CHAPTER VI. THE ADVENTURES OF JASON
The Hellènes had not long been
masters of all Greece, when a Phryg’i-an called
Pe’lops became master of the peninsula, which
from him received the name of Pel-o-pon-ne’sus.
He first taught the people to coin money; and his
descendants, the Pe-lop’i-dae, took
possession of all the land around them, with the exception
of Argolis, where the Da-na’i-des
continued to reign.
Some of the Ionians and Achaeans,
driven away from their homes by the Pelopidae, went
on board their many vessels, and sailed away.
They formed Hel-len’ic colonies in the neighboring
islands along the coast of Asia Minor, and even in
the southern part of Italy.
As some parts of Greece were very
thinly settled, and as the people clustered around
the towns where their rulers dwelt, there were wide,
desolate tracts of land between them. Here were
many wild beasts and robbers, who lay in wait for
travelers on their way from one settlement to another.
The robbers, who hid in the forests or mountains, were
generally feared and disliked, until at last some brave
young warriors made up their minds to fight against
them and to kill them all. These young men were
so brave that they well deserved the name of heroes,
which has always been given them; and they met with
many adventures about which the people loved to hear.
Long after they had gone, the inhabitants, remembering
their relief when the robbers were killed, taught
their children to honor these brave young men almost
as much as the gods, and they called the time when
they lived the Heroic Age.
Not satisfied with freeing their own
country from wild men and beasts, the heroes wandered
far away from home in search of further adventures.
These have also been told over and over again to children
of all countries and ages, until every one is expected
to know something about them. Fifty of these
heroes, for instance, went on board of a small vessel
called the “Argo,” sailed across the well-known
waters, and ventured boldly into unknown seas.
They were in search of a Golden Fleece, which they
were told they would find in Col’chis, where
it was said to be guarded by a great dragon.
The leader of these fifty adventurers
was Ja’son, an AEolian prince, who brought them
safely to Colchis, whence, as the old stories relate,
they brought back the Golden Fleece. They also
brought home the king’s daughter, who married
Jason, and ruled his kingdom with him. Of course,
as there was no such thing as a Golden Fleece, the
Greeks merely used this expression to tell about the
wealth which they got in the East, and carried home
with them; for the voyage of the “Argo”
was in reality the first distant commercial journey
undertaken by the Greeks.