The crowd applauded and howled with joy.
HE knew it, he who had commanded them over yonder, and had returned
with the last cohort in the last
galley!
"True! True!" said they.
Nevertheless, Gisco continued, the Republic had respected their
national divisions, their customs, and their modes of
worship; in
Carthage they were free! As to the cups of the Sacred Legion, they
were private property. Suddenly a Gaul, who was close to Spendius,
sprang over the tables and ran straight up to Gisco, gesticulating and
threatening him with two naked swords.
Without interrupting his speech, the General struck him on the head
with his heavy ivory staff, and the Barbarian fell. The Gauls howled,
and their
frenzy, which was spreading to the others, would soon have
swept away the
legionaries. Gisco shrugged his shoulders as he saw
them growing pale. He thought that his courage would be useless
against these exasperated brute beasts. It would be better to revenge
himself upon them by some artifice later;
accordingly, he signed to
his soldiers and slowly
withdrew. Then, turning in the
gateway towards
the Mercenaries, he cried to them that they would
repent of it.
The feast recommenced. But Gisco might return, and by
surrounding the
suburb, which was beside the last ramparts, might crush them against
the walls. Then they felt themselves alone in spite of their crowd,
and the great town
sleeping beneath them in the shade suddenly made
them afraid, with its piles of
staircases, its lofty black houses, and
its vague gods fiercer even than its people. In the distance a few
ships'-lanterns were gliding across the harbour, and there were lights
in the
temple of Khamon. They thought of Hamilcar. Where was he? Why
had he
forsaken them when peace was concluded? His differences with
the Council were
doubtless but a
pretence in order to destroy them.
Their unsatisfied hate recoiled upon him, and they cursed him,
exasperating one another with their own anger. At this juncture they
collected together beneath the plane-trees to see a slave who, with
eyeballs fixed, neck contorted, and lips covered with foam, was
rolling on the ground, and
beating the soil with his limbs. Some one
cried out that he was poisoned. All then believed themselves poisoned.
They fell upon the slaves, a terrible clamour was raised, and a
vertigo of
destruction came like a
whirlwind upon the
drunken army.
They struck about them at
random, they smashed, they slew; some hurled
torches into the
foliage; others, leaning over the lions' balustrade,
mas
sacred the animals with arrows; the most
daring ran to the
elephants, desiring to cut down their trunks and eat ivory.
Some Balearic slingers, however, who had gone round the corner of the
palace, in order to pillage more
conveniently, were checked by a lofty
barrier, made of Indian cane. They cut the lock-straps with their
daggers, and then found themselves beneath the front that faced
Carthage, in another garden full of trimmed
vegetation. Lines of white
flowers all following one another in regular
succession formed long
parabolas like star-rockets on the azure-coloured earth. The gloomy
bushes exhaled warm and honied odours. There were trunks of trees
smeared with cinnabar, which resembled columns covered with blood. In
the centre were twelve pedestals, each supporting a great glass ball,
and these hollow globes were indistinctly filled with
reddish lights,
like
enormous and still palpitating eyeballs. The soldiers lighted
themselves with torches as they stumbled on the slope of the deeply
laboured soil.
But they perceived a little lake divided into several basins by walls
of blue stones. So limpid was the wave that the flames of the torches
quivered in it at the very bottom, on a bed of white pebbles and
golden dust. It began to
bubble,
luminous spangles glided past, and
great fish with gems about their mouths, appeared near the surface.
With much
laughter the soldiers slipped their fingers into the gills
and brought them to the tables. They were the fish of the Barca
family, and were all descended from those primordial lotes which had
hatched the
mystic egg
wherein the
goddess was concealed. The idea of
committing a sacrilege revived the greediness of the Mercenaries; they
speedily placed fire beneath some
brazen vases, and amused themselves
by watching the beautiful fish struggling in the boiling water.
The surge of soldiers pressed on. They were no longer afraid. They
commenced to drink again. Their
ragged tunics were wet with the
perfumes that flowed in large drops from their foreheads, and resting
both fists on the tables, which seemed to them to be rocking like
ships, they rolled their great
drunken eyes around to
devour by sight
what they could not take. Others walked amid the dishes on the
purpletable covers, breaking ivory stools, and phials of Tyrian glass to
pieces with their feet. Songs mingled with the death-rattle of the
slaves expiring amid the broken cups. They demanded wine, meat, gold.
They cried out for women. They raved in a hundred languages. Some
thought that they were at the vapour baths on
account of the steam
which floated around them, or else, catching sight of the
foliage,
imagined that they were at the chase, and rushed upon their companions
as upon wild beasts. The conflagration spread to all the trees, one
after another, and the lofty mosses of verdure, emitting long white
spirals, looked like volcanoes
beginning to smoke. The clamour
redoubled; the wounded lions roared in the shade.
In an
instant the highest
terrace of the palace was illuminated, the
central door opened, and a woman, Hamilcar's daughter herself, clothed
in black garments, appeared on the
threshold. She descended the first
staircase, which ran obliquely along the first story, then the second,
and the third, and stopped on the last
terrace at the head of the
galleystaircase. Motionless and with head bent, she gazed upon the
soldiers.
Behind her, on each side, were two long shadows of pale men, clad in
white, red-fringed robes, which fell straight to their feet. They had
no beard, no hair, no eyebrows. In their hands, which sparkled with
rings, they carried
enormous lyres, and with
shrill voice they sang a
hymn to the
divinity of Carthage. They were the
eunuch priests of the
temple of Tanith, who were often summoned by Salammbo to her house.
At last she descended the
galleystaircase. The priests followed her.
She
advanced into the avenue of
cypress, and walked slowly through the
tables of the captains, who drew back somewhat as they watched her
pass.
Her hair, which was powdered with
violet sand, and combined into the
form of a tower, after the fashion of the Chanaanite maidens, added to
her
height. Tresses of pearls were fastened to her
temples, and fell
to the corners of her mouth, which was as rosy as a half-open
pomegranate. On her breast was a
collection of
luminous stones, their
variegation imitating the scales of the murena. Her arms were adorned
with diamonds, and issued naked from her sleeveless tunic, which was
starred with red flowers on a
perfectly black ground. Between her
ankles she wore a golden chainlet to
regulate her steps, and her large
dark
purplemantle, cut of an unknown material, trailed behind her,
making, as it were, at each step, a broad wave which followed her.
The priests played nearly stifled chords on their lyres from time to
time, and in the intervals of the music might be heard the tinkling of
the little golden chain, and the regular
patter of her papyrus
sandals.
No one as yet was acquainted with her. It was only known that she led
a
retired life, engaged in pious practices. Some soldiers had seen her
in the night on the
summit of her palace kneeling before the stars
amid the eddyings from kindled perfuming-pans. It was the moon that
had made her so pale, and there was something from the gods that
enveloped her like a subtle vapour. Her eyes seemed to gaze far beyond
terrestrial space. She bent her head as she walked, and in her right
hand she carried a little ebony lyre.
They heard her murmur:
"Dead! All dead! No more will you come
obedient to my voice as when,
seated on the edge of the lake, I used to through seeds of the
watermelon into your mouths! The
mystery of Tanith ranged in the
depths of your eyes that were more limpid than the globules of
rivers." And she called them by their names, which were those of the
months--"Siv! Sivan! Tammouz, Eloul, Tischri, Schebar! Ah! have pity
on me,
goddess!"
The soldiers thronged about her without under
standing what she said.