salammbo-第77章
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one of the large nets used for capturing wild beasts; and; taking
advantage of the moment when he stooped down; had involved him in it。
Then he was fastened on the elephants with his four limbs forming a
cross; and all those who were not wounded escorted him; and rushed
with great tumult towards Carthage。
The news of the victory had arrived in some inexplicable way at the
third hour of the night; the clepsydra of Khamon had just completed
the fifth as they reached Malqua; then Matho opened his eyes。 There
were so many lights in the houses that the town appeared to be all in
flames。
An immense clamour reached him dimly; and lying on his back he looked
at the stars。
Then a door closed and he was wrapped in darkness。
On the morrow; at the same hour; the last of the men left in the Pass
of the Hatchet expired。
On the day that their companions had set out; some Zuaeces who were
returning had tumbled the rocks down; and had fed them for some time。
The Barbarians constantly expected to see Matho appear;and from
discouragement; from languor; and from the obstinacy of sick men who
object to change their situation; they would not leave the mountain;
at last the provisions were exhausted and the Zuaeces went away。 It
was known that they numbered scarcely more than thirteen hundred men;
and there was no need to employ soldiers to put an end to them。
Wild beasts; especially lions; had multiplied during the three years
that the war had lasted。 Narr' Havas had held a great battue; and
after tying goats at intervalshad run upon them and so driven them
towards the Pass of the Hatchet;and they were now all living in it
when a man arrived who had been sent by the Ancients to find out what
there was left of the Barbarians。
Lions and corpses were lying over the tract of the plain; and the dead
were mingled with clothes and armour。 Nearly all had the face or an
arm wanting; some appeared to be still intact; others were completely
dried up; and their helmets were filled with powdery skulls; feet
which had lost their flesh stood out straight from the knemides;
skeletons still wore their cloaks; and bones; cleaned by the sun; made
gleaming spots in the midst of the sand。
The lions were resting with their breasts against the ground and both
paws stretched out; winking their eyelids in the bright daylight;
which was heightened by the reflection from the white rocks。 Others
were seated on their hind…quarters and staring before them; or else
were sleeping; rolled into a ball and half hidden by their great
manes; they all looked well fed; tired; and dull。 They were as
motionless as the mountain and the dead。 Night was falling; the sky
was striped with broad red bands in the west。
In one of the heaps; which in an irregular fashion embossed the plain;
something rose up vaguer than a spectre。 Then one of the lions set
himself in motion; his monstrous form cutting a black shadow on the
background of the purple sky; and when he was quite close to the man;
he knocked him down with a single blow of his paw。
Then; stretching himself flat upon him; he slowly drew out the
entrails with the edge of his teeth。
Afterwards he opened his huge jaws; and for some minutes uttered a
lengthened roar which was repeated by the echoes in the mountain; and
was finally lost in the solitude。
Suddenly some small gravel rolled down from above。 The rustling of
rapid steps was heard; and in the direction of the portcullis and of
the gorge there appeared pointed muzzles and straight ears; with
gleaming; tawny eyes。 These were the jackals coming to eat what was
left。
The Carthaginian; who was leaning over the top of the precipice to
look; went back again。
CHAPTER XV
MATHO
There were rejoicings at Carthage;rejoicings deep; universal;
extravagant; frantic; the holes of the ruins had been stopped up; the
statues of the gods had been repainted; the streets were strewn with
myrtle branches; incense smoked at the corners of the crossways; and
the throng on the terraces looked; in their variegated garments; like
heaps of flowers blooming in the air。
The shouts of the water…carriers watering the pavement rose above the
continual screaming of voices; slaves belonging to Hamilcar offered in
his name roasted barley and pieces of raw meat; people accosted one
another; and embraced one another with tears; the Tyrian towns were
taken; the nomads dispersed; and all the Barbarians annihilated。 The
Acropolis was hidden beneath coloured velaria; the beaks of the
triremes; drawn up in line outside the mole; shone like a dyke of
diamonds; everywhere there was a sense of the restoration of order;
the beginning of a new existence; and the diffusion of vast happiness:
it was the day of Salammbo's marriage with the King of the Numidians。
On the terrace of the temple of Khamon there were three long tables
laden with gigantic plate; at which the priests; Ancients; and the
rich were to sit; and there was a fourth and higher one for Hamilcar;
Narr' Havas; and Salammbo; for as she had saved her country by the
restoration of the zaimph; the people turned her wedding day into a
national rejoicing; and were waiting in the square below till she
should appear。
But their impatience was excited by another and more acrid longing:
Matho's death has been promised for the ceremony。
It had been proposed at first to flay him alive; to pour lead into his
entrails; to kill him with hunger; he should be tied to a tree; and an
ape behind him should strike him on the head with a stone; he had
offended Tanith; and the cynocephaluses of Tanith should avenge her。
Others were of opinion that he should be led about on a dromedary
after linen wicks; dipped in oil; had been inserted in his body in
several places;and they took pleasure in the thought of the large
animal wandering through the streets with this man writhing beneath
the fires like a candelabrum blown about by the wind。
But what citizens should be charged with his torture; and why
disappoint the rest? They would have liked a kind of death in which
the whole town might take part; in which every hand; every weapon;
everything Carthaginian; to the very paving…stones in the streets and
the waves in the gulf; could rend him; and crush him; and annihilate
him。 Accordingly the Ancients decided that he should go from his
prison to the square of Khamon without any escort; and with his arms
fastened to his back; it was forbidden to strike him to the heart; in
order that he might live the longer; to put out his eyes; so that he
might see the torture through; to hurl anything against his person; or
to lay more than three fingers upon him at a time。
Although he was not to appear until the end of the day; the people
sometimes fancied that he could be seen; and the crowd would rush
towards the Acropolis; and empty the streets; to return with
lengthened murmurings。 Some people had remained standing in the same
place since the day before; and they would call on one another from a
distance and show their nails which they had allowed to grow; the
better to bury them into his flesh。 Others walked restlessly up and
down; some were as pale as though they were awaiting their own
execution。
Suddenly lofty feather fans rose above the heads; behind the Mappalian
district。 It was Salammbo leaving her palace; a sigh of relief found
vent。
But the procession was long in coming; it marched with deliberation。
First there filed past the priests of the Pataec Gods; then those of
Eschmoun; of Melkarth; and all the other colleges in succession; with
the same insignia; and in the same order as had been observed at the
time of the sacrifice。 The pontiffs of Moloch passed with heads bent;
and the multitude stood aside from them in a kind of remorse。 But the
priests of Rabbetna advanced with a proud step; and with lyres in
their hands;