AfterMAth
Arriving home safely, after some narrow escapes, Jason took
his new bride to the palace where Pelias sat on the throne, surprised to see Jason.
Pelias was not expecting Jason to return alive, never had any plan to keep his
end of the deal, and did not vacate the throne. Unpin further inspection, Jason
also learned that King Pelias had murdered Jason’s father after he had left for his
voyage, and his mother had died from loneliness. Medea, seeing the anger and
sadness that Pelias had put on Jason decided to avenge her husband’s
wrongdoings in a sneaky way.
Making friends with Pelias daughters, Medea showed them a magic trick. She took an old sheep and chopped it up so it could fit in her pot. After saying a spell, the sorceress demonstrated how the sheep jumped out younger, and more handsome. Medea then told the girls that she could do the same with their father, Pelias, and wanting the best for their father, they planned to follow through. That night the girls chopped up their father and brought his pieces to Medea, who put him in the pot, but wanting to avenge her true love, did not say the spell. Medea left the pieces of Pelias in the pot, dead.
The island learned of the frightful trick that Medea had played on their past king, and did not want her as their queen, so Jason and Medea left for Corinth, where Medea gave birth to their three children. After time, Jason became bored with his wife, for she was no longer beautiful and left her for Glauce, the King of Cornith's daughter. Jason did not reveal his new love until after he had gotten consent form the King and the wedding was set, in which he tried to ask Medea for consent, lying that he still loved her and was doing it for their children, who would become royals.
Angered greatly at her husband cheating, Medea decided to take the anger out on the thing that caused the problems, Glauce. Medea constructed a beautiful golden cloth, in which she had spun a poison, which would penetrate the skin and bone of that who wore it, consuming them as if by fire. Medea sent it to Glauce as a wedding gift, who consumed by its beauty put it on, but immediately became engulfed in the poison and died painfully as a result. Not convinced that Jason had felt the pain that she did when he cheated on her, Medea went out and killed the three sons that she had with Jason.
Finding his bride dead in the chamber and his sons dead, Jason wen to the house which he shared with Medea for revenge, but she was nowhere to be found for she had escaped to Athens, on a golden chariot. Fueled by grief, Jason eventually kills himself. Ending his life and his story.
Making friends with Pelias daughters, Medea showed them a magic trick. She took an old sheep and chopped it up so it could fit in her pot. After saying a spell, the sorceress demonstrated how the sheep jumped out younger, and more handsome. Medea then told the girls that she could do the same with their father, Pelias, and wanting the best for their father, they planned to follow through. That night the girls chopped up their father and brought his pieces to Medea, who put him in the pot, but wanting to avenge her true love, did not say the spell. Medea left the pieces of Pelias in the pot, dead.
The island learned of the frightful trick that Medea had played on their past king, and did not want her as their queen, so Jason and Medea left for Corinth, where Medea gave birth to their three children. After time, Jason became bored with his wife, for she was no longer beautiful and left her for Glauce, the King of Cornith's daughter. Jason did not reveal his new love until after he had gotten consent form the King and the wedding was set, in which he tried to ask Medea for consent, lying that he still loved her and was doing it for their children, who would become royals.
Angered greatly at her husband cheating, Medea decided to take the anger out on the thing that caused the problems, Glauce. Medea constructed a beautiful golden cloth, in which she had spun a poison, which would penetrate the skin and bone of that who wore it, consuming them as if by fire. Medea sent it to Glauce as a wedding gift, who consumed by its beauty put it on, but immediately became engulfed in the poison and died painfully as a result. Not convinced that Jason had felt the pain that she did when he cheated on her, Medea went out and killed the three sons that she had with Jason.
Finding his bride dead in the chamber and his sons dead, Jason wen to the house which he shared with Medea for revenge, but she was nowhere to be found for she had escaped to Athens, on a golden chariot. Fueled by grief, Jason eventually kills himself. Ending his life and his story.