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revealed the   tyranny and weakness of the Jesuits. On the death of his father, Basilides expelled the Latin patriarch, and restored to   the wishes of the nation the faith and the discipline of Egypt.   The Monophysite churches resounded with a song of triumph,   "that the sheep of Æthiopia were now delivered from the   hyænas of the West;" and the gates of that solitary realm were   forever shut against the arts, the science, and the fanaticism   of Europe.   

   Chapter XLVIII:   

   Succession And Characters Of The Greek Emperors.   
   Part I.   Plan Of The Two Last Volumes. -- Succession And Characters   Of The Greek Emperors Of Constantinople, From The Time Of   Heraclius To The Latin Conquest.   I have now deduced from Trajan to Constantine, from Constantine to Heraclius, the regular series of the Roman   emperors; and faithfully exposed the prosperous and adverse   fortunes of their reigns. Five centuries of the decline and fall of   the empire have already elapsed; but a period of more than   eight hundred years still separates me from the term of my   labors, the taking of Constantinople by the Turks. Should I   persevere in the same course, should I observe the same measure, a prolix and slender thread would be spun through   many a volume, nor would the patient reader find an adequate   reward of instruction or amusement. At every step, as we sink   deeper in the decline and fall of the Eastern empire, the   annals of each succeeding reign would impose a more   ungrateful and melancholy task. These annals must continue   to repeat a tedious and uniform tale of weakness and misery;   the natural

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