登陆注册
5202200000108

第108章

The same vision had assailed Matho; but he cast it from him immediately, and his love, that he thus thrust back, was poured out upon his companions in arms.He cherished them like portions of his own person, of his hatred,--and he felt his spirit higher, and his arms stronger; everything that he was to accomplish appeared clearly before him.If sighs sometimes escaped him, it was because he was thinking of Spendius.

He drew up the Barbarians in six equal ranks.He posted the Etruscans in the centre, all being fastened to a bronze chain; the archers were behind, and on the wings he distributed the Naffurs, who were mounted on short-haired camels, covered with ostrich feathers.

The Suffet arranged the Carthaginians in similar order.He placed the Clinabarians outside the infantry next to the velites, and the Numidians beyond; when day appeared, both sides were thus in line face to face.All gazed at each other from a distance, with round fierce eyes.There was at first some hesitation; at last both armies moved.

The Barbarians advanced slowly so as not to become out of breath, beating the ground with their feet; the centre of the Punic army formed a convex curve.Then came the burst of a terrible shock, like the crash of two fleets in collision.The first rank of the Barbarians had quickly opened up, and the marksmen, hidden behind the others, discharged their bullets, arrows, and javelins.The curve of the Carthaginians, however, flattened by degrees, became quite straight, and then bent inwards; upon this, the two sections of the velites drew together in parallel lines, like the legs of a compass that is being closed.The Barbarians, who were attacking the phalanx with fury, entered the gap; they were being lost; Matho checked them,--and while the Carthaginian wings continued to advance, he drew out the three inner ranks of his line; they soon covered his flanks, and his army appeared in triple array.

But the Barbarians placed at the extremities were the weakest, especially those on the left, who had exhausted their quivers, and the troop of velites, which had at last come up against them, was cutting them up greatly.

Matho made them fall back.His right comprised Campanians, who were armed with axes; he hurled them against the Carthaginian left; the centre attacked the enemy, and those at the other extremity, who were out of peril, kept the velites at a distance.

Then Hamilcar divided his horsemen into squadrons, placed hoplites between them, and sent them against the Mercenaries.

Those cone-shaped masses presented a front of horses, and their broader sides were filled and bristling with lances.The Barbarians found it impossible to resist; the Greek foot-soldiers alone had brazen armour, all the rest had cutlasses on the end of poles, scythes taken from the farms, or swords manufactured out of the fellies of wheels; the soft blades were twisted by a blow, and while they were engaged in straightening them under their heels, the Carthaginians massacred them right and left at their ease.

But the Etruscans, riveted to their chain, did not stir; those who were dead, being prevented from falling, formed an obstruction with their corpses; and the great bronze line widened and contracted in turn, as supple as a serpent, and as impregnable as a wall.The Barbarians would come to re-form behind it, pant for a minute, and then set off again with the fragments of their weapons in their hands.

Many already had none left, and they leaped upon the Carthaginians, biting their faces like dogs.The Gauls in their pride stripped themselves of the sagum; they showed their great white bodies from a distance, and they enlarged their wounds to terrify the enemy.The voice of the crier announcing the orders could no longer be heard in the midst of the Punic syntagmata; their signals were being repeated by the standards, which were raised above the dust, and every one was swept away in the swaying of the great mass that surrounded him.

Hamilcar commanded the Numidians to advance.But the Naffurs rushed to meet them.

Clad in vast black robes, with a tuft of hair on the top of the skull, and a shield of rhinoceros leather, they wielded a steel which had no handle, and which they held by a rope; and their camels, which bristled all over with feathers, uttered long, hoarse cluckings.Each blade fell on a precise spot, then rose again with a smart stroke carrying off a limb with it.The fierce beasts galloped through the syntagmata.Some, whose legs were broken, went hopping along like wounded ostriches.

The Punic infantry turned in a body upon the Barbarians, and cut them off.Their maniples wheeled about at intervals from one another.The more brilliant Carthaginian weapons encircled them like golden crowns;there was a swarming movement in the centre, and the sun, striking down upon the points of the swords, made them glitter with white flickering gleams.However, files of Clinabarians lay stretched upon the plain; some Mercenaries snatched away their armour, clothed themselves in it, and then returned to the fray.The deluded Carthaginians were several times entangled in their midst.They would stand stupidly motionless, or else would back, surge again, and triumphant shouts rising in the distance seemed to drive them along like derelicts in a storm.Hamilcar was growing desperate; all was about to perish beneath the genius of Matho and the invincible courage of the Mercenaries.

But a great noise of tabourines burst forth on the horizon.It was a crowd of old men, sick persons, children of fifteen years of age, and even women, who, being unable to withstand their distress any longer, had set out from Carthage, and, for the purpose of placing themselves under the protection of something formidable, had taken from Hamilcar's palace the only elephant that the Republic now possessed,--that one, namely, whose trunk had been cut off.

同类推荐
  • 维摩义记

    维摩义记

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。汇聚授权电子版权。
  • 分别功德论

    分别功德论

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。汇聚授权电子版权。
  • 李文襄公奏疏与文移

    李文襄公奏疏与文移

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。汇聚授权电子版权。
  • 孟子集注

    孟子集注

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。汇聚授权电子版权。
  • 抗志

    抗志

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。汇聚授权电子版权。
热门推荐
  • 阿那邠邸化七子经

    阿那邠邸化七子经

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。汇聚授权电子版权。
  • 王妃不简单

    王妃不简单

    白微月总是感慨自己悲惨的命运,不就是打断了心上人的腿,为什么没被惩罚,反而被赐婚?经过再三思索,终于了结论:因为她娘是皇上的心上人,她爹是皇上的情敌……身为王妃,本该端庄贤淑,她偏是个暴力女,扑倒夫君、殴打官员、抓杀人凶手,没有片刻消停。但是体弱皇子说喜欢她,这是什么情况,果断逃!
  • 行走社会100诀

    行走社会100诀

    1部值得传世的经典着作;100条社会生存的必备法则该怎么在社会上行走,才能够平安稳健?有没有什么样的行为准则,能够立足社会,永保不败?《社会行走100诀》的作者李赫,以其犀利的文字,将社会行走必备的观念、行为准则,以及社会上普遍存在的现象、人与人之间互动的原则做了十分详尽且精准的剖析,甚至还进一步探讨了人的心态。这不是一本教人诈术的书,书中也没有取巧、投机的行为和心态,书中的100条法则,不但条理分明,且字字珠玑,即便是充满人生哲理的书,在作者的笔下,也仍然处处透着恒常不变的智慧,是一本值得传世的智慧之书。
  • 养只小鬼当宝贝

    养只小鬼当宝贝

    只是在大明星家当了个生活助理后,她的运气便开始不好了……父母相继住院,而她经常发现有恐怖的事情在她身边发生,一个一个的迷团让她心方,她耳边常常听到恐怖的笑声......原来竟然来自一只小鬼!
  • 哈佛大学第一堂经济课

    哈佛大学第一堂经济课

    《哈佛大学第一堂经济课》通过通俗有趣的语言、生动真实的案例,介绍了哈佛经济研究中关于需求供给、生产效率、成本控制、通货膨胀等经济常识。作者从最通俗的角度阐述经济学理论,使广大读者能通过本书对经济学理论有进一步深入的了解。
  • 两个人的房间:一部回忆录

    两个人的房间:一部回忆录

    在我们生活中的某一时刻,我们每个人都曾经经历过毁灭性的折磨,最终都能接受我们失去的东西。无论事情如何发生,结果都是一样,我们被独自留下,孤单一人,想着我们本能做些什么,我们怎么才能重获平和。这是艾贝尔自述的故事,他寻求平和的经历和之后的奇迹就证明,爱和希望可以持久,无论挣扎和悲剧怎样改变了我们的人生。
  • 中国大学生体育协会发展研究

    中国大学生体育协会发展研究

    随着我国建设体育强国战略目标的确立,中国体育踏上了新的征程。科学发展体育事业对全面提高中华民族健康素质和生活质量,促进人的全面发展,促进经济社会发展和社会体育文化发展有着重要的意义,而且肩负着振奋民族精神、提高我国综合实力的历史使命。中国大学生体育协会作为我国唯一的高等学校体育社会团体,在大学生综合素质培养中的作用日益彰显。在国际体育日新月异发展的背景下,随着我国教育体制、体育体制的不断更新完善,中国大学生体育管理改革势在必行。
  • 芬陀利室词话

    芬陀利室词话

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。汇聚授权电子版权。
  • 叩问生命之源:达尔文传

    叩问生命之源:达尔文传

    这是一本以英国科学家达尔文为原型的传记文学,真实而艺术地描写了,这位伟大的科学家所成长经历。达尔文从小就是一个“不守规矩”的“坏孩子”,他对大自然有着强烈的好奇心。达尔文完成了环球旅行,并写下了震惊世界的《物种起源》一书。这本传记文学出版后,曾以繁体字版本,在台湾香港再版。
  • 末世重生之不做肉文女配

    末世重生之不做肉文女配

    上一世她至死都没能回家一趟,三年后在基地再次见到因饥饿而瘦弱的不成人样的父母,她胆小懦弱的没敢上去去认,只因为她没有任何的地位和生存的本领,只能苟且偷生的靠着小队而活,直到一次意外她惨死于基地几里外的位置。死了一次她才总结出来原来她的一生只是一个女配,为女主生,为女主死。这一世,她一定要早早的回家,和父母一起在这个残忍冷酷的末世里一起活下去,远离那个绿茶婊。