years, and removed the cause of sedition by the death, the inevitable death, of his infant brothers.1011
The ambassadors of Europe and Asia soon appeared to congratulate his accession and solicit his friendship; and
to all he spoke the language of moderation and peace. The confidence of the Greek emperor was revived
by the solemn oaths and fair assurances with which he sealed the ratification of the treaty: and a rich
domain on the banks of the Strymon was assigned for the annual payment of three hundred thousand
aspers, the pension of an Ottoman prince, who was detained at his request in the Byzantine court. Yet
the neighbors of Mahomet might tremble at the severity with which a youthful monarch reformed the
pomp of his father's household: the expenses of luxury were applied to those of ambition, and a useless
train of seven thousand falconers was either dismissed from his service, or enlisted in his troops.12 In
the first summer of his reign, he visited with an army the Asiatic provinces; but after humbling the pride,
Mahomet accepted the submission, of the Caramanian, that he might not be diverted by the smallest
obstacle from the execution of his great design.13
The Mahometan, and more especially the Turkish casuists, have pronounced that no promise can bind
the faithful against the interest and duty of their religion; and that the sultan may abrogate his own treaties
and those of his predecessors. The justice and magnanimity of Amurath had scorned this immoral privilege; but
his son, though the proudest of men, could stoop from ambition to the basest arts of dissimulation and
deceit. Peace was on his lips, while war was in his heart: he incessantly sighed for the possession of
Constantinople; and the Greeks, by their own indiscretion, afforded the first pretence of the fatal rupture.14
Instead of laboring to be forgotten, their ambassadors pursued his camp, to demand the payment, and
even the increase, of their annual stipend: the divan was importuned by their complaints, and the vizier,
a secret friend of the Christians, was constrained to deliver the sense of his brethren. "Ye foolish and
miserable Romans," said Calil, "we know your devices, and ye are ignorant of your own danger! The
scrupulous Amurath is no more; his throne is occupied by a young conqueror, whom no laws can bind,
and no obstacles can resist: and if you escape from his hands, give praise to the divine clemency, which
yet delays the chastisement of your sins. Why do ye seek to affright us by vain and indirect menaces?
Release the fugitive Orchan, crown him sultan of Romania; call the Hungarians from beyond the Danube; arm
against us the nations of the West; and be assured, that you will only provoke and precipitate your ruin." But
if the fears of the ambassadors were alarmed by the stern language of the vizier, they were soothed
by the courteous audience and friendly speeches of the Ottoman prince; and Mahomet assured them
that on his return to Adrianople he would redress the grievances, and consult the true interests, of the
Greeks. No sooner had he repassed the Hellespont, than he issued a mandate to suppress their pension,
and to expel their officers from the banks of the Strymon: in this measure he betrayed a hostile mind; and
the second order announced, and in some degree commenced, the siege of Constantinople. In the
narrow pass of the Bosphorus, an Asiatic fortress had formerly been raised by his grandfather; in the
opposite situation, on the European side, he resolved to erect a more formidable castle; and a thousand
masons were commanded to assemble in the spring on a spot named Asomaton, about five miles from
the Greek metropolis.15 Persuasion is the resource of the feeble; and the feeble can seldom persuade: the
ambassadors of the emperor attempted, without success, to divert Mahomet from the execution of his
design. They represented, that his grandfather had solicited the permission of Manuel to build a castle
on his own territories; but that this double fortification, which would command the strait, could only tend
to violate the alliance of the nations; to intercept the Latins who traded in the Black Sea, and perhaps to
annihilate the subsistence of the city. "I form the enterprise," replied the perfidious sultan, "against the
city; but the empire of Constantinople is measured by her walls. Have you forgot the distress to which
my father was reduced when you formed a league with the Hungarians; when they invaded our country
by land, and the Hellespont was occupied by the French galleys? Amurath was compelled to force the
passage of the Bosphorus; and your strength was not equal to your malevolence. I was then a child
at Adrianople; the Moslems trembled; and, for a while, the Gabours16 insulted our disgrace. But when
my father had triumphed in the field of Warna, he vowed to erect a fort on the western shore, and that
vow it is my duty to accomplish. Have ye the right, have ye the power, to control my actions on my own
ground? For that ground is my own: as far as the shores of the Bosphorus, Asia is inhabited by the Turks,
and Europe is deserted by the Romans. Return, and inform your king, that the present Ottoman is far
different from his predecessors; that his resolutions surpass their wishes; and that he performs more