Page:Tanglewood tales (Dulac).djvu/273

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THE GOLDEN FLEECE
 

It will be excellent sport, I assure you, when they catch a glimpse of your figure. My father and all his court delight in nothing so much as to see a stranger trying to yoke them, in order to come at the Golden Fleece. It makes a holiday in Colchis whenever such a thing happens. For my part, I enjoy it immensely. You cannot imagine in what a mere twinkling of an eye their hot breath shrivels a young man into a black cinder.'

'Are you sure, beautiful Medea,' asked Jason, 'quite sure, that the unguent in the gold box will prove a remedy against those terrible burns?'

'If you doubt, if you are in the least afraid,' said the princess, looking him in the face by the dim starlight, 'you had better never have been born than go a step nigher to the bulls.'

But Jason had set his heart steadfastly on getting the Golden Fleece; and I positively doubt whether he would have gone back without it, even had he been certain of finding himself turned into a red-hot cinder, or a handful of white ashes, the instant he made a step farther. He therefore let go Medea's hand, and walked boldly forward in the direction whither she had pointed. At some distance before him he perceived four streams of fiery vapour, regularly appearing, and again vanishing, after dimly lighting up the surrounding obscurity. These, you will understand, were caused by the breath of the brazen bulls, which was quietly stealing out of their four nostrils, as they lay chewing their cuds.

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