sacrilegious trust. His sister Eulogia, a niece, and two female cousins, conspired against him; another
niece, Mary queen of Bulgaria, negotiated his ruin with the sultan of Egypt; and, in the public eye, their
treason was consecrated as the most sublime virtue.13 To the pope's nuncios, who urged the consummation
of the work, Palæologus exposed a naked recital of all that he had done and suffered for their sake. They
were assured that the guilty sectaries, of both sexes and every rank, had been deprived of their honors,
their fortunes, and their liberty; a spreading list of confiscation and punishment, which involved many
persons, the dearest to the emperor, or the best deserving of his favor. They were conducted to the
prison, to behold four princes of the royal blood chained in the four corners, and shaking their fetters
in an agony of grief and rage. Two of these captives were afterwards released; the one by submission,
the other by death: but the obstinacy of their two companions was chastised by the loss of their eyes; and
the Greeks, the least adverse to the union, deplored that cruel and inauspicious tragedy.14 Persecutors
must expect the hatred of those whom they oppress; but they commonly find some consolation in the
testimony of their conscience, the applause of their party, and, perhaps, the success of their undertaking.
But the hypocrisy of Michael, which was prompted only by political motives, must have forced him to
hate himself, to despise his followers, and to esteem and envy the rebel champions by whom he was
detested and despised. While his violence was abhorred at Constantinople, at Rome his slowness was
arraigned, and his sincerity suspected; till at length Pope Martin the Fourth excluded the Greek emperor
from the pale of a church, into which he was striving to reduce a schismatic people. No sooner had the
tyrant expired, than the union was dissolved, and abjured by unanimous consent; the churches were
purified; the penitents were reconciled; and his son Andronicus, after weeping the sins and errors of his
youth most piously denied his father the burial of a prince and a Christian.15
II. In the distress of the Latins, the walls and towers of Constantinople had fallen to decay: they were
restored and fortified by the policy of Michael, who deposited a plenteous store of corn and salt provisions,
to sustain the siege which he might hourly expect from the resentment of the Western powers. Of these,
the sovereign of the Two Sicilies was the most formidable neighbor: but as long as they were possessed
by Mainfroy, the bastard of Frederic the Second, his monarchy was the bulwark, rather than the annoyance,
of the Eastern empire. The usurper, though a brave and active prince, was sufficiently employed in the
defence of his throne: his proscription by successive popes had separated Mainfroy from the common
cause of the Latins; and the forces that might have besieged Constantinople were detained in a crusade
against the domestic enemy of Rome. The prize of her avenger, the crown of the Two Sicilies, was
won and worn by the brother of St Louis, by Charles count of Anjou and Provence, who led the chivalry
of France on this holy expedition.16 The disaffection of his Christian subjects compelled Mainfroy to
enlist a colony of Saracens whom his father had planted in Apulia; and this odious succor will explain
the defiance of the Catholic hero, who rejected all terms of accommodation. "Bear this message," said
Charles, "to the sultan of Nocera, that God and the sword are umpire between us; and that he shall either
send me to paradise, or I will send him to the pit of hell." The armies met: and though I am ignorant of
Mainfroy's doom in the other world, in this he lost his friends, his kingdom, and his life, in the bloody
battle of Benevento. Naples and Sicily were immediately peopled with a warlike race of French nobles; and
their aspiring leader embraced the future conquest of Africa, Greece, and Palestine. The most specious
reasons might point his first arms against the Byzantine empire; and Palæologus, diffident of his own strength,
repeatedly appealed from the ambition of Charles to the humanity of St. Louis, who still preserved a just
ascendant over the mind of his ferocious brother. For a while the attention of that brother was confined
at home by the invasion of Conradin, the last heir to the imperial house of Swabia; but the hapless boy
sunk in the unequal conflict; and his execution on a public scaffold taught the rivals of Charles to tremble
for their heads as well as their dominions. A second respite was obtained by the last crusade of St.
Louis to the African coast; and the double motive of interest and duty urged the king of Naples to assist,
with his powers and his presence, the holy enterprise. The death of St. Louis released him from the
importunity of a virtuous censor: the king of Tunis confessed himself the tributary and vassal of the crown
of Sicily; and the boldest of the French knights were free to enlist under his banner against the Greek
empire. A treaty and a marriage united his interest with the house of Courtenay; his daughter Beatrice
was promised to Philip, son and heir of the emperor Baldwin; a pension of six hundred ounces of gold
was allowed for his maintenance; and his generous father distributed among his aliens the kingdoms