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 182 DESTRUCTION OF THE GREEK EMPIRE selves for war by practising archery, and endeavouring to make themselves masters in it. 1 He records also that he was present at a tournament which the emperor and empress witnessed. Neither in his account nor in that of any con- temporary with which I am acquainted is there anything to show that the diminished population of the city were other than an industrious and sober people, to whom a question of religious dogma was of greater interest than any other, except perhaps those relating to the progress of their great enemy. But though the demoralisation of the Court and people in the usual sense of the term ought not to be counted among the reasons for the decay of the empire, the attitude of mind in the Court, in the Church, and among the masses is indicative of decay. In any country, but especially in one under absolute monarchy, the poorer classes of the people know and care little about politics. Among them there was under the empire a general indifference as to what was likely to happen. They were heavily taxed, were called upon to send their sons to the wars, and if there were to be a change of masters, it did not much matter. Their attitude was, indeed, not unlike that which exists to-day among the poorer Turks. A change of rulers would be welcomed by many, perhaps by most, though at the last moment religious senti- ment might and probably would come in to rouse opposition. Present evils are so burdensome that the hope of a change of rulers is constantly expressed. There was also among the subjects of the empire, as among those of the sultan, an underlying sentiment that the inevitable was happening. 9 AvdyKrj rjv was the belief among the Greeks almost as firmly as the Turks of to-day hold that it is their kismet to be driven out of Europe. The poorer classes may be disregarded when we are con- sidering the public opinion of the empire. Such opinions as existed among them were a reflection of those of the nobles, and especially of the Churchmen. Both clergy and nobles were intensely conservative, and had become by habit 1 La Brocqui&re, p. 339.