When I was a boy at school, if I remember rightly, our sympathies were generally with the Carthaginians as against the Romans. Why they were so, except that one generally sympathizes with the unfortu
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When I was a boy at school, if I remember rightly, our sympathies were generally with the Carthaginians as against the Romans. Why they were so, except that one generally sympathizes with the unfortunate, I do not quite know; certainly we had but a hazy idea as to the merits of the struggle and knew but little of its events, for the Latin and Greek authors, which serve as the ordinary textbooks in schools, do not treat of the Punic wars. That it was a struggle for empire at first, and latterly one for existence on the part of Carthage, that Hannibal was a great and skilful general, that he defeated the Romans at Trebia, Lake Trasimenus, and Cannae, and all but took Rome, and that the Romans behaved with bad faith and great cruelty at the capture of Carthage, represents, I think, pretty nearly the sum total of our knowledge.
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- PREFACE.
- CHAPTER I: THE CAMP IN THE DESERT
- CHAPTER II: A NIGHT ATTACK
- CHAPTER III: CARTHAGE
- CHAPTER IV: A POPULAR RISING
- CHAPTER V: THE CONSPIRACY
- CHAPTER VI: A CAMPAIGN IN SPAIN
- CHAPTER VII: A WOLF HUNT
- CHAPTER VIII: A PLOT FRUSTRATED