never attacked the Dolionan people
   1270because they were descended from Poseidon—
   he guarded them.
   A Thracian gale impelled
   the Argo toward this island, and the heroes
   moored in a harbor called the “Handsome Port.”
   Here it was that, at Tiphys’ suggestion,
   1275 (957)they cut the stone that served as anchor loose,
   dropped it into the stream Artacia,
   and chose a larger one to suit their needs.
   Years later, to fulfill Apollo’s plan,
   the sons of Neleus (that is, the ones
   1280that settled Asia Minor) set apart
   the very stone abandoned by the heroes
   as sacred in the temple of Athena,
   Helper of Jason, and the gift, of course,
   was quite appropriate.
   The Doliones
   1285and Cyzicus their king received the heroes
   and, after finding out their names and mission,
   warmly invited them to stay as guests.
   Cyzicus urged them please to row in farther
   and make their mooring in the city harbor,
   1290 (965)and so they did and, after raising there
   an altar to Apollo God of Landings,
   busied themselves preparing sacrifices.
   The king himself supplied what they required—
   some sweet wine and a flock of sheep. You see,
   1295Cyzicus had received a prophecy
   that claimed a godlike crew would land one day,
   and he should rush warmly to welcome them
   and take no thought of war. His beard was downy,
   like Jason’s, and had only lately sprouted,
   1300and fate had not yet graced him with a child.
   Cleite, his plush-tressed, newly wedded wife,
   daughter of Merops of Percota, shared
   a chamber with him in the royal palace,
   but labor pains were still unknown to her.
   1305 (978)Cyzicus only recently had led her
   out of her home on the opposing coast,
   and he had paid her father many gifts
   to buy the right to wed her. Nonetheless,
   he brought himself to leave the marriage chamber
   1310and bridal bed and entertain the heroes.
   He had dismissed suspicion from his heart.
   They asked each other questions at the feast—
   Cyzicus learned of Pelias’ bidding
   and the objective of their quest. The heroes,
   1315in turn, inquired about the neighboring cities
   and the whole basin of the vast Propontis,
   but Cyzicus’ knowledge ranged no further,
   much as they wished to learn what lay beyond.
   So half the heroes set about ascending
   1320 (985)Dindymum at dawn to see firsthand
   what waters they would cross, and to this day
   the path they took is known as Jason’s Way.
   The other half, however, stayed behind
   and rowed the Argo from her former mooring
   over to Chytus Haven.
   1325All at once
   the Earthborn ones came down around the mountain
   and tried to block the exit from the harbor
   by dropping countless rocks into the water,
   the way men catch sea creatures in a pool.
   1330Heracles and the younger men, however,
   had stayed back with the ship, and Heracles
   nocked arrows nimbly on his back-bent bow
   and dropped the giants freely one by one
   since they had focused all their strength on heaving
   1335 (995)and hurling jagged rocks into the sea.
   No doubt the goddess Hera, Zeus’ consort,
   had reared these horrid things as yet another
   labor for Heracles. The other heroes
   turned back before they reached the mountaintop
   1340and joined their comrades, and they all got down
   to slaughtering the Earthborn Giants, routing
   by shaft and spear their reckless, headlong charges
   till each and every one of them was dead.
   As woodcutters, once they have finished felling
   1345colossal old-growth trees, proceed to lay them
   side by side along the surf to soak
   and soften and receive the dowels, the heroes
   laid out the Earthborn Giants one by one
   along the shorefront of the choppy harbor—
   1350 (1008)some headfirst in the brine, their tops and torsos
   submerged, their legs protruding landward; others,
   conversely, had their feet out in the deep
   and heads out on the beach. Both groups were doomed
   to serve as meals for fish and birds alike.
   1355After the men returned, unscathed, from battle,
   they loosed the hawsers, and the wind came up,
   and they pursued their quest across the swell.
   All day the Argo coasted under sail.
   At evening, though, the wind became unsteady.
   1360Gusts from the opposite direction seized her
   and blew her back until she reached once more
   the island of the kindly Doliones.
   They disembarked at midnight, and the rock
   to which they hastily attached a line
   1365 (1019)is called the Sacred Outcrop to this day.
   But none among them was astute enough
   to notice they had stopped at the same island.
   Since it was night the Doliones failed
   as well to mark their friends come back again,
   1370no, they assumed Pelasgian invaders,
   Macrian men, had breached their beach instead,
   and so they took up arms and started fighting.
   Their shields and ash-wood lances clashed as swiftly
   as fire that has sparked on arid brushwood
   1375leaps aloft in crested conflagration.
   Battle, horrible and unforgiving,
   befell the Doliones. Cyzicus
   was not permitted to escape his doom
   or go home to enjoy his bridal bed.
   1380 (1032)Just as he joined the battle, Jason ran up
   and stabbed him in the center of the chest.
   Ribs shattered round the spear tip, and he crumpled
   upon the beach and met his destined end.
   Mortals can never sidestep fate; the cosmic
   1385net is extended round us everywhere.
   And so it was that, on the very night
   Cyzicus had assumed that he was safe
   from bitter slaughter at the heroes’ hands,
   destiny snared him, and he joined the fray.
   1390Many others on his side were slain:
   Heracles clubbed the life from Megabrontes
   and Telecles; Acastus slaughtered Sphodris;
   Peleus vanquished battle-keen Gephyrus
   and Zelys; and that mighty ash-wood spearman
   1395 (1043)Telamon triumphed over Basileus.
   Idas in turn disposed of Promeus; Clytius,
   Hyancinthus; and the brothers Castor
   and Polydeuces slew Megalossaces
   and Phlogius. Beside them Meleager
   1400son of Oeneus dispatched Artaces
   leader of men and bold Itymoneus.
   Still today the locals venerate
   the men who perished in that fight as heroes.
   The remnants of the Doliones turned
   1405and fled li
ke doves pursued by swift-winged hawks.
   After they stumbled, hoarse and helter-skelter,
   into the city, cries of lamentation
   erupted—yes, its soldiers had retreated,
   retreated from a dismal fight.
   At daybreak
   1410 (1053)both parties recognized the fatal error,
   but nothing could be done to make it right.
   Violent sorrow gripped the Minyans
   once they had spotted Aeneus’ son
   Cyzicus lying, bloody, in the dust.
   1415Three days the heroes and the Doliones
   tore out their hair and mourned the loss together.
   Then, after putting on their bronze war gear,
   they marched three times around the corpse, entombed it,
   and filed away to the Leimonian plain
   1420to hold memorial games, as is the custom.
   Cleite, however, Cyzicus’ wife,
   refused to stay behind among the living
   now that her man was dead. She heaped a further
   sorrow on top of what had gone before
   1425 (1065)by fastening a noose around her neck.
   Even the woodland nymphs bewailed her passing.
   In fact, these deities collected all
   the tears that tumbled earthward from their eyelids
   into a spring called Cleite—the “Renowned”
   name of the ill-starred widow.
   1430Zeus had never
   dropped a more heart-devastating day
   upon the Dolionan men and women.
   None of them could enjoy the taste of food
   and, far into the future, sorrow kept them
   1435from working at the mill, and they subsided
   on raw provisions. Still today, in fact,
   when the Cyzician Ionians
   make yearly sacrifices to the dead,
   they always use the public stone, and not
   1440 (1072)the stones they keep at home, to grind the meal.
   And then stiff winds arose and blew, preventing
   the heroes from departing, twelve nights, twelve days,
   but on the thirteenth night, when all their comrades
   had yielded to exhaustion and were sleeping
   1445heavily through the final watch, two men—
   Ampycus’ son Mopsus and Acastus—
   were standing sentry, and a halcyon
   appeared and fluttered round the golden hair
   of Jason son of Aeson, prophesying
   1450with strident voice the calming of the gales.
   As soon as Mopsus heard and apprehended
   the seabird’s joyous news, some higher power
   dispatched it fluttering aloft again
   to perch atop the Argo’s sculpted stern post.
   1455 (1090)Mopsus immediately ran to shake
   Jason sleeping under soft sheep fleeces.
   Soon as his captain was awake, he said:
   “You, son of Aeson, must ascend to where
   a temple stands on rugged Dindymum
   1460and soothe the Mother of the Blessed Gods
   upon her shining throne. Once you have done this,
   the stormy gales shall cease. Such is the message
   I heard just now. You see, an ocean-dwelling
   halcyon fluttered round your sleeping head,
   1465revealing everything that must be done.
   The winds, the ocean, and the earth’s foundations
   all depend upon the Mother Goddess,
   as does the snow-capped bastion of Olympus.
   When she forsakes the mountains and ascends
   1470 (1101)the mighty vault of heaven, Zeus himself,
   the son of Cronus, offers her his place,
   and all the blessed gods bow before her power.”
   Such were his words, and Jason welcomed them,
   vaulted for joy out of his bed, and ran
   1475to rouse his comrades. Once they were awake,
   he told them what the offspring of Ampycus,
   Mopsus, had ascertained.
   The younger heroes
   hurried to drag some oxen from the stalls
   and drive them all the way up Dindymum’s
   1480precipitous ascent. After detaching
   the hawsers from the Sacred Rock, the others
   rowed into the so-called “Thracian Harbor,”
   picked out some few to stay and guard the ship,
   and went to scale the mountain.
   From the peak
   1485 (1112)the Macrian massifs and all the Thracian
   coastline stretching opposite them seemed
   almost within arm’s reach. They also spotted
   the misty entrance to the Bosporus,
   the Mysian hills, and there, across the strait,
   1490Asepus River and its namesake city
   and the Nepeian plain of Adrasteia.
   There in the forest was an old vine stump,
   stubborn and dry. They cut it out to make
   a sacred image of the Mountain Goddess.
   1495Artful Argus carved it, and they set it
   atop a rugged outcrop in the shade
   of lofty oaks, which shoot their taproots deeper
   than any other tree.
   They built an altar
   of fieldstone, garlanded their brows with oak leaves,
   1500 (1125)and offered sacrifice, invoking Mother
   Dindymena, Dweller in Phrygia,
   and Queen of Many Names. They also summoned
   Titias and Cyllenus who, alone
   of all the Dactyls bred on Cretan Ida,
   1505have earned the titles “Destiny Assessors”
   and “Confidants” of the Idaean Mother.
   A nymph named Anchiala brought them forth
   in the Dictaean Cave while squeezing fistfuls
   of Oaxian earth to ease the pain.
   1510The son of Aeson poured libations over
   the blazing victims and implored the goddess
   with various prayers to turn the storms away.
   Under the tutelage of Orpheus
   the younger men performed the Dance in Armor,
   1515 (1135)leaping and pounding swords on shields so that
   any unlucky cry of grief the locals
   might possibly be making for their king
   would vanish in the din. From that day on
   the Phrygians have always celebrated
   1520Rhea with tambourine and kettledrum.
   These flawless sacrifices clearly won
   the goddess’ approval. Signs appeared,
   conclusive proof: fruit tumbled from the trees
   in great abundance, and beneath their feet
   1525the earth spontaneously sprouted flowers
   out of the tender grass, and savage creatures
   forsook their dens and thickets in the wild
   to fawn and beg with wagging tails around them.
   Later, another marvel came to pass:
   1530 (1147)water had never flowed on Dindymum
   but on that day it sprang forth on its own
   ceaselessly from the barren mountaintop,
   and locals from that day have called the spring
   “The Font of Jason.” Then they held a feast
   1535in honor of the goddess of that mountain,
   the Mountain of the Bears, and sang the praises
   of Rhea, Rhea, Queen of Many Names.
   The storm winds died by daybreak, and they left
   the island under oar. And then a spirit
   1540of healthy competition spurred the heroes
 &
nbsp; to find out which of them would weary last.
   The air had calmed around them, and the waves
   fallen asleep. Trusting in these conditions,
   they heaved the Argo on with all their might.
   1545 (1158)Not even lord Poseidon’s tempest-footed
   stallions could have outstripped them as they dashed
   across the sea.
   But when the violent winds
   that rise up fresh from rivers in the evening
   had riled the swell again, the heroes tired
   1550and gave up trying. Heracles alone,
   he and his boundless strength, pulled all those weary
   oarsmen along. His labor sent a shudder
   through the strong-knit timbers of the ship,
   and soon the Argo raised Rhyndacus strait
   1555and the colossal barrow of Aegaeum.
   But as they passed quite near the Phrygian coast
   in their desire to reach the Mysian land,
   Heracles, in the very act of plowing
   deep furrows through the sea swell, broke his oar
   1560 (1169)and toppled sideways. While the handle stayed
   locked in his fist, the ocean caught and carried
   the blade off in the Argo’s wake. He sat up,
   dumbstruck, silent, swiveling his eyes:
   his hands were not accustomed to disuse.
   1565At just the hour when a field hand,
   a plowman, gratefully forsakes the furrows
   to head home hungry for his evening meal
   and squats on weary knees, sun-burned, dust-caked,
   before the door, eying his calloused hands
   1570and calling curses down upon his belly,
   the heroes reached the land of the Cianians
   who dwell beneath Mount Arganthonia
   along the delta of the Cius River.
   Since they had come in peace, the local people,
   1575 (1179)Mysians by race, received them warmly
   and gave provisions, sheep and ample wine,
   to satisfy their needs. Some of the heroes
   collected kindling; others gathered leaves
   out of the fields to make up mattresses;
   1580still others grated fire out of sticks,
   decanted wine in bowls, and, after giving
   due offerings at dusk to Lord Apollo,
   the God of Embarkation, cooked a feast.
   After encouraging his friends to banquet
   1585heartily, Heracles the son of Zeus
   set out into the woods to find a tree
   to carve into an oar that fit his hands.
   He wandered for a while until he spotted
   a pine with few boughs and a dearth of needles,
   1590 (1190)most like a poplar in its height and girth.
   
 
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