristling  harvest  of  giants  shall  stand, 
Where  fell  on  the  dusky  clods  the  serpent's  teeth  from  thine  hand, 
Even  as  thou  mark'st  them  in  throngs  through  the  fallows  up- 
bursting  to  day. 
Cast  thou  in  their  midst  unawares  a  massy  stone  :  and  they. 
As  ravening  hounds  o'er  a  gobbet  of  flesh  that  wrangle,  shall  slay 
Each  one  his  fellow :  thou  also  in  battle-fury  shalt  fall 
On  the  rout.      So  the  Golden  Fleece  unto  Hellas,  if  this  be  all, 
From  Aia  afar  shalt  thou  bear  : — O  yea,  turn  thou  and  depart     ic6c 
Whithersoever  it  pleaseth  thee  :  seek  the  desire  of  thine  heart !  ' 
She  spake,  and  her  eyes  to  the  earth  at  her  feet  in  silence  she  cast ; 
And  her  cheeks  divinely  fair  were  wet  as  her  tears  fell  fast, 
As  she  sorrowed  because  that  far  and  afar  from  her  side  o'er  the  main 
He  must  wander  away.     And  she  looked  in  his  eyes,  and  she 

spake  yet  again 
With  mournful  word,  and  his  right  hand  now  hath  she  ta'en  in 

her  own ; 
For  the  shamefastness  now  from  her  eyes  on  the  wings  of  love 
had  flown  : 

*  But  O  remember,  if  ever  thou  com'st  to  thine  home  afar, 
Medea's  name :  and  in  like  wise  I,  when  sundered  we  are. 

Will  forget  thee  not.     But  tell,  of  thy  good  will,  where  is  thine  home,  1070 
Whitherward  bound  thou  wilt  fare  in  thy  galley  over  the  foam. 
Is  it  unto  Orchomenus'  wealthy  burg  that  thy  feet  shall  go  ? 
Or  anigh  to  Aiaia's  isle  ?     Of  the  maiden  fain  would  I  know. 
Some  maiden  far-renowned,  whom  thou  namedst  the  daughter,  I  wis. 
Of  Pasiphae  :  kinswoman  unto  my  sire  that  lady  is.' 

So  did  she  speak  ;  and  over  him  stole,  as  the  maiden  wept. 
Love  the  victorious  ;  and  answering  speech  to  his  lips  hath  leapt : 

*  Yea,  verily,  never  by  night,  I  ween,  and  by  day  nevermore 
Shalt  thou  be  forgotten  of  me,  if  unto  Achaia's  shore 
Unscathed  I  shall  'scape  indeed,  and  Aietes  before  me  set,  1080 
For  mine  hands  to  achieve,  none  other  toil  more  desperate  yet. 


128  THE  ARGONAUTS 

But  if  this  hath  pleased  thee,  to  learn  what  land  I  call  mine  own, 

I  will  tell  thee — yea,  and  mine  own  heart  biddeth  me  make  it  known 

A  country  there  is — steep  mountain-ramparts  around  it  run — 

A  land  of  streams  and  of  pastures,  wherein  lapetus'  son, 

Even  Prometheus,  begat  the  valiant  Deukalion, 

Who  of  all  men  was  first  that  builded  a  city,  or  reared  a  fane 

To  the  Deathless,  and  first  was  he  of  the  kings  over  men  that  reign. 

That  land  do  the  folk  that  around  it  dwell  Haimonia  call. 

Therein  is  my  city  lolkos  found  :  therein  withal 

Stand  many  beside,  where  not  so  much  have  they  heard  as  the  name 

Of  Aiaia's  isle  :  but  rumour  hath  told  how  Minyas  came 

Thereout,  even  Minyas  Aiolus'  son,  and  builded  the  town 

Of  Orchomenus  ;  over  the  marches  Kadmeian  her  towers  look 

down. 
Yet  why  should  I  speak  things  vain  as  the  wild  winds'  empty  sound 
Of  our  home,  of  the  daughter  of  Minos,  the  princess  far-renowned 
Ariadne — the  glorious  name  whereby  that  heart's  desire 
Was  called  among  men,  the  maiden  of  whom  thou  dost  inquire  ? 
Would  God  that,  even  as  Minos  his  heart  unto  Theseus  inclined 
For  her  sake,  so  would  thy  father  with  me  be  in  friendship  joined  !  ' 
So  spake  he,  with  tender  words  and  caressing  the  maiden  to  woo. 
But  anguish  exceeding  bitter  was  thrilling  the  heart  of  her  through  : 
And  in  sorrow  of  spirit  with  vehement  words  she  made  reply  : 

<  O  haply  in  Hellas  'tis  good  to  be  heedful  of  friendship's  tie  : 
But  Aietes  is  not  such  a  man  among  men  as  thou  saidst  but  now 
Was  Minos,  Pasiphae's  lord  ;  and  with  Ariadne,  I  trow, 
May  I  nowise  compare  me  :  wherefore  of  guest-love  speak  not 

thou. 
Only  remember  thou  me,  when  safe  thou  hast  sped  thy  flight 
To  lolkos  ;   and  I  will  remember — yea,  in  my  parents'  despite 
Will  remember  thee  :  and  from  far  may  a  rumour  come  unto  me,  i 
Or  a  messenger-bird  with  the  tidings,  when  I  am  forgotten  of 

thee! 
Or  me,  even  me,  may  the  swift-winged  blasts  from  the  earth's 

breast  tear. 
And  away  hence  over  the  sea  to  the  land  of  lolkos  bear, 


THE  THIRD  BOOK  129 

That  so  I  might  cast  reproaches  on  thee,  yea,  unto  thy  face, 
And  remind  thee  that  all  by  mine  help  thou  escapedst — ^but  oh 

that  my  place 
That  day  were  of  right  in  thine  halls,  the  place  of  a  queen  at  the 

board !  ' 
So  spake  she,  and  down  her  cheeks  the  piteous  tears  aye  poured. 
But  he  caught  up  her  words  even  there,  and  with  comforting 

speech  did  he  say  : 

*  O  stricken  one,  leave  thou  the  empty  blasts  at  their  will  to  stray, 
And  the  messenger-bird  to  roam,  for  thy  words  are  but  vanity  !    "s. 
But  if  ever  thou  come  unto  those  abodes,  if  Hellas  thou  see. 
Honour  and  worship  of  men  and  of  women  then  shall  be  thine  ; 
Yea,  they  shall  reverence  thee  as  a  very  presence  divine. 
Because  that  again  to  their  homes  did  the  sons  of  the  Hellenes  win 
By  thy  devising,  yea,  and  the  brethren  of  these,  and  their  kin  ; 
And  many  a  stalwart  husband  of  thee  hath  received  his  life. 

Then  shalt  thou  enter  the  bridal  bower  with  me — my  wife  ; 
And  nothing  shall  come  between  our  love,  and  nothing  shall  sunder, 
Till  death's  shroud  fold  us  around,  and  our  hearts  are  chilled 

thereunder.' 
He  spake,  and  to  hear  him  her  soul  was  melted  within  her  then  :  "3< 
Yet  she  shuddered  to  see  the  deeds  whose  end  was  beyond  her  ken. 
Ah  hapless  ! — not  long  was  she  doomed  to  refuse  a  home  in  the  land 
Of  Hellas,  for  hereunto  was  she  guided  of  Here's  hand, 
To  the  end  that  for  Pelias'  bane  Aiaian  Medea  might  come 
Unto  lolkos  the  hallowed,  forsaking  her  fatherland-home. 

But  by  this  from  afar  were  the  handmaids  glancing  towards 

these  twain 
Full  oft  in  disquiet ;  for  need  was  now,  as  the  day  'gan  wane, 
That  the  maiden  unto  her  mother  should  turn  her  homeward  again. 
But  she  thought  not  yet  of  departing,  such  joy  did  her  spirit  take 
Alike  in  his  goodlihead,  and  the  winsome  words  that  he  spake.    ii4( 
But  Aison's  son  took  heed,  and  late  and  at  last  did  he  say  : 

*  Lo  now,  it  is  time  to  depart,  lest  the  sun's  light  fade  away 
Before  we  be  ware,  and  lest  some  stranger  should  haply  espy 
All  this.     Yet  again  will  we  meet,  coming  hitherward,  thou  and  I.' 

I 


I30  THE  ARGONAUTS 

So  in  sweetest  communion  did  these  try  each  the  other's  heart 
Thus  far  ;  and  thereafter  they  sundered.     And  now  did  Jason 

depart 
Unto  his  friends  and  the  ship,  while  his  heart  for  joy  beat  high  ; 
And  she  to  her  handmaids,  and  all  in  a  troop  did  these  draw  nigh 
To  meet  her  :  she  marked  them  not,  as  unto  her  side  they  drew  ; 
For  her  soul  to  the  clouds  had  soared  far  up  'twixt  earth  and 

the  blue. 
And  with  feet  that  moved  in  a  dream  she  mounted  the  lieet-run- 

ning  wain  : 
In  her  left  hand  grasped  she  the  reins,  in  her  right  the  whip  hath 

she  ta'en 
Curious-fashioned,  to  drive  the  mules  ;  and  fast  did  they  flee, 
As  on  to  the  city  they  sped  and  the  palace  ;  and  Chalkiope 
'Gan  ask  her  of  all  that  befell,  for  her  sons'  sake  anguish-stirred  ; 
But  rapt  in  a  trance  of  thoughts  back-drifting  she  heard  not  a  word, 
And  to  all  that  eager  questioning  never  a  word  she  said  : 
But  adown  on  a  lowly  stool  did  she  sit  at  the  foot  of  the  bed, 
On  her  left  hand  propping  her  cheek  as  she  wearily  drooped  aside  ; 
And  with  tears  were  her  eyes  brimming  over,  as  surged  the  dark  ii6 

chill  tide 
Of  remembrance  of  emprise  dread  that  the  covenant  bound  her  to 

bide. 
Now  when  Aison's  son  had  wended  aback  to  the  place  where 

stayed 
His  comrades,  what  time  he  had  left  them  in  faring  to  meet  the  maid. 
Then,  telling  them  all  the  story  the  while,  with  these  did  he  hie 
To  the  throng  of  the  heroes  ;   and  now  to  the  galley  drew  they  anigh. 
And  they  saw  him,  and  lo\nngly  greeted,  and  asked  him  of  all  that 

befell : 
And  he  in  the  midst  of  them  all  did  the  maiden's  counsels  tell ; 
And  he  showed  them  the  dread  spell-drug.      One  only  of  all  sat 

apart, 
Idas,  nursing  his  wrath  :   but  the  others  with  joyful  heart 
Turned  them,  when  darkness  fell,  their  hands  from  their  labour  ^ 

to  stay. 


THE  THIRD  BOOK  131 

And  in  great  peace  laid  them  down  to  their  rest :  but  with  dawn- 
ing day 
To  Aietes,  to  ask  for  the  seed  of  the  serpent,  sent  they  away 
Two  men  ;  and  foremost  Telamon  Ares-beloved  they  sent, 
And  Aithalides,  glorious  scion  of  Hermes,  beside  him  went. 
So  went  they,  and  not  for  nought,  for  to  these  at  their  coming 

were  given 
Of  Aietes  the  king  the  teeth  for  the  grim  strife  hard  to  be  striven. 
The  teeth  of  the  dragon  Aonian,  that,  seeking  the  wide  world 

through 
For  Europa,  Kadmus  found  in  Ogygian  Thebe,  and  slew. 
The  monster  that  lurked,  a  warder,  beside  the  Aretian  spring. 
There  also  he  dwelt,  by  the  heifer  led,  which  Apollo  the  king 
By  the  word  of  prophecy  gave  for  his  guide,  that  he  should  not  stray. 
These  teeth  did  Tritonis  the  Goddess  tear  from  its  jawbone  away, 
And  the  gift  on  Aietes  and  him  that  had  slain  the  beast  she  be- 
stowed. 
On  the  plain  Aonian  Kadmus  the  teeth  of  the  serpent  sowed  ; 
And  an  earth-born  nation  was  founded  there  of  Agenor's  son. 
The  remnant  left  when  the  harvest  of  Ares'  spear  was  done. 
So  the  teeth  to  bear  to  the  galley  Aietes  gave  full  fain. 
For  he  weened  that  to  win  to  the  goal  of  his  task  he  should  strive  in 

vain. 
Yea,  though  to  the  yoking  of  those  dread  bulls  he  should  haply 
attain. 
And  the  sun  down  under  the  dark  earth  far  away  in  the  west,': 
Beyond  the  uttermost  hills  of  the  Aethiops,  sank  to  his  rest ; 
And  the  Night  was  laying  her  yoke  on  the  necks  of  her  steeds.   Then 

spread 
On  the  shore  by  the  hawsers  of  Argo  the  heroes  each  his  bed. 
But  Jason,  so  soon  as  the  flashing  stars  of  the  circling  Bear 
Had  set,  and  under  the  firmament  hushed  was  all  the  air. 
Unto  the  wilderness  even  as  a  thief  all  stealthily  hied 
With  whatso  was  needful  ;  for  all  had  he  taken  thought  to  provide 
In  the  day  :  and  fared  with  him  Argus,  and  milk  from  the  flock  he 
bore, 


132  THE  ARGONAUTS 

And  a  ewe  therewithal ;  for  these  had  he  ta'en  from  the  galley's 

store. 
But  when  he  beheld  the  place,  which  was  far  aloof  from  the  tread  i 
Of  men,  where  under  the  unscreened  sky  the  clear  meads  spread, 
There  first  of  all  in  the  flow  of  the  sacred  river  he  bathed 
His  limbs  full  reverently,  and  all  his  body  he  swathed 
Inadark-hued  cloak,  which  Hypsipyle,  daughter  of  Lemnos'  race, 
Gave  him  aforetime,  memorial  of  many  a  loving  embrace. 
Thereafter  he  digged  him  a  pit  in  the  plain  of  a  cubit  wide. 
And  the  billets  he  heaped,  and  the  lamb's  throat  cut  by  the  dark  pit's 

side. 
And  the  carcase  he  stretched  on  the  pile,  and  he  thrust  thereunder  the 

fire 
And  kindled  the  brands,  and  mingled  libations  he  poured  on  the 

pyre. 
Calling  on  Hekate  Brimo  to  draw  for  his  helper  nigh. 

And  when  he  had  called  on  her,  backward  he  fared,  and  she 

hearkened  his  cry. 
Out  of  nethermost  caverns  of  darkness  the  Awful  Queen  drew  near 
To  the  Aisonid's  sacrifice,  and  about  her  did  shapes  of  fear, 
Even  serpents,  in  horrible  wreaths  and  knots,  mid  the  oak-boughs 

hang  : 
And  flashed  a  fitful  splendour  of  torches  unnumbered ;  and  rang 
Around  her  wild  and  high  the  baying  of  hounds  of  hell. 
And  all  the  meadow-land  trembled  under  her  tread  ;   and  the  yell 
Pealed  of  the  marish-haunting  Nymphs  of  the  river,  that  dance 
In  the  pastures  wherethrough  Amaryntian  Phasis'  ripples  glance. 
And  terror  gat  hold  upon  Aison's  son ;  but,  for  all  his  dread, 
Yet  he  turned  him  not  round  as  his  feet  thence  bore  him,  until 

he  had  sped 
Back  to  his  friends :  and  by  this  over  Caucasus'  snow-flecked  height, 
As  she  rose,  was  the  Dawn  mist- cradled  shooting  her  shafts  of  light. 

And  now  did  Aietes  array  in  the  corslet  of  stubborn  mould 
His  breast,  the  corslet  that  Ares  gave,  in  the  day  when  rolled 
Mimas  of  Phlegra  beneath  his  hands  in  the  dust  of  doom. 
And  he  set  on  his  head  the  golden  helmet  of  fourfold  plume 


THE  THIRD  BOOK  133 

Flaming  like  to  the  world-encompassing  sun's  red  gleam, 
When  first  in  the  dawning  he  leapeth  up  from  the  Ocean-stream. 
He  uplifted  his  manifold-plated  shield,  and  he  grasped  in  his  hand : 
His  terrible  spear  and  resistless  :  was  none  that  before  it  might  stand 
Of  the  rest  of  the  heroes,  since  Herakles  now  they  had  left  afar : 
He  only  against  it  had  matched  his  might  in  the  shock  of  war. 
And  his  fair-fashioned  chariot  of  fleet-footed  steeds  was  stayed 

for  the  king 
By  Phaethon  hard  by  ;   then  to  the  chariot-floor  did  he  spring  ; 
And  he  drew  through  his  fingers  the  reins,  and  forth  of  the  city-gate 
Drove  he  along  the  broad  highway,  by  the  lists  of  fate 
To  stand  ;   and  a  countless  multitude  hastened  forth  at  his  side. 
And  as  when  to  the  Isthmian  athlete-strife  Poseidon  doth  ride 
High-borne  on  his  car,  or  Tainarus-wards,  or  to  Lerna's  mere,    : 
Or  Hyantian  Onchestus,  the  temple-grove  that  the  nations  revere ; 
And  as  when  to  Kalaurea  oft-times  his  chariot-wheels  have  rolled, 
AndHaimonia's  rock,  and  Geraistus'  town  that  the  forests  enfold, 
Even  so  was  Aietes,  lord  of  the  Kolchian  folk,  to  behold. 

But  Jason  the  while,  obeying  the  rede  from  Medea  that  came, 
In  water  hath  steeped  that  drug  ;  and  he  sprinkled  his  shield  with 

the  same. 
And   his   sturdy  spear   and   his  sword  ;  and  his  comrades  with 

might  and  main 
Made  proof  of  his  harness,  thronging  around  :  yet  essayed  they 

in  vain 
To  bend  that  spear,  though  it  were  but  a  little  ;  but  evermore 
Unyielding  and  stark  it  abode  in  their  strong  hands,  even  as  before. : 
But  Idas,  Aphareus'  son — for  with  wrath  was  the  heart  of  him 

black — 
With  his  great  sword  hewed  at  the  shaft  by  the  butt  ;  but  the 

blade  leapt  back 
As  hammer  from  anvil,  jarred  by  the  shock  ;  and  a  mighty  shout 
From  the  heroes  rejoicing  in  hope  of  the  trial's  end  rang  out. 
Thereafter  his  own  limbs  Jason  sprinkled ;  and  lo,  he  was  filled 
With  terrible  prowess,  unspeakable,  aweless  ;  the  hands  of  him 

thrilled 


134  THE  ARGONAUTS 

Tingling  with  strength,  as  waxed  their  sinews  with  gathering  might. 

And  even  as  when  a  battle-steed  afire  for  the  fight 

Leapeth  and  neigheth  and  paw^eth  the  ground,  and  glorying  rears 

His  neck  like  a  stormy-crested  billow,  and  pricketh  his  ears,         126« 

Even  so  in  the  pride  of  his  prowess  triumphant  was  Aison's  son. 

And  hither  and  thither  on  high  he  bounded  now  and  anon. 

In  his  hands  uptossing  his  brazen  shield  and  his  spear's  tough  ash. 

Thou  hadst  said  that  adown  through  the  murky  welkin  the  leaping 

flash 
Of  the  tempest-levin  was  gleaming  and  flickering  once  and  again 
From  the  clouds   that  are  bringing  hard  after  their  burden  of 

blackest  rain. 
Nor  long  time  now  would  they  tarry  from  faring  forth  to  essay 
The  emprise,  but  row  after  row  upon  Argo's  thwarts  sat  they, 
And  onward  exceeding  swiftly  to  Ares'  plain  they  sped. 
Overagainst  the  city  so  far  before  them  it  spread  ' 

As  the  space  from  the  start  to  the  turning-post  that  the  car  must  win 
AVhat  time,  when  a  king  unto  Hades  hath  passed,  his  princely  kin 
For  hero  and  horse  ordain  the  strife  of  the  funeral  game. 
There  found  they  Aietes,  and  other  the  tribes  of  the  Kolchian  name. 
The  folk  on  the  cliffs  Caucasian  in  lines  far-stretching  arrayed, 
While  the  king  by  the  winding  brink  of  the  river  their  coming  stayed. 
And  Aison's  son,  when  his  comrades  had  made  the  hawsers  fast. 
Then  with  his  spear  and  his  shield  to  the  mighty  trial  passed. 
Bounding  from  Argo  forth  ;   and  there  was  he  bearing  with  him 
His  gleaming  helm  with  the  dragon's  sharp  teeth  filled  to  the  brim, : 
Vrith  his  brand  on  his  shoulders  slung,  bare-limbed,  and  in  some 

wise  seeming 
As  Ares,  in  some  wise  Apollo  the  lord  of  the  sword  gold-gleaming. 
O'er  the  fallow  he  glanced,  and  the  brazen  yoke  of  the  bulls  he  espied. 
And  the  plough,  hewn  solid  of  massy  adamant,  therebeside. 
So  he  strode  thereunto,  and  beside  it  his  strong  spear  planted  upright 
On  the  butt-spike  thereof,  and  leaning  against  it  the  morion  he  pight. 
Then  tracing  the  countless  tracks  of  the  bulls  right  on  did  he  fare 
With  nought  but  his  shield :  but  suddenly  forth  from  an  unseen  lair, 
From  a  den  in  the  bowels  of  the  earth,  wherein  was  their  grimly  stall. 


THE  THIRD  BOOK  135 

Whereover  the  lurid-gleaming  smoke  ever  hung  as  a  pall,  1290 

Forth  rushed  they  together  as  one,  outbreathing  the  splendour 

of  flame ; 
And  the  heroes  quaked  when  they  saw.      But  Jason,  as  onward 

they  came. 
Set  wide  his  feet ;  and  even  as  a  rock  in  the  sea  doth  abide 
The  charging  surges  whereon  the  scourging  storm-blasts  ride. 
Before   him   he   held   to   withstand  them   his   shield;    and   the 

terrible  twain 
Their  strong  horns  bellowing  dashed  against  it  with  might  and  main : 
Nevertheless  by  their  onset  they  stirred  him  never  a  jot. 
And  even  as  when  the  armourers'  bellows  of  stout  hide  wrought 
In  the  pierced  melting-pot  anon  with  murmur  and  sigh 
Kindle  the  ravening  flame,  and  anon  doth  the  breath  of  them  die  ;  1300 
And  an  awful  roar  goeth  up  therefrom  as  the  flames  leap  higher 
From  beneath,  even  so  these  twain  outbreathing  the  rushing  lire 
Roared  from  their  mouth  s,and  about  him  as  lightning  leapt  and  played 
The  devouring  blaze  :  yet  warded  him  ever  the  spells  of  the  maid. 
Then  grasped  he  the  tip  of  the  horn  of  the  right-hand  monster,  and  so 
Mightily  haled  with  his  uttermost  strength,  till  he  bowed  it  low 
To  the  brazen  yoke,  and,  striking  its  hoof  of  brass  with  his  foot. 
Suddenly  cast  it  adown  on  its  knees,  and  its  fellow  brute. 
Even  as  it  charged  him,  with  one  thrust  down  on  its  knees  did 

he  throw. 
Then  his  broad  shield  cast  he  away  on  the  ground,  and,  to  and  fro  1310 
To  this  side  and  that  side  striding,  he  kept  them  fall'n  in  their  place 
On  their  fore-knees,  swiftly  moving  athwart  the  fervent  blaze, 
While  marvelled  the  king  at  the  hero's  might.    Then  drew  nigh  two, 
Even  Tyndareus'   sons — for  that  thus  long  since  had  he  bidden 

them  do  ; — 
And  they  lifted  and  gave  him  the  yoke  on  the  necks  of  the  bulls  to 

be  bound : 
And  deftly  thereon  did  he  bind  it,  and  'twixt  them  upraised  from 

the  ground 
The  brazen  pole,  and  he  made  it  fast  by  its  pointed  tip 
Unto  the  yoke :  and  they  twain  back  from  the  fire  to  the 


136  THE  ARGONAUTS 

Withdrew.     Then  he  caught  up  again,  and  cast  on  his  shoulders 

his  shield 
Behind  him  ;  the  helmet  strong  with  the  serpent's  sharp  teeth  filled 
He  grasped, and  his  spear  resistless,wherewith,  as  a  ploughman  wight 
Pricketh  his  oxen  with  goad  Pelasgian,  so  did  he  smite 
The  flanks  of  the  monsters,  and  starkly  and  steadily  still  did  he  hold 
Unswerving  the  plough-heft  cunningly  fashioned  of  adamant  mould. 
But  the  bulls  were  raging  the  while  with  fury  exceeding  sore 
Outbreathing  the  ravening  splendour  of  fire :  as  that  mad  roar 
Of  the  buffeting  winds  was  the  blast  of  their  breath,  when  the 

seafarers  quail 
At  their  yelling  above  all  else,  and  furl  the  straining  sail. 
Yet  it  was  not  long  ere  the  beasts,  as  the  stern  spear  bade  them  to  toil. 
Moved  on,  and  behind  them  was  broken  the  fallow's  rugged  soil 
Cloven  apart  by  the  might  of  the  bulls  and  the  ploughman  strong. 
And  terribly  crashed  and  groaned,  the  ploughshare's  furrows  along. 
The  clods  uprent,  of  a  man's  load  each,  and  with  sturdy  stride 
Trampling  the  path  the  hero  followed,  and  aye  flung  wide 
The  teeth  of  the  serpent  over  the  clods  upheaved  by  the  share. 
Ever  heedfully  turning  his  head,  lest  haply,  or  e'er  he  was  ware. 
The  harvest  fell  of  the  Earth-born  against  him  should  rise  :  and 

with  strain 
Of  brazen  hoofs  on  laboured  the  while  that  fearsome  twain. 
And  it  was  so,  that  when  the  third  part  now  was  left  of  the  day. 
From  the  dawn  as  it  waned,  when  the  toil-for  wearied  labourers  pray  13 
'  O  come  to  us,  sweet  unyoking-tide !      O  tarry  thou  not !  ' 
Even  then  by  the  stalwart  ploughman  the  fallowfield's  earing 

was  wrought, 
For  all  it  was  ploughgates  four;  and  the  bulls  from  the  yoke  loosed  he, 
And  with  shouting  and  smiting  he  scared  them  over  the  plain  to  flee. 
Then  back  toward  Argo  he  hied  him  again,  while  yet  all  clear 
Of  the  Earth-born  brood  thefurrows  he  saw;  and  with  cheer  on  cheer 
His  comrades  hailed  him  and  heartened.     He  plunged  the  brazen 

gleam 
Of  his  helm  mid  the  river's  waters,  and  slaked  his  thirst  from 

the  stream. 


THE  THIRD    BOOK  137 

Then  bent  he  his  knees  till  supple  they  grew ;  and  he  filled  with  might 
His  great  heart,  battle-aflame  as  a  boar,  when  he  whetteth  for  fight  1350 
Against  the  hunters  his  tushes,  and  drippeth  the  plenteous  froth 
Down  from  his  jaws  to  the  ground,  as  he  churneth  their  foam  in 

his  wrath. 
Now  by  this  was  the  harvest  of  Earth-born  men  over  all  that  field 
Upspringing  ;  and  all  round  bristled  with  thronging  shield  on  shield 
And  with  battle-spears  twy-pointed,and  morions  glorious-gleaming 
The  garth  of  the  death-dealing  War-god  :  the  splendour  thereof 

upstreaming 
Through  the  welkin  lightened,  and  up  to  the  heaven  of  heavens 

did  it  go. 
And  as  when  on  the  face  of  the  earth  hath  fallen  abundant  snow, 
And  the  wind-blasts  chase  the  wintry  clouds  in  scattered  rout 
Under  the  mirk  of  the  night,  and  all  the  hosts  shine  out  1360 

Ofthe  stars  through  the  darkness  glittering;  so  those  Earth-born  men 
Flashed,  o'er  the  face  of  the  ground  upgrowing  ;  but  Jason  then 
Remembered  the  rede  that  Medea  the  cunning-hearted  spake  ; 
And  a  huge  round  boulder  up  from  the  earth  in  his  grasp  did  he  take — 
A  terrible  quoit  for  Ares  the  War-god  :  there  should  not  be  found 
Four  stalwart  men  of  strength  to  upraise  it  a  span  from  the  ground. 
This  caught  he  up  in  his  hand,  and  afar  with  a  leap  did  he  throw 
Into  their  midst,  and  behind  his  buckler  himself  crouched  low 
Awelessly.      Loudly  the  Kolchians  shouted — it  rang  as  the  roar 
Of  the  shouting  sea  when  his  surges  over  the  sharp  reefs  pour.     1370 
But  speechless  amazement  seized  on  Aietes  at  that  vast  sweep 
Ofthe  massy  crag:  and  the  Earth-born  asfleetfoot  hounds  'gan  leap 
Each  on  his  fellow,  and  yelling  they  slew  :  the  embattled  lines 
On  their  mother  the  earth,  by  their  own  spears  slain,  were  falling,  as 

pines 
Or  as  oaks  which  the  down-rushing  blasts  of  the  tempest  have 

scourged  and  riven. 
And  even  as  leapeth  a  fiery  star  from  the  depths  of  the  heaven. 
Trailing  behind  him  a  splendour,  a  marvel  to  men  which  mark 
How  he  darteth  in  shattering  glories  athwart  the  firmament's  dark, 
Even  so  seemed  Aison's  son  on  the  Earth-born  rushing  :  he  bare 


138  THE  ARGONAUTS 

His  sword  from  the  scabbard  outflashed;  and  here  he  smote  them  and  i 

there, 
Mowing  them  down  :   full  many  on  belly  or  flank  did  he  smite 
Which  had  won  to  the  air  waist-high,  and  some  which  had  risen  to 

light 
But  shoulder-high,  and  some  as  they  stood  but  now  upright. 
And  other  some,  even  as  their  feet  'gan  strain  in  the  onset  of  fight. 
And  like  as,  when  round  the  marches  the  war  upstarteth  from  sleep, 
A  husbandman,  fearing  lest  foemen  the  toil  of  his  hands  may  reap, 
Graspeth  a  curved  sickle  newly- whetted  in  hand. 
And  moweth  in  haste  the  crop  yet  green,  neither  letteth  it  stand 
Until  it  be  parched  in  the  season  due  by  the  shafts  of  the  sun  ; 
Even  so  of  the  Earth-born  the  harvest  he  reaped  ;  and  with  blood  13 

did  they  run, 
Those  furrows,  as  hurrying  runnels  that  brim  from  a  fountain's 

plashing. 
Fast  fell  they,  some  on  their  faces,  bowing  their  knees,  and  gnashing 
Their  teeth  on  the  rough  clods — this  one  stayed  on  his  palm,  and  he 
On  his  side  :  as  they  wallowed  they  seemed  as  the  monster-brood 

of  the  sea. 
And  many,  or  ever  their  feet  from  beneath  the  earth  had  come, 
Pierced  through,  from  the  height  whereunto  they  had  risen,  even 

therefrom 
Down-drooping,   were  resting  their   death-dewed  brows  on  the 

earth  again. 
Even  so,  I  ween,  when  Zeus  down-poureth  the  measureless  rain. 
Droop  orchard-shoots  new-planted,  till  low  on  the  earth  they  lie. 
Snapped  hard  by  the  roots,that  the  gardener's  toil  is  doubled  thereby,  i. 
And  there  come  on  the  heart  of  the  lord  of  the  vineyard,  which 

planted  the  same. 
Confusion  of  face  and  deadly  anguish     in  such  wise  came 
On  Aietes  the  king  vexation  of  spirit  and  heaviness. 
And  back  to  the  city  he  wended  amidst  of  the  Kolchian  press, 
Dark-plotting  to  bring  the  heroes'  purpose  with  speed  to  nought. 
And  the  daylight  died,  and  Jason's  mighty  achievement  was 
wrought. 


THE    FOURTH   BOOK 

Now  take  thou  up  the  story,  O  Goddess  of  Song,  and  sing 
The  afflictions  and  thoughts  of  the  Kolchian  maid  ;  for  as  touching 

this  thing 
In  a  tempest  of  wilderment  whirled  is  my  soul,  that  I  know  not  to  say 
Whether  for  bitter  infatuate  passion  she  fled  away 
From  the  land  of  the  Kolchian  folk,  or  driven  of  panic  dismay. 
Now  the  king  in  the  midst  of  his  Kolchian  princes  and  men  of 

might 
Against  the  heroes  devising  treachery  sat  through  the  night 
In  his  halls,  and  hot  in  his  soul  did  the  vehement  anger  rise 
For  the  trial  whose  issue  he  loathed,  and  he  weened  not  in  anywise 
That  unhelped  of  his  daughters  had  Jason  prevailed  that  task  to  lo 

fulfil. 
But  Medea's  spirit  did  Here  with  woefullest  anguish  thrill : 
And  she  quaked  like  a  fawn  light-footed,  the  which  the  hounds' 

deep  bay 
Hath  scared,  the  while  in  the  tangled  depths  of  a  copse  she  lay. 
For  straightway  she  surely  foreboded  that  nothing  concealed  should 

remain 
Of  her  help,  and  for  this  should  she  fill  up  a  cup  ofuttermost  bane. 
And  her  maids  which  were  privy  thereto  she  dreaded,  and  filled 

were  her  eyes 
With  fire,  and  the  ears  of  her  rang  with  a  sound  as  of  awful  cries. 
Andofttimes  she  clutchedat  her  throat,  and  moaned  in  her  wretched 

despair. 
As  once  and  again  she  rent  the  tresses  of  her  hair. 
And  there  had  the  maiden  beyond  her  weird  her  own  death  wrought 

139 


140  THE  ARGONAUTS 

By  tasting  of  poison  ;  and  Here's  purpose  had  come  to  nought, 
But  for  this,  that  the  Goddess  stirred  her  to  flee  in  her  panic  dread 
With  Phrixus'  sons.      So  her  fluttering  spirit  was  comforted 
In  her  breast ;   and  into  her  bosom  in  eager  haste  did  she  pour 
All  mingled  her  spell-drugs  and  poisons,  her  casket's  deadly  store. 
And  she  kissed  her  bed,  and  her  hands  on  the  walls  with  loving  caress 
Lingered:   she  kissed  the  posts  of  the  doors;   and  one  long  tress 
She  severed,  and  left  it  her  bower  within,  for  her  mother  to  be 
A  memorial  of  maidenhood's  days,  and  with  passionate  voice  moaned 
she  : 
*  This  tress  in  mine  own  stead  leave  I,  or  ever  I  go,  unto  thee,  3 
My  mother  ;  and,  far  though  I  wend,  yet  take  farewell  from  me  ! 
Farewell  thou,  Chalkiope,  and  mine  home  ! — Would  God  that  the 

wave, 
Ere  thou  cam'st  to  the  Kolchian  land,  O  stranger,  had  yawned  for 
thy  grave !  ' 
So  spake  she,  and  down  from  her  eyelids  in  floods  the  teardrops  ran. 
Then,  even  as  stealeth  forth  from  the  house  of  a  wealthy  man 
A  bondmaid,  whom  fate  but  newly  hath  torn  from  her  fatherland- 
soil. 
Who  never  till  now  hath  tasted  the  lot  of  bitter  toil. 
But  unschooled  to  misery,  shrinking  in  horror  from  slavery 
Under  the  cruel  hands  of  a  mistress,  forth  doth  she  flee  ; 
Even  so  from  her  home  forth  hasted  the  lovely  maid  that  day.     ^ 
Yea,  and  the  bolts  of  the  doors  self-moving  to  her  gave  way 
Leaping  aback  at  the  swift-breathed  spell  of  her  magic  song. 
And  with  feet  unsandalled  she  ran  the  narrow  lanes  along. 
While  her  left  hand  gathered  a  fold  of  her  mantle,  to  screen  from  sight 
Her  brows  and  her  face  and  her  lovely  cheeks,  the  while  with  her 

right 
The  hem  of  the  skirt  of  her  tunic  she  held  upraised  from  the  ground. 
And  swiftly  without  the  towers  that  girded  the  v.nde  burg  round 
By  the  darkling  path  in  her  terror  she  came  ;  and  no  man  knew 
Of  the  warders  thereof,  but  past  them  all  unseen  she  flew. 
Thence  marked  she  well  to  the  temple  the  way,  nor  unweeting  she  5a 
was 


THE  FOURTH  BOOK  141 

Of  the  path,  for  that  oft  thereby  in  her  questing  she  wont  to  pass 

Seeking  for  corpses  and  deadly  roots,  as  the  wont  is  still 

Of  the  sorceress.      Ever  with  quivering  dread  did  the  heart  of  her 

thrill. 
And  Titania  beheld  her,  as  upward  she  floated  from  heaven's  far 

bourne. 
As  she  wandered  distraught ;  and  the  white  Moon-goddess  in 

triumph-scorn 
Over  Medea  exulted,  and  thus  to  her  heart  'gan  say  : 

'  Ha,  not  I  only  adown  to  the  Latmian  cavern  stray, 
Nor  I  alone  for  Endymion  the  comely  with  love  am  afire ! 
Ha,  many  a  time  when  mine  heart  was  yearning  with  hot  desire, 
Did  tliy  strong  spells  drive  me  from  heaven,  that  thou  in  the  rayless  60 

night 
Unhindered  might'st  work  thy  sorceries,  deeds  that  are  aye  thy 

delight. 
Now  thou  too  hast  part  in  the  same  infatuate  passion,  I  trow, 
And  a  god  of  affliction  hath  made  this  Jason  a  torment  and  woe 
Unto  thee  !      Pass  on,  and  harden  thine  heart,  be  thou  never  so  wise. 
To  take  up  thy  burden  of  anguish,  thy  doom  full-fraught  with  sighs.' 
So  spake  she  ;  but  swiftly  the  maid's  feet  bare  her,  as  onward 
she  strained  ; 
And  glad  was  she  when  the  height  of  the  bank  of  the  river  she  gained. 
And  overagainst  her  beheld  the  splendour  of  fire  :  nightlong 
For  joy  of  the  trial  triumphant  they  fed  it,  the  hero-throng. 
And  she  lifted  her  voice  clear-pealing  :  across  the  darkness  she  cried :  70 
To  the  youngest  of  Phrixus'  children  she  called  from  the  farther  side. 
Unto  Phrontis  :  and  he  with  his  brother  discerned  Medea's  call ; 
And  the  son  of  Aison  knew  it ;  and  hushed  were  the  heroes  all 
In  amazement,  so  soon  as  they  knew  of  a  certainty  whose  was  the  cry. 
Thrice  called  she  aloud,  and  thrice,  as  his  company  bade  reply, 
Phrontis  in  answer  shouted,  the  while  with  swift-plied  oar 
The  heroes  were  rowing  their  ship  unto  where  she  stood  on  the 

shore. 
Not  yet  to  the  land  were  they  casting  the  hawsers  forth  of  the  ship, 
When  lo !   to  the  shore  with  feet  light-bounding  did  Jason  leap 


142  THE  ARGONAUTS 

From  the  height  of  the  deck-planks;  and  after  him  Phrontis  to» 

land  hath  sprung, 
And  Argus,  the  children  of  Phrixus.     About  their  knees  she  clung, 
Clasping  them  round  with  clinging  hands,  and  Medea  cried  : 
'  Deliver  me,  O  my  friends,  the  hapless  ! — yea,  and  beside 
Save  from  Aietes  yourselves  :  for  all  hath  been  brought  to  light. 
Yea,  all :  and  there  cometh  no  help  therefor.      But  speed  we  our 

flight 
In  your  ship,  ere  the  king  shall  have  mounted  his  swift-horsed  car 

for  the  chase. 
And  the  Fleece  of  Gold  will  I  give  you  :  with  slumber-spells  will 

I  daze 
Its  serpent  warder.     But  thou  in  thy  comrades'  presence  take 
The  Gods  to  witness  the  vows  which  thy  lips,  O  stranger,  spake 
Unto  me  :  neither  make  me,  when  hence  I  have  fled  and  afar  from  9^ 

my  land. 
An  outcast  dishonoured,  as  one  by  whose  side  no  kinsman  doth 

stand.' 
In  anguish  she  spake  :  but  with  gladness  exceeding  the  heart  'gan 

stir 
Of  Aison's  son.     At  his  knees  as  she  bowed,  he  uplifted  her 
Gently,  and  straightway  embraced  her,  and  spake  to  her  words  of 

cheer : 
<  Lady,  let  Zeus  himself  the  Olympian  my  troth-plight  hear  ; 
Let  Here  of  Wedlock,  the  Bride  of  Zeus,  in  witness  be  near, 
That  I  surely  will  make  thee  mine  own  true  wife  mine  halls  within 
Whensoever  returning  again  unto  Hellas-land  I  shall  win.' 

He  spake,  and  her  hand  with  his  right  hand  caught  in  the  clasp  of 

love. 
Then  did  the  maiden  bid  them  to  speed  to  the  sacred  grove 
The  swift  ship  straightway,  that  so,  ere  Aietes  was  ware,  they  might 

seize 
And  bear  away  in  the  darkness  of  night  the  Golden  Fleece. 
Even  with  the  word  was  the  deed  performed  by  the  eager  men  ; 
For  they  took  her  aboard,  and  forth  from  the  land  their  galley  then 
Thrust  they  :   with  plashing  loud  the  pinewood  oars  'gan  strain 


THE  FOURTH  BOOK  143 

In  the  hands  of  the  chieftains.      But  backward  darting  the  maiden 

again 
Outstretched  her  despairing  hands  to  the  shore  :  but  Jason  spake 
Comforting  words,and  restrained  her  whose  heart  went  nigh  to  break. 
In  the  hour  when  men  from  their  eyes  the  fetters  of  slumber  cast, 
Even  huntsmen,  which  put  their  trust  in  their  hounds,  norever  waste  "« 
In  slumber  the  end  of  the  night,  but  the  light  of  the  sun  they  prevent. 
Lest,  ere  they  be  forth,  he  efface  the  track  of  the  beasts,  and  the 

scent 
Of  the  quarry,  with  stainless-gleaming  shafts  down-smiting  thereon ; 
Even  then  with  the  maid  from  the  galley  forth  stepped  Aison's  son 
On  a  grassy  sward.     The  Couch  of  the  Ram  men  call  that  spot, 
For  that  there  he  rested  first  his  knees  with  toil  overwrought. 
As  he  bare  on  his  back  the  Minyan  scion  of  Athamas. 
And  anigh  it  all  smoke-besmirched  the  base  of  an  altar  there  was, 
Which  the  Aiolid  Phrixus  to  Zeus  the  Preserver  of  Exiles  did 

build. 
And  the  Golden  Marvel  offered  thereon,  as,  gracious-willed,        12c 
Hermes  bade,  in  the  way  as  he  met  him.     The  hero-crew 
There  set  them  aland,  as  Argus  gave  them  counsel  to  do. 
So  these  twain  fared  by  the  pathway  that  led  to  the  sacred  grove. 
Seeking  the  oak-tree  marvellous-huge,  mid  the  branches  whereof 
Was  hanging  the  Fleece,  like  a  morning-cloud  that  flusheth  red 
In  the  beams  of  the  sun  as  he  riseth  up  from  his  ocean-bed. 
But  barring  their  path  did  the  neck  exceeding  long  uprise 
Of  the  serpent  glaring  upon  them  with  keen  unsleeping  eyes 
As  they  came  ;  and  in  awful  wise  did  he  hiss  ;  and  the  banks  of 

the  flood 
Far-stretching  echoed,  and  sighed  the  measureless  depths  of  the  13c 

wood. 
The  people  that  dwell  from  Titanian  Aia  far  away 
In  the  Kolchian  land  by  the  outfall  of  Lykus  heard,  even  they — 
Of  Lykus,  which  parteth  his  flow  from  Araxes'  rattle  and  roar, 
And  blendeth  with  Phasis  his  sacred  stream,  and  these  twain  pour 
Their  mingled  waters  in  one  to  the  dark  Caucasian  sea. 
Young  mothers  in  terror  awoke,  and  their  hands  in  agony 


144  THE  ARGONAUTS 

Cast  they  around  their  babes  new-born,  in  their  arms  which  slept, 
As  the  tiny  Hmbs  with  the  horror  of  that  hiss  thrilled  and  leapt. 
And  even  as  when,  above  a  smouldering  faggot-pile. 
The  eddies  of  smoke  roll  upward  in  murky  coil  on  coil, 
One  after  another  swiftly  ever  on  high  they  spring 
From  beneath  in  wavering  wreaths  uprushing  and  hovering  ; 
Even  so  that  monster  was  writhing  and  heaving  the  endless  trail 
Of  his  coils  overlappedwith  the  myriad-ranged  harsh-crackling  scale. 
But,  even  as  he  writhed  him,  came  before  his  eyes  the  maid. 
With  sweet  voice  summoning  Sleep,most  mighty  of  Gods,  to  her  aid. 
On  the  monster  to  cast  his  spell  :  and  to  her  that  through  night's 

deep  mirk 
Paceth,  the  Underworld  Queen,  she  cried  to  speed  her  work. 
And  followed  her  Aison's  son  in  fear  :   but,  lulled  by  the  song, 
The  serpent  by  this  was  relaxing  the  thorn-ridge  endless-long 
Of  his  Titan-spires,  and  was  lengthening  out  his  coils  untold. 
Even  as  a  dark  wave  over  a  sluggish  sea  slow-rolled, 
A  dumb  and  a  thunderless  surge  :  yet  still,  in  despite  of  the  spell. 
His  grisly  head  he  uplifted  on  high,  with  purpose  fell 
To  encompass  the  twain  with  the  grip  of  his  murderous  jaws:  but  she, 
Dipping  the  newly-slivered  spray  of  a  juniper-tree 
In  her  mystic  brewis,  singing — singing — rained  down  fast 
Untempered  spells  on  his  eyne,  and  about  him  and  o'er  him  was  cast 
Sleep  by  the  drug's  strong  fume  ;  and  his  dragon-jaws  he  laid 
On  the  earth  in  the  selfsame  place,  and  his  endless  coils  through  i( 

the  shade 
Of  the  myriad  stems  of  the  forest  stretching  afar  were  unrolled. 
Then  from  the  oak-tree  the  hero  snatched  the  Fleece  of  Gold 
At  the  maiden's  bidding.      Unswerving  all  the  while  she  stayed 
And  smeared  on  the  head  of  the  monster  her  unguent,  till  Jason  bade. 
Till  himself  said,  '  Turn  we  again,  and  fare  to  the  galley  aback.' 
Then  left  she  the  War-god's  grove,  where  the  vast  shades  brooded 

black. 
And  even  as  a  maiden  may  catch  on  her  vesture  of  delicate  thread 
The  light  of  the  mid-month's  moon,  when  she  saileth  the  heavens 

overhead 


THE  FOURTH  BOOK  145 

Her  high-roofed  bridal  bower,  and  her  heart  in  her  breast  is  aglow 
With  joy  that  her  eyes  behold  that  lovely  splendour  ;   so  170 

Exulting  did  Jason  the  mighty  Fleece  in  his  hands  upraise. 
And  suddenly  over  his  forehead  and  over  his  sunburnt  face 
From  its  shimmering  flocks  there  rested  a  flush  that  flamelike  shined. 
And  great  as  the  hide  of  a  yearling  steer,  or  the  fell  of  a  hind 
That  is  called  a  brocket  in  speech  of  the  hunters  of  the  wold. 
So  great  was  its  length  and  its  breadth  all  overtufted  with  gold. 
Heavy  with  flocks  thick-clustered ;  and  ever  as  onward  he  passed 
From  under  his  feet  the  earth  an  answering  sheen  upcast. 
Now  veiling  the  man's  left  shoulder  the  gleaming  burden  shone 
Down-trailed  from  the  height  of  his  neck  to  his  heel  as  he  trod,  180 

and  anon 

Did  he  gather  it  up  in  his  clutch,  for  that  sorely  he  feared  the  while 

Lest  a  God  or  a  man  might  meet  him  and  wrest  from  his  hands 

the  spoil. 

Dawn  over  the  earth  was  spread,  and  now  those  twain  returned 

To  their  company.     Marvelled  the  youths  to  behold  how  the 

great  Fleece  burned 
A  splendour  as  lightning  of  Zeus.    Upsprang  they,  for  eager-keen 
Was  each  man  to  touch  the  glory,  and  clasp  it  his  hands  between. 
But  the  son  of  Aison  withheld  them  :  a  mantle  thereover  he  threw 
New-woven,  to  hide  it.     To  Argo's  stern  the  maiden  he  drew. 
And  he  seated  her  there  ;  and  he  spake  to  the  heroes  all  his  rede  : 
*  No  longer  forbear  now,  friends,  to  your  fatherland  homeward  190 
to  speed  : 
For  the  emprise  now  for  the  which  we  dared  the  peril  and  pain 
Of  a  desperate  voyage,  toiling  with  bitter  travail  and  strain, 
All  this  by  the  maiden's  counsels  lightly  hath  been  fulfilled. 
To  the  home-land  her  will  I  bring — yea,  so  herself  hath  willed — 
My  bride  true-wedded  :   but  ye,  forasmuch  as  the  saviour  she  is 
Of  all  Achaia-land,  and  of  your  own  souls,  I  wis. 
Save  her  ;  for  surely,  I  ween,  will  Aietes  with  all  his  array 
Go  forth,  with  intent  from  the  river  seaward  to  bar  our  way. 
Now  down  through  the  ship,  man  ranged  after  man  in  order  arow. 
Shall  the  half  of  you  sit  at  the  oars  to  toil,  that  the  half  of  you  so  200 

K 


146  THE  ARGONAUTS 

May  uplift  the  ox-hide  shields  for  a  fence  from  the  darts  of  the  foe,    ' 
Guarding  our  home-return.      Lo,  now  in  our  hands  do  we  bear 
Our  children,  our  fatherland  dearly-beloved,  and  the  silver  hair 
Of  our  sires  ;  and  with  this  our  venture  the  fate  of  Hellas  is  bound. 
Or  to  reap  confusion  of  face,  or  a  glory  far-renowned.' 

So  spake  he,  and  donned  his  harness  of  fight ;  and  shouted  the  crew 
With  wondrous-eager  souls  ;  and  forth  of  the  scabbard  he  drew 
His  sword,  and  the  ship's  stern-hawsers  he  severed  in  twain  with 

the  brand. 
And  hard  by  the  maiden,  in  armour  clad,  hath  he  taken  his  stand 
By  Ankaius  the  helmsman,  and  flashed  the  oars  as  the  good  ship  2 

raced, 

As  to  speed  her  forth  of  the  river  they  strained  in  desperate  haste. 

But  by  this  to  Aietes  the  king  and  to  all  the  Kolchians  known 

Was  Medea's  love,  and  revealed  were  all  the  deeds  she  had  done. 

And  they  swarmed  to  the  gathering-place  in  their   harness  of 

battle,  untold 
As  the  crested  waves  of  the  sea  by  the  stormy  wind  uprolled. 
Or  as  leaves  of  the  forest  myriad-branched  that  earthward  sail 
In  the  month  of  the  fall  of  the  leaf — whereof  who  telleth  the 

tale  ? 
So  numberless  these  went  pouring  the  banks  of  the  river  along 
With  frenzy  of  shouting  :  on  fair-fashioned  chariot  amidst   of 

the  throng 
Glorious  Aietes  showed  above  all  with  his  steeds,  the  gift  : 

Of  the  Sun-god ;  for  even  as  the  blasts  of  the  wind  were  they 

passing-swift. 
In  his  left  hand  his  shapely-rounded  buckler  on  high  did  he  rear, 
And  a  pine-brand  exceeding  huge  in  his  right :  and  his  giant  spear 
Beside  him  rose  up  straight  and  high  ;  and  the  reins  of  the  car 
Absyrtus  grasped  in  his  hands.      But  Argo  by  this  was  afar 
Cleaving  the  brine,  to  the  stalwart  oarsmen's  stroke  as  she  leapt 
By  the  down-rushing  flood  of  the  mighty  river  seaward  swept. 
But  the  king  in  a  madness  of  anguish  uplifted  his  hands  to  the  sky: 
To  the  Sun  and  to  Zeus,  the  beholders  of  evil  deeds,  did  he  cry  ; 
And  he  turned  him  to  all  his  host,  and  he  shouted  terribly :  230 


THE  FOURTH  BOOK  147 

*  Except  ye  lay  hands  on  the  maiden,  and  seize,  or  on  land  it 

may  be, 
Or  finding  their  ship  yet  tossed  on  the  swell  of  the  open  sea, 
And  bring  her,  that  so  I  may  glut  my  fury,  wherewith  I  burn 
For  revenge,  on  your  own  heads  all  these  things  shall  light :  ye 

shall  learn 
The  measure  of  all  my  wrath  and  all  my  revenging  then.' 

So  spake  Aietes  :  on  that  same  day  did  the  Kolchian  men 
Launch  forth  their  galleys,  and  cast  in  the  ships  their  tackling-array. 
And  the  selfsame  day  sailed  forth  on  the  sea :  thou  wouldst  not  say 
That  so  mighty  a  host  was  this  of  ships,  but  in  crowd  on  crowd 
The  nations  of  bird-folk  over  the  sea  were  clamouring  loud.         240 

Swiftly  the  wind  blew,  even  as  Here  the  Goddess  planned. 
To  the  end  that  Aiaian  Medea  might  reach  the  Pelasgian  land 
Right  soon,  that  in  her  might  the  bane  of  Pelias'  house  be  found. 
So  the  men  with  the  third  day's  dawn  the  hawsers  of  Argo  bound 
To   the  Paphlagons'   strand,  where  the  sea  and  the  waters  of 

Halys  meet : 
For  Medea  bade  them  to  land,  and  with  sacrifice  to  entreat 
Hekate's  grace.     What  things  for  that  incantation  of  hell 
The  maiden  prepared  and  offered,  thereof  let  no  man  tell. 
Let  my  spirit  enkindle  me  not  to  darken  therewith  my  lay ! 
Yea,  awe  refraineth  my  lips.     Yet  the  altar  on  that  far  day  250 

To  the  Goddess  upreared  by  the  heroes  hard  by  the  breaking  sea 
Yet  standeth,  a  sign  to  be  seen  of  the  children  of  days  to  be. 

Straightway  to  Aison's  son,  and  the  heroes  withal,  came  back 
Remembrance  of  Phineus,  and  how  that  he  spake  of  another  track 
To  be  found  from  Aia  :  howbeit  to  all  was  his  meaning  dim, 
Till  Argus  arose  and  spake,  and  eager  they  hearkened  to  him  : 

*  We  may  win  to  Orchomenus,  whither  the  prophecy  bade  us  fare 
Of  the  seer  unerring,  whose  guests  in  the  days  overpast  ye  were. 
For  another  voyaging-course  there  is,  a  sea-path  shown 

By  the  priests  of  the  Deathless,  the  sons  of  Thebe,  Tritonis'  town.  260 
Not  yet  was  the  star-host,  that  whirl  round  heaven  their  chariots 

of  fire ; 
Not  yet  of  the  sacred  Danaan  race,  though  a  man  should  inquire, 


148  THE  ARGONAUTS 

Aught  might  he  hear.     Apidanian  Arcadians  alone  on  the  earth 

Dwelt — the  Arcadians  which  lived,  or  ever  the  moon  had  birth, 

Mid  the  mountains  acorn-sustained,  it  is  told.      No  sceptred  hand 

Of  Deukalion's  glorious  line  ruled  then  the  Pelasgian  land, 

In  the  days  when  men  called  Egypt,  the  fruitful  land  of  corn, 

The  Morning-land,  the  mother  of  peoples  elder-born. 

And  of  Trito  her  fair-flowing  river  was  named,  of  whom  all  the  plain 

Of  the  Morning-land  is  watered  ;  for  never  descendeth  the  rain  27c 

From  Zeus  thereupon  :  from  his  floods  the  stintless  harvests  spring. 

From  that  land,  say  they,  a  certain  king  went  journeying 

All  Europe  and  Asia  through,  by  the  strength  and  the  prowess 

made  bold 
And  the  aweless  might  of  his  people,  and  cities  he  builded  untold 
Whithersoever  he  came,  whereof  some  remain  to  this  day. 
Some  not,  for  that  long  generations  since  then  have  passed  away. 
But  Aia  abideth  unshaken  :   a  nation  the  sons'  sons  yet 
Abide  of  the  men  whose  dwelling  in  Aia  the  hero  set. 
And  graven  memorials  these  men  keep  of  their  fathers'  days 
Upon  pillars,  whereon  is  every  bourne  and  all  the  ways  aSc 

Of  the  watery  waste  and  the  land,  as  ye  journey  on  all  sides  round. 
Now  a  river,  the  uttermost  horn  of  the  Ocean,  therein  is  found, 
Wide  and  exceeding  deep,  that  a  diomond  may  sail  the  same. 
Far  on  their  chart  have  they  traced  it,  and  Ister  they  named  its  name. 
And  awhile  through  the  boundless  tilthland  it  cleaveth  its  way  afar 
As  but  one  ;  for  beyond  the  North-wind's  blasts  its  fountains  are, 
"Where  midst  the  Rhipaian  mountains  it  bursteth  forth  in  thunder  : 
But  so  soon  as  it  parteth  the  Thracian  and  Scythian  marches  asunder, 
There  is  it  cleft  in  twain,  and  the  half  of  its  flood  it  sendeth 
Hereby  to  the  sea  Ionian,  the  residue  southward  trendeth  290 

Where  a  deep  gulf  up  from  the  sea  Trinacrian  northward  bendeth — 
That  sea  which  lieth  beside  your  land,  if  the  tale  be  true 
That  forth  of  your  land  Acheloiis  the  river  fleeteth  thereto.' 

So  spake  he  ;  and  sent  by  the  Goddess  a  happy  portent  came  ; 
And  all  they  looking  thereunto  hailed  it  with  joyful  acclaim 
For  a  sign  that  their  voyaging-track  was  this:  for  a  splendour  in  heaven 
Shone  in  a  far-stretching  furrow  to  point  where  their  path  was  given. 


THE  FOURTH  BOOK  149 

And  there  glad-hearted  they  left  the  son  of  Lykus,  and  lied 
With  wide-spread  canvas  over  the  sea,  looking  back  as  they  sped 
On  the  Paphlagonian  Hills,  neither  rounded  Karambis-head,        300 
Forasmuch  as  the  breezes  held,  and  the  heavenly  fire's  long  gleam 
Shone  ever  before,  till  they  won  unto  Ister's  mighty  stream. 
Now  the  rest  of  the  Kolchian  host,  when  nothing  their  search 

availed, 
Forth  through  the  Crags  Dark-blue  from  the  Pontus-sea  had  sailed. 
But  others  went  to  the  river,  whose  chieftain  Absyrtus  was ; 
And  unto  the  Fair  Mouth  turning  aside  from  the  sea  did  he  pass. 
And  prevented  them,  mooring  beyond  the  neck  of  land  that  ran 
Athwart  the  innermost  gulf  of  the  sea  Ionian. 
For  around  the  island  Peukc  the  waters  of  Ister  pour. 
An  isle  three-cornered,  whose  breadth  looketh  out  on  the  breakers  3^0 

hoar. 
And  the  narrow  point  up-stream,  and  about  it  the  flood's  outfall 
Is  cleft  in  twain  ;  and  the  one  the  passage  of  Narex  they  call ; 
And  that  on  the  nether  side  the  Fair  Mouth  :   even  thereby 
The  Kolchian  array  with  Absyrtus  anchored  hastily  ; 
While  the  heroes  sailed  far  up  to  the  uttermost  spur  of  the  isle. 
Now  the  field-abiding  shepherds  forsook  in  the  meadows  the  while 
Flocks  without  number,  for  dread  of  the  ships  ;  for  they  weened 

that  these 
Were  beasts  that  had  risen  out  of  the  monster-teeming  seas. 
For  never  on  galleys  that  ride  the  waves  had  they  gazed  ere  then. 
Nor  they,  nor  the  Thracian  Scythians,  nor  yet  the  Sigynian  men,  320 
Nor  yet  the  Graukenian  folk,  nor  the  Sindian  tribes  that  abide 
Round  L  aurium  now,on  the  steppes  of  thewilderness  boundless- wide. 
But  when  they  had  run  by  Angurus,  the  Kauliac  cliffs  withal — 
Afar  from  Angurus  the  mountain  riseth  their  long  rock-wall — 
Around  which  Ister  divideth,  and  this  way  and  that  way  run 
His  rushing  waters,  and  out  to  the  Laurian  plain  they  won, 
Then  forth  to  the  Kronian  Sea  the  Kolchians  came,  and  beset 
All  the  outgoings  thereof,  that  the  quarry  might  'scape  not  their  net. 
So  Argo,  descending  behind  them  the  flood,  passed  forth  hard  by 
Where  islands  twain,  the  Bryge'ian  Isles  of  Artemis,  lie.  330 


150  THE  ARGONAUTS 

Now  it  fell  that  in  one  of  these  a  hallowed  temple  stood  ; 

In  the  other  the  heroes,  avoiding  Absyrtus'  multitude 

Landed,  seeing  the  foe  had  left  those  twin  isles  void 

Of  their  host,  for  awe  of  the  Daughter  of  Zeus  ;  but  all  beside. 

Thronged  with  the  Kolchian  men,  barred  every  seaward  way. 

Yea,  too,  of  their  host  upon  other  isles  hard  by  left  they 

Which  betwixt  the  Nestian  land  and  Salanko  the  river  lay. 

There,  being  few  against  many,  that  day  had  the  Minyan  men 
Yielded  in  that  grim  fight  to  their  foes ;  howbeit  ere  then 
Made  they  a  covenant,  fain  that  the  strife  should  abide  unstriven.  34 
For  the  Golden  Fleece, — forasmuchasAietes'pledgehad  been  given 
To  the  heroes  therefor,  if  the  ordeal  they  dared,  and  accomplished 

the  toil — 
That  prize  should  they  keep,  as  lawfully  won;  yea,  whether  their  guile 
Or  their  strength  in  the  king's  despite  had  prevailed  that  splen- 
dour to  win. 
But  as  touching  Medea — for  stubborn  the  wrangling  waxed  herein — 
Unto  Leto's  Daughter,  aloof  from  the  throng,  should  they  give 

her  in  ward. 
Till  her  cause  should  be  judged  of  a  king,  some  justice-dispensing 

lord, 
Whether  he  doom  that  they  yield  her  up  to  return  to  the  home 
Of  her  father,  or  doom  her  to  Hellas-land  with  the  heroes  to  come. 
Now  so  soon  as  the  maiden  mused  upon  all  things  purposed  of 35' 

these. 
With  keen-thrilling  anguish  her  heart  was  tempest-tossed  without 

cease  : 
And  straightway  she  called  forth  Jason  aloof  from  his  comrades 

alone. 
And  she  led  him  away  and  away,  till  far  apart  were  they  gone : 
There  uttered  she  speech  all  broken  with  sobs,  as  she  looked  in 

his  eyes  : 
*  O  Aison's  son,  what  purpose  is  this  that  now  ye  devise 
Touching  me  ?    Hath  thy  triumph  brought  utter  forgetfulness  unto 

thee? 
Dost  thou  nothing  regard  thy  promises,  all  that  thou  spakest  to  me 


THE  FOURTH  BOOK  151 

In  stress  of  thy  need  ?     Where  now  are  the  oaths  of  the  Suppliants' 

King 
Zeus  ? — and  thine  honied  promises,  whither  have  these  taken  wing  ? 
By  reason  of  these,  in  unseemly  wise,  with  passion  unshamed        360 
I  forsook  my  fatherland  home,  and  the  glory  of  halls  far-famed, 
Yea,  and  my  parents — all  that  was  most  unto  me  ;  and  I  sail 
Far  over  the  sea  alone,  where  the  plaintive  sea-mews  wail, 
Because  of  thy  trouble,  that  I  might  redeem  from  destruction  thy  life 
To  accomplish  the  fire-bulls'  quelling,  the  Earth-born  giants'  strife. 
Yea,  and  the  very  Fleece,  for  the  which  ye  had  sailed  to  our  shore, 
All  by  my  folly  ye  won.      Foul  shame  thereby  did  I  pour 
On  womankind !    Wherefore,  I  say,  as  thy  daughter,  thy  wife,  I 

stand. 
Yea,  and  thy  sister,  who  follow  thee  back  unto  Hellas-land. 
Oh  now  with  purpose  of  heart  stand  by  me,  neither  forsake  me    370 
Afar  and  forlorn  of  thee,  to  the  gathering  of  kings  to  betake  thee  I 
But  in  any  wise  save  me  ;   and  sealed  abide  thy  solemn  vow. 
Which  is  plighted,  by  justice  of  man  and  of  God  ;  or  else  do  thou 
Shear,  of  thy  pity,  this  my  throat  with  thy  falchion  through, 
That  so  for  my  frenzied  love  I  may  reap  the  guerdon  due. 
O  heartless  ! — if  that  he  doom  that  my  brother's  prey  I  remain, 
This  king  unto  whose  stern  judgment  ye  now  would  commit,  ye 

twain. 
Your  cruel  covenant,  how  shall  I  come  to  my  father's  sight  ? 
With  glory  in  sooth! — what  revenges,  what    devilish    torment 

will  light 
Upon  me  ! — what  agony-cup  shall  I  drain  for  the  dreadful  deed  380 
That  I  wrought  !      Oh,  never  think  that  in  bliss  your  return  shall 

speed ! 
Ne'er  may  the  World's  Queen,  bride  of  Zeus,  accomplish  for  thee — 
She  in  whom  thou  delightest — this !  Then  may'st  thou  remember  me 
When  anguish-racked  :  may  the  Fleece  like  a  dream  fleet  away 

from  thine  hand 
Down  the  wind  to  the  netherworld-gloom  !      Be  thou  chased  from 

thy  fatherland 
By  the  Spirits  of  Vengeance  for  me,  even  after  the  measure  of  all 


152  THE  ARGONAUTS 

That  through  thy  betrayal  I  suffered  !      That  earthward  my  curses 

should  fall 
Unaccomplished,  shall  God  forbid  ;  for  a  great  oath  thou  hast 

transgressed, 
O  ruthless  !      Not  long,  for  all  this  covenant-plight,  at  rest 
From  your  troubles,  on  me  shall  ye  wink  with  the  eye,  to  make  39 

me  your  jest.' 
So  spake  she,  seething  with  vehement  rage  ;  fierce-eager  was  she 
To  fire  the  ship,  and  to  hew  it  in  pieces  utterly. 
And  to  hurl  herself  mid  the  ravening  flame.      But,  half-adread. 
Did  Jason  essay  to  soothe  her  with  gentle  words ;  and  he  said  : 

*  Ah,  lady,  forbear  :   me  too  this  covenant  liketh  not. 
Only  a  little  delay  from  the  strife  herein  have  we  sought : 
Such  a  host  of  foes  like  a  cloud  of  fire  is  on  every  side 
For  thy  sake.     Yea,  and  the  folk  which  in  this  same  land  abide 
Be  eager  to  help  Absyrtus,  that  back  again  to  the  hall 
Of  thy  sire  he  may  hale  thee  like  to  a  captive  battle-thrall. 
Howbeit  should  we  in  hateful  destruction  all  be  slain 
If  we  closed  in  the  fight  with  these  ;   and  therein  were  bitterer  pain. 
If  we  leave  thee  a  prey  no  less  unto  these,  and  withal  we  die. 
But  now  shall  this  covenant  find  us  a  path  of  guile,  whereby 
To  destroy  him.      The  folk  of  the  land  shall  not  be  fain  as  before 
To  favour  the  Kolchians  in  thee,  when  their  king  shall  be  with 

them  no  more. 
He  who  forsooth  as  thy  champion  and  brother  doth  claim  thee 

to-day. 
Yea  also,  I  will  not  refrain  me  from  matching  my  might  in  the  fray 
With  the  Kolchian  men,  if  then  they  bar  mine  homeward  way.' 
For  her  comfort  he  spake ;  but  with  deadly  words  did  she  410 

make  reply : 
*  Give  heed  now  : — it  needs  must  be,  when  peril  and  shame  are  nigh. 
That  we  likewise  counsel  thereafter.     Distraught  I  was  at  the  first 
In  mine  error,  and  god-misguided  accomplished  desires  accurst. 
Do  thou  be  my  shield  from  the  Kolchian  spears  in  the  toil  of  the 

strife. 
And  I  will  beguile  this  man  to  lay  in  thine  hands  his  life. 


THE  FOURTH  BOOK  153 

He  shall  come  ;  and  with  dazzling  gifts  of  welcoming  win  thou 

his  heart, 
If  I  haply  persuade  the  heralds  to  hold  themselves  apart, 
And  draw  him  alone  unto  me  to  hearken  the  thing  I  would  say. 
Then  thou,  if  this  deed  be  good  in  thy  sight — I  say  not  nay — 
Slay  him,  and  meet  thereafter  the  Kolchian  men  in  the  fray.' 
Even  so  these  twain  consented,  and  twined  the  net  of  guile 
For  Absyrtus  ;   and  many  a  gift  of  welcome  prepared  they  the  while. 
And  with  these  a  sacred  mantle,  a  woven  crimson  flame. 
Gave  they,  Hypsipyle's  gift.     The  Graces  had  fashioned  the  same 
For  the  God  Dionysus  in  sea-girt  Dia  ;   and  he  on  his  son, 
Thoas,  bestowed  it ;  and  this  at  his  fleeing  Hypsipyle  won. 
And,  with  many  a  lovely  marvel,  that  parting-gift  wrought  fair 
She  gave  unto  Aison's  son.      Thine  hands  would  linger  there 
Touching,  thine  eyes  beholding,  ever  unsatisfied. 
And  a  scent  ambrosial  breathed  therefrom,  since  that  sweet  tide   a 
When  the  King  Nysaian  himself  thereon  lay  down  to  rest. 
With  wine  and  with  nectar  flushed,  lay  clasping  the  beauteous  breast 
Of  the  maiden    the  daughter    of  Minos,  who    sailed  from  the 

Knossian  land 
With  Theseus,  and  there  was  forsaken  of  him  upon  Dia's  strand. 
And  Medea  wrought  on  the  heralds — for  subtlest  speech  did  she 

frame 
To  beguile  them — when  unto  the  Goddess's  temple  Absyrtus  came 
For  the  covenant's  sake,  and  when  night's  black  pall  should  around 

them  be  rolled. 
To  depart,  that  with  him  she  might  plot  to  take  that  Fleece  of  Gold 
From  the  heroes,  and  bearing  the  prize  with  him  to  fare  again 
To  Aietes'  halls,  for  that  Phrixus'  sons  by  force  had  ta'en  4 

And  had  given  her  unto  the  strangers  a  captive  to  bear  overseas. 
Even  so  she  beguiled  them  ;  and  wide  through  the  air  and  afar 

on  the  breeze 
Cast  she  her  witchery-spells,  of  might  to  draw  from  his  lair 
On  the  trackless  mountain  the  wild  beast,  lurk  he  how  distant  soe'er. 
Ah,  ruthless  Love,  great  grief,  great  curse  to  the  sons  of  earth  ! 
Of  thee  fell  feuds,  and  anguish-moans,  and  laments  have  birth  ; 


154  THE  ARGONAUTS 

From  thee  therewithal  unnumbered  woes  as  a  flood  forth  burst. 
'Gainst  the  sons  of  our  foes,  thou  god,  array  thee  battle-athirst. 
As  when  thou  didst  thrill  the  heart  of  Medea  with  madness  accurst ! 
But  how,  when  to  meet  her  he  came,  by  an  evil  doom  did  she  quell  4 
Absyrtus  r — for  this  thing  next  must  the  song  in  order  tell. 

When  the  heroes  had  left  the  maiden  on  Artemis'  island-strand 
By  the  covenant,  ran  they  their  ships  in  a  several  place  aland. 
Even  Kolchians  and  Minyans.     Then  to  his  ambush  did  Jason  hie, 
For  Absyrtus  to  lie  in  wait,  and  for  them  of  his  company. 
And  now  that  hero,  deathward-beguiled  by  their  promise  dread, 
Over  the  swell  of  the  sea  in  his  galley  swiftly  sped. 
And  under  the  mirk  night  stepped  on  the  Isle  of  the  Holy  Place, 
And  alone  fared  onward  to  meet  his  sister  face  to  face. 
And  totryher  with  words, — as  though  some  tender  child  should  try  <j 
A  wintertide  torrent,  when  strong  men  may  not  cross  thereby  !  — 
If  perchance  she  would  weave  him  a  treachery-snare  for  the  stranger- 
crew. 
And  now  were  they  making  agreement  for  all  these  things,  they  two, 
When  suddenly  out  of  the  gloom  of  his  ambush  the  Aisonid  leapt 
Uplifting  his  naked  sword  in  his  hand  :  and  the  maiden  swept 
Her  veil  o'er  her  eyes,  as  she  turned  them  away  for  averting  of  guilt 
That  she  might  not  behold  the  blood  of  her  slaughtered  brother  spilt, 
And  him,  as  a  fiesher  felleth  a  strong-horned  bull,  even  so 
Did  he  mark  him,  and  smite  him,  hard  by  the  fane  which  long  ago 
The  Brygians  which  dwelt  on  the  mainland-shore  unto  Artemis  4 

wrought. 
In  the  porchway  thereof  on  his  knees  he  fell ;  and  the  hero  caught 
In  his  hands,  as  he  gasped  his  latest  breath,  the  dark-red  tide 
As  it  welled  from  the  gash,  and  he  hurled  that  murder-rain,  that 

it  dyed 
Crimson  her  silver  veil  and  her  robe,  as  she  shrank  aside. 
And  with  swift  side-glance  the  all-quelling  Vengeance-fiend  espied, 
And  her  pitiless  eye  beheld  that  murderous  deed  they  had  done. 
But  the  ends  of  the  dead  man's  limbs  then  severed  Aison's  son  ; 
Thrice  licked  he  the  blood  from  the  sod,  thrice  spat  it  again  to 
the  dust, 


THE  FOURTH  BOOK  155 

As  the  slayer  must  do  that  atonement  be  made  for  the  treachery- 
thrust. 
Then  hid  he  the  clammy  corpse  in  the  ground,  where  unto  this  day  480 
In  the  land  of  Absyrtan  men  be  those  bones  lapped  in  clay. 
Now  the  heroes  the  while  gazed  forth  through  the  night,  and 

beheld  where  shone 
The  glare  of  a  torch  which  the  maiden  upraised  for  a  sign  to  set  on  ; 
And  alongside  the  Kolchian  galley  they  laid  their  ship  straightway. 
And  they  slaughtered  the  crew  of  the  Kolchians,  even  as  wild 

hawks  slay 
The  tribes  of  the  woodland  cushats,  or  lions  of  the  wold 
Drive  huddled  a  mighty  flock,  when  they  leap  to  the  midst  of  the  fold. 
No,  of  them  all  was  there  none  that  escaped,  but  on  all  that  throng 
Even  as  flame  making  havoc  they  rushed  ;  and  it  seemed  o'erlong 
Ere  Jason,  afire  for  their  helping,  came  :  no  need  of  his  aid 
Had  they  ;  nay  rather  for  him  by  this  were  their  hearts  afraid.    490 
Thereafter  they  sat  them  down  to  devise  for  their  voyaging 
Deep  counsel ;  and,  yet  as  they  mused,  stole  into  the  midst  of 

the  ring 
The  maiden.     And  Peleus  resolved  him  the  first,  and  he  spake 

the  thing  : 
*  Now  call  I  upon  you  to  enter  up  into  the  ship,  and  to  row 
Cleaving  your  sea-path  onward,  while  yet  it  is  night,  and  the  foe 
Tarry ;  for  when  with  the  dawn  they  shall  see  and  be  ware  of 

their  plight. 
There  is  no  man,  I  trust  me,  who,  bidding  them  follow  the  track 

of  your  flight. 
Shall  win  them  to  hearken  a  word  ;  but,  as  folk  of  their  king  bereft, 
With  grievous  dissension  shall  these,  and  with  faction,  asunder  be  500 

cleft. 
Wherefore  our  path  henceforward, — when  sundered  our  foemenare 
Each  from  his  fellow, — to  Hellas  home  shall  be  easier  far.' 

He  spake,  and  the  young  men  praised  the  counsel  of  Aiakus'  child; 
And  they  entered  the  ship  with  haste,  and  they  grasped  the  oars, 

and  they  toiled 
Without  rest,  till  they  won  by  the  sacred  isle  of  Elekfra — the  same 


156  THE  ARGONAUTS 

Of  the  eyots  is  highest — and  so  to  the  river  Eridanus  came. 
Now  the  Kolchians,  so  soon  as  the  doom  of  their  murdered 

king  they  knew, 
Eager  were  they  for  Argo  to  search  and  her  Minyan  crew 
Through  all  the  Kronian  Sea  :  but  Here  held  them  back 
By  terrible  lightnings  that  flashed  evermore  from  the  cloudy  rack, 
That  they  shuddered  at  last  when  they  thought  on  their  homes 

in  Kytaia-land, 
And  quailed  for  Aietes'  wrath,  and  a  king's  avenging  hand. 
So  went  they  ashore,  and  abiding  homes  in  the  land  they  made 
Far-scattered  ;  for  some  set  foot  on  the  selfsame  isles  where  stayed 
The  heroes  ; — the  nameof  Absyrtus  yet  do  the  islanders  bear; — 
By  the  river  Illyrican's  darkling  depths  did  others  rear 
A  tower-girt  burg  where  the  tomb  of  Harmonia  and  Kadmus 

doth  stand  : 
With  Enchelean  men  do  they  dwell :  and  some  in  the  mountain-land 
Amidst  of  the  ridges  abide  which  the  Crests  of  Thunder  they  call 
Since  the  day  when  crashed  the  thunders  of  Zeus  their  souls  to  appal,  5: 
That  they  crossed  not  over  the  flood  to  the  isle,  on  the  heroes 

to  fall. 
Now  these,  when  they  weened  that  the  home-return's  grim 

peril  was  past. 
Who  had  gotten  so  far  on  now,  made  Argo's  hawsers  fast 
To  the  strand  Hyllaian  ;  for  thick  in  the  river  the  eyots  lie. 
And  a  troublous  track  they  make  it  for  them  that  would  voyage 

thereby. 
And  the  folk  Hyllaian  devised  not  their  hurt,  as  in  that  past  day  : 
Nay,  rather  they  did  their  endeavour  to  help  them  forth  on  their  way. 
And  they  won  for  their  guerdon  the  mighty  tripod  Apollo  gave. 
For  tripods  twain  had  Phoebus  bestowed,  far  over  the  wave 
To  be  borne  in  the  Quest  of  Aison's  son,  when  to  Pytho's  shrine  53' 
He  wended,  to  ask  touching  this  same  voyage  the  purpose  divine. 
And  this  was  their  weird,  that  in  whatso  land  those  tripods  were 

placed, 
That  land  no  foes  breaking  in  thereupon  should  prevail  to  waste. 
Wherefore  in  that  land  yet  by  Hy lie's  pleasant  town 


THE  FOURTH  BOOK  157 

That  tripod  abideth,  hidden  beneath  the  earth  deep  down, 

That  the  taUsman  so  may  continue  of  men  unseen  for  aye. 

Howbeit  their  king  no  longer  aHve  in  the  land  found  they, 

Even  Hyllus,  whom  Melite  lovely-faced  unto  Herakles  bare 

In  Phaeacia-land  ;  for  of  old  to  the  halls  did  the  hero  fare 

Of  Nausithous  and  Makris,  the  nurse  of  the  God  Dionysus  :  540 

defiled 
With  the  blood  of  his  children,  he  came  to  be  cleansed.     There 

saw  he  the  child 
Of  Aigaius  the  river,  even  the  Naiad  Melite  : 
And  he  loved  her,  and  humbled  the  maid,  and  Hyllus  the  strong 

bare  she 
In  Phaeacia-land.      And  he  dwelt  in  Nausithous'  halls  awhile. 
Being  yet  but  a  little  one  :   but  he  left  thereafter  the  isle. 
For,  as  waxed  within  him  his  might,  he  brooked  no  longer  to  stay 
At  a  king's  beck  there  in  the  island  that  owned  Nausithous'  sway. 
But  he  fared  to  the  Kronian  Sea,  and  a  host  of  her  sons  forth  led 
From  Phaeacia-land  :   yea,  also  the  king  his  journeying  sped. 
The  hero  Nausithous.   There  did  he  stablish  his  home,  and  was  slain  550 
Defending  his  kine  from  the  Mentors,  the  rovers  of  the  main. 

Now,  Goddesses,  tell  how  Argo's  wondrous  ensign  came 
Without  this  sea,  by  Ausonia-land,  and  the  isles  men  name 
The  *  Long  Row,'  lone  sea-cradles  that  nurse  a  Ligurian  seed — 
How  stood  clear  forth  mid-sea — what  strong  constraint,  what  need 
Thitherward  led  her^  what  breezes  they  were  that  wafted  her  speed. 
'Twas,  I  ween,  wnen  Absyrtus  had  fallen  in  mighty  overthrow, 
That  the  wrath  of  Zeus,  the  King  of  the  Gods,  for  their  deed 

was  aglow. 
Yet  he  ordained  the  transgressors  to  cleanse  them  of  murder's  stain 
By  the  counsels  of  Circe,  and  so,  after  measureless  travail  and  pain,  560 
Home  to  return  ;   yet  this  of  the  princes  did  no  man  know. 
But  they  sped,  when  the  land  Hyllaian  sank  on  the  sea-marge  low, 
Afar ;  and  they  left  behind  them  the  isles  that  were  thronged  erewhile 
With  the  Kolchians,  isle  Liburnian  ranged  in  the  sea  after  isle, 
Issa,  Dyskeladus,  then  Pityeia's  lovely  shore. 
So  passed  they  these,  and  overagainst  Kerkyra  they  bore. 


158  THE  ARGONAUTS 

There  was  it  Poseidon  caused  Asopus'  daughter  to  rest, 

When  by  reason  of  love  he  wafted  Kerkyra  the  beautiful-tressed  ' 

From  the  land  of  Phlius  afar  :  and  mariners  marking  it  swell 

Blackening  up  from  the  sea,  while  all  about  it  fell 

The  folds  of  its  darkling  forests,  named  it  Kerkyra  the  Black. 

Thence  sped  they  by  Melite,  glad  for  the  breeze  blowing  soft  on 

their  track. 
By  Kerosus  the  steep,  and,  far  in  the  offing  and  faint  as  it  showed, 
By  Nymphaia  they  fleeted,  the  isle  where  the  Lady  Kalypso  abode, 
The  daughter    of  Atlas  :  and  misty    and  doubtful  appeared  to 

their  ken 
The  Crests  of  Thunder.     And  known  unto  Here  even  then 
Were  the  counsels  of  Zeus  concerning  these,  and  his  mighty  wrath. 
Yet  devised  she  how  that  great  voyage  should  prosper,  and  full  in 

their  path 
Uproused  she  against  them  the  storm-winds,  which  caught  them, 

and  backward  swept 
To  Elektra's  rocky  isle.    But,  from  surge  unto  surge  as  they  leapt,  5 
Suddenly  heard  they  a  beam  with  a  man's  voice  cry  unto  them 
Out  of  the  hollow  ship,  the  which  in  the  midst  of  the  stem 
Athene  had  set — it  was  hewn  from  an  oak  in  Dodona  that  grew; 
And  deadhest  fear  laid  hold  upon  them  as  they  hearkened  thereto, 
To  the  voice  revealing  the  wrath  of  Zeus,  and  the  stern  decree 
Which  ordained  that  they  should  not  escape  from  the  paths  of 

an  endless  sea. 
And  affliction  of  tempests,  till  Circe  should  purge  the  guilt  away 
Of  Absyrtus'  ruthless  murder.      Moreover  the  voice  bade  pray 
Polydeukes  and  Kastor  withal  to  the  Gods  everlasting,  to  grant 
First  through  the  Ausonian  sea  a  path  to  the  secret  haunt  5 

Of  Circe,  the  daughter  whom  Perse  unto  the  Sun-god  bare. 
So  Argo  cried  through  the  darkness  :  uprose  that  god-born  pair, 
Tyndareus'  sons,  and  their  hands  to  the  deathless  Gods  did  they  raise 
Praying  the  prayer  commanded  ;  but  hushed  in  awed  amaze 
Were  the  rest  of  the  Minyan  heroes.     On  under  canvas,  and  on. 
Leapt  Argo,  till  deep  within  Eridanus'  river  they  won. 
There,  stricken  of  old  on  the  breast  with  the  smouldering  levin-fire. 


THE  FOURTH  BOOK  159 

Phaethon  half-consumed  from  the  car  of  his  Sun-god  sire 

Fell  into  the  gulf  of  the  fathomless  mere  ;  and  the  seething  stream 

From  his  burning  wound  even  yet  upbelcheth  clouds  of  steam.      600 

Neither  across  that  water  outspreading  her  pinions  light 

Any  fowl  of  the  air  may  win  her  way,  but,  even  mid-flight 

Faint-fluttering,  down  m.id  the  flame  it  plungeth.     On  either  side 

Round  poplars  slim  the  Sun-god's  daughters  in  slow  dance  glide, 

In  misery  wailing  a  piteous  plaint,  and  adown  from  their  eyne 

Raining  to  earth  do  the  glittering  drops  of  amber  shine. 

These,  parched  by  the  beams  of  the  sun,  lie  strewn  at  their  feet 

on  the  sand ; 
But  whensoever  the  blasts  of  the  wailing  wind  on  the  strand 
Are  dashing  the  dark  mere's  surging  billows  and  onward  hurling. 
Then  to  Eridanus  roll  they,  a  huddled  throng  on-whirling  610 

In  a  rippling  stream.      Now  a  legend  thereof  do  the  Kelt-folk  tell 
How  that  these  which  in  eddies  be  tossed  be  the  tears  from 

Apollo  that  fell. 
Even  Leto's  son,  which  he  shed  without  number  in  ancient  days, 
What  time  he  came  to  the  Hyperboreans'  sacred  race, 
By  his  father's  threatenings  driven  from  the  sunlit  heaven  to  the  earth, 
Wroth  for  his  son,  unto  whom  Karonis  the  Nymph  gave  birth 
In  bright  Lakyreia,  where  Amyrus'  outfall  seaward  is  rolled. 
Yea,  such  is  the  tale  of  these  that  amidst  that  people  is  told. 
And,thereon  as  they  sailed,  no  care  for  meat  nor  for  drink  had  they, 
Neither  turned  their  thoughts  unto  gladness  ;  but  ever  day  by  day  620 
Sorely  afllicted  they  were  till  their  burdened  hearts  grew  faint 
With  the  noisome  stench  that  uprose,  the  unendurable  taint 
From  Eridanus'  streams  that  reeked  of  Phaethon  burning  still. 
And  ever  by  night  they  hearkened  the  shriek  of  the  long  wail  shrill 
From  the  Sun-god's  daughters  lamenting.      Their  tears,  as  they 

mourned  and  wept, 
L  ike  drops  from  the  fruit  of  the  olive  adown  to  the  waters  were  swept. 
Thence  into  Rhodanus  ran  they,  whose  deep-flowing  waters  fleet 
Into  Eridanus'  stream  ;  and  where  the  great  floods  meet, 
Roar  they  turmoiling  and  seething.      Now  Rhodanus  comethfrom 

far, 


i6o  THE  ARGONAUTS 

From  the  ends  of  the  earth,  where  the  portals  of  Night  and  her 

mansions  are. 
Thence  bursteth  he  forth,  and  divideth  his  stream  ;   for  the  one 

part  roareth 
To  the  beaches  of  Ocean,  and  one  to  the  sea  Ionian  poureth  ; 
And  a  third  to  the  main  Sardinian,  the  sea-gulf  limitless-vast. 
Through  seven  mouths  sendeth  his  flood.      So  from  Rhodanus 

forth  they  passed, 
And  they  drave  over   wintry  meres  wide-spread — none  telleth 

their  bound — 
Over  the  Keltic  mainland,  and  well-nigh  there  had  they  found 
Inglorious  doom  :  for  a  certain  branch  turns  sidewards  flowing 
To  the  Ocean-gulf;   thereinto  were  these,  of  the  peril  unknowing, 
At  point  to  thrust,  and  never  alive  had  they  won  thereout. 
But  forth  out  of  heaven  Here  darted,  and  pealed  her  shout  ( 

From  the  rock  Herkynian  :  with  fear  were  they  shaken  because 

of  her  cry 
As  one  man  all,  for  terribly  crashed  the  wide-arched  sky. 
Backward  they  turned  at  the  Goddess's  warning,  and  then  were 

they  ware 
Of  the  track,  whereby  for  their  home-return  they  needs  must  fare. 
So  at  last  came  they  to  a  beach  where  the  sea-sui"ge  moaning  rolled, 
By  Here's  devising,  through  tribes  of  the  Keltic  folk  untold 
And  Ligurians  passing  unharmed  ;  for  about  them  a  mist- veil  dread 
Day  after  day,  as  homeward  they  fared,  did  the  Goddess  spread. 
And  so  through  the  midmost  mouth  of  the  river  Argo  sailed, 
And    safe   on  the  'Long  Row  Isles'  did  they  land;  for  the 6 

prayers  had  prevailed 
Of  the  sons  of  Zeus  ;  for  the  which  cause  altars  and  temples  aye 
Unto  these  have  been  reared  :  nor  with  those  sea-farers  alone 

went  they 
As  helpers,  but  Zeus  made  these  all  mariners'  savioui's  to  be. 
So  the  *  Long  Row  '  left  they,  and  on  to  Aithalia  sped  oversea. 
There  in  athlete- strife  did  they  supple  their  limbs,  till  the  sweat 

of  them  dripped 
As  rain,  and  the  pebbles  are  flecked  as  with  scarf-skin  strigil-stripped 


THE  FOURTH  BOOK  i6i 

To  this  day  ;  and  their  quoits  and  their  wondrous  armour  are 

there,  all  stone ; 
And  yet  in  the  name  of  the  haven  the  glory  of  Argo  is  shown. 
And  swiftly  speeding  thence  they  lieeted  the  sea-swell  o'er, 
To  Ausonia's  strand  Tyrrhenian  lifting  their  eyes  evermore.         660 
And  they  came  to  Aiaia's  haven  renowned,  and  forth  of  the  prow 
The  hawsers  adown  to  the  strand  they  cast.     And  Circe  now 
There  did  they  find,  in  the  spray  of  the  surf  as  she  bathed  her  head. 
For  that  d  reams  of  the  night  had  made  the  Spell-queen  sorely  adread. 
For  with  blood  did  it  seem  thather  palace-chambers,  and  every  wall. 
Were  running,  and  flame  was  devouring  her  magic  herbs,  even  all 
Wherewith  she  was  wont  to  bewitch  what  strangers  soever  came. 
And  herself  with  the  blood  of  murder  quenched  that  red-glowing 

flame, 
Scooping  it  up  with  her  hands  :  so  ceased  she  from  deadly  dismay. 
Wherefore,  when  dawning  uprose,  in  the  sea-surPs  flashing  spray  670 
At  her  waking  she  washed  her  vesture  and  bathed  her  braided  hair. 
And  beasts — not  like  unto  ravening  beasts  of  the  wold  these  were. 
Nor  in  likeness  fashioned  as  men,  but  as  though  from  a  medley -heap 
They  had  gotten  their  limbs — in  a  throng  followed  after  her, 

even  as  sheep 
From  the  folds  in  their  multitudes  following  after  the  shepherd  go. 
Such  shapes  from  the  slime  primeval  did  earth  first  cause  to  grow. 
Herself  the  creator,  compacted  of  limbs  in  confusion  blent. 
Ere  yet  into  hardness  she  grew  'neath  a  rainless  firmament. 
Neither  yet  from  the  shafts  of  a  scorching  sun  had  she  gotten  her 

dews 
Of  refreshing  :  but  these  as  the  ranks  of  an  army  did  Time  confuse,  6So 
As  he  marshalled  them  forth  into  being  : — such  monsters  after 

her  pressed. 
And  exceeding  amazement  fell  on  the  heroes ;  and  each  man  guessed, 
As  he  gazed  upon  Circe's  form,  and  the  eyes  unsoftened  with  ruth. 
That  this  should  be  none  save  Aietes'  sister  in  very  sooth. 

So  when  she  had  bidden  her  terrors  of  dreams  of  the  night  to  flee. 
Back  straightway  she  paced ;  and  the  heroes  she  bade  in  her  subtlety 
To  follow,  with  witching  beck  of  her  fingers  charming  them  on. 


i62  THE  ARGONAUTS 

Yet  steadfastly  tarried  the  throng  at  the  hest  of  Aison's  son 

In  their  place  :  but  he  went,  and  beside  him  the  Kolchian  maiden 

he  drew. 
So  trod  they  the  selfsame  path  till  they  entered  in,  those  two. 
Into  Circe's  hall.     In  amaze  at  their  coming,  the  Sorcery-queen 
Bade  them  to  sit  them  down  upon  thrones  of  burnished  sheen. 
But  soundless  and  wordless  they  sped  to  her  hearthstone's  hallowed 

place, 
And  there  sat,  after  the  wont  of  the  suppliant  in  evil  case  ; 
And  Medea  bowed  her  adown,  and  in  both  hands  hid  her  face. 
But  Jason  set  in  the  earth  his  mighty-hilted  sword 
Wherewithal  he  had  slain  Aietes'  son  ;  and  his  eyes  guilt-lowered 
Rose  never  to  meet  her  glance.     And  straightway  Circe  was  ware 
Of  the  vengeance-hounded  feet,  and  the  hands  that  the  blood- 
stain bare. 
Therefore  for  awe  of  the  statutes  of  Zeus  the  Suppliant- ward,     ; 
The  Manslayer's  Champion,  yea,  an  exceeding  jealous  lord. 
She  offered  the  sacrifice  whereby  they  are  cleansed  from  their  guilt. 
When  they  come  to  his  mercy-seat,  by  whose  fierce  hands  blood 

hath  been  spilt. 
First,  to  atone  for  the  murder  inexpiate  yet,  she  held 
Forth  over  their  heads  the  young  of  a  swine  whose  dugs  yet  swelled 
From  the  fruit  of  the  womb ;  thereafter  she  severed  its  throat, 

and  she  dyed 
Their  hands  with  the  blood,  and  again  with  other  drink-offerings 

beside 
Made  the  atonement,  calling  on  Zeus,  the  Cleanser  of  all, 
The  Avenger  of  suppliants  murder-stained,  on  his  name  which  call. 
Then  all  that  in  cleansing  she  used  from  the  mansion  her  hand- 5 

maids  bore. 
The  Naiad-nymphs,  which  ministered  whatso  she  needed  therefor. 
But  Circe  abode  by  the  hearth,  and  thereon  without  wine  did  she  burn, 
Praying  the  while,  the  atonement-cakes,  to  the  end  she  might  turn 
From  their  anger  the  terrible  Vengeance-fiends,  and  that  Zeus 

might  be  wrought 
Unto  mercy  and  grace  to  the  suppliants  twain,  his  pardon  who  sought, 


THE  FOURTH  BOOK  163 

Whether  they  bowed  at  his  throne  for  the  Hfe  of  a  stranger  shed, 
Or  their  kindred  hands  with  the  blood  of  their  nearest  and  dearest 
were  red. 
But  when  she  had  wrought  all  so,  and  the  work  of  atonement 
was  done, 
Then  raised  she  them  up,  and  seated  them  each  on  a  gleaming  throne. 
And  herself  sat  nigh  them,  and  eye  to  eye  she  straitly  inquired    720 
Wherefore  they  voyaged  thus,  and  the  thing  that  their  hearts  desired. 
And  from  what  far  shore  they  had  come  to  her  land  and  her  palace- 
home. 
And  in  suppliance  sat  on  her  threshold  ;  for  into  her  soul  had  there 

come. 
As  she  pondered,  a  hideous  thought,  as  her  dreams   in  remem- 
brance returned. 
And  to  hear  the  voice  of  the  maiden  her  kinswoman  sorely  she 

yearned ; 
For  she  knew  her,  so  soon  as  she  lifted  her  down-drooped  eyes 

from  the  earth, 
For  that  plainto  discern  were  all  which  drewfrom  the  Sun  their  birth, 
Forasmuch  as  they  lightened  afar  a  splendour  like  as  of  gold 
From  the  flashings  oftheir  eyes  upon  whoso  their  face  should  behold. 
So  Medea  told  unto  her  all  things  that  she  craved  to  know,  730 

Speaking  the  Kolchian  tongue  with  utterance  gentle  and  low, — 
Deep-hearted  Aietes'  child — of  the  Quest,  of  the  paths  where  fared 
The  heroes,  of  all  the  conflicts  sharp  and  stern  that  they  dared  ; 
How  herself  into  sin  by  her  woeful  sister's  pleading  was  led. 
And  how  from  her  father's  tyrannous  terrors  afar  she  had  fled 
With  Phrixus'  sons.     But  from  this  she  shrank,  that  nothing  she 

said 
Of  Absyrtus'  murder  ;  yet  Circe  discerned  it :  but  pity-stirred 
By  her  woe-stricken  kinswoman's  tears,  she  answered  and  spake 
the  word : 
*  Ah  wretch  !  thou  hast  found  thee  an  evil  and  shameful  home- 
ward path  ! 
Not  long,  I  ween,  shalt  thou  'scape  from  Aietes'  terrible  wrath.  740 
Nay,  but  full  soon  will  he  go  to  the  dwellings  of  Hellas-land 


i64  THE  ARGONAUTS 

To  avenge  the  blood  of  his  son,  the  unspeakable  deed  of  thine  hand. 
Yet,  forasmuch  as  my  suppliant  thou  art,  and  my  sister  withal. 
None  other  harm  unto  thee  at  thy  coming  of  me  shall  befall. 
But  begone  from  mine  halls,  companion  who  art  in  an  alien's  flight — 
Whosoe'er  be  this  fellow  unknown  thou  hast  ta'en  in  thy  father's 

despite !  — 
Nay,  knee  me  no  knees,  earth-croucher  !     Naught  shalt  thou  win 

save  blame. 
Save  a  curse  for  thine  heart's  devices,  for  this  thy  flight  of  shame ! ' 
So  spake  she ;  and  comfortless  grief  overwhelmed  Medea :  she  cast 
Her  robe  o'er  her  eyes,  and  she  wailed  and  wailed,  till  the  hero  7 

at  last 
By  the  hand  upraised  her,  and  forth  of  the  palace-doors  he  led. 
As  she  quivered  with  terror  :   and  so  from  the  mansions  of  Circe 

they  fled. 
Yet  they  passed  not  unmarked  of  the  Bride  of  Zeus  ;  but  Iris  bore 
Tidings  to  her,  whan  she  spied  them  faring  forlorn  from  her  door. 
For  Here  had  bidden  her  watch  what  time  they  should  wend  to 

the  ship. 
So  again  on  her  message  she  sped  her,  and  spake  with  eager  lip  : 
*  Dear  Iris,  if  ever  mine  hest  thou  fulfilledst  in  days  overpast. 
Now  hie  thee  away,  upon  hurrying  pinions  speeding  fast. 
Hitherward  bid  thou  Thetis  to  come  to  me,  up  from  the  sea 
Rising  :  for  need  of  her  cometh  to  me.      Thence  hasten  thee       ; 
Unto  the  echoing  beaches  whereon  the  brazen  rows 
Of  the  Fire-god'sanvils  aresmitten  with  thunderous-crashing  blows. 
Speak  to  him  to  still  the  fire-blast's  breathings,  till  Argo  thereby    '' 
Shall  have  sped  :  thereafter  shalt  thou  with  my  message  to  Aiolus 

fly- 
Aiolus,  king  of  the  welkin-begotten  winds  of  the  sky  : — 
Thou  tell  him  my  purpose,  that  all  blasts  under  the  firmament  ! 

He  may  hush  to  rest,  and  let  not  a  wandering  gust  be  sent 
To  ruffle  the  face  of  the  sea  :   let  Zephyr  alone  blow  on. 
Until  to  Alkinolis'  isle  Phaeacian  the  heroes  have  won.'  I 

So  spake  she  :  forthright  from  the  verge  of  Olympus  did  Iris  leap  77, 
Cleaving  the  welkin,  outspreading  her  light  wings.     Into  the  deep 


THE  FOURTH  BOOK  165 

Aegean  she  plunged,  even  there  where  the  mansions  of  Nereus  stand. 
And  first  unto  Thetis  she  came,  and  according  to  all  the  command 
Of  Here  she  spake,  and  uproused  her  to  Heaven's  Queen  to  soar. 
Next  unto  Hephaistus  she  came,  and  with  speed  at  her  word  he 

forbore 
From  the  clanging  of  hammers   of  iron  ;  and  stayed  from  their 

tempest-blast 
Were  the  smoke-grimed  bellows.      Thereafter  on  to  the  third 

hath  she  passed, 
Aiolus,  Hippotas'  glorious  son.     And  even  the  while 
Her  message  she  told,and  her  swift  knees  rested  from  journeying  toil, 
Thetis  from  Nereus  had  gone  and  her  sisters,  and  up  from  the  sea  780 
And  Olympus-ward  to  the  presence  of  Here  the  Queen  passed  she. 
And  she  caused  her  to  sit  by  her  side,  and  she  uttered  forth  the  word : 
'  Hear,  Goddess  Thetis,  the  thing  that  my  spirit  to  tell  thee  is 

stirred. 
Thou  knowest  how  honoured  is  Aison's  son  of  me  in  mine  heart. 
And  they  that  with  him  in  the  toil  of  the  Quest  have  borne  their  part. 
Alone  did  I  save  them  then  through  the  Clashing  Rocks  when 

they  flew, 
When  lightened  the  terrible  flames,  when  the  storm  of  the  fire- 
blast  blew, 
When  white  were  the  ragged  reefs  with  the  spume  of  the  boiling 

surge. 
But  a  path  by  Scylla  the  Rock  and  Charybdis'  fathomless  gorge 
Dreadly  outbelching,  awaits  them: — O  Thetis,!  nursed  thee  of  yore,  790 
Even  I,  when  thou  wast  but  a  wordless  babe,  and  I  loved  thee  more 
Than  the  others  thy  fellows,  the  Maids  in  the  halls  of  brine  which 

abide, 
Because  thou  refusedst,  for  all  his  desire,  to  couch  by  the  side 
Of  Zeus — ay,  so  evermore  be  his  thoughts  all  lust  for  embrace 
Of  a  Goddess  immortal,  or  couch  of  a  princess  of  mortal  race  ! 
But  for  reverence  of  me,  and  for  sacred  fear  which  the  heart  of 

thee  bare. 
Didst  thou  shrink  from  his  love  :  thereafter  a  mighty  oath  he  sware 
That  never  shouldst  thou  be  called  the  bride  of  a  God  undying  ; 


i66  THE  ARGONAUTS 

Yet  for  all  this  spared  not,  but  followed  thee  sore  loth,   lustfully 

eyeing. 
Till  reverend  Themis  revealed  unto  him  all  Fate's  decree. 
How  that  thy  weird  was  to  bear  a  son  who  should  mightier  be 
Than  his  father  :  wherefore,  for  all  his  desire,  he  refrained,  for  dread 
Lest  another  should  rise  up  matching  his  might,  and  should  rule 

in  his  stead 
O'er  the  Deathless,  and  so  should  himself  not  hold  the  dominion 

for  aye. 
But  the  best  of  the  sons  of  earth  for  thine  husband  I  found,  in  the  day 
That  saw  thine  espousals,  that  sweetness  of  marriage  might  comfort 

thee. 
And  babes ;   and  the  Gods  to  the  feast  of  thy  solemnity, 
Even  all,  did  I  bid  ;  in  mine  own  hands  then  did  the  splendour  shine 
Of  the  bridal  torch,  to  requite  that  love,  that  honour  of  thine. 
Go  to  now,  a  word  will  I  tell  thee,  a  prophecy  faithful  and  fast :  a 
What  time  thy  son  to  the  plain  Elysian  shall  come  at  the  last — 
Thy  son,  who  now  in  the  dwellings  of  Cheiron  the  Centaur-king, 
Forlorn  of  the  mother 's  breast,  is  nursed  by  the  Maidsof  the  Spring — 
There  is  it  his  weird  to  wed  Aietes'  daughter  ;  but  thou, 
Medea's  mother  that  shalt  be,  help  thy  daughter  now. 
Yea,  Peleus  withal — ha  !    why  is  thine  anger  quenchless-hot  ? 
Folly  was  his  ;  yet  even  the  Gods  may  be  folly-distraught. 
Of  a  surety,  I  ween,  by  my  behests  shall  Hephaistus  cease 
To  cause  the  might  of  his  fire  to  burn  ;  and  Hippotades, 
Aiolus,  all  the  rushing  wings  of  his  winds  shall  refrain,  8» 

Save  only  the  steadfast-breathing  West,  till  the  heroes  shall  gain 
The  havens  Phaeacian.  Devise  for  them  thou  a  return  without  bane. 
For  the  crags  and  the  tyrannous-buffeting  surges  make  me  afraid, 
These  only  ;  and  these  shall  be  foiled,  if  thou  and  thy  sisters  aid. 
In  'wildered  amazement  suffer  them  not  to  thrust  their  keel 
Charybdis-ward,  lest  down  through  her  jaws  to  destruction  they  reel. 
Neither  suffer  thou  them  to  approach  unto  Scylla's  hideous  lair — 
Ausonian  Scylla  the  deadly,  whom  nightmare  Hekate  bare. 
Even  she  whom  Kratai'is  they  call,  to  the  Ancient  of  the  sea — 
Lest  with  her  horrible  jaws  down-swooping  suddenly  83<: 


THE  FOURTH  BOOK  167 

She  destroy  of  the  heroes  the  chiefest.      But  guide  thou  onward 

the  ship 
In  the  course  where  still  is  a  hairbreadth  escape  from  destruction's 

grip.' 
So  spake  she,  and  Thetis  to  her  made  answer  with  suchlike  word: 
*  If  the  might  of  the  ravening  fire  and  the  winds'  breath  fury-stirred 
Shall  in  very  deed  be  refrained,  would  I  of  a  surety  essay — 
Yea,I  would  pledge  me,  what  though  the  surges  should  bar  their  way. 
To  bring  their  ship  safe  through,  if  the  West  blow  fresh  and  strong. 
But  now  is  it  time  that  I  fare  on  the  far  track  measureless-long 
Unto  my  sisters — they  which  herein  shall  strengthen  mine  hand, — 
And  to  where  the  ship's  stern-hawsers  be  cast  forth  on  to  the  strand,  840 
That  the  men  may  at  dawn  take  thought  for  the  home-return  to  their 

land.' 
She  spake,  and  departed,  and  plunged  from  the  height  of  the 

heaven  mid  swirls 
Of  the  dark-blue  sea  ;  and  she  called  to  her  sisters,  the  Nere'id-  girls, 
To  come  to  her  help :  and  the  Maids  of  the  Sea,  so  soon  as  they  heard, 
Gathered  ;  and  Thetis  told  them  according  to  Here's  word  ; 
And  she  sped  them  all  to  the  sea  Ausonian  thence  forthright. 
And  swifter  herself  than  the  flash  of  an  eye,  or  the  arrows  of  light 
Of  the  sun,  from  the  uttermost  bourne  when  his  chariot- wheels  up- 

flame. 
On  through  the  water  she  fleeted  and  flashed,  until  she  came 
Unto  the  beach  Aiaian  of  that  Tyrrhenian  main.  850 

And  she  found  by  the  galley  the  heroes  :  the  shaft  on  the  string  did 

they  strain 
For  their  sport,  and  the  javelin  they  hurled ;  but  she  stole  unto 

Peleus'  side. 
And  she  touched  his  hand;  for  of  old  had  he  won  her,  his  Goddess- 
bride. 
But  the  eyes  of  the  others  were  holden  :  to  him  did  the  Goddess 

appear. 
Of  his  eyes  only  discerned  ;  and  she  murmured  low  in  his  ear  : 

*  No  longer  now  on  the  beaches  Tyrrhenian  sitting  abide  ; 
But  cast  ye  the  hawsers  of  Argo  loose  with  the  dawning-tide, 


i68  THE  ARGONAUTS 

Obeying  your  helper  Here's  command  ;  for  at  her  behest 

The  Sea-maids,  daughters  of  Nereus,  all  to  the  trysting  have  pressed, 

Through  the  midst  of  the  Rocks  which  the  Wanderers  hight  your ; 

galley  to  speed 
Safe ;  for  thereby  is  your  course,  and  the  path  by  fate  decreed. 
But  see  that  thou  show  me  to  none,  when  thine  e)^es  my  form  discern 
Mid  the  N^onphs,  as  we  meet  thee,  lest  hotter  thou  cause  mine  anger 

to  burn 
Than  when  erst  thou  didst  kindle  my  spirit  to  anger  swift  and 

stern.' 
She  spake,  and  she  plunged  through  abysses  of  sea,  and  he  saw  her 

no  more  : 
And  sharp  pain  smote  him,  who  had  not  beheld  her  theretofore 
Since  the  day  she  forsook  her  bridal  bower  and  her  couch  at  the  first, 
When  for  noble  Achilles  their  babe  into  sudden  anger  she  burst. 
For  the  mortal  flesh  of  her  child  did  the  Goddess  encompass  aye     I 
Through  the  midst  of  the  night  with  flames  of  fire,  and  day  by  day  87J 
With  ambrosia  anointed  his  tender  frame,  to  make  him  thereby 
Immortal,  that  loathly  eld  might  come  not  his  body  anigh. 
But  Peleus  from  slumber  upstarted,  and  saw  his  beloved  son 
Gasping  mid  flame  ;  and  he  sent  abroad,  as  he  looked  thereon, 
A  terrible  cry  in  his  folly  exceeding.      She  heard  him,  and  whirled 
The  babe  aloft,  and  screaming  adown  on  the  earth  she  hurled  : 
And  herself  like  a  breath  of  the  wind,  or  a  dream  at  the  breaking  of 

sleep. 
Forth  of  the  hall  flitted  swiftly,  and  into  the  sea  did  she  leap 
In  her  anger  :  and  never  thereafter  returned  she  thither  again. 

Amazement  fettered  his  soul :  but,  for  all  his  'wildered  pain,    s8o 
To  his  comrades  he  spake  forth  all  the  commands  of  his  Goddess- 
wife. 
So  these  in  the  midst  brake  off,  and  refrained  from  the  athlete-strife  ; 
And  the  meat  of  the  eventide  and  the  earth-strawn  beds  they  dight, 
Whereon,  having  supped,  as  aforetime  they  laid  them  and  slept 
through  the  night. 
When  Dawn  'gan  sprinkle  the  sky  from  her  chalice  of  light  over- 
brimming, 


THE  FOURTH  BOOK  169 

Even  then,  when  the  wings  of  the  West-wind  the  face  of  the  waters 

were  skimming, 
They  went  up  from  the  strand,  and  they  sat  on  the  thwarts,  and  aboard 

they  drew 
Blithely  the  anchor-stones  from  the  deep,  and  in  order  due 
The  rest  of  the  tackling  all  they  lashed,  and  the  sail  spread  wide 
On  high  from  the  yard-arm,  straining  it  taut  with  the  sheets  of  hide.  890 

Onward  the  fresh  breeze  wafted  the  ship  :   full  soon  they  beheld 
A  fair  isle  flower-bestarred,  where  the  Siren  Destroyers  dwelled, 
Achelolis'  clear-voiced  daughters,whosesweetsongs  wontto  beguile 
With  their  witchery  whosoe'er  cast  anchor  anigh  that  isle. 
They  were  children  whom  lovely  Terpsichore,  one  of  the  Muses, 

bore 
To  the  flood  Acheloiis  :  and  unto  Demeter's  daughter  of  yore. 
When  sheyet  wasunwedded,  the  noble  Persephone,  ministered  they, 
As  in  blended  chorus  they  sang  :  but  as  birds  in  the  latter  day 
Were  they  fashioned  in  part  to  behold,  and  as  maidens  in  part  they 

were. 
And  aye  keeping  watch  from  the  harbour-cliffs  overbeetling  their  900 

lair, 
From  many  an  one  had  they  reft  sweet  home-return,  whom  they  slew 
With  wasting  consuming  them.      Lo,  on  a  sudden  to  Argo's  crew 
Pealed  from  their  lips  their  clear-sweet  voice.     From  the  galley  now 
Were  they  even  at  point  to  cast  the  hawser  ashore  from  the  prow  ; 
But  Thracian  Orpheus  matched  him  against  that  demon  choir. 
And  the  hands  of  Oiagrius'  scion  swept  the  Bistonian  lyre  ; 
And  the  march  of  the  song  o'er  the  rippling  melody  rang  ever  higher, 
Till  their  ears  were  filled  with  the  chiming  and  thrilled  with  the 

triumph  of  sound, 
And  the  Sea-maids'  shrilling  chant  in  the  storm  of  the  lyre  was 

drowned. 
On  flitted  the  ship,  by  the  West-wind  borne  and  the  sighing  swell  910 
Upleaping  astern  ;   and  bootless  the  weird  song  failed  and  fell  : — - 
Not  bootless  all,  for  that  Teleon's  goodly  son  did  leap 
From  the  polished  thwart,  ere  his  comrades  could  stay  him,  into  the 

deep. 


170  THE  ARGONAUTS 

Butes,  whose  soul  was  bewitched  by  the  Sirens'  clear-ringing  breath; 
And  he  swam  through  the  purple  surge  to  tread  that  strand  of  death. 
Doomed  wretch  ! — full  soon  had  they  robbed  him  there  of  his  home- 
return  ; 
But  for  him  did  the  Cyprian  Lady  of  Eryx  in  pity  yearn, 
And  she  snatched  him  away  from  the  swirling  wave,  and  safe  she  bore 
Of  her  grace  to  dwell  on  the  height  Lilyboean  on  Sicily's  shore. 
So  in  anguish  of  spirit  they  left  him :  but  perils  worse  than  these  c 
Awaited  them — shipwrecking  gulfs  in  the  meeting-place  ofthe  seas. 
For  on  this  side  Scylla's  smooth  sheer  crag  uptowering  loomed, 
And  on  that  side  Charybdis  seething  in  ceaseless  thunder  boomed  ; 
And  otherwhere,  swung  by  the  mighty  surge,  met  clanging  and 

crashing 
The  Wandering  Rocks,  where  afront  were  the  spurts  of  fire  out- 
flashing 
From  the  crests  of  the  clifl^s,  o'er  the  crag  red-glowing  on  high 

that  burned. 
And  with  smoke  was  the  air  all  mistily  shrouded  :  thou  hadst  not 

discerned 
The  beams  of  the  sun.     Then,  albeit  Hephaistus  refrained  from  his 

toil, 
"With  the  hot  uprushing  steam  did  the  sea  yet  bubble  and  boil. 
Then  Nereus'  daughters  from  this  side  and  that  side  the  heroes  met,  93« 
And  Thetis  the  Goddess  her  hand  to  the  blade  of  the  rudder  set ; 
And  onward  amidst  of  the  Wandering  Rocks  the  ship  haled  they. 
And  as  when  o'er  the  face  of  a  summer  sea  the  dolphins  play 
Circling  around  a  ship  as  she  runneth  before  the  wind, 
One  while  in  front  of  her  stern  beheld,  one  while  behind, 
And  alongside  anon  :  and  the  shipmen  be  blithe  for  their  gambol- 
ling ; 
So  darted  they  up  from  the  depths,  so  circled,  a  glimmering  ring, 
Round  Argo  the  ship  ;  and  Thetis  was  steering  her  course  through 

all. 
And  when  now  was  the  galley  at  point  on  the  Wandering  Rocks 

to  fall, 
Straightway  they  kilted  their  skirts  above  their  snowy  knees,        94c 


THE  FOURTH  BOOK  171 

And  high  on  the  crests  of  the  skerries,  the  breaking  of  madding 

seas, 
To  this  side  and  that  side  they  sped,  far  ranged  apart  to  stand. 
Sea-cataracts  crashed  on  her  beam,  fierce  surges  on  either  hand 
Higher  upsoaring  and  higher  o'er  the  rocks  were  bursting  and 

streaming  ; 
And  these  now  towered  to  the  welkin,  as  mountain-crags  in  seeming, 
And  now,  whelmed  down  the  abyss,  on  the  Ocean's  nethermost  floor 
Grounded  they  :  over  their  crests  did  the  triumphing  rollers  roar. 
But  the  Nereids,  as  maidens  that  flit  to  and  fro  on  a  sandy  beach, 
With  parted  gown-laps  kilted  about  the  waist  of  each. 
Sport  with  a  shapely  rounded  ball :  one  tosseth  it  on,  95° 

And  her  fellow  receiveth  ;  and  high  'twixt  heaven  and  earth  is 

it  gone 
Sped  from  her  hand  to  the  welkin ;  and  never  it  toucheth  the 

ground. 
So  from  one  unto  other's  hand  passed  on  did  the  galley  bound 
Through  the  air  o'er  the  crests  of  the  waves  as  they  sped  her,  clear 

alway 
Of  the  rocks  ;  and  around  her  the  water  upbelching  was  seething  aye. 
And  the  Fire-king's  self  on  the  ridge  of  a  surf-lashed  scaur  was  there, 
While  his  sturdy  hammer  the  weight  of  his  massy  shoulder  bare. 
Thence  marveUing  gazed  Hephaistus  :  the  bride  of  Zeus  looked 

down 
Where  she  stood  in  the  sunlit  heaven,  and  round  Athene  had  thrown 
Her  arms,  in  such  faintness  of  fear,  as  she  looked  thereon,  did  she  960 

cling. 
And  long  as  the  space  of  a  day  is  lengthened  out  in  the  spring, 
So  long  was  the  time  that  they  laboured,  heaving  with  might  and 

main 
The  ship  through  the  thunderous-echoing  rocks,  till  the  wind  again 
Blew  out  the  canvas  ;  and  onward  they  ran,  and  swiftly  they  sped 
By  the  meads  of  Thrinakria's  isle,  where  the  kine  of  the  Sun-god 

fed. 
Then  the  Nymphs  in  the  semblance  of  sea-mews  down  through 

abysses  of  brine 


172  THE  ARGONAUTS 

Plunged,  when  wrought  was  the  hest  of  Zeus's  Bride  divine. 
Then  through  the  air  did  there  come  to  the  heroes  a  bleating  of  sheep, 
And  a  lowing  of  kine  full  nigh  to  their  ears  floated  over  the  deep. 
There  a  shepherdess-goddess  pastured  the  sheep  o'er  the  dewy  lea,  g 
Phaethusa — youngest  of  all  the  Sun-god's  daughters  was  she — 
Bearing  a  shepherd's  crook  of  silver  the  while  in  her  hand  ; 
And  Lampetie  herded  the  kine,  and  of  mountain-brass  was  the  wand 
That  she  swayed  as  she  followed  their  steps  :   and  the  heroes  them- 
selves espied 
Those  herds  by  the  river  that  pastured,  the  sliding  gleam  beside. 
O'er  the  plain  and  the  water-meadow  :   was  none  amid  all  that  herd 
Dun-hued  of  hide,  but  all  white  even  as  milk  appeared. 
And  a  glory  of  golden  horns  on  the  stately  heads  of  them  shone. 
So  they  passed  in  the  daytime  the  Sun-god's  herds,  and  as  night 

drew  on. 
They  went  cleaving  the  great  sea-gulf  rejoicing,  until  once  more  9^ 
The  Child  of  the  Mist,  the  Dawning,  flashed  on  their  sea-path  hoar. 

Now  fronting  the  mouth  of  the  gulf  Ionian  lieth  an  isle 
In  the  sea  Keraunian,  forest-mantled,  with  deep  rich  soil, 
Whereunder  the  sickle,  saith  legend,  is  lying — vouchsafe  me  your 

grace. 
Song-goddesses  :  loth  do  I  speak  of  the  tale  of  the  olden  days — 
Wherewithal  the  strength  of  his  father  by  Kronos  was  ruthlessly 

shorn  : 
(But  of  some  is  it  called  Demeter-of-Hades'  Reaper  of  Corn  : 
For  Demeter  in  that  land  wont  to  abide  in  the  days  of  old. 
And  she  taught  the  Titans  to  reap  the  cornfield's  spears  of  gold, 
Ot  her  love  unto  Makris)  :  the  Sickle-land  is  it  named  therefrom,  99. 
The  Phaeacians'  hallowed  nurse  :   and  by  lineage  so  these  come 
Of  Ouranus'  very  blood,  and  his  sons  the  Phaeacians  be. 
So  Argo  through  much  tribulation  came  from  Thrinakria's  sea 
With  the  breeze  to  the  land  Phaeacian.     With  welcoming  sacrifice 
Alkinoiis  the  king  and  his  people  received  them  in  kindly  wise  : 
And  all  the  city  with  riot  of  mirth  o'er  the  far-driven  ones 
Rejoiced  :  thou  hadst  said  that  they  joyed  o'er  their  own  re-given 


THE  FOURTH  BOOK  173 

And  the  heroes  themselves  through  the  throng  in  gladness  triumphant 

strode, 
Even  as  though  the  heart  of  Haimonia-land  they  trod. 

But  now  were  they  like  to  be  donning  their  mail  for  the  onset-  i< 

cry, 
So  mighty  a  host  of  Kolchian  men  appeared  hard  by, 
Which  down  through  the  gorge  of  the  Pontus,  and  on  through  the 

Crags  Dark-blue 
Had  passed  to  the  uttermost  sea  in  quest  of  the  hero-crew. 
And  Medea  they  chiefly  were  eager  to  hale  to  her  father's  house 
Without  parley,  or  threatened  else  that  the  war-yell  dolorous 
Should  be  raised  for  the  slaughter-vengeance  unrelenting  and  stern 
Both  then,  and  when  led  by  Aietes  their  host  should  thereafter  return. 
Yet  Alkinoiis  the  king  restrained  them  amidst  of  their  lust  for  the  fray ; 
For  he  greatly  desired  without  the  clash  of  the  strife  to  allay 
The  haughty-hearted  feud  betwixt  the  war-hosts  twain.  ^^ 

But  the  maiden  in  deadly  fear  besought  again  and  again 
The  comrades  of  Aison's  son  ;  and  again  and  again  did  she  cling 
With  her  hands  round  the  knees  of  Arete,  the  wife  of  Alkinoiis  the 

king  : 
*  I  kneeluntothee,0  Queen! — begracious,  and  yield  me  not  now 
To  the  Kolchians  tohaletomyfather,if  thouart  of  humankind,  thou 
Which  livest  by  bread — of  the  hearts  into  folly  that  swiftliest  rush. 
Whom  lightest  transgression  adown  the  abysses  of  ruin  doth  push. 
Even  so  as  my  wisdom  forsook  me — nay,  but  it  was  not  done 
By  reason  of  lust :  be  witness  the  sacred  light  of  the  sun  : 
Be  witness  the  rites  of  Perseus'  daughter,  which  haunteth  the  night,  ^^ 
That  not  of  my  will  with  men  of  an  alien  land  in  flight 
Did  I  haste  from  mine  home ;  but  horrible  dread  on  my  spirit  wrought 
To  bethink  me  of  fleeing  thus  when  I  sinned  :  other  help  there  was 

not. 
Neither  hope.      My  maidenhead  yet  unmarred  abideth  and  clean. 
As  it  was  in  the  halls  of  my  father.      Have  pity  upon  me,  O  Queen  ; 
And  inclineuntomercy  the  heart  of  thy  lord !    May  the  Deathless  so 
A  life  all-perfect  on  thee,  all  happiness  bestow. 
And  sons,  and  the  boast  of  a  city  unravaged  of  any  foe  !  ' 


174  THE  ARGONAUTS 

So  bowed  at  Arete's  knees  did  she  weep,  and  so  beseech  ; 
And  thus  to  the  heroes   appealed  she,  turning  to  each  after  each  :  ] 
*  For  your  sakes,  O  ye  chiefest  of  might,  and  for  your  emprise, 
Am  I  hounded  of  terrors  thus,  even  I,  by  whose  device 
Ye  bowed  the  bulls  to  the  yoke,  and  reaped  that  deadly  swath 
Of  the  Earth-born  Men — even  I,  through  whom  on  the  homeward 

path 
Ye  shall  bear  the  Fleece  of  Gold  full  soon  to  Haimonia's  shore — 
Even  I,  who  have  lost  my  country,  my  parents  have  lost  evermore. 
Have  lost  mine  home,  have  lost  all  pleasures  of  life  that  I  knew. 
But  to  you  have  restored  your  country,  your  homes  have  restored 

unto  you ; 
And  with  rapture-litten  eyes  your  parents  again  shall  ye  see. 
But  from  me — a  tyrannous  god  all  happiness  reft  from  me  ;  i 

And  with  alien  men  do  I  wander  forlorn,  an  accursed  \vight ! 
Dread  ye  the  covenant-troth  and  the  oaths  :  the  Avenging  Sprite 
Of  the  suppliants  dread,  and  the  Gods'  retribution,  if  ever  I  come 
To  Aietes'  hands,  amid  outrage  and  agony  meeting  my  doom  ! 
No  temple  have  I,  neither  tower  of  salvation,  nor  refuge  beside  : 
You  cast  I  before  me,  mine  only  shield  in  the  perilous  tide. 
Hard  hearts  unrelenting  and  ruthless  ! — ye  know  not  reverence,  ye, 
For  the  suppliant,  though  ye  behold  as  I  stretch  despairingly 
Mine  hands  to  the  knees  of  a  stranger  queen.     Yet  the  Kolchian 

array, 
One  and  all,  had  ye  faced,  when  ye  thirsted  to  bear  the  Fleece  a  way  :: 
Yea,  Aietes  the  proud  had  ye  faced: — but  your  manhood  hath  fainted, 

is  flown 
Now,  when  your  foes  from  their  helpers  be  sundered,  a  handful 

alone.' 
So  passioned  and  prayed  Medea.     To  whomso  she  bowed  in 

prayer. 
Ever  he  heartened  her,  fain  to  assuage  her  anguished  despair. 
And  their  keen- whetted  lances  in  wrathful-quivering  hands  did  they 

shake. 
And  unscabbarded  swords  ;  and  they  swore  they  would  fail  not  her 

help  nor  forsake, 


THE  FOURTH  BOOK  175 

If  the  strange  king  touching  the  maiden  unrighteous  judgment  spake. 
And  lo,  mid  the  throng  as  they  wrangled,  the  night,  that  putteth  to 

sleep 
The  labours  of  men,  stole  o'er  them,  and  all  the  earth  did  she 

steep 
In  the  balm  of  her  quiet :  but  not  on  the  maid  fell  slumber's  peace  1060 
One  whit,  but  her  heart  in  her  bosom  for  anguish  writhed  without 

cease. 
Even  as  when  a  toiling  woman  windeth  her  thread 
Through  the  night,  and  her  fatherless  child  ren  around  her  be  moaning 

for  bread, 
For  that  widowed  she  is  ;  and  adown  her  cheeks  stream  ever  the 

tears 
As  she  thinketh  upon  this  dreary  lot  that  hath  darkened  her  years  ; 
Even  so  were  the  maid's  cheeks  wet,  and  her  heart  evermore  in  her 

breast 
On  the  anguish-thorn  impaled  was  writhing  in  wild  unrest. 

But  amidst  of  the  city  the  palace  within,  as  in  days  gone  by, 
Alkinoiis  the  king,  and  the  lady  of  queenliest  majesty. 
The  wife  of  Alkinoiis,  lay  in  their  bed,  and  many  a  word  1070 

Through  thedarknessin  counsel  they  spakeof  the  maiden  ;  and  thus 

to  her  lord 
With  loving  and  earnest  speech  made  answer  the  queen,  and  she  said: 
*  Yea,  O  my  beloved — yet  save,  I  beseech  thee,  the  woe-stricken 

maid 
From  the  Kolchians,  showing  a  grace  to  the  Minyan  men.      For 

anigh 
To  our  isle  lieth  Argos  ;  the  men  of  Haimonia  dwell  hard  by. 
But  Aietes — he  dwelleth  not  even  anear,  and  nought  do  we  know 
Of  Aietes  :  we  hear  but  his  name.  But  the  maiden's  awful  woe. 
When  she  made  supplication,  mine  heart  within  my  breast  hath  torn. 
Yield  her  not  up  to  the  Kolchians,  my  king,  to  her  sire  to  be  borne. 
In  madness  she  sinned  at  the  first,  when  she  gave  him  the  charm  that  1080 

should  tame 
The  bulls  ;   and  with  wrong  to  amend  that  wrong — ay,  ofttimes 

the  same 


176  THE  ARGONAUTS 

In  our  sinning  we  do  ! — she  straightway  essayed  ;   and,  shrinking 

in  fear 
From  her  proud  sire's  tyrannous  wrath,  she  fled.      Now  the  man, 

as  I  hear, 
This  Jason,  is  bound  by  mighty  oaths,  which  his  own  Hps  said. 
When  he  pledged  him  to  make  her,  his  halls  within,  his  wife 

true-wed. 
Wherefore,  beloved,  constrain  not  Aison's  son  to  forswear 
His  oath,  of  thy  will,  nor  consent  that  the  sire  from  the  daughter 

should  tear 
Her  life  in  the  rage  of  his  soul  amid  pangs  unendurably  keen  : 
For  cruelly  jealous  against  their  daughters  are  fathers,  I  ween. 
What  vengeance  did  Nykteus  wreak  on  Antiope  lovely-faced ! 
What  woes  were  of  Danae  borne  on  the  wide  sea's  desolate  waste 
Through  her  sire' s  mad  rage  !      And  of  late,  nor  afar,  it  came  to  pass 
That  wanton-tyrannous  Echetus  thrust  the  goads  of  brass 
Through  the  eyes  of  his  daughter  :   and  wasted  and  worn  by  her 

woeful  doom. 
She  is  grinding  the  grain  of  brass  in  a  hovel's  dungeon-gloom.' 

So  spake  she  beseeching;  and  softened  so  was  the  heart  of  the  king 
By  the  words  of  his  wife,  and  he  spake  in  such  wise  answering  : 

*  Arete,  the  Kolchian  men  would  I  even,  in  harness  arrayed. 
Drive  forth  of  the  land,  for  a  grace  to  the  heroes,  to  save  yon  maid. 
But  I  fear  to  set  the  unswerving  justice  of  Zeus  at  nought. 
Nor  were  this  well  done,  to  contemn,  according  to  this  thy  thought, 
Aietes  : — of  kinglier  king  than  Aietes  may  no  man  tell. 
Yea,  war,  if  he  list,  shall  he  bring  against  Hellas,afar  though  he  dwell. 
Wherefore  'tis  meet  and  right  that  the  sentence  be  spoken  of  me 
That  in  all  men's  eyes  shall  be  best,  and  I  will  not  hide  it  from 

thee : — 
If  the  damsel  be  virgin  yet,  I  decree  that  the  daughter  be  led 
To  the  father  :   but  if  she  minister  unto  a  husband's  bed, 
I  will  part  not  from  husband  wife  ;   nor,  if  haply  she  bear  'neath 

her  zone 
His  ofl^spring,  to  foes  will  I  yield  up  a  child  of  Aison's  son.' 
So  spake  he,  and  round  him  straight  did  the  veil  of  slumber  close. 


THE  FOURTH  BOOK  177 

But  she  laid  up  his  wisdom  her  heart  within  ;  and  she  straight- 
way uprose 
From  her  couch  in  the  palace  :  the  women  her  handmaids  with 

hurrying  feet 
Came,  eagerly  tending  their  lady  the  Queen  with  service  meet. 
And  she  silently  summoned  her  herald,  and  spake  in  his  ears  her 

request 
To  be  instant  in  bidding  Aison's  son,  at  his  Queen's  behest, 
To  wed  with  the  maiden,  nor  more  with  Alkinoiis  the  king  to  plead; 
For  himself  to  the  Kolchians  would  go  and  pronounce  the  doom 

decreed. 
That,  if  she  were  virgin  yet,  he  would  render  her  up  to  be  led 
To  her  father  :  but  if  she  ministered  unto  a  husband's  bed. 
Not  then  would  he  sever  the  wife  from  the  love  of  the  lawfully  wed.  1 
So  spake  she,  and  forth  of  the  hall  the  feet  of  the  herald  sped 
Unto  Jason,  Arete  the  Queen's  fair-omened  message  to  bring, 
And  Alkinoiis'  counsel,  the  word  of  the  god-revering  king. 
And  the  heroes  he  found  by  the  ship  in  their  war-gear  abiding  awake 
In  the  haven  of  Hyllus,  anigh  to  the  city  ;  and  out  he  spake 
The  Queen's  whole  message,  and  each  man's  spirit  was  gladness- 
stirred. 
Forasmuch  as  he  spake  in  their  ears  an  exceeding  welcome  word. 
Straightway  they  mingled  the  bowl  to  the  Gods  that  abide  for  aye; 
And  with  reverent  hands  to  the  altar  the  victim-sheep  drew  they. 
And  the  selfsame  night  for  the  maiden  prepared  they  the  couch  1 

of  the  bride 
In  a  hallowed  cave,  where  of  old  time  Makris  wont  to  abide, 
The  child  of  the  Honey-lord,  Aristaius,  whose  wisdom  discerned 
The  toils  of  the  bees,  and  the  wealth  of  the  labour  of  olives  learned. 
And  she  was  the  first  that  received  and  in  sheltering  bosom  bore 
The  child  Nysaian  of  Zeus,  on  Euboea's  Abantian  shore. 
And  with  honey  she  moistened  his  lips,  where  the  dew  of  life 

was  dried 
When  Hermes  bare  him  out  of  the  fire.     But  Here  espied, 
And  from  all  the  isle  that  Nymph  in  her  fierceness  of  anger  she  drave. 
Wherefore  she  dwelt  far  thence  in  the  holy  Phaeacian  cave. 


178  THE  ARGONAUTS 

And  blessing  and  weal  beyond  word  to  the  folk  of  the  land  she  gave. 
Even  there  did  they  spread  them  the  mighty  couch  and  there- 
over they  laid 
The  glittering  Golden  Fleece,  that  the  marriage  so  might  be  made 
Honoured,  a  song  in  the  mouths  of  bards.      Flowers  manifold-fair 
The  Nymphs  in  their  snowy  bosoms  gathered,  and  thitherward  bare. 
And  a  splendour  like  as  of  fire  glowed  round  those  shapes  divine, 
Such  glory-gleams  from  the  golden  tufts  did  shimmer  and  shine. 
Sweet  longing  lit  up  their  eyes  :   howbeit  did  awe  withhold 
Each  one,  though  she  yearned  to  lay  but  her  hand  on  the  wonder 

of  gold. 
And  of  that  bright  throng  the  river  Aigaius'  daughters  were  some. 
And  some  on  the  crests  of  Melite  dwelt  in  their  mountain-home  ; 
And  forest-glen  Nymphs  of  the  plains  were  some  :  for  Zeus's  bride, 
Even  Here,  had  sent  them  for  honour  to  Jason's  marriage-tide. 
That  cave  is  to  this  day  named  Medea's  Sacred  Grot, 
Forasmuch  as  to  wedlock's  solemnities  there  these  twain  they 

brought. 
When  the  odorous-sweet  fine  linen  they  spread.     And  the  heroes 

without 
Guarded  them  war-spear  in  hand,  lest  haply  for  battle  the  rout 
Of  their  foes  unawares  should  set  on  them,  or  ever  the  rites  were  sped. 
And  with  sprays  of  bounteous  leaf  did  they  wreathe  each  man 

his  head  ; 
And  in  harmony  all,  while  clear  the  harp  of  Orpheus  rang. 
At  the  entering-in  of  the  cave  the  bridal  hymn  they  sang. 
Yet  not  in  Alkinoiis'  home  the  hero  Aison's  son. 
But  in  halls  of  his  father,  the  goal  of  marriage  full  fain  had  won, 
When  home  he  returned  to  lolkos,  and  so  withal  was  the  mind 
Of  Medea,  but  hard  compulsion  constrained  them  now  to  be  joined. 
But  even  as  never  the  tribes  of  the  woe-stricken  children  of  earth 
May  tread  full-footed  the  path  of  delight,  but  still  with  our  mirth 
Hand  in  hand  goeth  pacing  affliction  bitter  as  gall, 
So  these,  when  melted  with  rapture  of  love  were  their  souls, 

were  thrall 
Unto  dread,  what  things  of  Alkinoiis'  sentence  should  haply  befall. 


THE  FOURTH  BOOK  179 

So. soon  as  the  dawn  with  her  beams  ambrosial  climbed  heaven's 

height, 
And  scattered  the  gloomy  night  through  the  welkin,  and  laughed 

in  her  light 
The  island-beaches,  and  all  the  paths  through  the  plains  that  wound 
Dew-gleaming  afar,  and  awoke  in  the  streets  a  murmur  of  sound, 
And  her  folk  were  astir  through  the  town,  and  astir  was  the 

Kolchian  host 
In  their  camp  far  off  on  the  bounds  of  the  Makrian  sea-ringed  coast. 
Then  straightway  Alkinoiis  hied  him,  by  covenant-plight  to  hold, 
To  utter  his  purpose  as  touching  the  maiden.      His  sceptre  of  gold. 
His  staff  of  justice,  he  bare,  wherewith  to  the  multitude 
Of  the  city  were  meted  the  statutes  with  righteousness  endued. 
And  beside  him,  in  ordered  ranks  arrayed  in  their  harness  of  fight,  i 
Squadron  by  squadron  were  marching  Phaeacia's  chiefest  of  might. 
And  forth  from  the  tower-girt  city  in  throngs  the  women  broke 
To  gaze  on  the  heroes ;  and  men  therewithal  of  the  country-folk 
Met  them,  which  heard  the  tidings  ;  for  Here  afar  had  sped 
A  rumour  that  erred  not :  and  one  a  lamb  unblemished  led, 
The  choice  of  the  sheep  :  with  a  heifer  unlaboured  one  drew  nigh  ; 
And  others  were  ranging  the  earthen  jars  of  wine  hard  by 
To  mingle.     The  sacrifice-smoke  was  wafted  far  away. 
Came  women  with  webs  of  costly  labour,  as  women  may. 
And  with  trinkets  of  gold,and  with  manifold  ornaments  therebeside,  i 
Such  gifts  as  be  wont  to  be  brought  to  the  newly-wedded  bride. 
And  they  marvelled  beholding  the  heroes'  stature  and  comeliness. 
As  they  towered  o'er  the  throng,  and  Oiagrius'  scion  amidst  of 

the  press. 
As  in  time  to  the  harmony-ringing  lyre  and  the  chanted  strain 
Ever  he  smote  and  anon  with  his  glittering  sandal  the  plain. 
And  the  Nymphs  all  blending  their  voices,  when  marriage-notes 

chimed  on  the  string, 
Uplifted  the  lovely  bridal  chant,  and  anon  would  they  sing 
Alone  and  unprompted  the  song,  as  the  wreaths  of  their  dances 

they  twined. 
O  Here,  of  thee  was  it  done ;   for  thou  puttedst  it  into  the  mind 


i8o  THE  ARGONAUTS 

Of  Arete  to  tell  Alkinoiis'  prudent  word  of  the  night.  i 

But  so  soon  as  the  king  had  pronounced  the  decree  of  unswerving 

right, 
And  when  now  was  the  marriage  accomplished  proclaimed  in  all 

men's  ears, 
Then  took  he  heed  that  it  so  should  abide  :  no  deadly  fears 
Touched  him,  nor  Aietes'  terrible  wrath  might  his  purpose  shake  ; 
But  he  held  by  the  word  he  had  plighted,  the  oath  that  he  would 

not  break. 
And  when  now  were  the  Kolchians  ware  that  in  vain  they  besought 

him  to  swerve. 
And  when  now  he  commanded  them — '  Either  obey  my  decree 

and  observe, 
Or  forth  of  my  havens  and  land  afar  shall  your  galleys  sail '  ; — 
Then  in  that  hour  for  their  own  king's  threatenings  'gan  they  quail, 
And  besought  him  amongst  his  folk  to  receive  them.      So  there  ^ 

in  the  land 
Long  time  with  the  people  Phaeacian  dwelt  the  Kolchian  band, 
Till  the  Bacchiad  lords,  which  by  lineage  sprang  from  Ephyre, 
As  the  years  passed,  settled  amidst  them,  and  they  to  the  isle  oversea 
Sailed  :  thence  to  the  Thunder-hills  of  Abantian  men  must  they  go, 
And  therefrom  to  the  folk  Nestaian,  and  on  to  Oricum  so. 
But  the  river  of  time  ere  then  down  many  a  year  must  flow. 
But  still  to  the  altars  the  yearly  sacrifice  men  bring 
For  the  Fates  and  the  Nymphs  in  the  fane  of  Apollo  the  Shepherd- 
king, 
Which  altars  Medea  builded.     And  gifts,  ere  they  passed  o'er 

the  wave. 
Full  many  Alkinoiis  gave  them,  and  many  Arete  gave. 
Thereafter  withal  on  Medea  Phaeacian  handmaid-thralls 
Twelve  did  the  Queen  bestow,  to  follow  her  forth  of  her  halls. 
On  the  seventh  day  sailed  they  away  from  Drepane.      Came  with 

the  morn 
A  fresh  breeze  sent  of  Zeus  :  and  so  by  the  wind's  breath  borne 
Onward  and  onward  they  ran.     Howbeit  not  yet  on  the  strand 
Of  Achaia  by  doom  of  the  God  might  they  tread,  that  hero-band, 


THE  FOURTH  BOOK  i8i 

Till  yet  they  had  toiled  in  the  uttermost  parts  of  Libya-land. 
And  now  by  the  bay  that  is  named  the  Ambracian  Gulf  had 

they  sped, 
And  now  had  they  left  the  Aetolian  land  with  sail  wide  spread  ; 
And  thereafter  the  isles  in  the  narrow  Echinad  strait  that  lie  ;      1230 
And  Pelops'  land  in  the  offing  but  now  might  they  dimly  descry  : 
Even  then  were  they  snatched  away  by  the  North- wind's  baleful 

blast 
In  mid  course :  on  to  the  Libyan  sea  did  it  sweep  them  fast 
Nine  nights  together,  and  days  as  many,  until  they  had  run 
Into  the  Syrtis  afar,  wherefrom  returning  is  none 
For  ships,  when  a  storm-driven  galley  within  that  gulf  shall  be  found. 
For  on  every  hand  be  shoals,  and  the  tangled  weed  all  round 
Of  the  deep,  and  the  salt  foam-scum  over  all  doth  mantle  and  cling. 
Into  haziest  distance  stretcheth  the  land :  no  living  thing 
There  moveth  that  creepeth  or  flieth.     On  that  drear  coast  by  the  1240 

sweep 
Of  the  flood-tide — for  ofttimes  the  outrushing  ebb  draweth  back 

to  the  deep 
Far  off  from  the  land,  and  again  with  gurgling  rush  and  roar 
Cometh  bursting  over  his  beaches — afar  on  the  innermost  shore 
Were  they  suddenly  thrust,  that  the  keel's  full  depth  was  covered 

no  more. 
Then  leapt  they  forth  of  the  ship,  and  in  trouble  of  soul  did  they  gaze 
On  the  dimness,  the  long  low  backs  of  the  land  all  formless  haze 
Far  stretching  away  unbroken.     Nor  stream  nor  spring  they  espied. 
Neither  path,  nor,  how  distant  soe'er,  a  steading  thereon  they 

descried 
Of  herdmen,  but  all  the  landskip  in  dead  calm  folded  lay. 
And  in  sore  vexation  of  spirit  did  hero  to  hero  say  :  1250 

*  What  manner  of  land  is  this  ?     Whither  now  hath  the  tempest's 

sway 
Hurled  us  ?  Would  God  we  had  dared,  all  reckless  of  deadly  dismay, 
To  rush  right  on  through  the  path  of  the  rocks  of  the  grim  sea-gate  ! 
Verily  better  it  were,  had  we  overleapt  the  fate 
Of  Zeus,  in  daring  a  deed  of  heroic  mood  to  have  died ! 


i82  THE  ARGONAUTS 

But  now,  what  thing  should  we  do,  which  be  prisoned  by  winds 

to  abide 
Here,  though  but  a  little  span  we  continue  ? — in  such  drear  wise 
The  plain  of  the  limitless  land  stretcheth  up  to  the  lowering  skies.' 

So  cried  they  :  thereafter  in  utter  despair  for  their  evil  case 
Ankaius  the  helmsman  spake  with  anguish-darkened  face  : 

*  Yea  verily,  ghastliest  doom  hath  undone  us.  E  scape  there  is  not 
From  destruction  :  for  us  but  remaineth  to  suffer  the  cruellest  lot, 
Which  have  fallen  on  this  desolation  ;  yea,  even  though  a  breath 

there  should  be 
Of  air  from  the  land,  forasmuch  as  nought  save  shoals  do  I  see, 
Afar  as  I  gaze  o'er  the  waters  around  ;  and  scantly  the  brine 
Overscaleth  the  hoary  sands  in  foam-fretted  line  upon  line. 
Yea,  and  our  god-built  ship  had  to  shards  been  wretchedly  torn 
Long  since  far  off  from  the  shore,  but  that  out  of  the  sea  was  it  borne 
By  the  flood-tide's  self  uplifted,  and  high  on  the  land  was  it  thrown. 
But  the  tide  now  raceth  aback  to  the  deep,  and  foam  alone  i 

Whereon  saileth  no  keel,  rolleth  on,  and  but  thinly  the  earth  hath 

it  veiled. 
Wherefore,  I  trow,  all  hope  of  our  sailing  hath  utterly  failed — 
All  hope  of  return  !      Let  another  man  show  sea-craft  herein. 
Lo,  there  is  the  helm — whosoever  is  fain  our  deliverance  to  win. 
Let  him  sit  in  my  seat.      But  little  doth  Zeus  desire,  I  wot. 
To  crown  with  a  day  of  return  the  toils  we  have  suffered  and 

wrought.' 
So  spake  he,  weeping  the  while  ;  and  the  others  agreed  thereto. 
Even  all  which  had  knowledge  of  ships ;  and  all  the  hearts  of 

them  grew 
Chilly  and  numb,  and  over  their  cheeks  was  paleness  shed. 
And  even  as,  like  unto  lifeless  spectres  of  folk  long  dead,  ' 

Men  creep  through  the  streets  of  a  town,  and  despairing  the  issue 

await 
Of  famine  or  leaguer  of  war,  or  a  tempest  unspeakably  great 
Which  hath  swept  o'er  the  land,  and  hath  flooded  the  labours  of 

oxen  untold  ; 
Or  when  great  gouts  of  blood  from  the  images  sweating  have  rolled, 


THE  FOURTH  BOOK  183 

Or  when  from  the  shrines  of  the  temple  ghostly  bellowings  wail, 
Or  the  sun  o'er  the  day'smid  noontide  draweth  the  night's  black  veil 
Out  of  heaven,  and  the  glittering  stars  come  forth  in  splendour  pale  ; 
So  stricken,  the  chieftains  then  by  the  strand's  verge  endless-wide 
Roamed  loitering  on.  And  at  one  stride  came  dark  eventide. 
And  piteously  around  each  other  their  arms  did  they  throw  1290 

With  weeping  farewell,  that  each  from  his  fellow  apart  might  go 
To  die,  and  might  fling  him  adown  on  the  sand  to  wait  for  the  end. 
So  this  way  and  that  way  to  choose  their  couch  of  the  night  did 

they  wend ; 
And  each  in  the  folds  of  his  mantle  enshrouded  his  head,  and  they 

lay 
Fasting  and  thirsting  there  through  the  livelong  night  and  the  day 
Awaiting  a  piteous  death.      And  the  handmaids  huddled  in  fear 
Round  Aietes'  daughter  apart  shrilled  lamentation  drear. 
And  as  when,  of  their  mother  forsaken,  fledglings  shrilly  cheep, 
Which  have  fallen  to  earth  from  a  cleft  in  a  sheer  scaur's  precipice- 
steep. 
Or  as  when  'twixt  the  low-browed  banks  of  Pactolus'  fair-flowing  1300 

stream 
The  swans  are  upraising  their  song,  and  the  meadow  of  dewy 

gleam 
Murmur eth  round,  and  murmur  the  river's  ripples  fair  ; 
So  the  handmaidens  bowing  low  in  the  dust  their  golden  hair. 
All  through  the  night  were  uplifting  their  pitiful  wail  of  despair. 
And  now  out  of  life  had  they  slidden,  had  vanished  from  human 

ken, 
And  the  name  and  the  fame  of  them  never  more  had  been  heard 

among  men. 
Those  noblest  of  heroes  ! — their  task  unaccomplished  had  ended 

then  : 
Howbeit  the  Heroine-nymphs  had  pity  of  them  as  they  pined 
In  helpless  despair,  the  Warders  of  Libya,  they  that  did  find 
Athene,  what  time  from  the  head  of  her  father,  in  battle-gear       131c 
All  flashing,  she  sprang,  and  the  new-born  bathed  they  in  Trito's 


i84  THE  ARGONAUTS 

The  noon  of  the  day  it  was,  and  the  sun  upon  Libya-land 
Burned  with  his  fiercest  beams  :  by  Aison's  son  did  they  stand, 
And  the  mantle-shroud  from  his  head  with  soft  light  touch  drew 

they. 
But  the  hero,  downward  drooping  his  eyes,  thence  turned  them  away, 
For  awe  of  the  shapes  divine  :  but  with  gentle  words  of  cheer 
With  open  face  did  they  speak  unto  him  in  his  'wildered  fear : 

*  Ill-starred  one,  wherefore  so  grievously  smitten  art  thou  with 

despair  ? 
We  know  how  ye  fared  for  the  Golden  Fleece  :  of  your  toils  we 

be  ware. 
Even  all  the  strength-overmastering  labours  on  land  that  ye  proved,  r 
And  all  ye  endured  on  the  face  of  the  watery  deep  as  ye  roved. 
The  Solitary  Ones  of  the  land,  the  Heroines,  are  we, 
Warders  and  daughters  of  Libya,  which  speak  which  our  voices 

to  thee. 
Up  then  :  let  thy  spirit  not  thus  to  affliction  of  misery  yield, 
And  uprouse  thy  comrades,  so  soon  as  the  steeds  of  the  car  swift- 
wheeled 
Of  Poseidon,  by  Amphitrite  loosed  from  the  yoke,  run  free. 
Unto  your  mother  the  nursing-debt  then  render  ye 
For  all  her  travail,  when  long  she  bare  you  her  womb  within. 
So  haply  again  unto  hallowed  Achaia-land  shall  ye  win.' 

So  spake  they,  and  vanished,  there  as  they  stood,  in  the  self- 13; 
same  place 
Where  murmured  their  voices  close  in  his  ear :  and  with  startled  gaze 
Staring  around,  on  the  earth  sat  Jason,  and  cried  in  amaze  : 

*  Be  gracious,  ye  glorious  Goddesses,  lone  in  the  desert  which 

dwell ! 
Yet  what  this  word  of  our  home-coming  meaneth  I  wot  not  well. 
I  will  gather  my  comrades,  and  tell  them,  and  learn  what  token 

is  this 
Of  escape  : — in  the  multitude  of  counsellors  safety  there  is.' 
Then  he  leapt  to  his  feet,  and  he  shouted  afar  o'er  the  desolate 

shore. 
All  dust-begrimed,  as  a  lion  that  seeking  his  mate  doth  roar 


THE  FOURTH  BOOK  185 

Up  and  down  through  the  forest-gloom  :  deep  glens  through  many 

a  hill 
Far  off  at  the  sound  of  his  voice's  thunder  shuddering  thrill,  1340 

And  tremble  the  oxen  that  roam  the  meads  with  exceeding  fear, 
And  the  herders  of  kine  :  but  never  a  whit  dismaying  to  hear 
Was  the  hero's  cry  to  his  friends  when  the  voice  of  his  shouting 

they  heard. 
And  they  gathered  with  down-drooped  eyes  to  his  side,  and  they 

sat  at  his  word 
Sore  troubled  anigh  where  lay  the  ship  ;  and  the  women  withal 
With  the  heroes  mingled  sat ;  and  he  spake,  and  he  told  them  all : 
*  Hearken,  O  friends,  for  in  this  mine  affliction  Goddesses  three, 
In  vesture  of  goatskins  girded  about,  from  neck  unto  knee 
Overdrooping  their  shoulders  and  waists,  as  maidens  of  earth  to 

behold. 
Stood  over  mine  head  full  nigh,  and  they  drew  my  mantle's  fold  1350 
Away  from  mine  head  with  fingers  light,  and  they  bade  me  arise 
From  my  couch  of  despair,  bade  rouse  you  up  in  the  selfsame  wise. 
And  they  bade  us  to  render  our  mother  the  nursing-debt  again — 
Seeing  that  long  in  her  womb  she  bare  us  with  travail-pain — 
Whensoever  the  steeds  of  the  swift-wheeled  car  of  the  Lord  of 

the  Sea 
Amphitrite  should  loose  from  the  yoke.     Howbeit  it  is  not  in  me 
To  divine  what  their  prophecy  meaneth.     They  named  them, 

that  stranger-band, 
Heroines,  daughters  of  Libya,  and  Warders  of  the  Land. 
Yea,  whatsoever  toils  we  endured  in  our  journeying 
By  land  or  by  sea,  said  they,  they  were  ware  of  everything.  1360 

No  longer  thereafter  I  saw  them  in  place,  but  there  came  between 
A  mist  or  a  cloud — they  appeared,  and  lo !  they  were  no  more  seen.' 

He  spake,  and  they  marvelled  all  such  tale  to  hear  him  tell. 
Then  to  the  Minyan  men  a  most  strange  wonder  befell : 
For  out  of  the  sea  to  the  land  did  a  horse  gigantic  bound 
With  golden  mane  far-streaming  that  tossed  his  shoulders  around. 
And  with  one  swift  stamp  he  shook  from  his  shoulders  the  briny 

spray, 


i86  THE  ARGONAUTS 

And  onward  he  galloped  with  feet  like  the  blast  of  the  wind : 

straightway 
Unto  the  throng  of  his  comrades  did  Peleus  rejoicing  say : 

<  The  steed  of  the  car  of  the  Lord  of  the  Sea! — unyoked  hath  her 

been 
Even  but  now  by  the  hands  of  his  dear -loved  wife,  I  ween. 
And  our  mother — none  other  is  this,  I  divine,  than  the  good  ship 

there, 
Argo  ;  for  verily  us  within  her  womb  she  bare 
With  grievous  anguish  of  travail  groaning  unceasingly. 
Her  therefore  with  stalwart  strength  and  with  tireless  shoulders  we 
Will  uplift,  and  afar  o'er  the  wastes  of  the  sandy  land  from  the  shore 
Will  we  bear  her,  where  yonder  steed  hath  with  swift  feet  sped 

before. 
For  he  will  not,  he,  sink  into  the  earth,  but  his  hoof-prints  shall  go 
Pointing  the  way  for  us  inland  afar  from  the  sea,  I  trow.' 

So  did  he  speak  :  of  his  keen-witted  counsel  were  all  they  fain,  i; 
Lo,  this  is  the  song  of  the  Muses,  and  I  but  sing  their  strain. 
The  Pierides'  servant ;  and  this  true  tale  in  mine  ears  hath  been  told 
That  ye,  O  mightiest  far  of  the  sons  of  the  kings  of  old. 
By  your  manhood  and  might  o'er  the  sands  of  Libya's  desert  drear 
Bare  high  over  earth  your  galley  and  all  her  voyaging-gear. 
On  your  shoulders  laid,  yea,  bare  her  through  long  days  two  and  ten, 
And  nights  as  many.      That  cup  of  affliction  and  travail  then, 
What  tongue  could  tell  it,  which  these  in  their  toil   filled  up 

full-brim  r 
Of  a  truth  of  the  blood  of  the  Deathless  they  were,  such  labour  grim 
Did  they  take  on  them,  onward  driven  and  on  by  Necessity's  goad,  i- 
Till  afar  mid  the  ripples  of  Trito's  mere  how  triumphantly  strode. 
How  gladly  adown  from  their  stalwart  shoulders  they  set  their 

load! 
Then  rushing,  like  unto  hounds  in  the  wild  hunt's  frenzy-burst, 
Sought  they  a  spring,  for  that  now  was  there  added  parching  thirst 
Unto  all  their  affliction  and  manifold  anguish  ;  nor  toiled  they  in  vain 
Wandering  there  ;  for  lo,  they  came  to  the  sacred  plain 
Where  but  yesterday  Ladon  the  Serpent  of  Libya  in  Atlas'  garden 


THE  FOURTH  BOOK  187 

Kept  watch  o'er  the  Apples  of  Gold ;  and  the  Nymphs  around 

their  warden, 
The  Hesperides,  rested  never,  chanting  their  lovely  song. 
But  now  by  the  arrows  of  Herakles  stricken  he  lay  along  1400 

By  the  trunk  of  the  apple-tree  :  only  the  tip  of  his  tail  had  strength 
To  quiver  yet,  but  adown  from  his  head,  through  all  the  length 
Of  his  dark  chine,  lifeless  he  lay.     Where  the  arrows  had  left  in  his 

blood 
The  bitter  gall  of  the  Hydra  of  Lerna,  a  swarming  brood 
Of  flies  o'er  the  venom-festering  wounds  of  him  crawled  and  clung. 
And  thereby  the  Hesperides  over  their  golden  heads  had  flung 
Their  white  arms,  shrilling  their  wail.     And  the  wanderers  suddenly 

drew 
Anear,  and  to  dust  and  to  earth  straightway,  when  the  hero-crew 
Came  hastily  on,  did  they  turn  even  there.      But  Orpheus  was  ware 
Of  the  portent  divine,  and  he  stood,  and  he  spake  to  the  Nymphs  ^410 

in  prayer : 
*  Divine  Ones,  lovely  and  kindly,  O  Queens,  be  gracious  ye, 
Whether  amongst  the  Heavenly  Goddesses  numbered  ye  be, 
Or  the  Earthly,  or  whether  they  name  you  the  Lone  Ones,  Nymphs 

divine, 
Come,  O  ye  Nymphs,  come,  daughters  of  Ocean's  sacred  line ! 
Appear  ye  in  manifest  form  to  our  longing  eyes,  and  show 
Some  spring  gushing  forth  from  the  rock,  some  sacred  upwelling 

flow 
From  the  bosom  of  Earth,  O  shapes  divine,  that  the  thirst  which 

doth  burn 
Our  tongues  without  cease  may  be  quenched  ;  and  if  ever  again  we 

return 
Unto  Achaia-land  in  our  weariful  voyaging. 
Then,  as  to  the  chiefest  in  heaven,  to  you  which  have  done  this  1420 

thing 
Gifts  and  libations  and  feasts  with  grateful  love  will  we  bring.' 

So  spake  he,  praying  with  earnest  voice  ;  and  they  from  anear 
Pitied  their  pain.  And  first  did  they  cause  green  grass  to  appear 
From  the  earth,  and  above  the  grass  rose  saplings  tall,  and  these 


iS8  THE  ARGONAUTS 

Thereafter  in  fulness  of  bloom  grew  up  into  fair  young  trees  : 
Tall-standing  and  straight,  high  up  from  the  face  of  the  earth  they 

towered. 
In  a  poplar  was  Hespere  veiled,  Erytheis  an  elm  embowered. 
And  Aigle  a  sacred  willow.     And  out  of  the  stems  of  them,  lo  ! 
Appeared  they,  and  like  as  before  they  had  been,  so  again  did  they 

show, 
A  marvel  exceeding  great :  and  Aigle  silence  brake, 
And  with  gentle  words  in  their  longing  ears  she  answered  and 

spake  : 
*  Of  a  surety  for  blessing  to  you  and  deliverance  out  of  your  toil, 
Hitherward  came  but  now  one  ruthless  and  shameless,  to  spoil 
Our  guardian  serpent  of  life  ;  and  the  Goddesses'  apples  of  gold 
He  plucked,  and  he  bare  them  away,  and  he  left  us  sorrowful- 

souled. 
For  there  came  yestreen  a  man  most  fell  in  wanton  despite, 
Grim-shapen,  whose  eyes  'neath  his  scowling  brows  flashed  terrible 

Hght, 
A  pitiless  man  :  in  a  monster  lion's  fell  untanned. 
Rawhide,  was  he  clad,  with  a  stubborn  olive-wood  staff  in  his  hand. 
And  a  bow,  with  the  arrows  whereof  he  shot  yon  dragon  dead. 
And  he  came,  he  also,  as  one  that  afoot  overland  hath  sped. 
Thirst-parched  :  and  questing  for  water  with  diligent  haste  he 

sought 
Through  all  this  place — but,  I  ween,  he  was  like  to  behold  it  not ! 
Howbeit  a  certain  rock  by  the  mere  Tritonian  stood  : 
This,  or  of  his  own  device,  or  a  God  wrought  so  on  his  mood. 
Did  he  smite  with  his  foot,  and  forth  did  the  water  in  full  burst  flow. 
Then  down  to  the  earth  on  his  hands  and  his  breast  he  bowed  him 

low  ; 
And  out  of  the  rifted  rock  an  unspeakable  draught  he  swilled. 
Till  his  mighty  maw,  down-stooped  like  a  beast  of  the  field,  he  had 

filled.' 
So  spake  she  ;  and  they  right  glad  thence  hasted,  until  they  came 
To  the  place  where  Aigle  had  told  of  the  spring  ;  and  they  found  the 


THE  FOURTH  BOOK  189 

And  as  when  earth-burrowing  ants  swarm  round  their  narrow  pit, 
All  hurrying  to  and  fro,  or  when  clustering  flies,  that  have  lit 
Where  lieth  a  drop  of  the  honey  sweet,  a  tiny  gout. 
Insatiate-eager  are  thronging,  so  in  a  huddled  rout 
The  Minyans  round  that  rock-spring  crowded  on  every  side. 
And  with  wet  lips  thus  in  his  gladness  hero  to  hero  cried  : 

*  O  strange  ! — how  hath  Herakles  saved  his  companions  forspent 

with  stress 
Of  thirst,  though  afar  he  were  !      Would  God  that  he  yet  might 

bless 
The  eyes  of  us  finding  him  faring  on  through  the  wilderness  !  '      1460 

Then  shouted  in  answerthey  which  were  ready-dight  for  the  deed. 
And  they  parted,  and  this  way  and  that  way  questing  the  lost  did 

they  speed. 
For  the  tracks  of  the  hero  by  winds  of  the  night  had  been  wholly 

effaced. 
As  they  drifted  the  sand.     And  away  did  Boreas'  two  sons  haste, 
Putting  trust  in  their  wings  ;  and  Euphemus  trusting  his  feet  flying 

fast, 
And  Lynkeus  the  piercing  glance  of  his  eyes  afar  to  cast  : 
And  Kanthus,  the  fifth  of  the  searchers,  darted  away  with  the  rest. 
Whom  the  doom  of  the  Gods  and  his  manfulness  drave  to  essay  that 

quest. 
That  of  Herakles'  mouth  for  certain  tidings  he  so  might  inquire 
Where  he  left  Polyphemus,  Eilatus'  son  ;  for  with  earnest  desire  147° 
Was    he  fain  to   ask    of  the  hero    concerning  his  lost  friend's 

fate  : — 
But  he  mid  the  Mysians  had  builded  a  city  glorious  and  great ; 
Then  yearning  for  home  came  o'er  him,   and  seeking  Argo  he 

passed 
Far  over  the  mainland,  until  he  came  to  the  land  at  the  last 
Of  the  sea-board  Chalybans  :  there  'neath  the  mastering  doom  did 

he  fall, 
And  there  up-piled  is  his  grave-mound  under  a  poplar  tall 
Facing  the  sea.     But  Lynkeus  deemed  that  he  spied  that  day 
Over  measureless  spaces  of  land  lone-faring  and  far  away 


I90  THE  ARGONAUTS 

Herakles — saw  him  as  one  that  hath  seen  or  hath  thought  he  hath 

seen 
The  moon,  when  the  month  is  young,  through  mist-veils  floating  i. 

between. 
To  his  comrades  returned  he,  and  told  them  that  quester  thereafter 

should  see 
The  hero  no  more  as  he  journeyed.    In  like  wise  came  those  three, 
Even  Euphemus  the  swift  of  foot,  and  the  scions  twain 
Of  the  Thracian  Wind  of  the  North,  having  toiled  and  striven  in 

vain. 
But,  Kanthus,  in  Libya  thee  did  the  fell  Fates  bring  to  thine  end. 
Upon  pasturing  flocks  didst  thou  light  ;   and  the  shepherd,  that 

wont  to  tend 
Those  sheep,  in  defending  them  smote  thee,  when  thou  thereof  wast 

fain 
To  take  for  thy  comrades'  need,  and  there  of  his  hand  was  thou  slain 
By  the  cast  of  a  stone  ;  for  in  sooth  no  weakling  there  kept  ward, 
Kaphaurus,  the  grandson  of  Phoebus,  Lykoreia's  Lord, 
And  of  fair  Akakallis  the  princess,  whom  Minos  drave  from  her 

home 
In  Libya  to  dwell,  when  the  fruit  of  a  God  was  found  in  her  womb. 
His  daughter  she  ;   and  a  glorious  son  unto  Phoebus  she  bare, 
Amphithemis  named,  and  Garamas — twofold  the  names  of  him  were. 
And  a  Nymph,  the  Lady  of  Trito's  Lake,  did  Amphithemis  wed  ; 
And  Nasamon's  might  and  Kaphaurus  the  strong  she  bare  to  his 

bed. 
Even  him  which  smote  down  Kanthus,  defending  his  sheep  as  he 

fought. 
Yet  from  the  chieftains'  avenging  hands  escaped  he  not, 
When  they  learned  what  deed  he  had  done  ;   and  the   Minyans 

sought  their  dead. 
And  they  took  up  the  corse,  and  they  laid  him  to  rest  in  the  strait: 

earth-bed. 
Mourning,  and  took  thereafter  the  slayer's  sheep  for  a  prey. 
There  also   Mopsus,  Ampykus'  son,  in  the  selfsame  day 
Did  a  pitiless  fate  cut  off.      Stern  doom  might  he  nowise  shun 


THE  FOURTH  BOOK  191 

By  his  prophecy-lore,  forasmuch  as  avoidance  of  death  is  there  none. 

For  a  dread  snake  lay  mid  the  sand  from  the  mid-noon  sun  to  hide, 

Too  sluggish  to  strike  of  his  will  at  such  as  would  turn  aside  ; 

Nor  yet  would  he  dart  full  face  upon  one  that  in  fear  shrank  back. 

Yet  into  whomso  but  once  he  should  spit  his  venom  black, 

Of  all  that  on  life-sustaining  earth  draw  living  breath. 

Not  a  cubit's  length  should  be  left  of  his  path  to  the  mansion  of  ^510 

Death, 
No,  not  though  the  Healer  God — if  this  I  may  say,  nor  sin — 
Should  medicine  him,  if  only  his  teeth  should  have  grazed  but  the 

skin. 
For  when  over  Libya  flying  godlike  Perseus  came — 
Who  is  also  Eurymedon  ;   so  did  his  mother  name  his  name — 
As  unto  the  king  the  Gorgon's  head  new-severed  he  bore. 
Whatsoever  to  earth  dropped  down  of  the  dark-red  gouts  of  gore, 
All  quickened,  and  serpents  thereof  of  the  selfsame  brood  did  there 

spring. 
Now  Mopsus  pressed  on  the  ridge  of  the  spine  of  the  deadly  thing. 
Setting  his  left  foot-sole  thereupon  ;  and  the  beast  in  his  pain 
Writhed  round  it :  the  flesh  'twixt  ankle  and  calf  in  his  fangs  hath  1520 

he  ta'en, 
And  he  tare  it,  the  while  Medea  and  all  her  handmaids  fled 
In  affright.      Howbeit  the  seer  was  handling,  nothing  adread, 
The  bleeding  wound  ;   for  the  pain  not  grievously  vexed  his  soul. 
Ah  wretch  !  — for  already  a  numbness  of  deadly  slumber  stole 
Unstringing  his  sinews  :   a  thick  mist  flooded  his  eyes  all  round. 
Straightway  his  burdened  limbs  all  helplessly  sank  to  the  ground. 
And  chill  did  he  grow.  And  his  comrades,  and  Aison's son,  amazed 
At  the  strokes  fast-falling  of  doom,  on  the  dead  man  thronging 

gazed. 
Yet  not  for  a  little  space,  albeit  but  newly  dead, 
Might  he  lie  in  the  sun,  for  that  fast  through  his  flesh 'gan  corruption  1530 

to  spread 
From  the  venom  :  the  very  hair  from  the  skin  like  slime  was  cast. 
Therefore  they  straightway  delved  them  a  deep  trench,  labouring 

fast 


192  THE  ARGONAUTS 

With  mattocks  of  brass  ;  and  in  mourning  thereafter  their  hair  did 

they  rend, 
Both  they  and  the  maidens,  bewaiHng  the  dead  man's  pitiful  end. 
Round  the  hero  meetly  entombed  then  thrice  in  their  warrior-gear 
Marched  they,  and  over  his  grave  the  earth-mound  high  did  they 

rear. 
But  when  now  they  were  gone  aboard  of  the  ship,  and  the  South- 
wind  blew 
Over  the  sea,  they  must  needs  make  guess  of  the  strait  wherethrough 
They  should  win  forth  out  of  Tritonis'  mere  ;  neither  any  device 
Long  had  they,  but  all  day  long  were  they  drifting  in  aimless  wise,  ^i 
And  as  writheth  a  serpent  along  his  crooked  path,  when  beat 
The  rays  of  the  sun  on  the  land,  and  scorch  him  with  fiercest  heat, 
And  with  hissing  to  this  side  and  that  side  he  turneth  his  head,  and 

his  eyne. 
Like  unto  sparks  that  leap  from  the  furnace,  glitter  and  shine 
For  his  fury,  until  to  his  lair  through  a  cleft  of  the  rock  he  may 

creep  ; 
So  Argo,  seeking  a  mouth  of  the  mere,  a  fairway  deep. 
Long  time  tacked  to  and  fro.     Then  Orpheus  suddenly  spake, 
That  Apollo's  massy  tripod  forth  of  the  ship  they  should  take, 
And  propitiate  the  Gods  of  the  land  therewith  for  their  home-going's 

sake. 
So  went  they,  and  set  Apollo's  goodly  gift  on  the  shore.  i 

Then  stood  before  them  one,  the  form  of  a  youth  who  bore, 
Even  Triton  the  Wide-dominioned.      From  earth  he  uplifted  a 

clod. 
And  he  held  it  forth  for  his  Stranger's  Gift ;  and  spake  the  God  : 

*  Receive  it,  my  friends  :  no  gift  exceeding  goodly  to  see 
Here  have  I  now  to  give  unto  them  which  seek  unto  me. 
But  and  if  ye  inquire  touching  this  sea's  paths — as  many  a  time 
Is  the  need  of  men  whose  journeyings  pass  through  an  alien  clime — 
I  will  tell  you,  seeing  Poseidon  hath  made  me  to  understand 
This  sea,  for  that  he  is  my  father,  and  I  am  the  king  of  the  land 
By  the  sea — if  perchance  to  your  ears  from  afar  Eurypylus'  name,  i 
Son  of  the  Land  of  the  Beasts  of  Ravin,  from  Libya  came.' 


THE  FOURTH  BOOK  193 

He  spake,  and  Euphemus  outstcetched  his  hands  right  joyfully 
That  gift  of  the  clod  to  receive,  and  answering  thus  spake  he : 
*  If  thou  peradventure  of  Atthis  and  Minos'  sea  dost  know, 
O  hero,  to  us  who  inquire  the  truth  unfaiHng  show. 
For  not  of  our  will  have  we  hitherward  come,  but  the  tempests' 

might 
Hath  hurled  us  afar,  on  the  borders  of  this  your  land  to  light : 
And  our  galley,  shoulder-uplifted,  a  weary  burden,  I  wis. 
Through  the  desert  we  bare  to  the  waves  of  thy  mere.      But  we 

know  not  this, 
Whereby  we  shall  sail  thereout  to  win  unto  Pelops'  land.'  , 

He  spake,  and  afar  that  other  pointed,  outstretching  his  hand 
To  the  sea,  and  the  mouth  of  the  deep-channelled  mere,  and  he 

spake  the  word  : 
'  Lo,  yonder  lieth  the  path  to  the  sea,  where  the  deeps  unstirred 
Darkest  are  gleaming  :  on  either  hand  roll  breakers  white 
Green-glimmering  under  their  shivering  crests,  and  on  forthright 
Through  the  lane  of  the  breakers  a  straight  path  lieth  to  win  from 

the  mere. 
And  yon  sea  misty  in  distance  beyond  Crete  stretcheth  clear 
To  the  sacred  land  of  Pelops.      But  rightward  still  steer  ye. 
When  forth  of  the  mere  ye  have  thrust,  and  ye  ride  on  the  swell  of 

the  sea. 
And  so  long  speed  ye  onward  your  course,  close-hugging  the  land,  1 
Till  ye  come  to  an  inland-trending  gulf;  and  then  shall  ye  stand 
Boldly  across  to  the  ness  where  endeth  the  sweep  of  the  shore 
Beyond.     Therefrom  shall  your  course  be  perplexity-troubled  no 

more. 
Now  pass  on  your  way  rejoicing  :  let  no  man  grieve  the  while 
That  your  limbs  must  labour,  while  yet  ye  have  strength  of  your 

youth  for  toil.' 
With  kindly  counsel  he  spake  ;  and  they  hied  them  aboard  once 

more. 
With  intent  to  get  them  forth  of  the  mere  by  toil  of  the  oar. 
On  sped  they  with  eager  purpose :  and  now  did  Triton  take 
On  his  shoulder  the  mighty  tripod  ;  and  now  did  he  enter  the  lake, 

N 


194  THE  ARGONAUTS 

And  they  saw  : — but  thereafter  did  no  man  mark  how  he  vanished  i 

from  sight 
With  the  tripod,  anigh  though  he  were.      Then  each  man's  heart 

grew  Hght, 
For  that  now  for  their  helping  had  met  them  one  of  the  Gods  ever- 
blest. 
And  they  cried  unto  Aison's  son  to  take  of  their  sheep  the  best, 
And  to  sacrifice  to  the  God,  and  to  chant  the  hymn  of  praise. 
Then  straightway  he  chose  it  in  haste,  and  the  victim  on  high  did 

he  raise, 
And  slew  it  there  on  the  stern,  and  the  sacrifice-prayer  he  cried  : 
*  Thou  God,  who  hast  manifested  thyself  on  the  mere's  lone 

side, — 
Whether  Triton  the  great  sea-marvel  thou  be,  or  whether  thy  name 
Be  Phorkys  or  Nereus  mid  Sea-nymphs  of  Nereus'  loins  which 

came, — 
Be  gracious  thou,  and  vouchsafe  heart-gladdening  home-return.'  3 
So  praying  he  severed  the  throat  of  the  victim,  and  down 

from  the  stern 
Mid  the  waves  did  he  cast  it.   Out  of  the  deep  yet  again  did  he  rise: 
In  his  own  true  form  as  a  God  was  he  manifest  unto  their  eyes. 
And  as  when  one  traineth  a  fleet-foot  steed  for  the  broad  race-course, 
Grasping  the  flowing  mane  of  the  hest-obeying  horse. 
Running  lightly  beside  him,  while  high  he  is  arching  his  neck  in 

his  pride. 
And  followeth  on,  and  the  gleaming  bit,  as  from  side  to  side 
He  rolleth  it  't^vixt  his  champing  jaws,  is  clashing  and  ringing  ; 
Even  so  with  his  hand  to  the  keel  of  hollow  Argo  clinging. 
Seaward  he  thrust  her  ;  and  all  his  form,  from  the  stately  crown  it 
Of  his  bead,  over  back  and  waist  and  navel,  thus  far  down 
Was  his  wondrous  shape  even  such  as  the  Gods  ever-blessed  are. 
But  down  from  his  loins  the  tail  of  a  sea-beast  lengthened  far 
Forking  to  this  side  and  that,  and  he  lashed  the  face  of  the  tide 
With  his  spines,  which  parted  below  into  fins  outcurving  wide 
In  fashion  like  to  the  horns  of  the  moon  when  the  month  is  new. 
Onward  he  drave  her,  till  sped  from  the  thrust  of  his  hand  she  flew 


THE  FOURTH  BOOK  195 

To  the  sea  :  then  sank  he  mid  fathomless  depths,  and  the  heroes  all 

Shouted,  whose  eyes  beheld  that  awesome  marvel  befall. 

There  is  the  haven  of  Argo,  and  there  are  the  signs  of  her  stay  :  1620 

There  stand  to  Poseidon  and  Triton  altars  unto  this  day  ; 

Forasmuch  as  for  that  day  tarried  they  there.    But  with  sail  outspread 

At  the  dawning  again  before  the  West- wind's  breath  they  fled. 

And  ever  they  kept  the  while  that  desert  land  to  the  right. 

On  the  morning  thereafter   the   ness  they  beheld,  and  the  long 

sea-bight 
Inland-trending  beyond  that  seaward-jutting  ness. 
Then  straightway  the  West-wind  failed  them,  but  blew  the  breath 

no  less 
Of  the  cloudless  South  ;  and  their  hearts  rejoiced,  in  the  sail  as 

it  sighed. 
And  the  sun  went  down,  and  uprose  the  star  of  the  folding-tide. 
Which  bringeth  from  labour  rest  unto  ploughmen  toil-fordone.     1630 
Even  then,  when  the  wind  died  down  as  the  darkling  night  drew  on, 
Furled  they  the  idle  sail,  and  the  mast  exceeding  tall 
They  lowered,  and  now  to  the  toil  of  the  polished  oar  did  they  fall 
All  through  the  night  and  the  day,  and,  when  failed  the  light  of 

the  day. 
Through  the  night  thereafter,  till  rugged  Karpathos  far  away 
Welcomed  them  :  thence  did  they  shape  their  course  unto  where 

rose  high 
Crete  above  all  the  rest  of  the  isles  in  the  sea  which  lie. 

There  Talos,  the  man  of  brass,  from  the  stubborn  scaur  as  he  tore 
Rock-shards,  withstood  them  from  making  the  hawsers  fast  to 

the  shore, 
When  came  to  the  roadstead  of  Dirke's  haven  the  sea-worn  ones.  1640 
Now  he  was  the  last  of  the  brazen  stock  of  the  Ash-tree's  sons  : 
In  the  days  of  the  Sons  of  the  Gods  none  other  on  earth  abode. 
Him  on  Europa  to  guard  her  island  Kronion  bestowed  ; 
And  thrice  round  Crete  each  day  with  his  brazen  feet  he  strode. 
Now  in  all  the  rest  of  his  body  and  limbs  was  he  fashioned  of  brass 
Which  might  not  be  broken  :   howbeit  a  blood-red  vein  there  was 
By  his  ankle  beneath  the  sinew,  and  guarded  therewithin 


196  THE  ARGONAUTS 

Were  the  issues  of  life  and  of  death  by  nought  save  a  film  of  skin. 
And  the  men  were  with  travail  outworn,  yet  aloof  from  the  land 

drew  they 
Their  ship  with  the  backward  sweep  of  the  oars,  in  exceeding  dismay,  i 
To  the  outsea  now  from  Crete  had  they  turned  them  in  plight  forlorn, 
Tormented  with  thirst,  and  by  all  their  travail-pain  outworn  ; 
But,  even  as  they  turned  them,  Medea  spake  to  the  hero-crew  : 

'  Hear  me  :  alone,  I  ween,  can  I  for  your  helping  subdue 
Yon  man,  whosoever  he  be,  though  fashioned  of  brass  all  through 
Be  his  body,  except  he  have  life  everlasting  added  thereto. 
But  consent  ye  to  keep  hereby  your  galley  beyond  the  flight 
Of  his  stones,  till  he  yield  unto  me  his  overmastered  might.' 

Then  backed  they  the  galley,  beyond  the  cast  of  his  arm,  to  rest 
On  the  oars  ;  and  they  waited  to  see  what  counsel,  of  all  unguessed, 
She  would  bring  to  pass.     Then  on  either  side  of  her  cheeks 

did  she  hold 
For  a  veil  before  her  face  her  purple  mantle's  fold. 
Then  up  to  the  deck  she  went,  and  her  hand  did  Aison's  son 
Grasp  in  his  own,  and  from  thwart  to  thwart  so  led  her  on. 
And  the  spell-chant  raised  she  :   the  Fates  with  singing  invoked 

she  there, 
Devourers  of  souls,  swift  hounds  of  Hades,  through  all  the  air 
Which  be  hovering  ever,  and  swoop  on  the  doomed  the  living  among. 
Bowing  the  knee  unto  these  three  times  she  invoked  them  with  song. 
And  thrice  with  prayer;  and  with  soul  unto  mischief  shapen  she  cast 
The  glance  of  the  evil  eye  upon  Talos,  his  vision  to  blast. 
And  her  teeth  gnashed  fury  accursed  upon  him,  the  arms  of  her  waved 
Beckonings  of  doom,  as  of  one  that  in  frenzy  of  hatred  raved. 

Zeus  Father,  awe  as  a  wind  on  my  spirit  bloweth  chill, 
Seeing  how  by  disease  not  alone,  nor  by  wounds,  the  doom  of  ill 
Meeteth  us,  yea,  how  one  from  afar  shall  work  our  bane  ! 
Even  as  he,  though  brazen,  vielded  yet  to  be  slain 
By  the  might  of  Medea  the  sorceress.     Then,  as  he  heaved  on  high 
The  massy  rocks  to  withstand  them  from  coming  the  haven  anigh, 
On  a  spur  of  the  crag  did  he  graze  his  heel,  and  the  ichor-flood 
Like  melting  lead  gushed  forth  :  nor  long  thereafter  he  stood 


THE  FOURTH  BOOK  197 

Towering  up  on  the  rock  out- jutting  that  frowned  o'er  the  brine. 

But,  even  as  high  on  the  mountain  side  a  giant  pine, — 

Which  the  woodmen  have  left,  when  adown  from  the  forest  at 

even  they  hie, 
With  the  keen  axe  half  hewn  through, — as  the  winds  of  the  night 

pass  by, 
Shivereth  first  in  the  blast,  and  swayeth  ;  but,  snapt  ere  long 
At  the  stump,  down  falleth  ;  so  he  on  his  feet  all  tireless-strong 
For  a  little  space  yet  stood,  yet  swayed  he  to  and  fro. 
Thereafter  all  strengthless  fell  with  a  mighty  crash  their  foe. 
For  that  night  there  on  the  shore  of  Crete  did  the  heroes  lie  ; 
But  thereafter,  so  soon  as  the  glow  of  the  dawn  overliushed  the  sky,  1690 
A  fane  to  Athene  Mino'is  builded  they  thereby. 
Then  water  they  drew  them,  and  hied  them  aboard,  that  with 

oars  swift- sped 
Before  all  else  they  might  pass  beyond  Salmone's  Head. 

But  even  as  they  ran  over  Crete's  wide  sea,  all  suddenly  came 
A  horror  of  darkness  on  them,which  the  Pall  of  Blackness  they  name, 
The  Night  of  Destruction.      No  stars  shone  through  it,  no  faint 

ray  gleamed 
Of  the  moon  :  black  chaos  from  heaven  descended,  or  haply  up- 
streamed 
Darkness  that  might  be  felt  from  the  depths  of  the  nethermost  hell. 
And   whether   through  Hades   they  drifted,  or   heaved  on  the 

waters'  swell, 
Nowise  they  knew  ;  but  unto  the  sea  in  helpless  despair  17C0 

They  committed  their  home-return,  to  bear  as  it  would.     But 

in  prayer 
Cried  Jason  with  mighty  voice,  and  to  Phoebus  his  hands  did  he  raise, 
Calling  on  him  to  save  them,  the  while  the  tears  ran  down  his  face 
In  his  trouble.    To  Pytho  and  Amyklae  promised  he  once  and  again 
Offerings  unnumbered  to  bear,  and  gifts  to  Ortygia's  fane. 
And  thou,  O  Leto's  son,  wast  swift  to  hear  :  from  on  high 
Unto  Melas'  rocks  thou  descendedst,  amidst  of  the  sea  which  lie. 
Twin  peaks  hath  the  isle :  upon  one  thereof  didst  thou  dart,  and  stand 
Uplifting  on  high  thy  golden  bow  in  a  God's  right  hand. 


198  THE  ARGONAUTS 

Flashed  round  thee  on  every  side  the  bow's  bright  splendour-sheen. 

Then  of  the  voyagers'  eyes  was  a  little  island  seen 

Of  the  Sporades,  overagainst  Hippuris'  tiny  isle. 

There  cast  they  anchor,  and  waited  :   and  soon  Dawn's  rosy  smile 

Flushed  up  through  the  sky.     In  a  tree-shadowed  dell  to  Apollo 

they  made 
A  goodly  hallowed  place,  and  an  altar  mid  twilight  of  shade. 
And  the  Splendour-god,  because  of  the  splendour  that  far-seen 

liamed, 
Phoebus  they  called  ;  and  Anaphe, '  Isle  of  Revealing,'  they  named 
That  rock,  for  that  Phoebus  revealed  it  to  men  bewildered  sore. 
And  they  sacrificed  whatso  men  might  provide  on  a  desolate  shore 
For  the  sacrifice :  but  when,  for  that  wine  they  had  none,  they  shed 
Water  over  the  brands  on  the  altar  glowing  red, 
Medea's  Phaeacian  maidens  beholding  them  could  not  refrain 
The  laughter  their  bosoms  within  any  more  ;  for  that  oxen  slain 
For  the  sacrifice  in  Alcinoiis'  halls  had  they  seen  full  oft. 
But  the  heroes  with  mirthful  hearts  cast  back  their  railing,  and 

scoffed 
With  gibing  words  :   and  so,  like  the  flame's  light-flickering  play, 
Flashed  taunts  'twixt  these  and  contention  of  jesting.     And  unto 

this  day, 
From  the  old  song-sport  of  the  heroes,  in  that  isle  women  fling 
Even  such  light  scoffs  at  the  men  when  gifts  of  atonement  they  bring 
To  Apollo  the  Splendour-god,  unto  Anaphe's  Warder-king.        i 
But  when  thence  they  had  loosed  the  hawsers,  when  summer- 
winds  blew  light, 
Then  did  Euphemus  call  to  remembrance  a  dream  of  the  night, 
In  his  awe  of  the  glorious  son  of  Maia.      For  lo,  him  thought 
That  the  god-given  clod  in  his  palm  close  unto  his  breast  he  had 

caught. 
And  therefrom  like  a  suckling  babe  white  streams  of  milk  it  drew. 
Till  the  clod,  for  all  that  so  little  it  were,  to  a  woman  grew 
Like  to  a  virgin.      In  love's  embrace,  by  desire  overborne. 
Did  he  lie  with  the  damsel :  yet  even  as  a  maiden  for  ruth  did 

he  mourn 


THE  FOURTH  BOOK  199 

To  have  humbled  her  whom  the  very  milk  of  his  breast  had  fed. 
But  she  with  unangry  words  spake  comfort  to  him,  and  she  said  :  1740 

'  Offspring  of  Triton  am  I,  and  the  nurse  of  thy  children  to  be  : 
No  maid,  dear  friend ;  for  that  Triton  and  L  ibya  gave  birth  unto  me. 
But  me  to  the  maidens  the  Daughters  of  Nereus  do  thou  restore 
To  dwell  in  the  sea  nigh  Anaphe's  isle.  I  shall  rise  once  more 
To  the  light  of  the  sun,for  thy  children's  childrena  home  prepared.' 
Now  his  heart  called  this  to  remembrance  ;   and  all  that  dream 

he  declared 
Unto  Aison's  son  :  then  he  mused  in  his  soul  on  a  prophecy 
Of  the  Smiter  from  Far,  and  he  uttered  his  thought,  and  thus 

spake  he  : 
*  O  strange  ! — of  a  surety  a  weird  of  glorious  renown  is  thine  ! 
For  the  Gods  shall  make  this  clod,  when  thou  castest  it  into  the  brine,  1750 
An  island,  wherein  thy  children's  children  hereafter  shall  live. 
For  this  was  the  stranger's-gift  which  Triton  did  freely  give 
To  thine  hand  on  the  Libyan  shore.      Of  the  Gods  that  abide 

for  aye 

None  other  was  he  who  gave,  when  he  met  thee  there  in  the  way.' 

He  spake,  and  Euphemus  set  not  at  nought  that  answering  word  ; 

But  his  heart  for  the  Aisonid's  oracle-promise  was  gladness-stirred; 

And  he  cast  'mid  the  surges  the  clod.     Thence  rose  up  an  isle 

from  the  sea, 
Kalliste,  the  sacred  nurse  of  Euphemus'  children  to  be. 
Which  in  Sintian  Lemnos  wont  to  dwell  in  the  ancient  days. 
And  from  Lemnos  were  driven  forth  by  men  of  Tyrrhenian  race  ;  1760 
And  to  Sparta  as  suppliants  came  they  :  from  Sparta  fared  they  on, 
Until  they  were  led  of  Thoras,  Autesion's  mighty  son. 
To  Kalliste  :  then  changed  they  its  name,  and  Thora  the  isle  did 

they  call 
From  their  chief  : — but  after  Euphemus'  days  did  this  befall. 
Thence  parting,  unhindered  o'er  long  sea-rollers  untold  did  they 

fare 
Till  they  stayed  on  Aigina's  beach  ;  and  in  innocent  rivalry  there 
Hero  with  hero  contended,  the  while  the  water  they  drew. 
Who  first  should  draw  it,  and  who  to  the  ship  win  first  of  the  crew. 


200  THE  ARGONAUTS 

For  their  need,  and  withal  the  fresh  strong  breeze,  bade  hasten  away. 
Wherefore  it  cometh  that  yet  do  the  youths  of  the  Myrmidons  lay 
On  their  shoulders  the  jars  full-brimmed,  and  burdened  so  do  they 

speed 
With  light-running  feet  o'er  the  race-course  striving  for  victory's 

meed. 
Be  gracious,  O  blest  generation  of  chieftains  ! — may  these  lays 

ring 
Year  after  year  in  the  ears  of  men  ever  sweeter  to  sing  ! 
For  now  at  the  last  am  I  come  to  the  glorious  ending  of  all. 
To  the  bourne  of  your  travail :  for  struggle  nor  strife  did  thereafter 

befall 
Unto  you,  as  homeward-bound  from  Aigina  did  Argo  flee. 
Neither  tempest  of  winds  brake  forth  ;  but  over  a  peaceful  sea 
By  the  land  of  Kekrops,  by  Aulis  coasting,  and  under  the  lee 
Of  Euboea,  by  cities  Opuntian  of  Lokrian  men  did  ye  fleet. 
Till  with  rapture  of  welcome  on  Pagasae's  strand  ye  set  your  feet. 


This  rendering  of  the  '  Argonautica,'  noiv  first  published^  has  been  translated 
from  the  original  Greek  by  Arthur  S.  Way,  M.A.,  the  gifted  translator  of 
'  Homer's  Iliad  and  Odyssey,'  ''the  Tragedies  of  Euripides,'  and  '  the  Epodes 
of  Horace. '  In  the  accompanying  '  Epilogue '  the  translator  summarises  the 
literary  history  of  the  poem^  and  indicates  its  place  in  Greek  literature.  The 
earlier  English  'versions  of  the  poem  are  the  'verse  renderings  by  Fawkes  and 
Green  (1780),  and  Preston  (1803).  These  translations  are  in  the  style  of 
Pope  ;  Preston  s  effort  is  the  better  ,•  it  is  iti  three  volumes^  the  second  and  third 
containing  elaborate  introductions  and  notes.  The  tnvo  poetical  -versions  ha-ve 
been  long  out  of  print,  and  are  noiu  very  rare.  There  is  also  an  English  prose 
rendering  by  Coleridge  (Bohn,  1889). 

As  in  the  case  of  Chapman's  '  Iliads,'  the  Publishers  have  thought  it  ivell  to 
allozv  the  type  to  run  into  the  margin,  so  as  to  avoid  the  turning  of  the  lines. 

The  General  Editor  desires  to  thank  Mr  Way  for  generously  placing  this  nenu 
version  of  the  old  poem  at  his  disposal  for  inclusion  in  tJie  present  series  ,•  he  feels 
sure  that  many  readers  tvill  appreciate  this  neiu-old  treasure  from  '  the  realms  of 

gold: 

I.  G. 

Shakespeare^ s  Day,  1901. 


THE  TRANSLATOR'S  EPILOGUE 

The  historian,  if  asked  to  name  the  country  and  the  period  in 
which  literary  men — not  popular  novelists,  but  men  whose  in- 
centive to  labour  is  the  love  of  literature,  science,  research — 
were  in  the  most  enviable  position,  would  go  very  far  back  from 
the  present  time,  and  point  to  Egypt  as  the  country,  and  the 
three  centuries  before  Christ  as  the  period.  '  The  history 
of  literature,'  it  has  been  said,  *  is  hardly  anything  but  a 
martyrology,  as  though  there  were  a  conspiracy  of  ingratitude 
among  men  : '  bat  the  respect,  honour  and  support  accorded  to 
literary  genius  under  the  Ptolemies  form  a  striking  contrast  to 
its  fate  in  other  lands  and  epochs. 

When,  on  the  death  of  Alexander  the  Great,  in  323  b.c, 
his  vast  empire  was  divided  amongst  his  generals,  one  of  them, 
Ptolemy  Soter,  became  king  of  Egypt.  Once  established  in 
his  kingdom,  he  soon  proved  that  he  was  very  much  more  than 
a  mere  soldier.  He  was  a  man  of  brains,  with  a  taste  for 
literature,  and  a  love  for  those  who  pursued  it.  His  successors 
were  worthy  of  him :  the  Ptolemies  created  an  era  in  the 
history  of  literature ;  they  made  learning  the  fashion,  and 
scholars,  poets  and  men  of  science  honourable. 

Ptolemy  I.  (Soter)  built  at  Alexandria  a  magnificent  palace 
of  learning,  the  Museum.  This  '  Temple  of  the  Muses  '  was 
such  in  a  very  literal  sense,  and  so  was  very  much  more  than  a 
museum  in  the  restricted  sense  now  commonly  understood.  It 
was  a  Residential  Royal  Academy  of  Literature,  the  Resident 
Fellows  of  which  were  literary  men.      The  first  great  annexe  to 

202 


THE  TRANSLATOR'S  EPILOGUE  203 

the  Museum  was  a  Library,  which  the  king  spared  no  expense 
to  make  complete,  and  thus  he  attracted  scholars  from  all  Greek- 
speaking  countries.  His  successor  further  enlarged  the  library, 
and  added  galleries  of  pictures  and  statues,  and  commenced  a 
natural  history  museum.  So  it  went  on  :  Ptolemy  after  Ptolemy 
added  to  the  completeness  and  magnificence  of  the  now  world- 
famous  library,  and  amassed  wealth  of  art-treasures  and 
curiosities  from  all  parts  of  the  world.  The  foundation  was 
richly  endowed,  so  that  the  poets,  scholars  and  scientists  who 
dwelt  there  lived  without  a  care,  in  sheltered  comfort  (Timon 
the  Phliasian  satirically  called  it  *the  coop'),  with  every 
advantage  for  the  prosecution  of  their  labours,  and  (after  the 
days  of  Ptolemy  V.  204-181  b.c.)  the  prospect  of  a  pension. 
There  was  a  hall  where  they  all  dined,  the  king  himself  being 
sometimes  of  the  company.  Through  generation  after  generation 
this  institution  was  the  hobby  of  the  kings  of  Egypt,  some  of 
whom  were  themselves  proud  to  be  of  the  brotherhood  of 
authors,  and  who  vied  with  each  other  in  fostering  genius,  talent 
and  plodding  industry,  with  a  splendour,  lavishness  and  zeal 
unapproached  in  any  other  age  or  country.  It  was  Ptolemy  IL 
(Philadelphus)  under  whose  auspices  was  produced  the  great 
translation  of  the  Hebrew  Bible  into  Greek,  known  as  the 
Septuagint,  from  which  the  authors  of  the  New  Testament 
quote.  When  Egypt  passed  under  the  dominion  of  Rome,  the 
Museum  and  its  endowments  did  not  suffer.  Livy  speaks  of  it 
as  a  noble  monument  of  the  wealth  of  the  Egyptian  kings  ;  and 
Ammianus  Marcellinus  says  that  till  the  time  of  Aurelian  (a.d. 
270-275),  the  Museum  'continued  to  be  the  habitation  of 
scholars.'  The  College,  or  Royal  Society  of  Literature,  so 
nobly  housed,  was  under  the  government  of  a  President,  nomi- 
nated first  by  the  Ptolemies,  afterwards  by  the  Roman  Emperors. 
Of  course,  patronage  cannot  create  genius,  though  it  can  pro- 
vide conditions  favourable  to  its  development ;  and  but  few  men 
of  genius  appeared  during  this  long  period  of  the  establishment 
and  endowment  of  literature.  But  the  general  level  of  culture 
was  raised,  and  the  amount  of  literary  work  done  was  immense. 


204  THE  ARGONAUTS 

A  great  deal  of  learned  labour  was  expended  upon  the  interpre- 
tation of  Homer.  <  It  may  indeed  be  said,'  remarks  Prof. 
MahafFy,  '  that  all  philology  among  the  Greeks,  all  textual  and 
grammatical  criticism,  arose  from  the  desire  to  purify  and  to 
understand  the  text  of  Homer,  and  then  of  other  old  poets.' 
At  the  same  time,  however,  while  nothing  was  more  meritorious 
than  the  role  of  the  commentator  on  Homer,  nothing  was  less 
so  than  any  attempt  to  imitate  him,  or  to  revive,  in  any  shape  or 
form,  epic  poetry.  It  was  settled  as  an  axiom  beyond  controversy 
that  the  age  of  great  sustained  poems  was  past,  that  the  age  of 
literary  gem-work,  of  perfect  finish  in  minute  details,  '  of  art  for 
art's  sake,'  had  come  to  stay.  So  poets  were  to  restrict  them- 
selves to  '  short  swallow-flights  of  song,'  fables,  hymns  to  various 
deities  and  sacred  places,  elegies,  epigrams,  the  one  thing  needful 
being  that  every  line  should  be  a  model  of  polished  brilliance, 
and  that  each  poem  should  be  a  mine  of  learned  allusion.  Of 
this  literary  faith  and  practice  the  great  champion  and  exponent 
was  Callimachus.^  He  was,  in  the  days  of  Ptolemy  Philadelphus 
(285-247  B.C.),  President  of  the  Museum,  and,  in  Prof. 
Murray's  words,  *  was  perhaps  the  most  influential  personality  in 
literature  between  Plato  and  Cicero.'  Philologist,  archaeologist, 
historian,  dramatist,  poet,  critic — there  was  scarcely  a  department 
of  literature  in  which  he  did  not,  in  the  view  of  his  contempor- 
aries, excel  ;  and  his  industry  was  enormous.  As  an  example 
of  the  scale  on  which  he  worked,  it  is  sufficient  to  mention  just 
one  of  his  many  productions — an  Encyclopedia  of  Literature, 
biographical,  bibliographical  and  critical,  in  one  hundred  and 
twenty  books.  The  prestige  of  his  official  position,  coupled  with 
his  exact  interpretation  of  the  demands  and  capacities  of  his  age, 
made  him  the  autocrat  of  letters.  He  carved  with  incisive 
criticism,  and  lashed  with  merciless  ridicule,  the  Thebaid,  an 
epic  written  by  Antimachus  of  Colophon  in  imitation  of  Homer, 
a  work  which  the  Emperor  Hadrian,  long  afterwards,  pro- 
nounced superior  to  Homer's — from  which  fact  we  learn  more 
perhaps  of  Hadrian  than  of  the  Thebaid.  We  can  faintly 
'  To  him  is  attributed  the  saying,  'A  great  book  is  a  great  evil.' 


THE  TRANSLATOR'S  EPILOGUE  205 

imagine,  then,  with  what  scornful  indignation  Callimachus  heard 
that  a  pupil  of  his  own,  a  young  inmate  of  the  Museum,  who 
owed  all  his  literary  culture  to  its  head,  had  revolted  from  the 
cardinal  principles  of  the  one  literary  faith,  had  actually  written 
an  epic  ! 

Apollonius,  son  of  Illeus  (or  Silleus),  born,  about  270  b.c, 
at  Naucratis  (or,  according  to  other  accounts,  at  Alexandria), 
was  kindled  by  his  studies  in  Homer  to  attempt  a  theme  never 
yet  worthily  sung — the  story  of  the  Quest  of  the  Golden  Fleece 
by  heroes  who  were  the  fathers  of  those  whose  exploits  Homer 
sang.  He  can  hardly  have  been  ignorant  of  his  master's  views 
on  the  subject  of  modern  epics  ;  but  he  may  well  have  felt  some 
confidence  that  he  could  do  that  which  would  prove  them  wrong, 
and  may  have  given  Callimachus  credit  for  magnanimity  enough 
to  confess  himself  mistaken  when  confronted  with  the  actual 
achievement  of  that  which  he  had  pronounced  impossible. 

He  completed  his  task,  and  gave  a  public  reading  of  his  epic, 
probably  in  the  lecture-hall  of  the  Museum.  Its  reception  was 
a  bitter  disappointment  for  him.  The  audience  took  its  cue 
from  the  all-powerful  President  ;  and  before  the  storm  of  im- 
patient interruptions,  angry  disapproval  and  contemptuous  laughter 
the  poor  lad — he  was  not  twenty — broke  down,  *  flushing  crimson 
with  mortification,'  as  the  old  Greek  biographer  graphically 
records.  He  recognised  only  too  clearly  who  had  taken  the 
lead  in  crushing  him,  and  tried  to  retaliate  in  satirical  verse  and 
stinging  epigram.  But  it  is  given  to  few  to  be  as  eflfective  with 
this  weapon  as  Dryden  or  Byron,  and  Apollonius  found  tha*- 
his  enemy's  artillery,  discharged  as  it  was  from  the  vantage- 
ground  of  social  influence  and  oflScial  authority,  overmatched  his 
own.  Callimachus  was  not  ashamed  to  put  forth  all  his  strength 
against  his  young  and  friendless  opponent  ;  and  his  bitter  satire. 
The  Ibis,^  seems  to  have  displayed  no  little  ability  and  power 
of  invective.  It  long  survived  the  occasion  for  which  it  was 
written,  and  must  have  been,  in  its  kind,  of  some  merit,  since, 

■'The  Bird  of  the  Nile'  in  satirical  allusion  to  Apollonius'  birthplace 
being  beside  that  river. 


2o6  THE  ARGONAUTS 

personal  and  local  though  it  was,  its  celebrity  lasted  till  the 
Augustan  age  of  Rome.  Ovid  took  it  as  his  model  in  his 
satirical  poem  of  the  same  name. 

The  young  poet  found  literary  life  in  Alexandria  made  im- 
possible for  him,  and  (invited  perhaps  by  sympathisers)  he  sailed 
thence  to  Rhodes.  He  there  produced  a  revised  version  of  his 
epic,  and  was  comforted  by  the  applause  with  which  the 
Rhodians  received  it.  Honoured  by  all,  and  presented  with 
the  freedom  of  the  city,  he  gratefully  took  for  his  country  the 
land  where  he  was  appreciated,  and  was  proud  to  be  known  as 
'  Apollonius  of  Rhodes.'  He  lived  there  many  years,  a  re- 
nowned poet,  and  a  popular  professor  of  rhetoric.  Meanwhile  at 
Alexandria  his  old  enemy  died  :  the  old  literary  cliques  were 
no  more :  the  fame  of  the  prophet  who  had  been  without 
honour  in  his  own  country  had  recrossed  the  sea  :  men  longed  to 
atone  for  the  neglect  which  was  a  discredit  to  themselves  ;  and 
Apollonius  was  given  to  understand  that  a  warm  welcome  was 
prepared  for  him  in  the  land  of  his  birth.  The  temptation  to 
triumph  on  the  scene  of  his  humiliation  was  irresistible.  He 
returned  to  Egypt :  he  read  his  poem  to  enthusiastic  audiences : 
the  opportune  death  of  Eratosthenes,  who  had  succeeded  Calli- 
machus  as  President  and  Chief  Librarian,  created  a  vacancy 
for  which  Apollonius  was  acclaimed  the  only  possible  successor. 
So,  installed  as  the  head  of  the  culture  and  learning  of  the  Greek 
world,  he  lived  days  of  peaceful  industry  and  satisfied  ambition, 
till,  full  of  years  and  honours,  he  passed  away,  and,  as  though 
to  symbolise  forgiveness  and  oblivion  of  old  feuds,  was  buried 
beside  his  old  master,  Callimachus. 

Like  all  the  Alexandrian  scholars,  he  was  busy  with  his  pen 
to  the  last.  His  most  important  works,  besides  the  *  Tale  of  the 
Argonauts,'  were  the  *  Foundations,'  poems  embodying  the  stories 
or  legends  of  the  origin  or  foundation  of  famous  cities,  such  as 
Rhodes,  Cnidus,  Alexandria.  But  of  them  all  only  nine  and  a  half 
lines  survive,  and  it  is  on  the  Argonaut'ica  that  his  fame  must  rest. 
The  poem  is,  like  the  epics  of  Vergil,  Tasso,  Tennyson,  the  work 
of  a  student,  and  not,  like  those  of  Homer,  the  work  of  a  man 


THE  TRANSLATOR'S  EPILOGUE  207 

who  had  been  a  part  of  the  Hfe  he  described.  ApoUonius 
connected  the  Argonauts  with  all  the  legends  or  myths  belonging 
to  the  places  they  might  be  supposed  to  have  visited,  gathering 
materials  for  this  part  of  his  work  from  the  rich  libraries  in  which 
he  wrote.  Hence  we  find  traces  of  his  having  more  matter  than 
he  quite  knew  what  to  do  with  ;  and  his  digressions  on  the  origins 
of  cities,  names,  rites,  and  so  forth,  are  occasionally  such  as  the 
average  reader  will  skip.  Still,  all  together,  they  do  not  occupy 
proportionally  as  much  space  as  the  similarly  little-read  Catalogue 
of  the  Ships  in  the  Iliad. 

There  can  be  no  doubt  that  the  Argonautica  was  for  the  ancients 
the  one  great  epic  between  Homer  and  Vergil.  Even  con- 
temporaries wrote  commentaries  on  it.  It  was  popular  among  the 
Romans.  P.  T.  Varro  earned  fame  by  his  translation  of  it,  and 
Val.  Flaccus  wrote  a  Latin  Argonautica,  which  was  but  a  free 
translation  of  the  Greek  original.  But  his  noblest  eulogy  will  be 
found  in  the  pages  of  Vergil,  who  drew  no  small  part  of  his  in- 
spiration from  him,  transferring  to  his  JEneid  at  least  a  score  of 
episodes,  similes,  or  picturesque  touches. 

On  the  other  hand,  ApoUonius  is  very  far  from  being  an 
imitator  of  Homer.  He  is,  indeed,  considering  the  atmosphere  in 
which  his  genius  was  trained,  amazingly  original ;  and  it  is  not 
the  least  proof  of  his  genius  that  he  recognised  that  his  strength 
lay  in  the  very  things  which  were  either  neglected,  or  lightly 
touched  on,  by  Homer.  The  elaborate  picturesqueness  and  un- 
failing 'verve  with  which  he  describes  the  coasting  voyages,  the 
weird  desolation  of  the  Libyan  sands,  the  gauntlet-fight,  the  battle 
with  the  giants,  the  passage  of  the  Clashing  Crags,  and  that  of 
the  Wandering  Rocks,  the  ploughing  with  the  brazen  bulls,  and 
many  other  such  incidents,  are  examples  of  work  of  which  Homer 
gives  but  slight  and  occasional  examples  :  while  the  great  and 
crowning  achievement  of  the  poem,  the  story  of  Medea's  passion, 
with  its  fierce  fervour,  its  thrilling  pathos,  its  lovely  tenderness  and 
virginal  purity,  its  strangely  modern  introspectiveness  and  analysis 
of  motives,  is  absolutely  without  parallel,  not  in  Homer  alone,  but 
in  any  Greek  poet  whose  works  have  come  down  to  us.      Even 


2o8  THE  ARGONAUTS 

Vergil,  with  all  his  human  sympathy,  with  all  the  advantage  of 
having  such  a  model  before  him,  cannot  rise  to  the  same  height : 
the  love  of  Dido  is  a  pale  reflex  of  that  of  Medea.  It  is  curious, 
too,  to  note  that,  even  in  the  minor  matter  of  similes,  Apollonius 
remains  original.  In  only  one  (Bk.  II.  541-548,  where  he 
somewhat  expands  Homer's  thought)  can  he  be  charged  with 
imitation. 

The  argument  has  been  well  summed  up  by  Prof.  R.  Ellis  : — 
*  For  Apollonius  the  problem  was  how  to  write  an  epic  which 
should  be  modelled  on  the  Homeric  epics,  yet  be  so  completely 
different  as  to  suggest,  not  resemblance,  but  contrast.  We  think 
no  one  who  has  read  even  a  hundred  lines  of  the  poem  can  fail  to 
be  struck  by  this.  It  is  in  fact  the  reason  why  it  is  a  success. 
The  Argonautica  could  not  have  been  written  without  the  Iliad  and 
Odyssey^  but  it  is  in  no  sense  an  echo  of  either.  Nay,  we 
believe  that  a  minute  examination  of  Apollonius'  language  and 
rhythm  would  show  that  he  placed  himself  under  the  most  rigid 
laws  of  intentional  dissimilarity.  Not  that  this  is  more  than  one 
element  of  his  success.  His  genius  is  quite  as  real  an  element ; 
and  no  one  will  deny  this  who  has  studied  the  successive  phases 
of  Medea's  passion  in  Book  III.  If,  indeed,  greatness  could 
be  tested  by  the  extent  of  influence  after  death,  the  poem 
of  Apollonius  can  rank  only  with  the  best  works  of  Greek 
literature.' 


THE    END 


Colston  dr»  Coy.  Li»nted,  Printers,  Edinburgh. 


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