[Salammbo by Gustave Flaubert]@TWC D-Link book
Salammbo

CHAPTER XIV
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She vaguely felt that the hate with which he had persecuted her was something almost religious,--and she would fain have seen in Narr' Havas's person a reflection, as it were, of that malice which still dazzled her.

She desired to know him better, and yet his presence would have embarrassed her.

She sent him word that she could not receive him.
Moreover, Hamilcar had forbidden his people to admit the King of the Numidians to see her; by putting off his reward to the end of the war he hoped to retain his devotion;--and, through dread of the Suffet, Narr' Havas withdrew.
But he bore himself haughtily towards the Hundred.

He changed their arrangements.

He demanded privileges for his men, and placed them on important posts; thus the Barbarians stared when they perceived Numidians on the towers.
The surprise of the Carthaginians was greater still when three hundred of their own people, who had been made prisoners during the Sicilian war, arrived on board an old Punic trireme.


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