food. Although his youth had been spent in the
camp, he possessed such culture as belonged to the
Phoenicians of rank in his day; in Greek, apparently
after he had become a general, he made such progress
under the guidance of his confidant Sosilus of Sparta
as to be able to compose state papers in that language.
As he grew up, he entered the army of his father,
to perform his first feats of arms under the paternal
eye and to see him fall in battle by his side.
Thereafter he had commanded the cavalry under his
sister’s husband, Hasdrubal, and distinguished
himself by brilliant personal bravery as well as by
his talents as a leader. The voice of his comrades
now summoned him—the tried, although youthful
general—to the chief command, and he could
now execute the designs for which his father and his
brother-in-law had lived and died. He took up
the inheritance, and he was worthy of it. His
contemporaries tried to cast stains of various sorts
on his character; the Romans charged him with cruelty,
the Carthaginians with covetousness; and it is true
that he hated as only Oriental natures know how to
hate, and that a general who never fell short of money
and stores can hardly have been other than covetous.
But though anger and envy and meanness have written
his history, they have not been able to mar the pure
and noble image which it presents. Laying aside
wretched inventions which furnish their own refutation,
and some things which his lieutenants, particularly
Hannibal Monomachus and Mago the Samnite, were guilty
of doing in his name, nothing occurs in the accounts
regarding him which may not be justified under the
circumstances, and according to the international law,
of the times; and all agree in this, that he combined
in rare perfection discretion and enthusiasm, caution
and energy. He was peculiarly marked by that
inventive craftiness, which forms one of the leading
traits of the Phoenician character; he was fond of
taking singular and unexpected routes; ambushes and
stratagems of all sorts were familiar to him; and
he studied the character of his antagonists with unprecedented
care. By an unrivalled system of espionage—he
had regular spies even in Rome—he kept
himself informed of the projects of the enemy; he
himself was frequently seen wearing disguises and false
hair, in order to procure information on some point
or other. Every page of the history of this
period attests his genius in strategy; and his gifts
as a statesman were, after the peace with Rome, no
less conspicuously displayed in his reform of the
Carthaginian constitution, and in the unparalleled
influence which as a foreign exile he exercised in
the cabinets of the eastern powers. The power
which he wielded over men is shown by his incomparable
control over an army of various nations and many tongues—an
army which never in the worst times mutinied against
him. He was a great man; wherever he went, he
riveted the eyes of all.
Rupture between Rome and Carthage