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it   would require many years of health, of leisure, and of   perseverance. Bentinck Street, February 1, 1776.   P. S. The entire History, which is now published, of the   Decline and Fall of the Roman Empire in the West, abundantly   discharges my engagements with the Public. Perhaps their favorable opinion may encourage me to prosecute a work,   which, however laborious it may seem, is the most agreeable   occupation of my leisure hours.   Bentinck Street, March 1, 1781.   An Author easily persuades himself that the public opinion is   still favorable to his labors; and I have now embraced the   serious resolution of proceeding to the last period of my   original design, and of the Roman Empire, the taking of Constantinople by the Turks, in the year one thousand four   hundred and fifty-three. The most patient Reader, who   computes that three ponderous volumes have been already   employed on the events of four centuries, may, perhaps, be   alarmed at the long prospect of nine hundred years. But it is   not my intention to expatiate with the same minuteness on the   whole series of the Byzantine history. At our entrance into this   period, the reign of Justinian, and the conquests of the   Mahometans, will deserve and detain our attention, and the   last age of Constantinople (the Crusades and the Turks) is   connected with the revolutions of Modern Europe. From the   seventh to the eleventh century, the obscure interval will be supplied by a concise narrative of such facts as may still   appear either interesting or important.   Bentinck Street, March 1, 1782.   

   Preface To The First Volume.   

   Diligence and accuracy are the only merits which an historical   writer

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