published by Samizdat Express, Orange, CT, USA
established in 1974, offering over 14,000 books
Books by Gustave Flaubert in English translation:
- Madame Bovary
- Salammbo
- The Temptation of Saint Anthony
- Bouvard and Pecuchet
- Three Short Works (Dance of Death, Saint-Julian the Hospitaller, A Simple Soul)
- Herodias
- Over Strand and Field (Travel through Brittany
- The George Sand-Gustave Flaubert Letters
feedback welcome:info@samizdat.com
visit us atsamizdat.com
CHAPTER I THE FEAST
CHAPTER II AT SICCA Two days afterwards the Mercenaries left Carthage.
CHAPTER III SALAMMBO
CHAPTER IV BENEATH THE WALLS OF CARTHAGE
CHAPTER V TANITH
CHAPTER VI HANNO
CHAPTER VII HAMILCAR BARCA
CHAPTER VIII THE BATTLE OF THE MACARAS
CHAPTER IX IN THE FIELD
CHAPTER X THE SERPENT
CHAPTER XI IN THE TENT
CHAPTER XII THE AQUEDUCT
CHAPTER XIII MOLOCH
CHAPTER XIV THE PASS OF THE HATCHET
CHAPTER XV MATHO
CHAPTER I THE FEAST
It was at Megara, a suburb of Carthage, in the gardens of Hamilcar. The soldiers whom he had commanded in Sicily were having a great feast to celebrate the anniversary of the battle of Eryx, and as the master was away, and they were numerous, they ate and drank with perfect freedom.
The captains, who wore bronze cothurni, had placed themselves in the central path, beneath a gold-fringed purple awning, which reached from the wall of the stables to the first terrace of the palace; the common soldiers were scattered beneath the trees, where numerous flat-roofed buildings might be seen, wine-presses, cellars, storehouses, bakeries, and arsenals, with a court for elephants, dens for wild beasts, and a prison for slaves.
Fig-trees surrounded the kitchens; a wood of sycamores stretched away to meet masses of verdure, where the pomegranate shone amid the white tufts of the cotton-plant; vines, grape-laden, grew up into the branches of the pines; a field of roses bloomed beneath the plane- trees; here and there lilies rocked upon the turf; the paths were strewn with black sand mingled with powdered coral, and in the centre the avenue of cypress formed, as it were, a double colonnade of green obelisks from one extremity to the other.
Far in the background stood the palace, built of yellow mottled Numidian marble, broad courses supporting its four terraced stories. With its large, straight, ebony staircase, bearing the prow of a vanquished galley at the corner