Jason, leader of the Argonauts writes in his log, ‘We have come far & yet have only found discarded pieces of her garment floating on the current as if leading us on to her lavender abyss; Asclepius, much like Hart Crane gaily diving off the side of the ship fishes her sandal from the waters;
Asclepius sniffing the well worn footwear; his healing eyes ignite, ‘These surely were worn by the Goddess; Her foot-odor is all over them’, the divine doctor says Stroking the abandoned enchanted instep
Heracles wonders if this is a sign Or if the doctor simply has a shoe fetish; Tiresias telling the strongman that Every fetish has its purpose & this will reveal the direction her steps have taken & that it was Prometheus himself Who gave sheer lingerie to women To catch the scent & hold men spellbound
After some basic Homeric conversational one-upmanship & Socratic back-and-forth, Tiresias succeeds in convincing Heracles of the rightness of drooling Dr. Asclepius’s perverted actions;
The Argonauts are destined for success By decree of Zeus, father of the gods; Calliope, a giant who blows the clouds into shapes & makes the four winds sing like a boy band; can become human size whenever she desires & ****** mortal men w/ her song
I would think right there on the temple floor on mats softer than any fur, We are destined to spend 40 nights as captives of her furious wrestling tiger-women whose roar is so loud the sound roils through the vined jungle and across the tops of the darkest trees and every living creature goes into a heat and goes to ground To mate driven lustily insane by the unearthly screams, and just then growls rang out
Her blood boiling hot, No one had ever come so near, it was as if a fight to the death was on, but no death seemed clear
Of all the heroes on the Argos Only one truly worried; Calliope's own son would have to endure witnessing yet again his mother ****** his shipmates; the muse of epic poetry inspiring love visions in their heads, meaning Orpheus, greatest poet & musician of the ancient world would have to yet again wield the eternally perfectly tuned lyre given him by his muse-mother's master, sun god Apollo for just this cause;
Another painful reminder that his mother was a **** who molested him when he was but a singing child; she had taught him the ways of poetry & music but at the price of his sympathy & as if embracing the death of love, it would be Orpheus' task to yet again bewitch his own mother
Intrigued, Calliope bursting mortal chains asunder grows into who knows how tall Only to dissolve from sight into a swarm of sea creatures; Calliope, beloved mother of Orpheus casting bones as the ship goes over the edge of the world;
As if from two separate points of view the hero embarks on his Quest for the majestic crone, Only to find his ship navigating through Amazon territory (so Freudian, so Jungian) where he searches for the temple of the mythic mystic female;
Every legendary goddess has heard of him From still-more ancient legends known only to them; the hero whose name is as yet unknown goes to the prow of his ship, at long last seeing her white mountains & following her thunder