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Jason
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===Jason returns=== [[File:Jason fresque romaine.jpg|thumb|Jason on a fresco from [[Pompeii]]]] [[Thomas Bulfinch]] has an antecedent to the interaction of Medea and the daughters of Pelias. Jason, celebrating his return with the Golden Fleece, noted that his father was too aged and infirm to participate in the celebrations. He had seen and been served by Medea's magical powers. He asked Medea to take some years from his life and add them to the life of his father. She did so, but at no such cost to Jason's life. Medea withdrew the blood from Aeson's body and infused it with certain herbs; putting it back into his veins, returning vigor to him.<ref name="William Godwin 1876 41">{{cite book|url=https://archive.org/details/livesnecromance04godwgoog|title=Lives of the Necromancers|last=Godwin|first=William|year=1876|page=41}}</ref> Pelias' daughters saw this and wanted the same service for their father. Medea, using her sorcery, claimed to Pelias' daughters that she could make their father smooth and vigorous as a child by chopping him up into pieces and boiling the pieces in a cauldron of water and magical herbs. She demonstrated this remarkable feat with the oldest ram in the flock, which leapt out of the cauldron as a lamb. The girls, rather naively, sliced and diced their father and put him in the cauldron. Medea did not add the magical herbs, and Pelias was dead.{{sfn|Godwin|1876|p=42}} Pelias' son, [[Acastus]], drove Jason and Medea into exile for the murder, and the couple settled in Corinth.
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