登陆注册
5401400000020

第20章

His impotence exasperated him.He was jealous of this Carthage which contained Salammbo, as if of some one who had possessed her.His nervelessness left him to be replaced by a mad and continual eagerness for action.With flaming cheek, angry eyes, and hoarse voice, he would walk with rapid strides through the camp; or seated on the shore he would scour his great sword with sand.He shot arrows at the passing vultures.His heart overflowed into frenzied speech.

"Give free course to your wrath like a runaway chariot," said Spendius."Shout, blaspheme, ravage and slay.Grief is allayed with blood, and since you cannot sate your love, gorge your hate; it will sustain you!"Matho resumed the command of his soldiers.He drilled them pitilessly.

He was respected for his courage and especially for his strength.

Moreover he inspired a sort of mystic dread, and it was believed that he conversed at night with phantoms.The other captains were animated by his example.The army soon grew disciplined.From their houses the Carthaginians could hear the bugle-flourishes that regulated their exercises.At last the Barbarians drew near.

To crush them in the isthmus it would have been necessary for two armies to take them simultaneously in the rear, one disembarking at the end of the gulf of Utica, and the second at the mountain of the Hot Springs.But what could be done with the single sacred Legion, mustering at most six thousand men? If the enemy bent towards the east they would join the nomads and intercept the commerce of the desert.

If they fell back to the west, Numidia would rise.Finally, lack of provisions would sooner or later lead them to devastate the surrounding country like grasshoppers, and the rich trembled for their fine country-houses, their vineyards and their cultivated lands.

Hanno proposed atrocious and impracticable measures, such as promising a heavy sum for every Barbarian's head, or setting fire to their camp with ships and machines.His colleague Gisco, on the other hand, wished them to be paid.But the Ancients detested him owing to his popularity; for they dreaded the risk of a master, and through terror of monarchy strove to weaken whatever contributed to it or might re-establish it.

Outside the fortification there were people of another race and of unknown origin, all hunters of the porcupine, and eaters of shell-fish and serpents.They used to go into caves to catch hyenas alive, and amuse themselves by making them run in the evening on the sands of Megara between the stelae of the tombs.Their huts, which were made of mud and wrack, hung on the cliff like swallows' nests.There they lived, without government and without gods, pell-mell, completely naked, at once feeble and fierce, and execrated by the people of all time on account of their unclean food.One morning the sentries perceived that they were all gone.

At last some members of the Great Council arrived at a decision.They came to the camp without necklaces or girdles, and in open sandles like neighbours.They walked at a quiet pace, waving salutations to the captains, or stopped to speak to the soldiers, saying that all was finished and that justice was about to be done to their claims.

Many of them saw a camp of Mercenaries for the first time.Instead of the confusion which they had pictured to themselves, there prevailed everywhere terrible silence and order.A grassy rampart formed a lofty wall round the army immovable by the shock of catapults.The ground in the streets was sprinkled with fresh water; through the holes in the tents they could perceive tawny eyeballs gleaming in the shade.The piles of pikes and hanging panoplies dazzled them like mirrors.They conversed in low tones.They were afraid of upsetting something with their long robes.

The soldiers requested provisions, undertaking to pay for them out of the money that was due.

Oxen, sheep, guinea fowl, fruit and lupins were sent to them, with smoked scombri, that excellent scombri which Carthage dispatched to every port.But they walked scornfully around the magnificent cattle, and disparaging what they coveted, offered the worth of a pigeon for a ram, or the price of a pomegranate for three goats.The Eaters of Uncleanness came forward as arbitrators, and declared that they were being duped.Then they drew their swords with threats to slay.

Commissaries of the Great Council wrote down the number of years for which pay was due to each soldier.But it was no longer possible to know how many Mercenaries had been engaged, and the Ancients were dismayed at the enormous sum which they would have to pay.The reserve of silphium must be sold, and the trading towns taxed; the Mercenaries would grow impatient; Tunis was already with them; and the rich, stunned by Hanno's ragings and his colleague's reproaches, urged any citizens who might know a Barbarian to go to see him immediately in order to win back his friendship, and to speak him fair.Such a show of confidence would soothe them.

Traders, scribes, workers in the arsenal, and whole families visited the Barbarians.

The soldiers allowed all the Carthaginians to come in, but by a single passage so narrow that four men abreast jostled one another in it.

Spendius, standing against the barrier, had them carefully searched;facing him Matho was examining the multitude, trying to recognise some one whom he might have seen at Salammbo's palace.

The camp was like a town, so full of people and of movement was it.

同类推荐
  • 济生集

    济生集

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。汇聚授权电子版权。
  • 二谛义

    二谛义

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。汇聚授权电子版权。
  • 季冬纪

    季冬纪

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。汇聚授权电子版权。
  • 聚云吹万真禅师语录

    聚云吹万真禅师语录

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。汇聚授权电子版权。
  • 官箴集要

    官箴集要

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。汇聚授权电子版权。
热门推荐
  • 万界独尊

    万界独尊

    你丹药多?我丹方无尽。你身怀秘术?及我九牛一毛?你武功盖世?三尺长剑,教你做人!顶尖功法无数,生活职业无双,热血的对决,犀利的打脸,一寸剑光,万里直驱,破碎虚空,成就圣位!你是天才?不好意思,连给我提鞋,你都不配!
  • 逆世邪尊

    逆世邪尊

    废物少年拜师风老,一举获得众人的震惊。他日重回家族,以一己之力打败众人,碾压般的姿态获得成人礼第一,震惊全场。且看安凌如何在乱世称雄,成就无上霸业。
  • 给父母的爱调成振动的(微阅读1+1工程·第六辑)

    给父母的爱调成振动的(微阅读1+1工程·第六辑)

    张格娟创作的《给父母的爱调成振动的》是“微阅读1+1工程”这套书中的一册,收录了《快门》、《寻找米小西》、《梨花开过的冬季》、《哆来咪》、《金子》、《胡子》、《雷米》、《润格》、《裸奔》、《剑客》、《红围巾》、《老费的错误人生》、《底片》、《亲爱的》等故事。
  • 北窗炙輠录

    北窗炙輠录

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。汇聚授权电子版权。
  • 初恋的借口

    初恋的借口

    初恋的美好,只是拿来作为借口去下一步的恋情
  • 赵氏经络综合锻炼方法

    赵氏经络综合锻炼方法

    天地万事万物都离不开“道”。老子在《道德经》第一章讲述了道的玄妙。“道可道,非常道。名可名,非常名。无名,万物之始也;有名,万物之母也。故恒无欲也,以观其妙;恒有欲也,以观其所徼。两者同出,异名同谓。玄之又玄,众妙法门”。释义:“道”如果可以用语言来表述,那它就是常“道”(“道”是可以用语言来表述的,它并非一般的“道”);“名”如果可以用文辞去命名,那它就是常“名”(“名”也是可以说明的,它并非普通的“名”)。“无”可以用来表述天地混沌未开之际的状况;而“有”,则是宇宙万物产生之本原的命名。因此,要常从“无”中去观察领悟“道”的奥妙;要常从“有”中去观察体会“道”的端倪。
  • 残垣消寂

    残垣消寂

    她从没有想过,一场戏过后,带来的竟是这般生灵涂炭、战事纷争的杀孽,他也从来没有想过,一场戏过后,竟有人用一己之力平息了这场本该血流成河的灾难,可是,终究苦了有情者,求而不得,还是负了无情者,再难弥补。
  • 利斯塔

    利斯塔

    因着命运,被酒鬼赌徒父亲卖掉的路易斯走上了剑士之路,寻求女神所描绘的乐园。赤怒酋长,极霜暴君,嗜血君主,无数强大的怪物,无数令人恐惧的阴谋。黑暗中的真相迷离,但无法阻挡你登上孤独的王座。
  • 战地元

    战地元

    荒兽千里横行,草木万里争锋,万人逐道,红尘掩枯骨
  • 矩阵帝国

    矩阵帝国

    这是一个走入岔道的平行世界。一座座‘墟’侵入地球,各种种族互相倾轧又不吝啬的向着人类张开獠牙。 主角方昊,穿越到人族堪堪将各族抵挡在国门之外的“和平时期”,独自一人从一座小乡村向着大城市走去,各种磨炼、经历,一步步走向强者之路。 好吧,其实这是一本异界种田文,方昊将要让科技降临异界,找寻回家之路。书又名《神一般的男人》书群:688242721欢迎聊骚