king and savior of the isle. By the rebellion of a people on whom he had so long trampled with impunity,
Charles was astonished and confounded; and in the first agony of grief and devotion, he was heard to
exclaim, "O God! if thou hast decreed to humble me, grant me at least a gentle and gradual descent
from the pinnacle of greatness!" His fleet and army, which already filled the seaports of Italy, were hastily
recalled from the service of the Grecian war; and the situation of Messina exposed that town to the first
storm of his revenge. Feeble in themselves, and yet hopeless of foreign succor, the citizens would have
repented, and submitted on the assurance of full pardon and their ancient privileges. But the pride of
the monarch was already rekindled; and the most fervent entreaties of the legate could extort no more
than a promise, that he would forgive the remainder, after a chosen list of eight hundred rebels had
been yielded to his discretion. The despair of the Messinese renewed their courage: Peter of Arragon
approached to their relief;24 and his rival was driven back by the failure of provision and the terrors of
the equinox to the Calabrian shore. At the same moment, the Catalan admiral, the famous Roger de
Loria, swept the channel with an invincible squadron: the French fleet, more numerous in transports than
in galleys, was either burnt or destroyed; and the same blow assured the independence of Sicily and the
safety of the Greek empire. A few days before his death, the emperor Michael rejoiced in the fall of an
enemy whom he hated and esteemed; and perhaps he might be content with the popular judgment, that
had they not been matched with each other, Constantinople and Italy must speedily have obeyed the
same master.25 From this disastrous moment, the life of Charles was a series of misfortunes: his capital
was insulted, his son was made prisoner, and he sunk into the grave without recovering the Isle of Sicily,
which, after a war of twenty years, was finally severed from the throne of Naples, and transferred, as an
independent kingdom, to a younger branch of the house of Arragon.26