stratagems.
âFor all he said of my wickednessâI was fifteen
thenâ
I preferred to wheel and deal. So, having nothing, only the dry crumbs Pelias dropped, I made my bargain with
him.
I'd sail the seas, bring back whatever my crew and I could steal, and leave it for him to decide what worth
it was.
I wouldn't be the first great lord, God knew, who'd
gotten his start
marauding. I gathered my crew together, and with the
first fair wind,
we sailed. We were lucky. Good breezes most of the
way, good hosts â¦
“We learned quickly. If men came down to us with
open arms,
glad to see strangers, eager to hear of our sea
adventures,
we made ourselves their firm friendsâpraised them to
the skies,
fought beside them if they happened to have some
war in progress,
drank with them, gave them our shoulders later when
they stumbled, climbing
to bed. And when the time for leaving came, they'd
give us
gifts, the finest they hadâthey'd load up our boat to
the gunnels,
throw in a barge of their ownâand we'd stand on the
shore with them, moaning,
tears running down our cheeks, and we'd hug them,
swearing we'd never
forget. When we sailed away we'd wave till the haze
of land
was far below the horizon. They were no jokes, those
friendships.
Sooner than anyone thought, I'd prove how firm they
were,
when all at once I had need of the men I'd fought beside, sung with half the night, or tracked down women
withâ
princes my own age, some of them, or second sons, nephews of kings, like myself, with no inheritance but nerveâcourage and talent to spareâand their old
advisors,
sea-dog uncles, friends of their fathers, powerful fighters who'd outlived the centaur war, seen war with the
Amazons,
and now, like dust-dry banners in a trunk, waited, their
glory
dimmed.
“So it was with friends. But if, on the other hand, we landed and men came down at us with battle-axes, stones and hammers, swords, we'd repay them blow
for blow
till the rock shore streamed with bloodâor we'd row
for our lives, and then
creep back when darkness came, invisible shadows
more soft
of foot than preying cats, and we'd split their skulls.
We'd sack
their towns, stampede their cattle in the vineyards till
not one vine
stood straight; and so we'd take by force what they
might have made
more profitable by hurling it into the sea before we came. Yet it wasn't the best of bargains on either
side.
Both of us paid with lives, and more than once we lost a ship. Besides, the booty we snatched and hauled
aboard
was mediocre at bestâfar cry from the hand-picked
treasures
given with love by friends. Sometimes when the sea
was rough
the loot we'd loaded on the run would clatter and slide,
and our weight
would shift, and we'd scratch for a handhold, watching
the sea comb in.
“We learned. We were out three years. When we
turned at last for home,
we had seven ships for the one we'd started with. I'd
earned
my keep, I thought: a house like any lord's, at least, and some small say in my uncle's court I figured wrong. Sour milk and rancid honey it was, in the eyes of Pelias.
“The king had gotten the solemn word of an oracle
that he'd meet his death through the works of a man
he'd someday see
coming from town with one bare foot. It was soon
confirmed.
Just after we landed, I was fording the Anauros River,
making
for town and the palace beyond, when I lost one sandal
in the mud.
It was stuck fast, gripped as if by the hand of old Hades seizing at a pledge. The river was floodedâit was a
time of thawâ
so I left it there. Pelias was giving a great banquet for his father Poseidon and the other godsâor all but
Heraâ
when I came where he sat, his lords and ladies all
crowded around him,
dressed to the nines, like a flock of exotic birdsâlong
capes
more brilliant than precious stones, deep blue, sharp
yellow, scarletâ
eating and laughing, plump as the mountainous clusters
of grapes
the slaves bore in. I bowed to him, dressed in the
panther-cape
already famous for midnight strikes, unexpected attacks from rooftops, pits of dungeons. I bowed, most
dignifiedâ
except, of course, for that one bare foot. He looked not
exactly
gratified that I'd made it. He looked, in fact, like a man who's gotten an arrow in his back. Pelias threw out his
hands,
tiny chins trembling, and said, âJ-J-J
-Jason!'
And said no more. He'd fainted. It was three full days before I
could see him.
“Well, no reason to stretch it out. I sat by his bed, summed up my winnings, and waited to hear what he
thought it all worth.
I heard, instead, about the golden fleece. I had the
m-makings
of a king, he said. He continually squeezed his hands
together,
winking. I thought he'd gone crazy. âJ-J-J-Jason, b-boy, you've got the m-makings of a king.' He was gray and
flabby, like a man
who's been sitting in a dimly lit room for a full
half-century.
His legs and arms were spindles, the rest of him loose,
like a pudding,
his large head wide and flat, wrinkled like an embryo's. In his splendid bedclothesâazure and green and as full
of light
as wine falling in a stream in front of a candle flame-he looked like a slightly frightened treetoad, blinking
its eyes,
cautiously peeking out from a spray of peacock feathers. You would not have thought him a child of Poseidon
the Earth-trembler,
but demigod he was, nonetheless, and dangerous.
“I waited, laboring to figure him out. I dropped the
idea
of craziness. He was sly, vulpine. The way he made his eyes glint when he mentioned the fleece, and wrung
his hands
and made me bend to his pillow, to let him poke at me, conspirators in a cunning schemeâI knew the old man was sane enough. He was pulling something. Yet this
was the plan:
Bring him the golden fleece, and he'd split the kingdom
with me,
half and half. I could see at a glance what he wanted,
all right,
though I wasn't quite sure of the reasonânot then.
But half the kingdom!
I looked down, hiding my interest, adding it up. I saids “You seem to forget the difficulties,' and watched him
closely.
âNo d-d-d-
diff
iculties!' he said, and splashed out his
arms,
then wiped his mouth. “None for a muh-muh-man like
you!
âI waited. He grinned like a monkey. Then after a while
he sighed,
allowed that it might be a long way, allowed that there
might
be âsnakes' (he glanced at me) âsnakes and suh-suh-so
on.' He sighed.
âAnd if I ⦠refuse your offer?' He sighed again, looked
grieved.
“You're young, J-Jason. P-popular.' He looked out the
window.
And I understood. âYou think I'll reclaim my father's
throne
despite all the horrors of civil war. But if, by
mischanceâ'
âJ-Jason!' he exclaimed. His eyes were wide with shock.
I laughed.
He snatched my hand, and, sickly as he looked, his grip
was fierce.
He wept. âJ-Jason, I wish you w-well,' he said. And
he didâ
as Zeus wished Kronos well when he had all his bulk
in chains,
or as Herakles wished for nothing but peace to the
slaughtered snake
or the shredded, mammocked tree when he tore off the
apples of gold.
âSuppose you had the suh-certain word of an oracle,'
he said,
âthat a suh-certain man was going to k-k-k-kill you.
What would
you do?' I nodded. âI'd send him to fetch the golden
fleece,'
I said. Old Pelias squeezed my hand. âGo and f-fetch it.' And so I agreed. Pelias had known I'd agree, of course. What Pelias couldn't know was that I'd beat those odds. It meant two thingsâthe perfect ship and the perfect
crew.
I could get them. That very day I checked with the
augurers,
playing it safe. No signs were ever better; and though I had, like any man of sense, my doubts about how much a squinting, cracked old priestâwith
reasons of his own,
could be, for seeing what he didâhow much such a
man could know
by watching a few stray birds, still, I was excited.
I was
a most devout young man, in those days. Goodness
in the gods
was a rockfirm fact of experience, I thought. And so
I told
the king that as soon as I'd gotten my ship and crew
together
I'd sail.
“It was Argus who built the shipâold Argus, under Athena's eye. He built it of trees from her sacred groves, beech and ironwood, towering pines and great dark
oaks
that sang in the wind like men, a vast, unearthly
choirâ
and Athena showed him herself which trees to cut.
When the beam
of the keel went in, old Argus smiled, his long gray hair tied back with a thong, and the beam said, âGood! Nice
work, old man!'
When he notched the planks and lowered them onto the
chucks, the planks
said, âGood! Nice fit!' He carved the masts and shaped
them with figures
facing in all the four directions, and after he'd dropped
them,
slid them with a hollow thump to the central beam,
they said,
That's fine! We're snug as rocks!' Then he built the
booms and wove
the sails. The black ship sang, and Argus had finished it.
“I gathered the crew.
“I can't deny it: there never was
in all this world or on any world a mightier crew than the Argonauts. Sweet gods, beside the most feeble
of the lot,
I seemed, myself, a mildly intelligent hedgehog!
I gathered
Akhaians from far and nearâall men of genius, sons of godsâ
“And the first, the finest of them all, was Orpheus.
He was borne by Kalliope herself to her Thracian lover
Oiagros,
high on the slopes of Pimplea. Even as a child, with his
music
he enchanted the towering, frozen rocks and the violent
streams,
and to this day there are quernal forests on the coasts
of Thrace
that Orpheus, playing his lyre, lured down from Pieria, rank on rank of them, coming to his music like soldiers
on the march.
The next I chose was Polyphemon, son of Eilatos,
out of
Larissa. He was, in his younger days, a hero in the
ranks
of the incredible Lapithai who warred with the centaurs
once.
His limbs by now were heavy with age, but he still had
the same
fierce heart.
âThe next was Asterios, son of an endless line
of travellers, explorers, river merchants, a man who
could trade up
wools and linens to priceless gems. And Iphiklos was
next,
my mother's brother, who came for the sake of our
kinship. Then
Admetos, king of Pherai, rich in sheep. Then the sons of Hermes, out of Alope, land of cornfields; with them Aithalides their kinsman. Then, from wealthy Gyrton, Koronos came, the son of Kaineosâstrong as a boulder, though he wasn't the man his father was. In Gyrton
they say
the old man singlehanded beat the centaurs back, and after the centaurs rallied and overcame him, even then they couldn't kill him. With massive pines they
drove him
down in the earth like a nail. He was still alive.
“Then Mopsos,
powerful man whom Apollo had trained to excel all
others
in the art of augury from birds. He knew when he
came, he said,
that he'd meet his end in the Libyan desert.
Then Telamon
and Peleus, sons of Aiakos, fathers in turn of sons as awesome as they were themselvesâthe heroes Aias
and Akhilles,
now chief terrors of Troy.
“And after the two great brothers,
from Attica came Butes, son of Teleon, and Phalerus, famous for their deadly spears. (Theseus, finest of the Attic line, was out of business. He'd gone with Peirithoös into the Underworld, and was kept
there, chained,
a prisoner deep in the earth.)
âThen out of the Thespian town
of Siphai, Tiphys came. He was a mariner who could sense the coming of a swell across the open
sea
and knew by the sun and stars when storms were
brewing, six
weeks off. Athena herself had sent him to join usâshe who'd supervised the building of our ship.
“Then Phlias
came, Dionysos' son, who lived by the springs of
Asoposâ
child of the black-robed god who was my father's father. Phlias was a dancer, a tiger in battle. He never learned
speech.
“From Argos came Talaos and Areion, and powerful
Leodokos.
“Then came Herakles. He'd heard a rumor of the
expedition