the phalanx so as to pass clean through it. But the narrower ranks
glided below the longer ones and recovered their position, and the
phalanx turned upon the Barbarians as terrible in flank as it had just
been in front.
They struck at the staves of the sarissae, but the
cavalry in the rear
embarrassed their attack; and the phalanx, supported by the elephants,
lengthened and
contracted, presenting itself in the form of a square,
a cone, a rhombus, a trapezium, a pyramid. A twofold
internalmovementwent on
continually from its head to its rear; for those who were at
the lowest part of the files hastened up to the first ranks, while the
latter, from
fatigue, or on
account of the wounded, fell further back.
The Barbarians found themselves thronged upon the phalanx. It was
impossible for it to advance; there was, as it were, an ocean wherein
leaped red crests and scales of brass, while the bright
shields rolled
like silver foam. Sometimes broad currents would
descend from one
extremity to the other, and then go up again, while a heavy mass
remained
motionless" target="_blank" title="a.静止的;固定的">
motionless in the centre. The lances dipped and rose
alternately. Elsewhere there was so quick a play of naked swords that
only the points were
visible, while turmae of
cavalry formed wide
circles which closed again like whirlwinds behind them.
Above the voices of the captains, the ringing of clarions and the
grating of tyres, bullets of lead and almonds of clay whistled through
the air,
dashing the sword from the hand or the brain out of the
skull. The wounded, sheltering themselves with one arm beneath their
shields,
pointed their swords by resting the pommels on the ground,
while others, lying in pools of blood, would turn and bite the heels
of those above them. The
multitude was so
compact, the dust so thick,
and the
tumult so great that it was impossible to
distinguishanything; the cowards who offered to
surrender were not even heard.
Those whose hands were empty clasped one another close; breasts
cracked against cuirasses, and corpses hung with head thrown back
between a pair of
contracted arms. There was a company of sixty
Umbrians who, firm on their hams, their pikes before their eyes,
immovable and grinding their teeth, forced two syntagmata to recoil
simultaneously. Some Epirote shepherds ran upon the left
squadron of
the Clinabarians, and whirling their staves, seized the horses by the
man; the animals threw their riders and fled across the plain. The
Punic slingers scattered here and there stood gaping. The phalanx
began to waver, the captains ran to and fro in distraction, the
rearmost in the files were pressing upon the soldiers, and the
Barbarians had re-formed; they were recovering; the
victory was
theirs.
But a cry, a terrible cry broke forth, a roar of pain and wrath: it
came from the seventy-two elephants which were rushing on in double
line, Hamilcar having waited until the Mercenaries were massed
together in one spot to let them loose against them; the Indians had
goaded them so
vigorously that blood was trickling down their broad
ears. Their trunks, which were smeared with mimium, were stretched
straight out in the air like red serpents; their breasts were
furnished with spears and their backs with cuirasses; their tusks were
lengthened with steel blades curved like sabres,--and to make them
more
ferocious they had been intoxicated with a
mixture of pepper,
wine, and
incense. They shook their necklaces of bells, and shrieked;
and the elephantarchs bent their heads beneath the
stream of
phalaricas which was
beginning to fly from the tops of the towers.
In order to
resist them the better the Barbarians rushed forward in a
compact crowd; the elephants flung themselves impetuously upon the
centre of it. The spurs on their breasts, like ships' prows, clove
through the cohorts, which flowed surging back. They stifled the men
with their trunks, or else snatching them up from the ground delivered
them over their heads to the soldiers in the towers; with their tusks
they disembowelled them, and hurled them into the air, and long
entrails hung from their ivory fangs like bundles of rope from a mast.
The Barbarians
strove to blind them, to hamstring them; others would
slip beneath their bodies, bury a sword in them up to the hilt, and
perish crushed to death; the most intrepid clung to their straps; they
would go on sawing the leather amid flames, bullets, and arrows, and
the wicker tower would fall like a tower of stone. Fourteen of the
animals on the
extreme right, irritated by their wounds, turned upon
the second rank; the Indians seized
mallet and
chisel,
applied the
latter to a joint in the head, and with all their might struck a great
blow.
Down fell the huge beasts, falling one above another. It was like a
mountain; and upon the heap of dead bodies and
armour a monstrous
elephant, called "The Fury of Baal," which had been caught by the leg
in some chains, stood howling until the evening with an arrow in its
eye.
The others, however, like
conquerors, delighting in extermination,
overthrew, crushed, stamped, and raged against the corpses and the
debris. To repel the maniples in serried circles around them, they
turned about on their hind feet as they
advanced, with a continual
rotatory
motion. The Carthaginians felt their
energy increase, and the
battle begin again.
The Barbarians were growing weak; some Greek hoplites threw away all
their arms, and
terror seized upon the rest. Spendius was seen
stooping upon his dromedary, and spurring it on the shoulders with two
javelins. Then they all rushed away from the wings and ran towards
Utica.
The Clinabarians, whose horses were exhausted, did not try to overtake
them. The Ligurians, who were weakened by
thirst, cried out for an
advance towards the river. But the Carthaginians, who were posted in
the centre of the syntagmata, and had suffered less, stamped their
feet with
longing for the
vengeance which was flying from them; and
they were already darting forward in
pursuit of the Mercenaries when
Hamilcar appeared.
He held in his spotted and sweat-covered horse with silver reins. The
bands fastened to the horns on his
helmet flapped in the wind behind
him, and he had placed his oval
shield beneath his left thigh. With a
motion of his triple-
pointed pike he checked the army.
The Tarentines leaped quickly upon their spare horses, and set off
right and left towards the river and towards the town.
The phalanx exterminated all the remaining Barbarians at
leisure. When
the swords appeared they would stretch out their throats and close
their eyelids. Others defended themselves to the last, and were
knocked down from a distance with flints like mad dogs. Hamilcar had
desired the
taking of prisoners, but the Carthaginians obeyed him
grudgingly, so much pleasure did they
derive from plunging their
swords into the bodies of the Barbarians. As they were too hot they
set about their work with bare arms like mowers; and when they
desisted to take
breath they would follow with their eyes a horseman
galloping across the country after a fleeing soldier. He would succeed
in seizing him by the hair, hold him thus for a while, and then fell
him with a blow of his axe.
Night fell. Carthaginians and Barbarians had disappeared. The
elephants which had taken to
flight roamed in the
horizon with their
fired towers. These burned here and there in the darkness like beacons
nearly half lost in the mist; and no
movement could be discerned in
the plain save the undulation of the river, which was heaped with
corpses, and was drifting them away to the sea.
Two hours afterwards Matho arrived. He caught sight in the starlight
of long,
uneven heaps lying upon the ground.
They were files of Barbarians. He stooped down; all were dead. He
called into the distance, but no voice replied.
That very morning he had left Hippo-Zarytus with his soldiers to march
upon Carthage. At Utica the army under Spendius had just set out, and