The Age of Fable eBook

Thomas Bulfinch
This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 1,207 pages of information about The Age of Fable.

The Age of Fable eBook

Thomas Bulfinch
This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 1,207 pages of information about The Age of Fable.

Medea used her arts here for a good purpose, but not so in another instance, where she made them the instruments of revenge.  Pelias, our readers will recollect, was the usurping uncle of Jason, and had kept him out of his kingdom.  Yet he must have had some good qualities, for his daughters loved him, and when they saw what Medea had done for Aeson, they wished her to do the same for their father.  Medea pretended to consent, and prepared her caldron as before.  At her request an old sheep was brought and plunged into the caldron.  Very soon a bleating was heard in the kettle, and when the cover was removed, a lamb jumped forth and ran frisking away into the meadow.  The daughters of Pelias saw the experiment with delight, and appointed a time for their father to undergo the same operation.  But Medea prepared her caldron for him in a very different way.  She put in only water and a few simple herbs.  In the night she with the sisters entered the bed chamber of the old king, while he and his guards slept soundly under the influence of a spell cast upon them by Medea.  The daughters stood by the bedside with their weapons drawn, but hesitated to strike, till Medea chid their irresolution.  Then turning away their faces, and giving random blows, they smote him with their weapons.  He, starting from his sleep, cried out, “My daughters, what are you doing?  Will you kill your father?” Their hearts failed them and their weapons fell from their hands, but Medea struck him a fatal blow, and prevented his saying more.

Then they placed him in the caldron, and Medea hastened to depart in her serpent-drawn chariot before they discovered her treachery, or their vengeance would have been terrible.  She escaped, however, but had little enjoyment of the fruits of her crime.  Jason, for whom she had done so much, wishing to marry Creusa, princess of Corinth, put away Medea.  She, enraged at his ingratitude, called on the gods for vengeance, sent a poisoned robe as a gift to the bride, and then killing her own children, and setting fire to the palace, mounted her serpent-drawn chariot and fled to Athens, where she married King Aegeus, the father of Theseus, and we shall meet her again when we come to the adventures of that hero.

The incantations of Medea will remind the reader of those of the witches in “Macbeth.”  The following lines are those which seem most strikingly to recall the ancient model: 

    “Round about the caldron go;
     In the poisoned entrails throw.

     Fillet of a fenny snake
     In the caldron boil and bake;
     Eye of newt and toe of frog,
     Wool of bat and tongue of dog,
     Adder’s fork and blind-worm’s sting,
     Lizard’s leg and howlet’s wing: 

     Maw of ravening salt-sea shark,
     Root of hemlock digged in the dark,” etc

    —­Macbeth, Act iv, Scene 1

And again: 

    Macbeth.—­What is’t you do? 
    Witches,—­A deed without a name.

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The Age of Fable from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.