his queen, fairest of all women. One child they had, a little
maid, Hermione.
When to Sparta there came Paris, with eyes blue as the sea, and hair
that gleamed like gold on his purple robe, gallant and brave, and more
beautiful than any mortal man, glad was the welcome that he had from
Menelaus.
And when Paris gazed on Helen's face, he knew that in all the world
there was no woman half so fair as the wife of Menelaus.
Then did Aphrodite cast her magic upon Helen.
No longer did she love her husband, nor did she remember little
Hermione, her own dear child.
When Paris spoke to her words of love, and begged her to flee with
him, and to be his wife, she knew only that she loved Paris more than
all else. Gladly she went with him, and in his red-prowed ship
together they sailed across the green waves to Troyland, where Mount
Ida showed her snowy crown high above the forests.
An angry man was Menelaus when he found that Paris had stolen from him
the fair wife who was to him as his own heart.
To his elder brother Agamemnon, overlord of all the Greeks, he went
and told his grievous tale.
And from far and wide did the Greek hosts gather, until a hundred
thousand men and eleven hundred fourscore and six ships were ready to
cross the seas to Troyland.
Many were the heroes who sailed away from Greece to punish Paris and
his kin, and to bring back fair Helen to her own land.
Few there were who came home, for ten long years of woe and of
spilling of blood came to the men of Greece and of Troy from the fatal
beauty of Helen the queen.
II
THE COUNCIL
That night both gods and men slept long; only Zeus, king of the gods,
lay wakeful, pondering in his heart how best he might do honor to
Achilles. "I shall send a Dream to beguile Agamemnon," at length he
resolved.
Then did he call to a Dream, for by Dreams the gods sent their
messages to mortal men.
"Go now, thou evil Dream," said Zeus, "go to where Agamemnon sleeps in
his tent near to his fleet ships, and tell him every word as I shall
tell it thee. Bid him call to arms with speed his warriors, for now he
shall take the strong city of Troy."
To the tent of Agamemnon sped the Dream. Taking the form of the old
warrior who had striven to make peace between Agamemnon and Achilles,
the Dream stooped over the sleeping warrior, and thus to him it spoke:
"Sleepest thou, Agamemnon? Ill fits it for the overlord of so mighty a
host to sleep all throug
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