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<h2> CHAPTER IV: A POPULAR RISING </h2>
<p>Day after day Malchus went down to the port. His father was well pleased
with his report of what he had done and provided him with ample funds for
paying earnest money to his various agents, as a proof that their
exertions would be well rewarded. He soon had the satisfaction of seeing
that the agitation was growing.</p>
<p>Work was neglected, the sailors and labourers collected on the quays and
talked among themselves, or listened to orators of their own class, who
told them of the dangers which threatened their trade from the hatred of
Hanno and his friends the tax collectors for Hannibal, whose father and
brother-in-law had done such great things for Carthage by conquering Spain
and adding to her commerce by the establishment of Carthagena and other
ports. Were they going to stand tamely by and see trade ruined, and their
families starving, that the tyrants who wrung from them the taxes should
fatten at ease?</p>
<p>Such was the tenor of the orations delivered by scores of men to their
comrades on the quays. A calm observer might have noticed a certain
sameness about the speeches, and might have come to the conclusion that
the orators had received their instructions from the same person, but this
passed unnoticed by the sailors and workmen, who were soon roused into
fury by the exhortations of the speakers. They knew nothing either of
Hannibal or of Hanno, but they did know that they were ground down to the
earth with taxation, and that the conquest of Spain and the trade that had
arisen had been of enormous benefit to them. It was, then, enough to tell
them that this trade was threatened, and that it was threatened in the
interest of the tyrants of Carthage, for them to enter heart and soul into
the cause.</p>
<p>During these four days the Barcine Club was like the headquarters of an
army. Night and day the doors stood open, messengers came and went
continually, consultations of the leading men of the city were held almost
without a break. Every man belonging to it had his appointed task. The
landed proprietors stirred up the cultivators of the soil, the
manufacturers were charged with the enlightenment of their hands as to the
dangers of the situation, the soldiers were busy among the troops; but
theirs was a comparatively easy task, for these naturally sympathized with
their comrades in Spain, and the name of the great Hamilcar was an object
of veneration among them.</p>
<p>Hanno's faction was not idle. The Syssite which was composed of his
adherents was as large as its rival. Its orators harangued the people in
the streets on the dangers caused to the republic by the ambition of the
family of Barca, of the expense entailed by the military and naval
establishments required to keep up the forces necessary to carry out their
aggressive policy, of the folly of confiding the principal army of the
state to the command of a mere youth. They dilated on the wealth and
generosity of Hanno, of his lavish distribution of gifts among the poor,
of his sympathy with the trading community. Each day the excitement rose,
business was neglected, the whole population was in a fever of excitement.</p>
<p>On the evening of the fourth day the agents of the Barcine Club discovered
that Hanno's party were preparing for a public demonstration on the
following evening. They had a certainty of a majority in the public vote,
which, although nominally that of the people, was, as has been said,
confined solely to what would now be called the middle class.</p>
<p>Hitherto the Barcine party had avoided fixing any period for their own
demonstration, preferring to wait until they knew the intention of their
opponents. The council now settled that it should take place on the
following day at eleven o'clock, just when the working classes would have
finished their morning meal.</p>
<p>The secret council, however, determined that no words should be whispered
outside their own body until two hours before the time, in order that it
should not be known to Hanno and his friends until too late to gather
their adherents to oppose it. Private messengers were, however, sent out
late to all the members to assemble early at the club.</p>
<p>At nine o'clock next morning the Syssite was crowded, the doors were
closed, and the determination of the council was announced to the members,
each of whom was ordered to hurry off to set the train in motion for a
popular outbreak for eleven o'clock. It was not until an hour later that
the news that the Barcine party intended to forestall them reached Hanno's
headquarters. Then the most vigourous efforts were made to get together
their forces, but it was too late. At eleven o'clock crowds of men from
all the working portions of the town were seen making their way towards
the forum, shouting as they went, “Hannibal for general!” “Down with Hanno
and the tax gatherers!”</p>
<p>Conspicuous among them were the sailors and fishermen from the port, armed
with oars, and the gang of stevedores with heavy clubs. Hanno and a large
number of his party hurried down to the spot and tried to pacify the
crowd, but the yells of execration were so loud and continuous that they
were forced to leave the forum. The leaders of the Barcine party now
appeared on the scene, and their most popular orator ascended the rostrum.
When the news spread among the crowd that he was a friend of Hannibal and
an opponent of Hanno, the tumult was stayed in order that all might hear
his words.</p>
<p>“My friends,” he said, “I am glad to see that Carthage is still true to
herself, and that you resent the attempt made by a faction to remove the
general of the army's choice, the son of the great Hamilcar Barca. To him
and to Hasdrubal, his son-in-law, you owe the conquest of Spain, you owe
the wealth which has of late years poured into Carthage, you owe the trade
which is already doing so much to mitigate your condition. What have Hanno
and his friends done that you should listen to him? It is their incapacity
which has lost Carthage so many of its possessions. It is their greed and
corruption which place such burdens on your backs. They claim that they
are generous. It is easy to be generous with the money of which they have
plundered you; but let them know your will, and they must bend before it.
Tell them that you will have Hannibal and none other as the general of
your armies, and Spain is secure, and year by year your commerce with that
country will increase and flourish.”</p>
<p>A roar of assent arose from the crowd. At the same instant a tumult was
heard at the lower entrance to the forum, and the head of a dense body of
men was seen issuing from the street, with shouts of “Hanno forever!” They
were headed by the butchers and tanners, an important and powerful body,
for Carthage did a vast trade in leather.</p>
<p>For a time they bore all before them, but the resistance increased every
foot they advanced. The shouts on both sides became louder and more angry.
Blows were soon exchanged, and ere long a pitched battle was raging. The
fishermen and sailors threw themselves into the thick of it, and for ten
minutes a desperate fight raged in the forum. Soon the battle extended, as
bodies of men belonging to either faction encountered each other as they
hurried towards the forum.</p>
<p>Street frays were by no means unusual in Carthage, but this was a
veritable battle. Hanno had at its commencement, accompanied by a strong
body of his friends, ridden to Byrsa, and had called upon the soldiers to
come out and quell the tumult. They, however, listened in sullen silence,
their sympathies were entirely with the supporters of Hannibal, and they
had already received orders from their officers on no account to move,
whosoever might command them to do so, until Hamilcar placed himself at
their head.</p>
<p>The general delayed doing this until the last moment. Hannibal's friends
had hoped to carry their object without the intervention of the troops, as
it was desirable in every way that the election should appear to be a
popular one, and that Hannibal should seem to have the suffrages of the
people as well as of the army. That the large majority of the people were
with them they knew, but the money which Hanno's friends had lavishly
spent among the butchers, skinners, tanners, and smiths had raised up a
more formidable opposition than they had counted upon.</p>
<p>Seeing that their side was gaining but little advantage, that already much
blood had been shed, and that the tumult threatened to involve all
Carthage, Hamilcar and a number of officers rode to the barracks. The
troops at once got under arms, and, headed by the elephants, moved out
from Byrsa. Being desirous to avoid bloodshed, Hamilcar bade his men leave
their weapons behind them, and armed them with headless spear shafts, of
which, with all other things needed for war, there was a large store in
the citadel. As the column sallied out it broke up into sections. The
principal body marched toward the forum, while others, each led by
officers, took their way down the principal streets.</p>
<p>The appearance of the elephants and troops, and the loud shouts of the
latter for Hannibal, quickly put an end to the tumult. Hanno's hired mob,
seeing that they could do nothing against such adversaries, at once broke
up and fled to their own quarters of the city, and Hanno and his adherents
sought their own houses. The quiet citizens, seeing that the fight was
over, issued from their houses, and the forum was soon again crowded.</p>
<p>The proceedings were now unanimous, and the shouts raised that the senate
should assemble and confirm the vote of the army were loud and strenuous.
Parties of men went out in all directions to the houses of the senators to
tell them the people demanded their presence at the forum. Seeing the
uselessness of further opposition, and fearing the consequences if they
resisted, Hanno and his friends no longer offered any opposition.</p>
<p>The senate assembled, and, by a unanimous vote the election of Hannibal as
one of the suffetes in place of Hasdrubal, and as commander-in-chief of
the army in Spain, was carried, and was ratified by that of the popular
assembly, the traders and manufacturers of Hanno's party not venturing to
oppose the will of the mass of mechanics and seafaring population.</p>
<p>“It has been a victory,” Hamilcar said, when, accompanied by a number of
his friends, he returned to his home that evening, “but Hanno will not
forget or forgive the events of this day. As long as all goes well in
Spain we may hope for the support of the people, but should any disaster
befall our arms it will go hard with all who have taken a prominent part
in this day's proceedings. Hanno's friends have so much at stake that they
will not give up the struggle. They have at their back all the moneys
which they wring from the people and the tributaries of Carthage, and they
will work night and day to strengthen their party and to buy over the
lower classes. We are the stronger at present; but to carry the popular
vote on a question which would put a stop to the frightful corruption of
our administration, to suppress the tyranny of the council, to sweep away
the abuses which prevail in every class in the state—for that we
must wait till Hannibal returns victorious. Let him but humble the pride
of Rome, and Carthage will be at his feet.”</p>
<p>The party were in high spirits at the result of the day's proceedings. Not
only had they succeeded in their principal object of electing Hannibal,
but they had escaped from a great personal danger; for, assuredly, had
Hanno and his party triumphed, a stern vengeance would have been taken
upon all the leading members of the Barcine faction.</p>
<p>After the banquet, while Hamilcar and his companions reclined on their
couches at tables, a Greek slave, a captive in war, sang songs of his
native land to the accompaniment of the lyre. A party of dancing girls
from Ethiopia performed their rhythmical movements to the sound of the
tinkling of a little guitar with three strings, the beating of a small
drum, the clashing of cymbals, and the jingling of the ornaments and
little metal bells on their arms and ankles. Perfumes were burned in
censers, and from time to time soft strains of music, played by a party of
slaves among the trees without, floated in through the casements.</p>
<p>Malchus was in wild spirits, for his father had told him that it was
settled that he was to have the command of a body of troops which were
very shortly to proceed to Spain to reinforce the army under Hannibal, and
that he should allow Malchus to enter the band of Carthaginian horse which
was to form part of the body under his command.</p>
<p>The regular Carthaginian horse and foot formed but a very small portion of
the armies of the republic. They were a corps d'elite, composed entirely
of young men of the aristocratic families of Carthage, on whom it was
considered as almost a matter of obligation to enter this force. They had
the post of honour in battle, and it was upon them the Carthaginian
generals relied principally to break the ranks of the enemy in close
battle. All who aspired to distinguish themselves in the eyes of their
fellow citizens, to rise to power and position in the state, to officer
the vast bodies of men raised from the tributary nations, and to command
the armies of the country, entered one or other of these bodies. The
cavalry was the arm chosen by the richer classes. It was seldom that it
numbered more than a thousand strong. The splendour of their armour and
appointments, the beauty of their horses, the richness of the garments of
the cavaliers, and the trappings of their steeds, caused this body to be
the admiration and envy of Carthage. Every man in it was a member of one
of the upper ranks of the aristocracy; all were nearly related to members
of the senate, and it was considered the highest honour that a young
Carthaginian could receive to be admitted into it.</p>
<p>Each man wore on his wrist a gold band for each campaign which he had
undertaken. There was no attempt at uniformity as to their appointments.
Their helmets and shields were of gold or silver, surmounted with plumes
or feathers, or with tufts of white horsehair. Their breastplates were
adorned with arabesques or repousse work of the highest art. Their belts
were covered with gold and studded with gems. Their short kilted skirts
were of rich Tyrian purple embroidered with gold.</p>
<p>The infantry were composed of men of good but less exalted families. They
wore a red tunic without a belt. They carried a great circular buckler of
more than a yard in diameter, formed of the tough hide of the river horse,
brought down from the upper Nile, with a central boss of metal with a
point projecting nearly a foot in front of the shield, enabling it to be
used as an offensive weapon in a close fight. They carried short heavy
swords similar to those of the Romans, and went barefooted. Their total
strength seldom exceeded two thousand.</p>
<p>These two bodies constituted the Carthaginian legion, and formed but a
small proportion indeed of her armies, the rest of her forces being
entirely drawn from the tributary states. The fact that Carthage, with her
seven hundred thousand inhabitants, furnished so small a contingent of the
fighting force of the republic, was in itself a proof of the weakness of
the state. A country which relies entirely for its defence upon
mercenaries is rapidly approaching decay.</p>
<p>She may for a time repress one tributary with the soldiers of the others;
but when disaster befalls her she is without cohesion and falls to pieces
at once. As the Roman orator well said of Carthage: “She was a figure of
brass with feet of clay”—a noble and imposing object to the eye, but
whom a vigourous push would level in the dust. Rome, on the contrary,
young and vigourous, was a people of warriors. Every one of her citizens
who was capable of bearing arms was a soldier. The manly virtues were held
in the highest esteem, and the sordid love of wealth had not as yet
enfeebled her strength or sapped her powers. Her citizens were men,
indeed, ready to make any sacrifice for their country; and such being the
case, her final victory over Carthage was a matter of certainty.</p>
<p>The news which afforded Malchus such delight was not viewed with the same
unmixed satisfaction by the members of his family. Thyra had for the last
year been betrothed to Adherbal, and he, too, was to accompany Hamilcar to
Spain, and none could say how long it might be before they would return.</p>
<p>While the others were sitting round the festive board, Adherbal and Thyra
strolled away among the groves in the garden.</p>
<p>“I do not think you care for me, Adherbal,” she said reproachfully as he
was speaking of the probabilities of the campaign. “You know well that
this war may continue in Spain for years, and you seem perfectly
indifferent to the fact that we must be separated for that time.”</p>
<p>“I should not be indifferent to it, Thyra, if I thought for a moment that
this was to be the case. I may remain, it is true, for years in Spain; but
I have not the most remote idea of remaining there alone. At the end of
the first campaign, when our army goes into winter quarters, I shall
return here and fetch you.”</p>
<p>“That's all very well,” the girl said, pouting; “but how do you know that
I shall be willing to give up all the delights of Carthage to go among the
savage Iberians, where they say the ground is all white in winter and even
the rivers stop in their courses?”</p>
<p>Adherbal laughed lightly. “Then it is not for you to talk about
indifference, Thyra; but it won't be so bad as you fear. At Carthagena you
will have all the luxuries of Carthage. I do not say that your villa shall
be equal to this; but as you will have me it should be a thousand times
dearer to you.”</p>
<p>“Your conceit is superb, Adherbal,” Thyra laughed. “You get worse and
worse. Had I ever dreamed of it I should never have consented so
submissively when my father ordered me to regard you as my future
husband.”</p>
<p>“You ought to think yourself a fortunate girl, Thyra,” Adherbal said,
smiling; “for your father might have taken it into his head to have done
as Hamilcar Barca did, and married his daughters to Massilian and Numidian
princes, to become queens of bands of nomad savages.”</p>
<p>“Well, they were queens, that was something, even if only of nomads.”</p>
<p>“I don't think that it would have suited you, Thyra—a seat on
horseback for a throne, and a rough tent for a palace, would not be in
your way at all. I think a snug villa on the slopes of the bay of
Carthagena, will suit you better, not to mention the fact that I shall
make an infinitely more pleasant and agreeable master than a Numidian
chief would do.”</p>
<p>“You are intolerable, Adherbal, with your conceit and your mastership.
However, I suppose when the time comes I shall have to obey my father.
What a pity it is we girls cannot choose our husbands for ourselves!
Perhaps the time may come when we shall do so.”</p>
<p>“Well, in your case, Thyra,” Adherbal said, “it would make no difference,
because you know you would have chosen me anyhow; but most girls would
make a nice business of it. How are they to know what men really are? They
might be gamesters, drunkards, brutal and cruel by nature, idle and
spendthrift. What can maidens know of a man's disposition? Of course they
only see him at his best. Wise parents can make careful inquiries, and
have means of knowing what a man's disposition and habits really are.”</p>
<p>“You don't think, Adherbal,” Thyra said earnestly, “that girls are such
fools that they cannot read faces; that we cannot tell the difference
between a good man and a bad one.”</p>
<p>“Yes, a girl may know something about every man save the one she loves,
Thyra. She may see other's faults clearly enough; but she is blind to
those of the man she loves. Do you not know that the Greeks depict Cupid
with a bandage over his eyes?”</p>
<p>“I am not blind to your faults,” Thyra said indignantly. “I know that you
are a great deal more lazy than becomes you; that you are not sufficiently
earnest in the affairs of life; that you will never rise to be a great
general like my cousin Hannibal.”</p>
<p>“That is all quite true,” Adherbal laughed; “and yet you see you love me.
You perceive my faults only in theory and not in fact, and you do not in
your heart wish to see me different from what I am. Is it not so?”</p>
<p>“Yes,” the girl said shyly, “I suppose it is. Anyhow, I don't like the
thought of your going away from me to that horrid Iberia.”</p>
<p>Although defeated for the moment by the popular vote, the party of Hanno
were not discouraged. They had suffered a similar check when they had
attempted to prevent Hannibal joining Hasdrubal in Spain.</p>
<p>Not a moment was lost in setting to work to recover their lost ground.
Their agents among the lower classes spread calumnies against the Barcine
leaders. Money was lavishly distributed, and the judges, who were devoted
to Hanno's party, set their machinery to work to strike terror among their
opponents. Their modes of procedure were similar to those which afterwards
made Venice execrable in the height of her power. Arrests were made
secretly in the dead of night. Men were missing from their families, and
none knew what had become of them.</p>
<p>Dead bodies bearing signs of strangulation were found floating in the
shallow lakes around Carthage; and yet, so great was the dread inspired by
the terrible power of the judges, that the friends and relations of those
who were missing dared make neither complaint nor inquiry. It was not
against the leaders of the Barcine party that such measures were taken.
Had one of these been missing the whole would have flown to arms. The
dungeons would have been broken open, and not only the captives liberated,
but their arrest might have been made the pretext for an attack upon the
whole system under which such a state of things could exist.</p>
<p>It was chiefly among the lower classes that the agents of Hanno's
vengeance operated. Among these the disappearance of so many men who were
regarded as leaders among the rest spread a deep and mysterious fear.
Although none dared to complain openly, the news of these mysterious
disappearances was not long in reaching the leaders of the Barcine party.</p>
<p>These, however, were for the time powerless to act. Certain as they might
be of the source whence these unseen blows descended, they had no evidence
on which to assail so formidable a body as the judges. It would be a rash
act indeed to accuse such important functionaries of the state, belonging,
with scarcely an exception, to powerful families, of arbitrary and cruel
measures against insignificant persons.</p>
<p>The halo of tradition still surrounded the judges, and added to the fear
inspired by their terrible and unlimited power. In such an attack the
Barcine party could not rely upon the population to side with them; for,
while comparatively few were personally affected by the arrests which had
taken place, the fear of future consequences would operate upon all.</p>
<p>Among the younger members of the party, however, the indignation aroused
by these secret blows was deep. Giscon, who was continually brooding over
the tyranny and corruption which were ruining his country, was one of the
leaders of this section of the party; with him were other spirits as
ardent as himself. They met in a house in a quiet street in the lower
town, and there discussed all sorts of desperate projects for freeing the
city of its tyrants.</p>
<p>One day as Giscon was making his way to this rendezvous he met Malchus
riding at full speed from the port.</p>
<p>“What is it, Malchus, whither away in such haste?”</p>
<p>“It is shameful, Giscon, it is outrageous. I have just been down to the
port to tell the old fisherman with whom I often go out that I would sail
with him tomorrow, and find that four days ago he was missing, and his
body was yesterday found by his sons floating in the lagoon. He had been
strangled. His sons are as much overpowered with terror as by grief, they
believe that he has suffered for the part he took in rousing the fishermen
to declare for Hannibal a fortnight since, and they fear lest the terrible
vengeance of Hanno should next fall upon them.</p>
<p>“How it happened they know not. A man arrived late in the evening and said
that one of their father's best customers wanted a supply of fish for a
banquet he was to give next day, and that he wanted to speak to him at
once to arrange about the quantity and quality of fish he required.
Suspecting nothing the old man left at once, and was never heard of
afterwards. Next morning, seeing that he had not returned, one of his sons
went to the house to which he had been fetched, but found that its owner
knew nothing of the affair, and denied that he had sent any message
whatever to him. Fearing that something was wrong they searched
everywhere, but it was not until last night that his body was, as I have
told you, found.</p>
<p>“They are convinced that their father died in no private feud. He had not,
as far as they know, an enemy in the world. You may imagine how l feel
this; not only did I regard him as a friend, but I feel that it was owing
to his acting as I led him that he has come to his death.”</p>
<p>“The tyrants!” Giscon exclaimed in a low voice. “But what can you do,
Malchus?”</p>
<p>“I am going to my father,” Malchus replied, “to ask him to take the matter
up.”</p>
<p>“What can he do?” Giscon said with a bitter laugh. “What can he prove? Can
he accuse our most noble body of judges, without a shadow of proof, of
making away with this unknown old fisherman. No, Malchus, if you are in
earnest to revenge your friend come with me, I will introduce you to my
friends, who are banded together against this tyranny, and who are sworn
to save Carthage. You are young, but you are brave and full of ardour; you
are a son of General Hamilcar, and my friends will gladly receive you as
one of us.”</p>
<p>Malchus did not hesitate. That there would be danger in joining such a
body as Giscon spoke of he knew, but the young officer's talk during their
expedition had aroused in him a deep sense of the tyranny and corruption
which were sapping the power or his country, and this blow which had
struck him personally rendered him in a mood to adopt any dangerous move.</p>
<p>“I will join you, Giscon,” he said, “if you will accept me. I am young,
but I am ready to go all lengths, and to give my life if needs be to free
Carthage.”</p>
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