Mappalian quarter and tried to climb up the face of the cliff. He
covered his knees with blood, broke his nails, and then fell back into
the waves and returned.
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
continualeagernessfor 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
practicable" target="_blank" title="a.不切实际的">
impracticablemeasures, 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
monarchystrove to
weakenwhatever 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
grassyrampart 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 up
setting 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.
The two
distinct crowds mingled without blending, one dressed in linen
or wool, with felt caps like fir-cones, and the other clad in iron and
wearing helmets. Amid serving men and itinerant vendors there moved
women of all nations, as brown as ripe dates, as
greenish as olives,
as yellow as oranges, sold by sailors, picked out of dens,
stolen from
caravans, taken in the sacking of towns, women that were jaded with
love so long as they were young, and plied with blows when they were
old, and that died in routs on the roadsides among the
baggage and the
abandoned beasts of burden. The wives of the nomads had square, tawny
robes of dromedary's hair swinging at their heels; musicians from
Cyrenaica, wrapped in
violet gauze and with painted eyebrows, sang,
squatting on mats; old Negresses with
hanging breasts gathered the
animals' dung that was drying in the sun to light their fires; the
Syracusan women had golden plates in their hair; the Lusitanians had
necklaces of shells; the Gauls wore wolf skins upon their white
bosoms; and
sturdy children, vermin-covered, naked and uncircumcised,
butted with their heads against passers-by, or came behind them like
young tigers to bite their hands.
The Carthaginians walked through the camp, surprised at the quantities
of things with which it was
running over. The most
miserable were
melancholy, and the rest dissembled their anxiety.
The soldiers struck them on the shoulder, and exhorted them to be gay.
As soon as they saw any one, they invited him to their amusements. If
they were playing at discus, they would manage to crush his feet, or
if at
boxing to
fracture his jaw with the very first blow. The
slingers terrified the Carthaginians with their slings, the Psylli
with their vipers, and the horsemen with their horses, while their
victims, addicted as they were to
peaceful occupations, bent their
heads and tried to smile at all these outrages. Some, in order to show
themselves brave, made signs that they should like to become soldiers.
They were set to split wood and to curry mules. They were buckled up
in
armour, and rolled like casks through the streets of the camp.
Then, when they were about to leave, the Mercenaries plucked out their
hair with
grotesque contortions.
But many, from
foolishness or
prejudice,
innocently believed that all
the Carthaginians were very rich, and they walked behind them
entreating them to grant them something. They requested everything
that they thought fine: a ring, a
girdle, sandals, the
fringe of a
robe, and when the despoiled Carthaginian cried--"But I have nothing
left. What do you want?" they would reply, "Your wife!" Others even
said, "Your life!"
The military
accounts were handed to the captains, read to the
soldiers, and definitively approved. Then they claimed tents; they
received them. Next the polemarchs of the Greeks demanded some of the