CHAPTER XV. THE SACRIFICE OF IPHIGENIA
True to his promise, Achilles soon
came to Aulis with his well-trained soldiers, the
Myr’mi-dons, and with him came his friend Pa-tro’clus.
All were now eager to start, and ready to embark;
but unfortunately there was no favorable wind to fill
their sails and waft them over to Asia Minor.
Day after day they waited, and offered
sacrifices to the gods, but all in vain. At last
they again consulted the oracle, who said that the
wind would not blow until Iph-i-ge-ni’a, Agamemnon’s
daughter, were offered up in sacrifice to Di-an’a,
goddess of the moon and the chase, whom this king
had once offended.
Agamemnon at first said that he would
not sacrifice his daughter, but finally his companions
persuaded him to do so. Just as the priest was
about to kill the maiden on the altar, however, the
goddess Diana came, and carried her off unharmed,
leaving a deer to be sacrificed in her stead.
The deer was killed, the wind rose,
the sails filled, and the Greek fleet soon came within
sight of the high walls and towers of Troy. There,
contrary to their expectations, the Greeks found the
people ready to fight them; but, after many days’
struggle, they saw that they had made no great advance.
On the wide plain which stretched
out between the city and the sea, the Greek and Tro’jan
armies fought many a battle; and sometimes one party,
and sometimes the other, had the victory. The
men on both sides had been trained to handle their
weapons with great skill, and there were many fights
in which the Greek heroes met the bravest Trojans.
Nine years passed thus in continual
warfare, but even then the Greeks were as far from
taking the town as on the first day; and the Trojans,
in spite of all their courage, had not been able to
drive their enemies away.