be duly paid, I will demand the arrears under the walls of Tauris and Sultania." The ungovernable rage
of the sultan at length betrayed him to an insult of a more domestic kind. "If I fly from thy arms," said
he, "may my wives be thrice divorced from my bed: but if thou hast not courage to meet me in the field,
mayest thou again receive thy wives after they have thrice endured the embraces of a stranger."39 Any
violation by word or deed of the secrecy of the harem is an unpardonable offence among the Turkish
nations;40 and the political quarrel of the two monarchs was imbittered by private and personal resentment.
Yet in his first expedition, Timour was satisfied with the siege and destruction of Siwas or Sebaste, a
strong city on the borders of Anatolia; and he revenged the indiscretion of the Ottoman, on a garrison
of four thousand Armenians, who were buried alive for the brave and faithful discharge of their duty.41
As a Mussulman, he seemed to respect the pious occupation of Bajazet, who was still engaged in the
blockade of Constantinople; and after this salutary lesson, the Mogul conqueror checked his pursuit,
and turned aside to the invasion of Syria and Egypt. In these transactions, the Ottoman prince, by the
Orientals, and even by Timour, is styled the Kaissar of Roum, the Cæsar of the Romans; a title which, by
a small anticipation, might be given to a monarch who possessed the provinces, and threatened the city,
of the successors of Constantine.42