[Salammbo by Gustave Flaubert]@TWC D-Link bookSalammbo CHAPTER XIV 32/68
Afterwards they found a field of beans; and everything disappeared as though a cloud of grasshoppers had passed that way.
Three hours later they reached a second plateau bordered by a belt of green hills. Among the undulations of these hillocks, silvery sheaves shone at intervals from one another; the Barbarians, who were dazzled by the sun, could perceive confusedly below great black masses supporting them; these rose, as though they were expanding.
They were lances in towers on elephants terribly armed. Besides the spears on their breasts, the bodkin tusks, the brass plates which covered their sides, and the daggers fastened to their knee-caps, they had at the extremity of their tusks a leathern bracelet, in which the handle of a broad cutlass was inserted; they had set out simultaneously from the back part of the plain, and were advancing on both sides in parallel lines. The Barbarians were frozen with a nameless terror.
They did not even try to flee.
They already found themselves surrounded. The elephants entered into this mass of men; and the spurs on their breasts divided it, the lances on their tusks upturned it like ploughshares; they cut, hewed, and hacked with the scythes on their trunks; the towers, which were full of phalaricas, looked like volcanoes on the march; nothing could be distinguished but a large heap, whereon human flesh, pieces of brass and blood made white spots, grey sheets and red fuses.
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