your feet!
Entrust your homes, your cattle, your lovely city on
the hill
to these visitors! Whatever their beauty or ugliness, they're lovely beside old age, starvation, the silence
at the end.'
“They listened, shocked. A few rose up and clapped;
and then
on every side, the hall applauded Polyxo's speech. Hypsipyle stood up again, ghost-white. âSince you're
all agreed,
I'll send a messenger to the ship at once.' She said
to Iphinoe:
âGo, Iphinoe, and ask the captain of this expedition, whoever, whatever the man may be, to come to
my house;
and tell his men they may land their ship and come
into town
as friends.' With that, the beautiful golden-haired
daughter of Thoas
dismissed the meeting and set out in haste for home.
“More swiftly
Euphemos came, racing over the water, to the
Argo,
and so we were ready for the news Iphinoe brought.
“Blue eyes
cast down, half-kneeling like a dancer, a slave,
a suppliant,
she poured out her tale. I hardly listened to the words,
wondering
at the clash of appearance and fact. She seemed more
soft than ferns
at dawn, more sweet than a bower of herbs and
gillyflowers,
clear and holy of mind as sunlit glodes. I stood bemused, and heard her out. In the end, I said I'd come. None spoke against it. We stood observing Iphinoe like
men
in a trance: the night was silent, not a wave stirring.
By the light
of the ship's torches she seemed a celestial vision of
beauty
and innocenceâand yet we knewâand we stared,
numbed,
like a child who's discovered a spider in the fold
of a rose. When the girl
was gone, receding like music toward that torchlit shore, we gathered around Aithalides, who told what he'd seen and heard, and we turned it over in our minds like a
strange coin,
an arrowhead centuries old. And then I went to them. I hardly knew myself what I meant to do. Avenge the dead, perhaps. Yet how can a man set his mind
to avenge
a crime he can hardly conceive, an act as baffling as
the dreams
of camels?
“Old Argus knew my thought, as usual.
He called me, frowning, and gave me a cloak as I
started for town.
The man knew more than it's good for a man to know.
The cloak
was crimson, bordered with curious designs that
outshone the rising
sun. I remember the old man's look as he pointed
them out.
Here the cyclops, hammering out the great thunderbolt for Zeus, one ray still lacking, lying on the ground
and spurting
flame. And here Antiope's sons, with the town of Thebes, as yet unfortified. Zethos shouldered a mountain peakâ he seemed to find it heavy workâand Amphion walked behind, singing to his lyre; a boulder twice his size came trundling after him. Here came Aphrodite,
wielding
Ares' formidable shield. It mirrored her breasts. And
here
a woodland pasturage, with oxen grazingâin a grove
nearby,
herdsmen fighting off raiders. The trees were wet with
blood.
And here stood Phrixos with the golden ram, the huge
beast speaking,
Phrixos listening, and the whole weird scene so artfully
wrought
that all who looked at it hushed for a moment,
listening too,
straining for the creature's words. Who knows what
all this means?
Argus wove it. Who knows if he knew himself?
“I wore
the mantle, crossing to the city, and the water glowed
blood-red
beside me. When I passed through the gates the women
came flocking around me,
reddened, demonic in the mantle's glow. They sighed
and smiled
and held out flowers that gleamed, as eerie as
gardens lit
by burning walls. I kept my eyes on the ground
and walked
till I came to Hypsipyle's palace. The double doors
with close-fit
panels flew openâpanelling of cypress, the beams
of the palace
cedar, and all around me the scent of nard and saffron, calamus and cinnamon, and incense-bearing trees,
Oriental
myrrh and aloesâand Iphinoe led me quickly through the hall and brought me to a polished chair where I sat
and faced
the queen. In blood-red stillness that sweet face looked
at me.
For all the old artificer's magic, her cheeks were as fair between their pendantsâand her neck in the cup of
her necklacesâ
as young doves hiding in the clefts of a rock, the
coverts of a cliff.
âMy lord,' she said, more soft, more gentle than a child,
“why have
you stayed so long outside our cityâa city that has lost its men? They have gone to the mainland to plough
the fields of Thrace.
She kept back tears. âI'll tell you the truth. In my
father's time
they raided there, bringing booty home, and women too. But cruel and childlike Aphrodite for a long time had kept her eye on them, and at last she struck. She
made
their hearts furnaces, howling, raging with lustâburned
out
their wits. They lost all sense of right and wrong,
conceived
a loathing for their wedded wives: turned them out of
doors and took
their captives into their beds. For a long time we
endured it,
hoping their lust would dieâbut its heat increased.
No father
cared at all for his daughter; a cruel step-mother
could kill
the girl-child in his sight, and the father would laugh.
No brother
cared for his sister as he ought or defended his mother.
At last,
at the dark whisper of a god, we resolved to act. One day when the men sailed home from raiding, we closed our
gates against them,
hoping to drive them elsewhere, whores and all.
They fought us.'
She paused, lowering her eyes, as though the memory were even now a source of pain and shame. âSome died,' she said, âsome both on their side and on ours. In the
end,
they begged from us our male children and left, and so went back with their women to Thrace. And there they
are now, scratching
a livelihood from its snowy fields. âShe paused again, eyes turned aside, maidenly.' Because of that, noble stranger, I invite you to stay and settle with us. All that women can do for men we'll do for you, beyond your wildest hopes. And you yourself, captainâ robed like a kingâmy father's sceptre shall be yours
alone,
and all you say shall be heard as law on Lemnos.' She
raised
her shy eyes, gently pleading, like a girl who's come to
her beloved
and stands now naked and trembling, awaiting her loved
one's hands,
fearing he'll scoff at her gift as shameful. What
could I say?
I could easily think, in the cloak's unnatural light,
that all
her words were lies. Yet how could I know? Old
Argus wove
the cloth. There was magic in it, the magic of Athena,
queen
of cities, builder of the
Argo.
And what did Athena care for Hypsipyle, the quiet power a man might gain as king on that lonely island, guarding its old,
deep-grounded
walls, defending its women, right or wrong? As for all Aithalides saw and heard, should I trust the evidence of another's fallible senses and not my own? A case of desperate rationalizing, you may say. I grant it. But I think no man but a fool would have dared to
avenge those deaths
with no more case for Hypsipyle's guilt than that. She
was
no ordinary beauty, moreoverâwhatever her sins. She was fait as the moon, resplendent as the sun; in
her gem-rich robes
as dazzling as an army with all its banners flying.
“I rose.
âWe need your help, Hypsipyle,' I said, âand all you
can give us.
But the sovereignty I must leave to youâthough not
from indifference.
An urgent calling forces me on. I'll talk with my men and come once more to your palace.' I stretched my
hand to her
and she took it A touch like fire. I quickly turned and
left,
and countless young girls ran to me, dancing around
me, smiling,
kissing my hands, my cheeks, my clothes. They knew
what it was
to be women, manless for a year and more. Before
I reached
the shore, they were there before me with
smooth-running wagons laden
with gifts. They did not find it hard to bring my
Argonauts
home with them. Queen Aphrodite, changeable as summer wind, was in every blade of grass; she shone in every rock and tree. And so I spent the night with Hypsipyle, my truncheon under the pillow. And
spent
the next night too, and the next. And I could find no
sign
of wickedness in those dove-soft eyes, no trace of a lie on her apple-scented lips. Nor could my men find evil hidden in the women who led them gently, shyly, home to bed. They were not racked by nightmares, prodded
and pinched
by guilt, hounded by furies. If they were alarmed
at times
by images, were their husbands not alarmed before
them,
those who'd raided and bloodied the fields of Thrace?
Do innocent
sheep not sometimes cringe, ambushed by memory,
the same as
wolves?
“As I lay beside her one night, my left hand under
her head, my right embracing her, she whispered, âJason, are men capable of love?' I glanced at her eyes. They
seemed
a child's eyes, baffled and lonely, but far more beautiful than any ordinary child's. âAre women?' I asked.
Her eyes
formed tearsâwhether false or honest tears, who
knows? I listened.
The night outside our window fell forever, a void. I heard the dark sea pounding on the land, the dark
wind shaking
trees, and I fell into a dream of wheeling birds,
old sea-beasts,
monsters crawling on the land on short, dark legs.
If we were
centaurs landed on Lemnos, violent murderers, still I'd be here in her arms, and might be fond of her. And Thoas' daughter would move her hand on my
wiry mane,
my gift to her coiled in her womb. When hot Aphrodite
strikes,
sanity shifts to loblogic. My nightmare turned to numbers bumping in space like rocks in a vortex.
I sat up,
staring. She touched my cheek. We slept again,
and again
at dawn the fire awoke in me and I took her in my arms and thought her filled with light. And still the old gray
waves
crashed on the rocks, and the rocks took them, hurled
them away again,
took them again; and the ghost-filled wind moved
through stiff branches,
howled in the battlements, walkways, spindrift parapets, moon-bruised stone escarpments sinking in tiers to
the sea â¦
falling endlessly, hopelessly ⦠My mind was a nest of snakes. There was nothing to avenge, nor was I,
in any case,
keeper of Lemnos' dead. Though the very earth cried out, voice of their blood, for vengeance (the earth did
not cry out),
how could all that be my affair? Search where I might, I saw no certain good, no certain evil, therefore nothing I dared to attack. It was not that I doubted
their guilt,
ultimately. But all the universe howls for freedom, strikes at the tyrant when he turns his back. Who
dares condemn
the goaded bull when, flanks torn, bleeding, heavy
of heart,
he sees his moment and, bellowing, charges the
farmer's son?
We lead him away to the slaughterhouse with prods
of bronze,
twisting the ring in his nose till the foam runs pink;
for once
he's tasted freedom, he's dangerous, useless. And so
it was
with the Lemnian women. How could they love with a
pure heart now,
how put on a contrition devoid of intrinsicate clauses, secret reservations? And how could we men demand
it of them?
What I mean has nothing to do with mastery. Love
was dead
on the sad isle of Lemnos. Or so it seemed to meâ
seemed
to all of us, those who were there. Old Argus waited
on the ship
with Herakles. Those two had refused to come with us, one too wise, the other too stiffly ignorant. So we stayed. Day followed day, and still we did not sail.
“That was no pleasant time for Hera, nursing
her grudge,
waiting for Pelias to pay for the times he'd slighted her. She troubled my chest with restlessness, caused me
to gaze
moodily out at the window, peer through the lattice,
pace
by the sea, debating, stirred by I knew not what. Nothing made sense. Why fight for a share in the kingdom with
Pelias, when here
I was king alone, for whatever it was worth? Why
risk Aietes'
rage for a hank of wool when here I had all the warmth of Hypsipyleâfor what it was worth? What was
anything worth?
No doubt she made life on Olympos hard enough, that
queen.
When her patience wore out, she came in the shape of
a lizard, a spider,
a birdâwho knows?âand whispered dreams into
Herakles' head
where he slept, sullen, on the ship, held back by the