ascended towards the Suffet's gardens, were ir
regularly separated from
one another by little
pebble walls, trenches of spring water, ropes of
esparto-grass, and nopal hedges. But Hamilcar's eyes were fastened on
a great tower, the three storys of which formed three monster
cylinders--the first being built of stone, the second of brick, and
the third all of cedar--supporting a
copper cupola upon twenty-four
pillars of juniper, from which
slender interlacing chains of brass
hung down after the manner of garlands. This lofty
edifice overlooked
the buildings--the emporiums and mercantile houses--which stretched to
the right, while the women's palace rose at the end of the
cypresstrees, which were ranged in line like two walls of
bronze.
When the echoing
chariot had entered through the narrow
gateway it
stopped beneath a broad shed in which there were shackled horses
eating from heaps of chopped grass.
All the servants hastened up. They formed quite a
multitude, those who
worked on the country estates having been brought to Carthage through
fear of the soldiers. The labourers, who were clad in animals' skins,
had chains riveted to their ankles and trailing after them; the
workers in the
purple factories had arms as red as those of
executioners; the sailors wore green caps; the fishermen coral
necklaces; the huntsmen carried nets on their shoulders; and the
people be
longing to Megara wore black or white tunics, leathern
drawers, and caps of straw, felt or linen, according to their service
or their different
occupations.
Behind pressed a
tatteredpopulace. They lived without employment
remote from the apartments, slept at night in the gardens, ate the
refuse from the kitchens,--a human mouldiness vegetating in the shadow
of the palace. Hamilcar tolerated them from
foresight even more than
from scorn. They had all put a flower in the ear in token of their
joy, and many of them had never seen him.
But men with head-dresses like the Sphinx's, and furnished with great
sticks, dashed into the crowd,
striking right and left. This was to
drive back the slaves, who were curious to see their master, so that
he might not be assailed by their numbers or inconvenienced by their
smell.
Then they all threw themselves flat on the ground, crying:
"Eye of Baal, may your house flourish!" And through these people as
they lay thus on the ground in the avenue of
cypress trees, Abdalonim,
the Steward of the
stewards, waving a white miter,
advanced towards
Hamilcar with a censer in his hand.
Salammbo was then coming down the
galleystaircases. All her slave
women followed her; and, at each of her steps, they also descended.
The heads of the Negresses formed big black spots on the line of the
bands of the golden plates clasping the foreheads of the Roman women.
Others had silver arrows,
emerald butterflies, or long bodkins set
like suns in their hair. Rings, clasps, necklaces, fringes, and
bracelets shone amid the
confusion of white, yellow, and blue
garments; a rustling of light material became
audible; the pattering
of sandals might be heard together with the dull sound of naked feet
as they were set down on the wood;--and here and there a tall eunuch,
head and shoulders above them, smiled with his face in air. When the
shouting of the men had subsided they hid their faces in their
sleeves, and together uttered a strange cry like the howling of a she-
wolf, and so frenzied and strident was it that it seemed to make the
great ebony
staircase, with its thronging women,
vibrate from top to
bottom like a lyre.
The wind lifted their veils, and the
slender stems of the papyrus
plant rocked
gently. It was the month of Schebaz and the depth of
winter. The flowering pomegranates swelled against the azure of the
sky, and the sea disappeared through the branches with an island in
the distance half lost in the mist.
Hamilcar stopped on perceiving Salammbo. She had come to him after the
death of several male children. Moreover, the birth of daughters was
considered a
calamity in the religions of the Sun. The gods had
afterwards sent him a son; but he still felt something of the betrayal
of his hope, and the shock, as it were, of the curse which he had
uttered against her. Salammbo, however, continued to advance.
Long bunches of various-coloured pearls fell from her ears to her
shoulders, and as far as her elbows. Her hair was crisped so as to
simulate a cloud. Round her neck she wore little quadrangular plates
of gold, representing a woman between two rampant lions; and her
costume was a complete
reproduction of the
equipment of the goddess.
Her broad-sleeved
hyacinth robe fitted close to her figure, widening
out below. The vermilion on her lips gave
additional whiteness to her
teeth, and the antimony on her eyelids greater length to her eyes. Her
sandals, which were cut out in bird's
plumage, had very high heels,
and she was
extraordinarily pale,
doubtless on
account of the cold.
At last she came close to Hamilcar, and without looking at him,
without raising her head to him:
"Greeting, eye of Baalim,
eternal glory! triumph! leisure!
satisfaction!
riches! Long has my heart been sad and the house
drooping. But the returning master is like reviving Tammouz; and
beneath your gaze, O father, joyfulness and a new
existence will
everywhere prevail!"
And
taking from Taanach's hands a little oblong vase
wherein smoked a
mixture of meal, butter, cardamom, and wine: "Drink freely," said she,
"of the returning cup, which your servant has prepared!"
He replied: "A
blessing upon you!" and he
mechanically grasped the
golden vase which she held out to him.
He scanned her, however, with such harsh attention, that Salammbo was
troubled and stammered out:
"They have told you, O Master!"
"Yes! I know!" said Hamilcar in a low voice.
Was this a
confession, or was she
speaking of the Barbarians? And he
added a few vague words upon the public embarrassments which he hoped
by his sole efforts to clear away.
"O father!" exclaimed Salammbo, "you will not obliterate what is
irreparable!"
Then he drew back and Salammbo was astonished at his
amazement; for
she was not thinking of Carthage but of the sacrilege in which she
found herself implicated. This man, who made legions tremble and whom
she hardly knew, terrified her like a god; he had guessed, he knew
all, something awful was about to happen. "Pardon!" she cried.
Hamilcar slowly bowed his head.
Although she wished to
accuse herself she dared not open her lips; and
yet she felt stifled with the need of complaining and being comforted.
Hamilcar was struggling against a
longing to break his oath. He kept
it out of pride or from the dread of putting an end to his
uncertainty; and he looked into her face with all his might so as to
lay hold on what she kept concealed at the bottom of her heart.
By degrees the panting Salammbo, crushed by such heavy looks, let her
head sink below her shoulders. He was now sure that she had erred in
the
embrace of a Barbarian; he shuddered and raised both his fists.
She uttered a
shriek and fell down among her women, who
crowded around
her.
Hamilcar turned on his heel. All the
stewards followed him.
The door of the emporiums was opened, and he entered a vast round hall
form which long passages leading to other halls branched off like the
spokes from the nave of a wheel. A stone disc stood in the centre with
balustrades to support the cushions that were heaped up upon carpets.
The Suffet walked at first with rapid strides; he breathed noisily, he
struck the ground with his heel, and drew his hand across his forehead
like a man annoyed by flies. But he shook his head, and as he
perceived the accumulation of his
riches he became calm; his thoughts,
which were attracted by the vistas in the passages, wandered to the
other halls that were full of still rarer treasures. Bronze plates,