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Antonines, to the   taking of Constantinople by Mahomet the Second; and includes a review of the Crusades, and the state of Rome   during the middle ages. Since the publication of the first   volume, twelve years have elapsed; twelve years, according to   my wish, "of health, of leisure, and of perseverance." I may   now congratulate my deliverance from a long and laborious   service, and my satisfaction will be pure and perfect, if the public favor should be extended to the conclusion of my work.   It was my first intention to have collected, under one view, the   numerous authors, of every age and language, from whom I   have derived the materials of this history; and I am still   convinced that the apparent ostentation would be more than   compensated by real use. If I have renounced this idea, if I have declined an undertaking which had obtained the   approbation of a master-artist, * my excuse may be found in   the extreme difficulty of assigning a proper measure to such a   catalogue. A naked list of names and editions would not be   satisfactory either to myself or my readers: the characters of   the principal Authors of the Roman and Byzantine History have been occasionally connected with the events which they   describe; a more copious and critical inquiry might indeed   deserve, but it would demand, an elaborate volume, which   might swell by degrees into a general library of historical   writers. For the present, I shall content myself with renewing   my serious protestation, that I have always endeavored to draw from the fountain-head; that my curiosity, as well as a   sense of duty, has always urged me to study the originals; and   that, if they have sometimes eluded my search, I have carefully   marked the secondary

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