Polybius, Histories (English) (XML Header) [genre: prose] [word count] [lemma count] [Polyb.]. | ||
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When news of this dreadful affair reached the Carthaginians, they were powerless indeed to do anything, but they were
filled with horror; and in a transport of agony despatched messengers to Hamilcar and the second general Hanno, entreating
them to rally to their aid and avenge the unhappy victims;
and at the same time they sent heralds to the authors of this
crime to negotiate for the recovery of the dead bodies. But
the latter sternly refused; and warned the messengers to send
neither herald nor ambassador to them again; for the same
punishment which had just befallen Gesco awaited all who
came. And for the future they passed a resolution, which
they encouraged each other to observe, to put every Carthaginian whom they caught to death with torture; and that
whenever they captured one of their auxiliaries they would cut
off his hands and send him back to
frame of mind if you show indulgence or kindness, they regard it as a cover for trickery and sinister designs, and only become more suspicious and more inflamed against the authors of it; while if you retaliate, their passions are aroused to a kind of dreadful rivalry, and then there is no crime too monstrous or too cruel for them to commit. The upshot with these men was, that their feelings became so brutalised that they lost the instincts of humanity: which we must ascribe in the first place, and to the greatest extent, to uncivilised habits and a wretchedly bad early training; but many other things contributed to this result, and among them we must reckon as most important the acts of violence and rapacity committed by their leaders, sins which at that time were prevalent among the whole mercenary body, but especially so with their leaders.
Polybius, Histories (English) (XML Header) [genre: prose] [word count] [lemma count] [Polyb.]. | ||
<<Polyb. 1.80 | Polyb. 1.81 (Greek) | >>Polyb. 1.82 |