overwhelmed
by stench where the body of Phaiton still burned. At
night, by the will
of the gods, we entered an unknown stream whose rock
shores sang
with the rumble of mingling waters. So on and on we
rushed,
lost in the endless domain of the murderous Kelts. Now
storms,
now raging men dismayed us, thinning our company. My sickness stayed. My hand on the gunnel was
marble-white;
my face grew gaunt, rimose. We touched at the
kingdom of stone,
the kingdom of iron men, the kingdom of the ants. As
dreams
insinuate their unearthly cast on the light of the sick man's room, making windows alien eyes, transforming
chairs
to animals biding their time, so now to the heartsick
Argo
the world took on a change. The night was unnaturally
dark,
crowded with baffling machines we could not quite see.
And then
at dawn we looked out, in our strange dream, on
motionless banks
where no beast stirred and even the leaves on the trees
were still.
No songbird sang, and the clouds above us were as void
of life
as stones. We struggled to awaken, but the ship was
sealed in a charm.
We waited. Then came to a fork in the stream, a great
hushed island,
and the Argonauts, half-starved, rowed in, cast anchor,
and made
the long ship fast. As far as the eye could see on the
windless
rockstrewn beach, there was nothing alive. The tufts of
grass
on the meadow above were still, as if lost in thought.
“On a hill,
rising at the center of the island, there stood a grove so
dense
no thread of light came through, and between the boles
of the trees
lay avenues. We went there, Lynkeus leading the way with his powerful eyes. I walked behind him, my hand
in Jason's,
and my spirit was filled with uneasiness. I was sure the
airâ
chill, unstirringâwas crowded with thirsty ghosts. We
found
no game; it seemed that even the crawling insects slept.
“Without warning from Lynkeus, we reached a glade
and, rising
in the center of the glade, a vast stone building in the
shape of a dome.
The gray foundation rocks were carved with curious
oghams:
spirals like eddies in a river, like blustering windsâ
the oldest
runes ever made by man. At the low, dark door of the
building
a chair of stone stood waiting. We studied it, none of us
speaking.
And suddenly, even as we watched, there appeared a
figure in the chair,
seated comfortably, casually, combing his beard. He was
old,
his hair as white as hoarfrost. But as for his race, he
was nothing
we knewâa snubnosed creature with puffy eyes. His
face,
like his belly, was round, and he wore an enormous
moustache. He said: â
Ah ha! So it's Jason again!' The lord of the Argonauts
stared,
then glanced at me, as if thinking the curious image
were somehow
my creation. The old man laughed, impish, a laugh that rang like bells on the great rock mound and the
surrounding hills.
He laughed till he wept and clutched his sides.
“I asked: “Who are you?
Why do you mock us with silent sunlit isles and
laughter,
when Zeus has condemned us to travel as miserable
exiles forever,
suffering griefs past number for a crime so dark I dare not speak of it?' He laughed again, unimpressed by
grief,
unmoved by our hunger. “Mere pangs of mortality,' he
said.
âIf you knew
my
troublesâ' He paused, reflecting, then
laughed again.
âHowever, they slip my mind.' I repeated the question:
âWho are you?'
He tapped the tips of his fingers together, squinting,
though his lips
still smiled. âDon't rush me. It'll come to me.' He
searched his wits.
âI'm something to do with rivers, I remember.' He pulled
at his beard,
pursed his lips, looked panic-stricken. âIs it
very
important?'
Suddenly his face brightened and he snapped his
fingers. At onceâ
apparently not by his wishâan enormous sow appeared, sprawled in the grass beside him, her eyes alarmed.
He snapped
his fingers again, looking sheepish, and at once the huge
beast vanished.
Again the name he'd been hunting had slipped his
mind. Then:
âSpirit of sorts,' he said. âNot one of your dark ones, no
god
of the bog people, or the finger-wringing Germans, orâ' His bright eyes widened. âAh yes! I'd forgotten!
âWe have dealings, we powers,
from time to time. I received a request from the goddess
of will.
Abnormal. But isn't everything? âForgive me if I seem too light in the presence of woe. We're not very good at
woe,
we Grand Antiques. Treasure your guilt if you like, dear
friends.
Guilt has a marvelous energy about itâhavoc of
kingdoms,
slaughter of infants, et cetera. Discipline! That's what
it gives you!
(Discipline, of course, is a virtue not all of us value.)
However,
Time is wide enough for all. Indeed, in a thousand years (I've been there, understand. A thousand thousand
times I've heard
the joke, and that lunatic punchline) ⦠But what was
I saying? Ah!
Sail on in peace!âor in whatever mood suits your
temperament.
The passage is opened, this once, after all these
millennia.
Make way for the flagship
Argo,
ye golden generations!
Make way
for purification by fire, salvation by slaughter!' His
eyesâ
pale blue, mocking, were a-glitter; but at once he
remembered himself.
âForgive me, lady. Forgive an old bogyman's foolishness,
lords
of Akhaia.' His smile was genuine now. The universe has time for all experiments. Sail in peace!' He
vanished.
And the same instant the sky went dark and we found
ourselves
on the
Argo,
on a churning sea. Black waves came
combing in,
and mountains to left and right were yawing apart for
us,
and the opening sucked the sea in, and like a chip on
a torrent
the
Argo
went spinning, careening, the walls half buried
in foam,
to the south. I clung to the capstan. I would have been
washed away,
but the boy Ankaios abandoned the useless steering oar and caught my arm and held me till Jason could
reach me, crawling
pin by pin along the rail. He held me by the waist,
his arm
like rock. So we stood as we fell, dropped down from
a dizzying height,
a violent booming around us, as if the earth had split, and we looked up behind us in terror and saw the
mountains close,
and the same instant we struck and were hurled to the
belly of the ship.
The
Argo
shrieked as if all her beams had burst, and
water
boiled in over us. Then, at Ankaios' shout, we knew we were safe, the ship was afloat, all her brattice-work
firm despite
contusions, a thin, dark ooze. And thus we came, by
the whim
of the river spirit of the North, to the kingdom of Circe,
daughter
of the sun, my father's sister.
“We did not speak of the dreamâ
the cynical god who could scoff at all human shame
and pain.
Did only I dream it? There are those who claim we
create, ourselves,
in the dark of our minds, the gods who guide us. Was
I in fact
remorseless as the snake who smiles as he swallows the
bellowing frog?
Did my dreams create, then, even the dizzying fall of the
Argo,
that dark-as-murder sky? I dared not speak of the
dream,
but the image of the god remained, like the nagging
awareness of a wound,â
that and the sunlight in which he sat, with his attention
fixed
on his beard. If I closed my eyes, relaxed, I could drift
to him again,
abandon all sorrow and guilt forever, as if such things were childhood fantasy, and only thisâhis twinkling
eyes,
his laugh, his comb, his silent, sunlit gladeâwere real. I could step, if I wished, from my sanity to peace. I
resisted,
perhaps for fear of Jason.
“We came to Circe's isle.
“At Jason's command, the Argonauts cast the hawsers
and moored
the ship. We soon found Circe bathing where spindrift
rained
on shale. That night she'd been alarmed by visions: the
walls of her palace
were wet with blood, it seemed to her, and flames were
devouring
the magic herbs she used for bewitching strangers. With
the gore
of a murdered man she quenched the flame, catching
the blood
in her hands. It clung to her skin and garments. When
she awoke, at dawn,
the mood of the dream was still upon her, and so she'd
come
to lie in the spray by the pounding surf and be cleansed.
As she lay there
it seemed to her in a waking dream that saurian beasts flopped from the waterâbeasts neither animal nor
human, confused
and foul, as if earth's primeval slime were producing
them, testing
its powers in the age before rain, when the terrible sun
was king.
As she looked, the creatures took on, more and more,
the appearance of men.
She rose, watching them with witch's eyes, and stepped
back softly
in the direction of the grave-dark grove and the palace
beyond. With her hand
she beckoned, a movement like wind in a sapling. And
the Argonauts, trapped
in the power of her spell, came after her. The son of
Aison
reached out, touched my hand. He knewâthough
helpless to resist,
unable to command his men to stayâthat Aietes' sister would prove no friend, her eyes as soulless as my
father's, her girlish
beauty as deadly as Aietes' anguine strength. At his
touch
I wakened. I gazed around me in alarm, like a
life-prisoner
startled from pleasant dreams to his dungeon reality. They walked like men asleep, smiling.On the terry
ahead,
the demonic witch smiled back. She had hair like a
raven's, a smile
malicious, seductive, uncertain as the shifting patterns
of leaves
on her ghostly face. With the long fingers of her left
hand
she touched her breast, then gently, gently, dark eyes
staring,
she moved the tips of her fingers to the cloud of hair
that bloomed
below. Make no mistake: it was not mere sex wise
Circe
lured them with. She promised violence, knowledge like
the gods',
forbidden mysteries deeper than innocence or guilt.
âNor think
that I could prove any match for her, witch against
witch. Helpless,
in anguish at Jason's appeal for help, I cried out, âCirce! Spare them!”
“The queen witch swung her glowing eyes to me
and knew that I too was of Helios' race, for the
children of the sun
have eyes like no other mortals. At once, with a curious
smile,
she unmade the spell, as though her mind were far
away,
and Jason signalled his men to wait, and we two alone went up with Circe to her palace.
“The queen of witches drew on
her sable mantle and signalled the two of us over to
chairs
of gold. We did not sit, but went to the hearth at once and sat among ashes, in the age-old manner of
suppliants.
I buried my face in both my hands, and Jason fixed in the cinders the treasure-hilted sword with which he'd
slain
Apsyrtus. We could not meet her eyes. She understood, smiling that curious smile again, mind far away; and in reverence to the ancient
ordinance of Zeus,
the god of wrath but of mercy as well, she began to offer the sacrifice that cleanses murderers of guilt. To atone for the murder still unexpiated, she held above our heads the young of a sow whose dugs swelled yet
from the fruit
of the womb, and slitting its throat, she sprinkled our
hands with the blood;
and she made propitiation with offerings of wine, calling on Zeus the Cleanser, hope of the murder-stained, who
seize
in maniac pride what belongs to the gods alone; and all defilements her attendants bore from the palace.
Then Circe, by the hearth,
burned cakes unleavened, and prayed that Zeus might
calm the furies,
whether our festering souls were stained by the blood
of a stranger
or a kinsman.
“When all this ritual was done, she raised us up
and led us to the golden chairs; and she herself sat
near,
facing us. At once she asked us our names and business and why we had come here as suppliants. For she
remembered her dreams,
and she longed to hear the voice of her unknown
kinswoman.
I answered, telling her all she asked, sick at heart, answering softly in the Kolchian tongue. But I shrank from speaking of the murder of Apsyrtus.