Jason and Medeia

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Authors: John Gardner

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Jason and Medeia

John Gardner

A NOTE FROM THE PUBLISHER

John Gardner wrote
Jason and Medeia
as a book-length poem, complete with line breaks and indents that do not usually occur in works of prose. In keeping with the author's intentions, this ebook edition has deliberately kept the original formatting.

TO JOAN

ACKNOWLEDGMENTS

This poem was made possible by financial gifts from my friends Marilyn Burns, Ruby Cohn, and Duncan M. Luke and by grants from Southern Illinois University and the National Endowment for the Arts. I thank William H. Gass for permission to borrow and twist passages from his
Fiction and the Figures of Life,
and Gary Snyder for permission to borrow and twist two of his translations from the Cold Mountain series. Parts of this poem freely translate sections of Apollonios Rhodios'
Argonautica
and Euripides'
Medeia,
among other things.

And so the night will come to you: an end of vision;

darkness for you: an end of divination.

The sun will set for the prophets,

the day will go black for them.

Then the seers will be covered with shame,

the diviners with confusion;

they will all cover their lips,

because no answer comes from God.

MICAH 3:6—7

Contents

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A Biography of John Gardner

1

I dreamed I awakened in a valley where no life stirred,

no cry

of a fox sparked up out of stillness; a night of ashes.

I was sitting

in a room that seemed a familiar defense against

darkness, but decayed,

the heavy old book I'd been reading still open on my

knees. The lamp

had burned out long ago; at the socket of the bulb,

thick rust.

All around me like weather lay the smell of the

abandoned house,

dampness in every timber, the wallpaper blistered,

dark-seamed,

at the window, the curtains mindlessly groping inward,

and beyond,

gray mist, wet limbs of trees. I seemed to be waiting

for someone.

And then (my eyes had been tricked) I saw her—

a slight, pale figure

standing at the center of the room, present from

the first, forlorn,

around her an earth-smell, silence, the memory of a

death. In fear

I clutched the arms of my chair. I whispered:

“Dream visitor

in a dreaming house, tell me what message you bring

from the grave,

or bring from my childhood, whatever unknown or

forgotten land

you haunt!” So I spoke, bolt-upright, trembling; but the ghost-shape, moonlit figure in mourning, was silent, as if she could neither see nor hear. She

had once

been beautiful, I saw: red hair that streamed like fire, charged like a storm with life. Alive no longer.

She began

to fade, dissolve like a mist. There was only the

moonlight.

Then came

from the night what I thought was the face of a man

familiar with books,

old wines, and royalty—dark head slightly lowered, eyes amused, neither cynical nor fully trusting: cool eyes set for anything—a man who could spin a yarn and if occasion forced him, fight.

Then I saw another shade,

a poet, I thought, his hair like a willow in a light wind, in his arms a golden lyre. He changed the room to sky by the touch of a single string—or the dream-change

rang in the lyre:

no watchfulness could tell which sea-dark power

moved first.

If I closed my eyes, it seemed the song of the man's harp was the world singing, and the sound that came from

his lips the song

of hills and trees. A man could revive the dead

with a harp

like that, I thought; and the dead would glance back

in anguish at the grave,

torn between beauty's pain and death's flat certainties.

(This was a vision stranger than any a man ever saw. I rose and stepped in close. There came a whistling

wind.

My heart quaked. I'd come, God knew, beyond my

depth.

I found a huge old tree, vast oak, and clung to it,

waiting.)

   And now still another ghost rose up, pale silent mist: the mightiest mortal who'd ever reached that thestral

shore,

his eyes like a child's. They seemed remote from me

as stars

on a hushed December night. His whitened lips moved, and I strained forward; but then some wider vision

stirred,

blurring my sight: the swaying shadow of a huge snake, a ship reeling, a room in a palace awash in blood, a woman screaming, afire …

The sea went dark. Then all

grew still. I bided my time, the will of the moon-goddess.

   A king stood scowling out over blue-green valleys.

He seemed

half giant, but enfeebled by age, his sinews slackening

to fat.

In the vast white house behind him, chamber rising

out of

chamber, nothing moved. There was no wind, no breeze. In the southwest, great dark towers of cloud were

piled high,

like summercastles thrown up in haste to shield ballistas, archers of ichor and air, antique, ignivomous engines, tottering in for siege, their black escarpments charged like thunderheads in a dream. Light bloomed, inside

the nearest—

there was no sound—and then, at the king's left side

appeared

a stooped old man in black. He came from nowhere—

leering

sycophant wringing his crooked-knuckled hands, the

skin

as white as his beard, as white as the sun through

whitecaps riding

storm-churned seas. The king stood looking down at

him, casual,

believing he knew him well. “My lord!” the old man said, “good Kreon, noblest of men and most unfortunate!” He snatched at the hem of the king's robe and kissed it,

smiling.

I saw that the old man's eyes and mouth were pits. I

tried

to shout, struggle toward them. I could neither move

nor speak.

   Kreon, distressed, reached down with his spotted,

dimpled hands

to the man he took for his servant, oft-times proven

friend,

and urged him up to his feet. “Come, come,” the king

said, half-

embarrassed, half-alarmed. “Do I look like a priest?”

He laughed,

his heart shaken by the sudden worship of a household

familiar.

He quickly put it out of mind. “But yes; yes it's true,

we've seen

some times, true enough! Disaster after disaster!”

He laughed

more firmly, calming. His bleared eyes took in the river winding below, as smooth and clean as new-cut brass, past dark trees, shaded rocks, bright wheat. In the

soft light

of late afternoon it seemed a place the gods had

blessed,

had set aside for the comfort of his old age. Dark walls, vine-locked, hinted some older city's fall.

He tipped

his head, considered the sky, put on a crafty look. They say, ‘Count no man happy until he's dead, beyond all change of Fortune.'” He smiled again, like a

merchant closing

his money box. “Quite so, quite so! But the axiom has its converse: ‘Set down no man's life as tragedy till the day he's howled his way to his bitter grave.' ”

He chuckled,

a sound automatic as an old-man actor's laugh, or

a raven's.

He'd ruled long, presiding, persuading. Each blink,

each nod

was politics, the role and the man grown together

like two old trees.

Then, solemn, he squeezed one eye tight shut, his head drawn back. He scowled like a jeweller of thirty

centuries hence

studying the delicate springs and coils of a strange

timepiece,

one he intended to master. He touched the old slave's

arm.

“The gods may test their creatures to the rim of

endurance—not

beyond. So I've always maintained. What man could

believe in the gods

or worship them, if it were otherwise?” He chuckled

again,

apologetic, as if dismissing his tendency toward bombast. “In any case,” he said, “our luck's

changing.

I give you my word.” He nodded, frowning, hardly glancing at the husk from which the god peeked

out

as the rim of a winecup peeks from the grave of the

world's first age.

The spying, black-robed power leered on, wringing his hands in acid mockery of the old servant's love.

Whatever shadows had crossed

the king's mind, he stepped out free of them. Tentatively, he smiled once more, his lips like a

woman's,

faintly rouged, like his cheeks. His bald head glowed like polished stone in the failing light. A breeze, advancing ahead of the storm, tugged at his heavy skirts and picked at his beard. “It's difficult, God knows,”

he said,

“to put those times behind us: Oidipus blind and wild, Jokasta dead, Antigone dead, high-chambered Thebes yawning down like a ship in flames… Don't think

I haven't

brooded aplenty on that. A cursed house, men say; a line fated to the last leaf on the last enfeebled branch. It's a dreadful thought,

Ipnolebes.

I'm only human. I frighten as easy as the next man. I won't deny that I've sat up in bed with a start,

sometimes,

shaking like a leaf, peering with terrified, weeping eyes at the night and filling the room with a frantic rush

of prayers—

‘Dear gods, dear precious-holy-gods …' —Nevertheless, I can't believe it. A man would be raving mad to think the luculent powers above us would doom us willy-nilly, whether we're wicked or virtuous, proud or not. No, no! With all due respect, with all due love for Oidipus and the rest, such thoughts are the sickness of faulty

metaphysics.”

   The king stared at the darkening sky, his soft hands folded, resting on his belly. Again he closed one eye and reached for the old slave's arm. “I do not mean

to malign

the dead, you understand. But working it through in

my mind

I've concluded this: the so-called curse has burned

itself out.”

He paused, thought it over, then added, as if with a

touch of guilt,

“No curse in the first place, actually. They were tested

by the gods

and failed. Much as I loved them all, I'm forced to

say it.”

He shook his head. They were stubborn. So they went

down raging to the grave

as Oidipus rages yet, they tell me, stalking the rocks of his barren island, groping ahead of himself with

a stick,

answering cries of gulls, returning the viper's hiss, tearing his hair, and the rest. Well, I'm a different breed of cat. Not as clever, I grant—and not as noble,

either—

but fit to survive. I've asked far less than those did. I ask for nothing! I do my duty as a king not out of pride in kingship, pleasure in the awesome power

I wield,

but of necessity. Someone must rule, and the bad luck's

mine.

Would Kreon have hanged himself, like poor Jokasta?

She was

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