About This Book
The play depicts a Greek expedition stalled at Aulis by a windless calm; the seer Calchas declares that safe passage requires Agamemnon's daughter be sacrificed to Artemis. Agamemnon deceives his wife by promising their daughter's marriage to Achilles and summons her; Clytemnestra brings Iphigenia, unaware of the true intent. The arrival ignites conflicts between public duty and private bonds as characters debate obedience to divine will, leadership, and sacrifice. The chorus and messengers comment on fate, persuasion, and the cost of honor, culminating in the agonizing resolution of the girl's fate and its repercussions for the household and the army.
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