carry so wise a block of wood along with him in his perilous
voyage.
"Tell me,
wondrous image," exclaimed Jason, --"since you
inherit the
wisdom of the Speaking Oak of Dodona, whose
daughter you are,--tell me, where shall I find fifty bold
youths, who will take each of them an oar of my
galley? They
must have
sturdy arms to row, and brave hearts to encounter
perils, or we shall never win the Golden Fleece."
"Go," replied the oaken image, "go,
summon all the heroes of
Greece."
And, in fact,
considering what a great deed was to be done,
could any advice be wiser than this which Jason received from
the figure-head of his
vessel? He lost no time in sending
messengers to all the cities, and making known to the whole
people of Greece, that Prince Jason, the son of King Jason, was
going in quest of the Fleece of Gold, and that he desired the
help of forty-nine of the bravest and strongest young men
alive, to row his
vessel and share his dangers. And Jason
himself would be the fiftieth.
At this news, the
adventurous youths, all over the country,
began to bestir themselves. Some of them had already fought
with giants, and slain dragons; and the younger ones, who had
not yet met with such good fortune, thought it a shame to have
lived so long without getting astride of a flying
serpent, or
sticking their spears into a Chimaera, or, at least, thrusting
their right arms down a
monstrous lion's
throat. There was a
fair
prospect that they would meet with plenty of such
adventures before
finding the Golden Fleece. As soon as they
could furbish up their helmets and shields,
therefore, and gird
on their
trusty swords, they came thronging to Iolchos, and
clambered on board the new
galley. Shaking hands with Jason,
they
assured him that they did not care a pin for their lives,
but would help row the
vessel to the remotest edge of the
world, and as much farther as he might think it best to go.
Many of these brave fellows had been educated by Chiron, the
four-footed pedagogue, and were
therefore old schoolmates of
Jason, and knew him to be a lad of spirit. The
mighty Hercules,
whose shoulders afterwards upheld the sky, was one of them. And
there were Castor and Pollux, the twin brothers, who were never
accused of being chicken-hearted, although they had been
hatched out of an egg; and Theseus, who was so
renowned for
killing the Minotaur, and Lynceus, with his
wonderfully sharp
eyes, which could see through a
millstone, or look right down
into the depths of the earth, and discover the treasures that
were there; and Orpheus, the very best of harpers, who sang and
played upon his lyre so
sweetly, that the brute beasts stood
upon their hind legs, and capered
merrily to the music. Yes,
and at some of his more moving tunes, the rocks bestirred their
moss-grown bulk out of the ground, and a grove of forest trees
uprooted themselves, and, nodding their tops to one another,
performed a country dance.
One of the rowers was a beautiful young woman, named Atalanta.
who had been nursed among the mountains by a bear. So light of
foot was this fair
damsel, that she could step from one foamy
crest of a wave to the foamy crest of another, without wetting
more than the sole of her
sandal. She had grown up in a very
wild way, and talked much about the rights of women, and loved
hunting and war far better than her
needle. But in my opinion,
the most
remarkable of this famous company were two sons of the
North Wind (airy youngsters, and of rather a blustering
disposition) who had wings on their shoulders, and, in case of
a calm, could puff out their cheeks, and blow almost as fresh a
breeze as their father. I ought not to forget the prophets and
conjurors, of whom there were several in the crew, and who
could foretell what would happen to-morrow or the next day, or
a hundred years hence, but were generally quite
unconscious of
what was passing at the moment.
Jason ap
pointed Tiphys to be helmsman because he was a
star-gazer, and knew the points of the
compass. Lynceus, on
account of his sharp sight, was stationed as a look-out in the
prow, where he saw a whole day's sail ahead, but was rather apt
to
overlook things that lay directly under his nose. If the sea
only happened to be deep enough, however, Lynceus could tell
you exactly what kind of rocks or sands were at the bottom of
it; and he often cried out to his companions, that they were
sailing over heaps of
sunken treasure, which yet he was none
the richer for beholding. To
confess the truth, few people
believed him when he said it.
Well! But when the Argonauts, as these fifty brave adventurers
were called, had prepared everything for the
voyage, an
unforeseen difficulty threatened to end it before it was begun.
The
vessel, you must understand, was so long, and broad, and
ponderous, that the united force of all the fifty was
insufficient to shove her into the water. Hercules, I suppose,
had not grown to his full strength, else he might have set her
afloat as easily as a little boy launches his boat upon a
puddle. But here were these fifty heroes, pushing, and
straining, and growing red in the face, without making the Argo
start an inch. At last, quite wearied out, they sat themselves
down on the shore
exceedingly disconsolate, and thinking that
the
vessel must be left to rot and fall in pieces, and that
they must either swim across the sea or lose the Golden Fleece.
All at once, Jason bethought himself of the
galley's miraculous
figure-head.
"O, daughter of the Talking Oak," cried he, "how shall we set
to work to get our
vessel into the water?"
"Seat yourselves," answered the image (for it had known what
had ought to be done from the very first, and was only waiting
for the question to be put),--" seat yourselves, and handle
your oars, and let Orpheus play upon his harp."
Immediately the fifty heroes got on board, and seizing their
oars, held them perpendicularly in the air, while Orpheus (who
liked such a task far better than rowing) swept his fingers
across the harp. At the first ringing note of the music, they
felt the
vessel stir. Orpheus thrummed away
briskly, and the
galley slid at once into the sea, dipping her prow so deeply
that the figure-head drank the wave with its
marvelous lips,
and rising again as
buoyant as a swan. The rowers plied their
fifty oars; the white foam boiled up before the prow; the water
gurgled and bubbled in their wake; while Orpheus continued to
play so
lively a
strain of music, that the
vessel seemed to
dance over the billows by way of keeping time to it. Thus
triumphantly did the Argo sail out of the harbor,
amidst the
huzzas and good wishes of everybody except the
wicked old
Pelias, who stood on a promontory, scowling at her, and wishing
that he could blow out of his lungs the
tempest of wrath that
was in his heart, and so sink the
galley with all on board.
When they had sailed above fifty miles over the sea, Lynceus
happened to cast his sharp eyes behind, and said that there was
this bad-hearted king, still perched upon the promontory, and
scowling so
gloomily that it looked like a black thunder-cloud
in that quarter of the horizon.
In order to make the time pass away more
pleasantly during the
voyage, the heroes talked about the Golden Fleece. It
originally belonged, it appears, to a Boeotian ram, who had
taken on his back two children, when in danger of their lives,
and fled with them over land and sea as far as Colchis. One of