“Jason and the Argonauts,” for me, was a movie long before it was a book. As a child, I revelled in the special-effects wizardry through which Ray Harryhausen, in his film Jason and the Argonauts (1963), brought to life a vivid array of mythical monsters – harpies, a bronze giant, an army of skeletons, a many-headed dragon – as antagonists for Jason of Thessaly and his crew of adventurers on board the ship Argo. As I grew older, I came to appreciate the nuanced take on classical Greek mythology that the film offered, as embodied by the way the film presents the Argonauts’ adventures as part of a cosmic board game being played by the Olympian gods Zeus and Hera. And I could more clearly understand the ways in which Harryhausen’s film drew upon, and in some ways modified, its source material: an epic poem written in the 3rd century B.C. by Apollonius of Rhodes. The poem’s formal title is Argonautica (Ἀργοναυτικά), though I think the good people at Penguin Books did well to apply the well-loved Jason and the Argonauts title to this 2014 translation of the poem.
Not much is known about Apollonius of Rhodes, except that he worked at the Library of Alexandria during the era of the Ptolemies. His work is associated with the Hellenistic period, the time after the death of Alexander the Great in 323 B.C. Alexander’s conquests brought Greek culture and various Eastern cultures together, and an intriguing cultural mix resulted. It is interesting to contemplate how the Argonautica (literally, The Tale of the Argonauts) might incorporate storytelling traditions from other major cultures of the time – Persia or India, for example – along with those of classical Greece.
As Jason and the Argonauts begins, Pelias of Thessaly has consolidated power in his kingdom, in part by imprisoning any potential rivals – including Aeson, father of Jason. Yet Pelias does not feel secure in the crown he wears: “Pelias had received/a prophecy: a miserable doom/awaited him, a murder brought about/by someone he would see come from the country/wearing a single sandal.”
When Jason arrives at Thessaly, wearing a single sandal, Pelias knows that the person who can hurl him from his throne is standing before him. Therefore Pelias assigns Jason what he hopes will be an impossible task: to sail all the way from Thessaly to Colchis – a Black Sea kingdom located in what is now the western part of the Republic of Georgia – and bring back the Golden Fleece. The fleece is the golden skin and wool of Chrysomallos, a winged ram that rescued Phrixus of Boeotia from a murder plot devised by Phrixus’ stepmother. The winged ram carried Phrixus to Colchis, where Phrixus sacrificed the ram and gave the golden fleece to Colchis’ king, Aeëtes. The fleece, for Aeëtes, symbolizes divine sanction of his kingship, and therefore he will not give it up without a fight.
Accepting Pelias’ challenge, Jason oversees the building of a great ship, the Argo, and undertakes the task of finding a crew worthy of this epic quest. The Argonauts (“sea voyagers of the Argo”) who accept the challenge constitute a true All-Star Team of classical Greek worthies, including Orpheus the great musician, Heracles and his companion Hylas, Meleager who hunted the Calydonian boar, the twin half-brothers Castor and Polydeuces (sons of Leda), Argus the shipwright, and Acastus son of Pelias.
The influence of Homer is evident when one reads the Argonautica. Some of the most moving scenes in the Iliad and the Odyssey are understated scenes of human emotion – Helen expressing gratitude to Hector, because he is the only Trojan who has been kind to her; the baby Astyanax crying out in fear when he sees the feather plume on the helmet that his father Hector is wearing; Odysseus and his aging dog Argos silently recognizing one another when Odysseus returns in disguise to Ithaca. Apollonius of Rhodes also provides such moments, as when Jason tries to comfort his mother as he prepares to leave on a mission that looks like certain death: “Sudden are the woes/the gods allot to mortals. Strive to bear/your portion of them, though it pains your heart.”
As Heracles – the son of a god, and eventually a god himself – literally and figuratively stands head and shoulders above all other Greek heroes, perhaps it should be no surprise that the Argonauts initially want Heracles to lead the expedition. But Heracles, to his credit, declines the leadership of the Argonauts, insisting that that distinction properly belongs to Jason who organized the voyage: “No, no, let no one offer me this honour./I won’t accept. What’s more, I will prevent/the rest of you from standing for the job./The man who called us here should lead our party.”
Another pre-eminent quality of the Argonautica is its depiction of Jason and other characters in terms of imperfections and uncertainties that make the characters seem quite modern. After the seer Idmon (who had foreseen that he would die on the journey, but elected to sail with the Argonauts anyway) has been killed by a boar in Bithynia, Jason is disheartened, and cannot bring himself to join the other Argonauts over their evening wine: “Jason, however, like a man in sorrow,/minutely scrutinized within himself/All that might leave him feeling still more helpless.”
As in the Iliad, so in the Argonautica, disputes among the heroes on the expedition sometimes threaten to undo the expedition. After the death of Idmon, Idas of Messene, who killed the boar that had fatally wounded Idmon, challenges Jason, accusing him of failing as leader of the Argonauts. An extended quarrel between Jason and Idas follows, while “Orpheus…did his best to calm them./He took up his lyre in this left hand/And played a song he had been working on.”
On their way north towards the straits that lead from the Aegean into the Black Sea, the Argonauts visit Lemnos. That Greek island is known for the “Lemnian crime,” the murder by the Lemnian women of the all the men on Lemnos. Hypsipyle, who managed to save her father from the Lemnian crime, is Queen of Lemnos, and she and Jason feel an immediate attraction toward one another. Jason’s attractiveness to Hypsipyle is emphasized when the poem’s narrator describes how Jason “strode on toward the city like the star/Young brides who are confined to new-built chambers/Watch rising radiantly above their houses.”
The Lemnian women, at Hypsipyle’s urging, accept the Argonauts as lovers and protectors, and Hypsipyle herself has an affair with Jason – though she expresses a fatalistic sense that, sooner or later, the Argonauts will move on, and Jason will leave her to bear alone the children that she has conceived by Jason.
As the voyage of the Argo continues, more and more of the Argonauts’ heroic adventures come to seem more like unheroic misadventures. At one point, the Argonauts, who have helped their hosts and allies the Doliones fight an army of six-armed giants, leave their hosts, only to be blown back off course; they then end up fighting the Doliones, who in the darkness and confusion of night assume that the Argonauts are Pelasgian enemies of the Doliones. The narrator responds to this unfortunate event by setting forth the fatalistic world-view of the poem – “Mortals can never sidestep fate; the cosmic/Net is extended round us everywhere.”
Heracles’ handsome young companion Hylas is kidnapped by a love-struck water nymph; and Heracles, grief-stricken and enraged at the loss of his friend, ends up being accidentally left behind when the Argo sails. While the Argonauts argue over who is at fault for the abandonment of the greatest of their company, Jason again exhibits some of the unheroic qualities that become more and more apparent as the poem goes on: “Jason was so dumbstruck and at a loss/He uttered nothing one way or the other – /No, he just sat there gnawing at his heart,/Feeling the burden of catastrophe.” It becomes increasingly clear, over the course of the Argonautica, that Jason of Thessaly has his limitations as an expedition leader.
Once the Argonauts realize that Heracles has been left behind, Telamon of Aegina accuses Jason of deliberately abandoning the greatest of all Greek heroes. It takes divine intervention – in the form of the sea-god Glaucus coming up out of the sea, holding on to the keel of the Argo, and telling the Argonauts of Hylas’ fate – to get the heroes back on course.
Indeed, deus ex machina interventions, a hallowed tradition in classical Greek literature, are very much in evidence throughout the Argonautica. The goddesses Hera and Athena in particular offer help to Jason and the Argonauts as they make their way through a number of the exciting episodes dramatized in Harryhausen’s film – saving Phineus of Thrace from tormenting Harpies; getting the Argo safely through the Clashing Rocks that have crushed every vessel that has previously tried to pass through; battling the bronze giant Talus; encountering a great serpent that guards the Golden Fleece.
A particularly important example of divine help to Jason comes after the Argonauts’ arrival at Colchis, when the love goddess Aphrodite (at the urging of Hera and Athena) has her son Eros shoot the Colchian princess Medea, daughter of king Aeëtes, with darts of love for Jason. Eros, who is depicted as a spoiled, selfish little boy, accedes to his mother’s request (she has promised him a shiny new toy), and Medea falls immediately and desperately in love with Jason:
[S]he fired scintillating glances over
And over at the son of Aeson. Anguish
Quickened her heart and panted in her breast,
And she could think of him, him only, nothing
But him, as sweet affliction drained her soul.
Medea emerges here as a sympathetic figure: a pawn in a game among gods, compelled by divine forces to fall in love with a man who will become the enemy of her country – to turn traitor in the name of love.
Aeëtes, for all of the reasons stated above, doesn’t want to give up the Golden Fleece; therefore, he assigns Jason the challenge of harnessing two fire-breathing oxen and with them plowing the plains of Colchis. Argus, builder of the Argo, offers to seek Medea’s favour and assistance, and Jason gives his consent, adding, “But, mind you,/If we entrust our homecoming to women,/Our hopes are very pitiful indeed.”
Gaining the fleece, and leaving Colchis, Jason and Medea and the Argonauts take shelter with Alcinoös and Arete at the island of Drépané. Aeëtes has promised to put Medea to death by slow torture if he ever catches her. Alcinoös has decreed that if Medea is still a virgin, he must return her to Aeëtes; if she is not, Alcinoös will shelter and protect her. Accordingly, Jason and Medea, who had hoped for a palace wedding back in Thessaly, must have a hurry-up marriage in Alcinoös’ court:
The truth is, we
The members of the woe-struck tribes of mortals
Never tread the pathways to delight
With confidence. Some bitter anguish always
Shambles along beside our happiness.
Thus, after Jason and Medea’s souls
Dissolved in sweet lovemaking, terror gripped them:
Would King Alcinoös, in fact, deliver
The verdict Queen Arete had described?
The reader of the Argonautica is always thinking ahead to what will happen beyond the bounds of the poem. We know that Jason and Medea will eventually settle in Corinth – that Jason, over time, will seek to improve his situation by divorcing Medea and marrying the princess Creusa (or Glauce) – and that Medea will respond to Jason’s faithlessness by taking a truly terrible revenge, as Euripides chronicles in his play Medea. Harryhausen’s film alludes gently to the unhappy future of these characters, when the film’s Zeus (played by Niall MacGinnis) says that “for Jason, there are other adventures. I have not finished with Jason.”
Today, Jason and the Argonauts come up in all sorts of contexts. Dante Alighieri sends Jason to Hell, assigning him to the First Bolgia of the Inferno's 8th circle where "Seducers and Panderers" are punished, because of Jason's seduction and abandonment of Hypsipyle. Toronto’s professional football team has been called the Argonauts since 1873. Senator William Proxmire of Wisconsin, from 1975 to 1988, would give a “Golden Fleece Award” to the federal official who he felt had been most wasteful of public money. The 1982 song “Jason and the Argonauts,” by the British rock band XTC, declares that “There may be no Golden Fleece,/But human riches I’ll release”. And whether one wants to read the Argonautica in its larger mythological context, or for its long-term cultural influence, or simply as a rousing tale of adventure, it is a journey well worth taking.