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in in wait for so long; rose up out of the grass and charged the gazelles from the east; west; and north。 Never had Chen Zhen witnessed such a terrifying attack。 When men charge the enemy; they shout “Charge!”
or “Kill!” Dog attacks are acpanied by frenzied barking to intimi—date and instill fear。 But when wolves attack; they do so in silence—no shouts; no wolfish howls。 Warrior wolves!
The wolves flew out of the tall grass like torpedoes armed with the sharpest; most fearsome teeth and menacing glares; heading straight for the herd。
Stuffed from overeating; the gazelles were thrown into a panic。 Denied their primary weapon—speed—they were now little more than sheep; nothing but meat on the hoof。 Chen imagined their great terror。 Souls had probably already fled from most of them and were on their way up to Tengger。 Many merely stood where they were and quaked; others crumpled to the ground as if kneeling; their tongues out; their short tails twitching。
狼圖騰(英文版) 2(10)
Chen was witness to the wolves’ intelligence and patience; their organi—zation and discipline。 Faced with a bat opportunity that came around only once every few years; they were still able to wait patiently; keeping their hunger and their appetite in check; then disarm the enemy—the herd of gazelles—with ease。
Now he understood how the great; unlettered military genius Genghis Khan; as well as the illiterate or semiliterate military leaders of peoples such as the Quanrong; the Huns; the Tungus; the Turks; the Mongols; and the Jurchens; were able to bring the Chinese (whose great military sage Sun…tzu had produced his universally acclaimed treatise The Art of War) to their knees; to run roughshod over their ter—ritory; and to interrupt their dynastic cycles。 They had