Note 059
Ducas kills him with two blows of Turkish
soldiers; Chalcondyles wounds him in the shoulder, and then
tramples him in the gate. The grief of Phranza, carrying him
among the enemy, escapes from the precise image of his
death; but we may, without flattery, apply these noble lines
of Dryden:
As to Sebastian, let them search the field;
And where they find a mountain of the slain,
Send one to climb,and looking down beneath,
There they will find him at his manly length,
With his face up to heaven, in that red monument
Which his good sword had digged.
The History Of The Decline And
Fall Of The Roman Empire
—Fall In The East
—Chapter 68