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salammbo-第32部分

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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

the inhabitants were beginning to fire the engines。 All had fought

desperately。 But; the tumult which was going on in the direction of

the bridge increasing in an incomprehensible fashion; Matho had struck

across the mountain by the shortest road; and as the Barbarians were

fleeing over the plain he had encountered nobody。



Facing him were little pyramidal masses rearing themselves in the

shade; and on this side of the river and closer to him were motionless

lights on the surface of the ground。 In fact the Carthaginians had

fallen back behind the bridge; and to deceive the Barbarians the

Suffet had stationed numerous posts upon the other bank。



Matho; still advancing; thought that he could distinguish Punic

engines; for horses' heads which did not stir appeared in the air

fixed upon the tops of piles of staves which could not be seen; and

further off he could hear a great clamour; a noise of songs; and

clashing of cups。



Then; not knowing where he was nor how to find Spendius; assailed with

anguish; scared; and lost in the darkness; he returned more

impetuously by the same road。 The dawn as growing grey when from the

top of the mountain he perceived the town with the carcases of the

engines blackened by the flames and looking like giant skeletons

leaning against the walls。



All was peaceful amid extraordinary silence and heaviness。 Among his

soldiers on the verge of the tents men were sleeping nearly naked;

each upon his back; or with his forehead against his arm which was

supported by his cuirass。 Some were unwinding bloodstained bandages

from their legs。 Those who were doomed to die rolled their heads about

gently; others dragged themselves along and brought them drink。 The

sentries walked up and down along the narrow paths in order to warm

themselves; or stood in a fierce attitude with their faces turned

towards the horizon; and their pikes on their shoulders。 Matho found

Spendius sheltered beneath a rag of canvas; supported by two sticks

set in the ground; his knee in his hands and his head cast down。



They remained for a long time without speaking。



At last Matho murmured: 〃Conquered!〃



Spendius rejoined in a gloomy voice: 〃Yes; conquered!〃



And to all questions he replied by gestures of despair。



Meanwhile sighs and death…rattles reached them。 Matho partially opened

the canvas。 Then the sight of the soldiers reminded him of another

disaster on the same spot; and he ground his teeth: 〃Wretch! once

already〃



Spendius interrupted him: 〃You were not there either。〃



〃It is a curse!〃 exclaimed Matho。 〃Nevertheless; in the end I will

get at him! I will conquer him! I will slay him! Ah! if I had been

there!〃 The thought of having missed the battle rendered him even

more desperate than the defeat。 He snatched up his sword and threw it

upon the ground。 〃But how did the Carthaginians beat you?〃



The former slave began to describe the manoeuvres。 Matho seemed to see

them; and he grew angry。 The army from Utica ought to have taken

Hamilcar in the rear instead of hastening to the bridge。



〃Ah! I know!〃 said Spendius。



〃You ought to have made your ranks twice as deep; avoided exposing the

velites against the phalanx; and given free passage to the elephants。

Everything might have been recovered at the last moment; there was no

necessity to fly。〃



Spendius replied:



〃I saw him pass along in his large red cloak; with uplifted arms and

higher than the dust; like an eagle flying upon the flank of the

cohorts; and at every nod they closed up or darted forward; the throng

carried us towards each other; he looked at me; and I felt the cold

steel as it were in my heart。〃



〃He selected the day; perhaps?〃 whispered Matho to himself。



They questioned each other; trying to discover what it was that had

brought the Suffet just when circumstances were most unfavourable。

They went on to talk over the situation; and Spendius; to extenuate

his fault; or to revive his courage; asserted that some hope still

remained。



〃And if there be none; it matters not!〃 said Matho; 〃alone; I will

carry on the war!〃



〃And I too!〃 exclaimed the Greek; leaping up; he strode to and fro;

his eyes sparkling; and a strange smile wrinkled his jackal face。



〃We will make a fresh start; do not leave me again! I am not made for

battles in the sunlightthe flashing of swords troubles my sight; it

is a disease; I lived too long in the ergastulum。 But give me walls to

scale at night; and I will enter the citadels; and the corpses shall

be cold before cock…crow! Show me any one; anything; an enemy; a
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