Study of a Woman
STUDY OF A WOMAN BY HONORE DE BALZAC Translated by Katharine Prescott Wormeley DEDICATION To the Marquis Jean-Charles di Negro.
In silence and great awe, the warriors stood around, while Calchas drew
a sharp knife from its scabbard. But, lo! as he struck, the maiden was
not there; and in her stead, a noble deer lay dying on the altar. Then
the old soothsayer cried out in triumphant tones, "See, now, ye men of
Greece, how the gods have provided for you a sacrifice, and saved the
innocent daughter of the king!" And all the people shouted with joy;
and in that self-same hour, a strong breeze came down the bay, and
filled the idle sails of the waiting ships.
"To Troy! to Troy!" cried the Greeks; and every man hastened aboard his
vessel.
How it was that fair Iphigenia escaped the knife; by whom she was
saved, or whither she went--no one knew. Some say that Artemis carried
her away to the land of the Taurians, where she had a temple and an
altar; and there is a story that, long years afterward, her brother
Orestes found her there, and led her back to her girlhood's home, even
to Mycenae. But whether this be true or not, I know that there have
been maidens as noble, as loving, as innocent as she, who have given up
their lives in order to make this world a purer and happier place in
which to live; and these are not dead, but live in the grateful
memories of those whom they loved and saved.
STUDY OF A WOMAN BY HONORE DE BALZAC Translated by Katharine Prescott Wormeley DEDICATION To the Marquis Jean-Charles di Negro.