Web
and Book design, Copyright, Kellscraft Studio 1999-2006 (Return to Web Text-ures) |
Click
Here to return to Golden Fleece Content Page |
(HOME) |
III.
THE GOLDEN FLEECE
HEY
brought Jason into a hall where Ćson, his father, waited. Very strange
did this
old and grave-looking man appear to him. But when son spoke, Jason
remembered
the tone of his father’s voice and he clasped him to him. And his
father knew
him even without the sight of the ruby ring which Jason had upon his
finger.
Then
the young man began to tell of the centaur and of his life upon the
Mountain
Pelion. As they were speaking together Pelias came to where they stood,
Pelias
in the purple robe of a king and with the crown upon his head. Łson
tightly
clasped Jason as if he had become fearful for his son. Pelias smilingly
took
the hand of the young man and the hand of his brother, and he bade them
both
welcome to his palace. Then,
walking between them, the king brought the two into the feasting hall.
The
youth who had known only the forest and the mountainside had to wonder
at the
beauty and the magnificence of all he saw around him. On the walls were
bright
pictures; the tables were of polished wood, and they had vessels of
gold and dishes
of silver set upon them; along the walls were vases of lovely shapes
and
colors, and everywhere there were baskets heaped with roses white and
red. The
king’s guests were already in the hall, young men and elders, and
maidens went
amongst them carrying roses which they strung into wreaths for the
guests to
put upon their heads. A soft-handed maiden gave Jason a wreath of roses
and he
put it on his head as he sat down at the king’s table. When he looked
at all
the rich and lovely things in that hall, and when he saw the guests
looking at
him with friendly eyes, Jason felt that he was indeed far away from the
dim
spaces of the mountain forest and from the darkness of the centaur’s
cave. Rich food and wine such as he had never dreamt of tasting were brought to the tables. He ate and drank, and his eyes followed the fair maidens who went through the hall. He thought how glorious it was to be a king. He heard Pelias speak to Ćson, his father, telling him that he was old and that he was weary of ruling; that he longed to make friends, and that he would let no enmity now be between him and his brother. And he heard the king say that he, Jason, was young and courageous, and that he would call upon him to help to rule the land, and that, in a while, Jason would bear full sway over the kingdom that Cretheus had founded. So
Pelias spoke to Ćson as they both sat together at the king’s high
table. But
Jason, looking on them both, saw that the eyes that his father turned
on him
were full of warnings and mistrust. After
they had eaten King Pelias made a sign, and a cup-bearer bringing a
richly
wrought cup came and stood before the king. The king stood up, holding
the cup
in his hands, and all in the hall waited silently. Then Pelias put the
cup into
Jason’s hands and he cried out in a voice that was heard all through
the hall,
“Drink from this cup, O nephew Jason! Drink from this cup, O man who
will soon
come to rule over the kingdom that Cretheus founded!” All
in the hall stood up and shouted with delight at that speech. But the
king was
not delighted with their delight, Jason saw. He took the cup and he
drank the
rich wine; pride grew in him; he looked down the hall and he saw faces
all
friendly to him; he felt as a king might feel, secure and triumphant.
And then
he heard King Pelias speaking once more. “This
is my nephew Jason, reared and fostered in the centaur’s cave. He will
tell you
of his life in the forest and the mountains — his life that was like to
the
life of the half gods.” Then
Jason spoke to them, telling them of his life on the Mountain Pelion.
When he
had spoken, Pelias said: “I
was bidden by the oracle to beware of the man whom I should see coming
toward
me half shod. But, as you all see, I have brought the half-shod man to
my
palace and my feasting hall, so little do I dread the anger of the
gods. “And
I dread it little because I am blameless. This youth, the son of my
brother, is
strong and courageous, and I rejoice in his strength and courage, for I
would
have him take my place and reign over you. Ah, that I were as young as
he is
now! Ah, that I had been reared and fostered as he was reared and
fostered by
the wise centaur and under the eyes of the immortals! Then would I do
that
which in my youth I often dreamed of doing! Then would I perform a deed
that
would make my name and the name of my city famous throughout all
Greece! Then
would I bring from far Colchis, the famous Fleece of Gold that King
Ćetes keeps
guard over!” He
finished speaking, and all in the hall shouted out, “The Golden Fleece,
the
Golden Fleece from Colchis!” Jason stood up, and his father’s hand
gripped him.
But he did not heed the hold of his father’s hand, for “The Golden
Fleece, the
Golden Fleece!” rang in his ears, and before his eyes were the faces of
those
who were all eager for the sight of the wonder that King Ćetes kept
guard over.
Then
said Jason, “Thou hast spoken well, O King Pelias! Know, and know all
here
assembled, that I have heard of the Golden Fleece and of the dangers
that await
on any one who should strive to win it from King Ćetes’s care. But
know, too,
that I would strive to win the Fleece and bring it to Iolcus, winning
fame
both for myself and for the city.” When
he had spoken he saw his father’s stricken eyes; they were fixed upon
him. But
he looked from them to the shining eyes of the young men who were even
then
pressing around where he stood. “Jason, Jason!” they shouted. “The
Golden
Fleece for Iolcus!” “King
Pelias knows that the winning of the Golden Fleece is a feat most
difficult,”
said Jason. “But if he will have built for me a ship that can make the
voyage
to far Colchis, and if he will send throughout all Greece the word of
my
adventuring so that all the heroes who would win fame might come with
me, and
if ye, young heroes of Iolcus, will come with me, I will peril my life
to win
the wonder that King Ćetes keeps guard over.” He
spoke and those in the hall shouted again and made clamor around him.
But still
his father sat gazing at him with stricken eyes. King
Pelias stood up in the hall and holding up his scepter he said, “O my
nephew
Jason, and O friends assembled here, I promise that I will have built
for the
voyage the best ship that ever sailed from a harbor in Greece. And I
promise
that I will send throughout all Greece a word telling of Jason’s voyage
so that
all heroes desirous of winning fame may come to help him and to help
all of you
who may go with him to win from the keeping of King Ćetes the famous
Fleece of
Gold.” So
King Pelias said, but Jason, looking to the king from his father’s
stricken
eyes, saw that he had been led by the king into the acceptance of the
voyage so
that he might fare far from Iolcus, and perhaps lose his life in
striving to
gain the wonder that King Ćetes kept guarded. By the glitter in
Pelias’s eyes
he knew the truth. Nevertheless Jason would not take back one word that
he had
spoken; his heart was strong within him, and he thought that with the
help of
the bright-eyed youths around and with the help of those who would come
to him
at the word of the voyage, he would bring the Golden Fleece to Iolcus
and make
famous for all time his own name. |