Apollodorus
Medea & Jason (of
the Argonauts)
The Argonauts now arrived among the Mariandynians,
and there King Lycus received them kindly. There died
Idmon the seer of a wound inflicted by a boar; and
there too died Tiphys, and Ancaeus
undertook to steer the ship. And having
sailed past the Thermodon and the Caucasus
they came to the river Phasis, which is in the Colchian land. When the ship was brought into port, Jason
repaired to Aeetes, and setting forth the charge laid
on him by Pelias invited him to give him the fleece.
The other promised to give it if single-handed he would yoke the brazen-footed
bulls. These were two wild bulls that he had, of enormous size, a gift of
Hephaestus; they had brazen feet and puffed fire from their mouths. These
creatures Aeetes ordered him to yoke and to sow
dragon's teeth; for he had got from Athena half of the dragon's teeth which Cadmus sowed in Thebes.
While Jason puzzled how he could yoke the bulls, Medea
conceived a passion for him; now she was a witch, daughter of Aeetes and Idyia, daughter of
Ocean. And fearing lest he might be destroyed by the bulls, she, keeping the
thing from her father, promised to help him to yoke the bulls and to deliver to
him the fleece, if he would swear to have her to wife and would take her with
him on the voyage to Greece.
When Jason swore to do so, she gave him a drug with which she bade him anoint
his shield, spear, and body when he was about to yoke the bulls; for she said
that, anointed with it, he could for a single day be
harmed neither by fire nor by iron. And she signified to him that, when the
teeth were sown, armed men would spring up from the ground against him; and
when he saw a knot of them he was to throw stones into their midst from a
distance, and when they fought each other about that, he was taken to kill
them. On hearing that, Jason anointed himself with the drug, and being come to
the grove of the temple he sought the bulls, and though they charged him with a
flame of fire, he yoked them. And when he had sowed the teeth, there rose armed
men from the ground; and where he saw several together, he pelted them unseen
with stones, and when they fought each other he drew near and slew them. But
though the bulls were yoked, Aeetes did not give the
fleece; for he wished to burn down the Argo and kill the crew. But before he
could do so, Medea brought Jason by night to the
fleece, and having lulled to sleep by her drugs the dragon that guarded it, she
possessed herself of the fleece and in Jason's company came to the Argo. She
was attended, too, by her brother Apsyrtus. And with
them the Argonauts put to sea by night.
They went to Corinth, and lived there happily for ten years,
till Creon, king of Corinth, betrothed his daughter Glauce to Jason, who married her and divorced Medea. But she invoked the gods by whom Jason had sworn,
and after often upbraiding him with his ingratitude she sent the bride a robe
steeped in poison, which when Glauce had put on, she
was consumed with fierce fire along with her father, who went to her rescue.
But Mermerus and Pheres,
the children whom Medea had by Jason, she killed, and
having got from the Sun a car drawn by winged dragons she fled on it to Athens.
Another tradition is that on her flight she left behind her children, who were
still infants, setting them as suppliants on the altar of Hera
of the Height; but the Corinthians removed them and wounded them to death.
Medea
came to Athens, and being there married
to Aegeus bore him a son Medus.
Afterwards, however, plotting against Theseus, she
was driven a fugitive from Athens
with her son. But he conquered many barbarians and called the whole country
under him Media, and marching against the Indians he met his death. And Medea came unknown to Colchis,
and finding that Aeetes had been deposed by his
brother Perses, she killed Perses
and restored the kingdom to her father.