and nobody there, no matter how old, could recall he’d
   seen
   a handsomer couple.” She closed her eyes and rocked,
   as slow
   as a merchant ship sunk low in the water when the wind first fills her sails. She said, ‘Your
   face was flushed,
   and when Jason moved his hand on your arm, the air
   in the room
   turned rich, overripe as apples fallen from the tree—
   despite
   that glacial stillness of eyes. I was heavy with years,
   life-sickened
   already by then. I saw I must end my days in the service of a lord and lady whose love was a fadge of guilt
   and scorn,
   a prospect evil enough. And little by little, as the tales of the Argonauts came to our ears, we understood.
   Such a passion
   as Queen Aphrodite had put on you two was never seen on earth before; not even in Kadmos and Harmonia was such fire seen. But passion or no, he hated you. How could he not?—a princely Akhaian, and you’d
   saved his life
   by the midnight murder of your own poor trusting
   brother! No matter
   to Jason that that was your one slim chance. He’d
   sooner be dead
   than safe and ashamed. Worse yet … Don’t be
   surprised, lady,
   that I dare to speak these things. I can see how it
   drains your cheeks,
   the mention of your brother’s murder. No better than
   you can I tell
   which way your anger will strike, at yourself or me.
   You suck in
   breath, and I’m shaken with fear—but my fear is more
   by far
   for you than it is for myself. I’ve seen how you wince
   and cry out,
   alone. It fills me with dread. You’ll plunge into
   madness, Medeia,
   hating what couldn’t be helped, wrenching your heart
   out in secret,
   proud—oh, prouder than any queen living—but even
   at the height
   of that fierce Aiaian pride, uncertain, doubting you merit the friendship of any but the
   Queen of Death.
   You’re poisoned, Medeia. Venomed as surely as the ivy
   burning
   from within. I’d cure you if I could, if I knew how to
   force you to hear me.
   Think, child of the sun! Think past the bouldered hour that dams the flow of your mind. Lord Jason hated you. Justly, you think? Unselfishly? Is Jason a god? He’d agreed to your plan—agreed for your life’s sake,
   not his.
   To save your life, the woman who scattered his wits
   like a vision—
   like the sizzling crepitation of a lightning-bolt— he’d do what he’d never consider to save himself. No
   wonder
   if after he’d saved what he worshipped, your Jason
   gnawed his fists
   and hated all sight of what proved his weakness.
   —Jason who once
   loved honor, trusted his courage. You taught him his
   price.”
   The slave
   was silent awhile. Medeia waited—high cheeks
   bloodless.
   The slave said softly, “—But time soon changed all that. Not any intentional act of yours, Medeia, nor any act of his. Mere time. We saw how he tensed when you screamed in the pain
   of your labor, bearing him
   sons. Great tears rushed down his cheeks, and his
   shoulders shook.
   In part of his mind—we saw it shaping—he must have
   seen
   that the fault was his, not yours: you showed him what
   had to be,
   and gave him a plan. He’d acted upon it as gladly, that
   night,
   as he’d have changed places with you now. Or the fault
   was no one’s—love
   a turmoil prior to rules, and rumbling on beyond the last idea’s collapse. His eyes grew warmer then. And yours as well. No house was ever more happy,
   for a time—
   the twins babbling in their sunlit cribs, the master and
   mistress
   warmer than sunbeams arm in arm, sitting at the
   window,
   talking and laughing, or sitting in jewelled crowns,
   on thrones
   level with Pelias and his queen’s. If troublesome
   shadows of the past
   returned, you could drive them back.
   “But soon time changed that too.”
   Her wide mouth closed, trembling, and her faded slate
   eyes stared.
   “Pelias was a fool; perhaps far worse. And now, at times, when Pelias would hinder his will, Lord Jason would
   frown, speak sharply
   to you, or to us, or the twins. Your eyes got the she-wolf
   look.
   His slightest glance of annoyance, and up your poison
   seethed,
   old bile of guilt, self-hate, pride, love—black nightmare
   shapes:
   Aphrodite whispered and teased, cruel Hera, and Athena, gray-eyed fox. Seize the throne for him!—Jason’s
   by right!
   Would old Aietes hesitate even for an instant, dismayed by a sickly usurper of a nephew’s lawful place?
   Strike out!’
   I needn’t remind you of the rest. Screams in the palace,
   blood,
   the cries of the children awakened in haste when you
   fled. And now,
   for that, from time to time, his eyes go cold.”
   The slave
   came forward a little, tortuously moving her thick
   canes inch
   by inch. “I’ve lived some while, Medeia. There are
   things I know.
   Give the man time, and he’ll come to see, now too,
   that the fault
   was as much his own as yours. Let him be. Be patient,
   my lady.
   No woman yet has defeated a stubborn, ambitious man by force.”
   Medeia turned, smiling. But her eyes were wild.
   “I won’t win his heart with labor pains again,” she said, “barren as a rock, wrecked as the cities he burns in his
   wake
   with the same Akhaian lust.”
   “Medeia” the old woman moaned,
   “leave it to the gods! Let time sift it! Tell me, what wife in all the ages of the world has seized by her own
   hand’s power
   more than the staddle of a grave? Not even the
   mightiest king
   wins more in the end. Consider the tumbled columns
   of the bed
   of the giant Og. His fame is now mere sand, a ring of stones that startles the wilderness like a ghostly
   whisper
   of jackals crying in the night. My exiled people have a prophecy for those who trust in themselves. They say:
   Their horses are swifter than leopards,
   fiercer than wolves in the dark;
   their horsemen plunge on, advancing from afar,
   swooping like an eagle to stoop on its prey.
   They come for plunder, mile on mile of them,
   their faces searching like an east wind;
   they scoop up prisoners like sand.
   They scoff at kings,
   they laugh at princes.
   They make light of the mightiest fortresses:
   they heap up ramps of earth and take them.
   Then the wind changes and is gone.
   Woe to the man who worships his arm’s omnipotence!
   I would not wave it away as the noise of a beaten
   people
   shorn of all tools of war but the rattle of poetry. They were mighty themselves when they sang it first,
   though humbled now.
   Learn to accept! What sorrow have yo 
					     					 			u more great
   than the fall
   of a thousand thousand cities since time began?
   You have sons.
   How can you speak of a ruined womb, Akhaian lust, when civilizations—races of men with the hopes
   of gods—
   are tumbled to fine-grained ashes, fallen out of history?”
   “Enough!” Medeia said. She turned, in her eyes a
   flicker
   like cauldron light. “Self-pity, you say. So it is. I’ll end it, tear all trace from my heart and stare, dead on, at night as the tigress slaughters her young, then waits for the
   hunter’s attack.
   We’re all poor fools, poor witless benoms to startle
   a crow
   in the cast-off grandeur of scullery-slaves. I grant the
   wisdom
   of your gloomy people’s prophecy. I howl for justice. Insane! Where’s justice, or beauty, or love? Where
   grounds for the pride
   you charge me with? Childish illusions—not even lies our parents told, but lies we fashioned ourselves in
   the playroom,
   prettily singing to dolls, dead children of sawed-down
   trees.
   How dare I hoot for love, claim honor owed to me? Who in the sky ever promised me love or honor? O,
   the plan
   is plain as day, if anyone cares to read. In the shade of the sweetly laden tree, the fat-sacked snake. Good,
   evil
   lock in the essence of things. The Egyptians know—
   with their great god
   Re, by day the creative sun, by night the serpent, mindless swallower of frogs, palaces. Let me be one with the universe, then: blind creation and blind
   destruction,
   indifferent to birth and death as drifting sand.
   Great gods,
   save me from the childish virgin’s fantasy, purity of
   heart,
   gentleness, courage in a merely created man! We fall in love with the image of a mythic, theandric father,
   domineering
   oakfirm tower of strength, and we find, as our mothers
   found,
   the tower is home to a mouse peeking groundward with
   terrified eyes.
   We teach them to act, or act for them. We teach their
   audaculous hands
   the delicate tricks of love-making, teach their abstract heads the truth about power. They pay us by sliding
   their hands
   up slavegirls’ thighs, or turning the tricks of supremacy on us. And then, when we’re ready to shriek and claw,
   strike back
   with the moon-cold anger of the huntress-goddess,
   absolute
   idea of ice, cold flame of Artemis, they come to us like hurt children, showing the wounds from some
   other woman
   or clever woman’s man, and we’re won again, seduced by the only power on earth more cruel, more viciously
   pure
   of heart than woman, ancient ambiguous garden—
   old monster
   Motherhood.”
   “Medeia, stop!” The dim eyes widened
   and the mouth gaped for air. “Media, child!” she
   whispered.
   Abruptly, shaken by the word, Medeia was silent. She
   raised
   her hands to her face, then suddenly crossed to the
   slave and embraced her.
   I understood, squinting at the two, that the word had
   changed her.
   I gradually made out why. She’d all at once remembered what it was to be a child: the inexplicable safety, the sense of sure salvation adults forget. A fact of
   reality,
   like a house, three sheep in a pasture. In the face of
   what she knew
   she had no choice but acceptance, weeping like a child
   again.
   For all her knowledge of mingled evil and good in the
   world,
   it seemed to her (mysterious, baffling) that she held in
   her arms
   the perishable husk of a truth still pure and
   imperishable,
   eternal as Dionysos drinking and singing in the grave. “Now, now,” the old woman whimpered, weeping.
   “Now, now, my lady,
   no need for sorrow. All will be well. Have faith!”
   “I know,”
   Medeia said, and struggled to believe it for a moment
   longer.
   She drew away, forced a smile, and—seeing that the
   slave
   trembled with weakness—led Agapetlka to a cushioned
   bench
   with a view of the darkened garden, and helped her
   down on it.
   She frowned, studying the old woman, alarmed by her
   gasps,
   the trembling of the dry, gray hands. “All you say is
   true,” she said.
   “I have a kind of proof, in fact—” She paused; then,
   softly:
   “I’ll show it to you.” Swift, majestic, Medeia was gone from the room. In a moment she was back, carrying
   an object wrapped
   in skins. She laid it on the carved bench by the
   window, moved
   the tall lamps close to Agapetika’s chair, and, taking
   the package
   in her hands again, she carefully unwrapped it. A
   gleam of gold,
   and Agapetika gasped anew. And then it was undone, with one quick toss unfurled like a dazzling, sunlit flag. “ ’For you,’ he told me,” Medeia said, “ ‘because it was
   won
   by both of us. No other woman and no other man could have done it—though only Argus, child of
   Athena, could weave
   the fleece we two brought home. Make a gown of the
   cloth, my queen.
   A symbol, fit for a goddess, of Jason’s love.’ —Jason of the golden tongue, they call him.” She brooded.
   “And yet I was moved.”
   We looked—the old woman, Medeia, and I—at the
   cloth woven
   from the golden fleece. It was smooth as silk to the
   touch, and yet
   crowded with figures—peacocks, parrots, turrets and
   towers,
   farmers ploughing their sloping fields under city walls, and, nearby, soldiers, ladies and lords on splendid
   barges,
   all interlocked with loveknots and (curious lace)
   sharp bones.
   The scenes kept changing, like tricks of light, and our
   three heads
   bent close, almost touching. We looked so hard that our
   eyes crimped
   like the eyes of a man who’s stared for a minute at the
   sun. Old roads
   drew us mysteriously inward, plunging into forests so
   thick
   no thread of light broke through where the groaning
   limbs interlocked.
   We came to a clearing, a wide black river tumbling,
   roaring
   at our feet, and across it waterfalls crashed out of
   terrible heights,
   gray cliffs that went up like a falling man’s grasp,
   through brooding clouds;
   and the falls, striking, sent out such shocks that the
   ground where we stood
   shivered like the outstretched wing of a soaring hawk.
   The path
   led on—wound inward to a cave like the nose in an
   ancient skull,
   on the far side of the torrent. But the bridge was
   gone. We were stopped.
   Strain as I might, my eyes could pierce no further
   through
   the deceiving mists of the cloth.
   Then, stranger still, I thought,
   I heard faint whispers stirring, rising from the tapestry: the threads of the cloth, it seemed to me, were singing.
					     					 			/>
   They sang:
   Argus wove me, craftily wrought my warp and woof with magic more than Medeia makes, and misery more, and mystery more. And more than he meant I melt in me and wider than Argus’ wisdom wrought I work my
   wyrds,
   my secret words. For wealth and weal he wove in the
   warp
   (ingenious antic engineer by his ancient art!) but bonefire, bane, and burning blood he buried in the
   woof,
   buried in the woof as the bobbin drove; for his dark
   brains burned,
   and little his lore of the lower lusts that lurk in love, lurked in his love for the lady and lord he labored for. (Woe lay within him when Argus wrought my warp
   and woof,
   the warp and woof of my web so wisely, wickedly
   wrought.)
   Argus wove me, weary old Argus, weary old Argus
   who wished them well.
   I stared at Medeia. She’d heard some other song,
   perhaps.
   Or each of us heard what he knew. For the fat old
   woman wept
   and covered her face with her gray hands, shaking in
   sorrow.
   The room went dark. I reached out suddenly to touch
   the two women,
   hold them a moment longer and warn Medeia. I’d
   watched
   too long as the timid outsider, even as I did in my
   own life,
   thirty centuries hence. “Medeia!” I called. No answer. Only the moan of the universe turning on its weary
   wheels.
   My hands closed on nothing. She was a dream.
   “Medeia,”
   I whispered. Useless. The long sigh of the galaxies slowly exhaling, dimming, drifting through darkness.
   Dreams.
   5
   The great hall gleamed. Koprophoros spoke, the
   dark-eyed king
   with the womanish voice, great rolls of abdomens and
   chins.
   The ruby glowed on his forehead like blood on fire,
   and the gold
   of his turban, his robes, his scimitar, was bright as the
   sun.
   The meal had been carried away long since, the
   jugglers returned
   to their rooms to count their coins. The slaves moved
   silently
   from table to table, pouring wine. Old Kreon sat with his chin resting in his hands, observing carefully. His beloved slave, Ipnolebes, standing beside him,
   watched
   with eyes like dagger holes, his arms folded. He seemed carved out of weathered rock. Jason gazed at the
   table—
   forehead resting on his hand, his wide shoulders low-listening thoughtfully, biding his time. Could it be