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Life of Mahomet [Volume II Chapter 5]
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THE BIOGRAPHY OF MAHOMET, AND RISE OF ISLAM.
CHAPTER FIFTH.
Progress of Islam from the fifth to the tenth Year of the Mission of Mahomet.
Return of the Abyssinian refugees, 615 A.D.
THREE months had not elapsed from the departure of the little band Abyssinia when standing the secure retreat and hospitable reception
offered at the Najashy's Court, they again appeared in Mecca. Their return is linked with one of the strangest episodes in the life of the Prophet. Hishami contents himself with saying that they came back because tidings reached them of the conversion of the Coreish. Wackidi and Tabari give another story, of which the following is a close outline.
The Lapse of Mahomet
The aim of Mahomet had been the regeneration of his people. But he had fallen miserably short of Mahomet it.
He is down-cast and desires a reconciliation with his fellow citizens
The conversion of forty or fifty souls ill compensated the bitter alienation of the whole community. His heart was vexed and his spirit chafed by the violent opposition of the most respected and influential Chiefs. The prospect was dark; to the human eye, hopeless. Sad and dispirited, the
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Arabian Prophet longed for a reconciliation, and cast about how it could be effected.
Narrative by Wackidi and Tabari
"On a certain day, the chief men of Mecca, assembled in a group beside the Kaaba, discussed as was their wont the affairs of the city; When Mahomet
appeared and, seating himself by them in a friendly manner, began to recite in their hearing the LIII. Sura1 , The chapter opens with a description of the
first visit of Gabriel to Mahomet, and of a later vision of that angel, in which certain heavenly mysteries were revealed. It then proceeds2;-
And see ye not LAT and OZZA,
And MANAT the third besides?
Satan tempts Mahomet to an Idolatrous concession
"When he had reached this verse, the devil suggested an expression of the thoughts which for many a day had possessed his soul; and put into
his mouth words of reconciliation and compromise, the revelation of which he had been longing for from God,3 namely;-
These are the exalted Females,
And verily their Intercession is to be hoped for.
-These words, however, do not occur in the second version given by Tabari, nor in the tradition of Wackidi.
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The Coreish worship along with him
"The Coreish were surprised and delighted with this acknowledgment of their deities; and as Mahomet wound up the Sura with the closing words,-
Wherefore bow down before God, and serve Him,
the whole assembly prostrated themselves with one accord on the ground and worshipped. Waild alone, the son of Mughira, unable from the infirmities of age to bow down, took a handful of earth and worshipped, pressing it to his forehead4.
The people pleased
"And all the people were pleased at that which Mahomet had spoken, and they began to say,- Now we know that it is the Lord alone that giveth life and taketh it away, that createth and supporteth. These our goddesses make intercession with Him for us; and as thou hast conceded unto them a portion, we are. content to follow thee. But their words disquieted Mahomet, and he retired to his house. In the evening Gabriel visited him; dnd the Prophet recited the Sura unto him. And Gabriel said, What is this that thou hast done? thou hast repeated
before the people words that I never gave unto thee.
Mahomet disowns the whole proceeding
So Mahomet grieved sore, and feared the Lord greatly; and he said, I have spoken of God that whole which He hath not said. But the Lord comforted
cession is pleasing unto God." Sprenger has in this instance quoted the MS. of Tabari. incorrectly in his valuable Notice of Tabari, in the Journal of the Asiatic Society, 1850, No ii. p. 129. The unusual phrase
signifies delicate, swcan-like.
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His Prophet,5 and restored his confidence, and canceled the verse, and revealed the true reading thereof (as it now stands), namely,
And see ye not LAT and OZZA,
And MANAT the third beside?
What! Shall there be male progeny unto you, and female
unto him?
That were indeed an unjust partition!
They are naught but names, which ye and your, Fathers have
invented, &c.
The Coreish more bitter than ever
Now when the Coreish heard this, they spake among themselves, saying, Mahomet hath repented his favourable mention of the rank held by our goddesses before the Lord. He hath changed the same, and brought other words in its stead. So the two Satanic verses were in the mouth of every one of the unbelievers,6 and they increased their malice,7 and
The passage is as follows: And we have not sent before thee any
Apostle, nor any Prophet, but when he longed, Satan cast
suggestions into his longing. But God shall cancel that which Satan
suggesteth then shall God establish his revelations (and God is knowing and wise) ;-- that he may make what Satan hath suggested a trial unto
those whose hearts are diseased and hardened, &C
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stirred them up to persecute the faithful with still greater severity."
This narrative founded on fact.
Pious Mussulmans of after days, scandalized at the lapse of their
Prophet into so flagrant a concession to idolatry, would reject
the whole story.8
But the authorities are too strong to be impugned. It is hardly
possible to conceive how the tale, if not founded in truth,
could ever have been invented. The stubborn fact remains,
and is by all admitted, that the first refugees did return about
this time from Abyssinia; and that they returned in consequence
of a rumour that Mecca was converted. To this fact the narratives
of Wackidi and Tabari afford the only intelligible clue.
At the same time, it is by no means necessary that we should
literally adopt the exculpatory version of Mahometan tradition;
or seek, in the interposition of Satan and Gabriel, an explanation
of actions to be equally accounted for by the natural workings
of the Prophet's mind.
The concession was neither unpremeditated, nor immediately withdrawn.
It is obvious that the lapse was no sudden
Ibn Ishac's works (which Ibn Hisham professes to follow,) is
evident from its being quoted by Tabari expressly from that author.
See Sprenger's Note in the Calcutta Asiatic Journal, where
the original passages are quoted at length.
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event. It was not a concession won by surprize, or an error of the tongue
committed unawares, and immediately withdrawn. The hostility of his people
had long pressed upon the spirit of Mahomet; and, in his inward musings,
it is admitted even by orthodox tradition that he had been meditating
the very expressions which, as is alleged, the devil prompted him to utter.
Neither can we believe that the concession lasted but for a day. To outward
appearance the reconciliation must have been consolidated and complete;
and it must have continued at the least for some days, probably for many,
to allow of the report going forth and reaching the exiles in a shape
sufficient to inspire them with confidence. We are warranted therefore
in assuming a far wider base and a more extensive action for the event,
than are admitted by ex-parte tradition.
Mahomet tempted to it by the hope of gaining over his people.
The circumstances may be thus conceived. Up to this point, the religion
of Mahomet was a spiritual system, of which Faith, and Prayer, and the
inculcation of virtue, form the prominent features. Though the Kaaba
and some of its rites may have been looked upon as founded by the patriarch
Abraham, the existing worship as a whole was rejected by reason of its
idolatry and corruption.9
Yet to this superstition, with all its practices, the
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people were obstinately wedded; and, unless permission were given
to join more or less the time-honoured institutions of Mecca with
the true Faith, there was little hope of a general conversion.
How far would the strong expediency of the case justify him to meet
half way the prevailing system? How far was it the will of God to
admit concession?
Considerations by which he may have been influenced.
Was not the worship of the Kaaba, after all, a Divine institution?
The temple was built at command of God; the compassing of it symbolized
the circling course of the heavenly bodies, and the obedience of all
creation to the Deity. Love and devotion were nurtured by the kissing
of the sacred Corner-stone: the slaying of sacrifices, a pious rite in
commemoration of Abraham's readiness to offer up his son, signified
a like submission;10
the pilgrimage to Arafat, the shaving of the head, and all the other
popular observances were innocent, if not directly religious, in their
tendency. But how shall he treat the Images of the Kaaba, and the gross
idolatry rendered to them? In their present mind, the Coreish would
never abandon these. But if (as they professed themselves ready)
they would
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acknowledge the one true God as the supreme Lord, and look to the Idols
as symbolical only of his angels, what harm would result from their bare
continuance? Incredible as the concession may appear, and utterly
irreconcilable with his first principles of action, Mahomet acceded to it,
and consented to maintain the Idols as the representatives of heavenly
beings "whose intercession was to be hoped for with the Deity." The hurried
and garbled notices of tradition give no farther insight into the compromise.
If Mahomet stipulated for any safeguards against the abuses of idolatry,
no trace of them can be now discovered. We only know that the arrangements,
of whatever nature, gave perfect satisfaction to the chiefs and people,
and produced a temporary union.
Error soon discovered;
But Mahomet was not long in perceiving the inconsistency into which
he had been betrayed. The people still worshipped Images, and not God.
No reasoning upon his part, no assurance from them, could dissemble
the galling fact that the practice of idolatry continued as gross
and rampant as ever.
and remedied by a complete disavowal.
His only safety now lay in disowning the concession. The devil had
deceived him. The words of compromise were no part of the divine system
received from God through his heavenly messenger. The lapse was thus
remedied. The heretical verses spoken under delusion were cancelled,
and others
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revealed in their stead, denying the existence of female Angels
such as Lat and Ozza, and denouncing idolatry with a sentence of
irrevocable condemnation. Henceforward the Prophet wages mortal
strife with images in every shape. His system gathers itself up
into a pure and stern theism; and the Coran begins to breathe
(though as yet only in the persons of Moses and Abraham) intimations
of an iconoclastic revenge.11
Idols reprobated.
Ever after, the intercession of idols is scouted as futile and absurd.
Angels dare not to intercede with the Almighty;12
how much less the idols, who
... have no power over even the Husk of a date stone;
Upon whom if ye call, they hear not your calling,
And if they heard they would not answer you;
And in the Day of Judgment, they shall reject your deification
of them.13
And the ruling of providence asserted to be with God only.
The following passage, produced shortly after his lapse, shows how Mahomet
refuted his adversaries, and adroitly turned against them the concession
they had made of the Supreme Deity of God alone.
And if thou askest them who created the Heavens and the
Earth, they will surely answer God14.
SAY, what think ye then? If the Lord be pleased to visit me with affliction,
can those upon whom ye call besides God,- what! could they remove
the visitation?
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Or if He visit me with mercy, could they withhold His mercy?
SAY, God sufficeth for me; in Him alone let those that put their trust,
confide.15
The lapse, and danger of the compromise, keenly felt.
However short his fall, Mahomet retained a keen sense of his disgrace,
and of the danger which lay in parkying with his adversaries;--
And truly they were near tempting thee aside from what we
revealed unto thee, that thou shouldest fabricate regarding Us
a different revelation; and then they would have taken thee for
their friend.
And if it had not been that WE stablished thee, verily thou
hadst nearly inclined unto them a little;
Then verily WE had caused thee to taste both of the punishment
of Life, and the punishment of Death;
Then thou shouldest not have found against Us any Helper.16
Ever and anon the prophet is cautioned in the Coran to beware
lest he should be induced to change the words of inspiration,
out of a desire to deal gently with his people; or be deluded,
by the pomp and numbers of the idolaters, into following after them
and deserting the straight and narrow path indicated for him by
God.17
Mahomet's position with the Meccans injured by the lapse.
But although Mahomet may have completely re-established his own
convictions, and fully regained the confidence of his adherents,
there is little doubt that the concession to idolatry, followed
by a recantation so sudden and entire, seriously weakened his
position with the people at large. They would not
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readily credit the excuse, that words of error were "cast by the devil
into the mouth of Mahomet."18
Even supposing it to have been so, what faith could be placed in
the revelations of a Prophet liable to such influences? The Divine author
of a true revelation must know beforehand all that he will at any
subsequent period reveal. If the Coran were in truth His oracle,
Mahomet would never be reduced to the petty shift of retracting
as a mistake that which had once been given forth as a message from
heaven. The Coreish laughed to scorn the futile endeavour of the Prophet
to produce a union, and draw them away from idolatry. They addressed
him thus ironically;-
And when they see thee, they receive thee no otherwise than
scoffingly, - "Ah! is this he whom God hath sent an Apostle?
verily he had nearly seduced us from our Gods, unless we had
patiently persevered therein." But they shall know hereafter,
when they see the torment, who bath erred moat from the right
way.19
He can only reiterate his own conviction.
To the accusations triumphantly advanced by his adversaries,
Mahomet could oppose simply the reiteration of his own assurance;-
And when We change one verse in place of another, (and God best
knoweth that which he revealeth) they say,- "Verily thou plainly
art a Fabricator." Nay! but the most of them understand not.
SAY;- The Holy Spirit hath brought it down from the Lord, &c.
The Abyssinian emigrants return to Mecca, 615 A.D.
We have seen that it was the tidings of the reconciliation with
the Coreish that induced the little
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band of emigrants, after a two months' residence in Abyssinia,
to set out for Mecca.20
As they approached the city, a party of travellers returning from
it communicated the information that Mahomet had withdrawn his
concessions, and that the Coreish had resumed their oppression.
After consulting for a moment what should now be done, they resolved
to go forward and visit their homes;- If things came to the worst,
they could but again escape to Abyssinia. So they entered Mecca,
each under the protection of a relative or friend.21
The Second Emigration to Abyssinia, A.D. 615-616
The tidings brought by the emigrants of their kind reception by
the Najashy, following upon the late events, annoyed the Coreish,
and the persecution became hotter than ever.22
Wherefore Mahomet again recommended his followers to take refuge
in Abyssinia. The first party of the new expedition thither set out
probably about the sixth year of the mission; and thereafter at
intervals small bodies of converts, accompanied sometimes
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by their wives and children, joined the exiles, until they reached (without calculating their little ones) the number of 101. Of these, eighty-three were men. Amongst the women, eleven were of Coreish descent, and seven belonged to other tribes. Thirty-three of the men, with eight women, (including Othman and Rockeya, the daughter of Mahomet,) again returned to Mecca; most of these eventually emigrated to Medina. The rest of the refugees remained in Abyssinia for several years, and did not rejoin Mahomet until his expedition to Kheibar, in the seventh year of the Hegira.23
But the number of emigrants to Abyssinia is given at 100, as
the aggregate of all who from first to last proceeded thither. They
did not all set out at once, but, as is distinctly said, in parties one
after another, and probably at considerable intervals. The fact
therefore that the total number exceeded 100, is not in the least
inconsistent with the position that the first party was small, or
that the whole of Mahomet's followers may not at the time of its
departure have exceeded fifty.
Hishami (p. 114) has mixed up the return of the thirty-three emigrants
belonging to the second Abyssinian expedition, with the much earlier
return of the whole of the emigrants of the first expedition consequent
upon the lapse of Mahomet.
Of those who returned from the second expedition there may be
enumerated (besides Othman), Abu Hodzeifa, Abdallah ibn Jahsh,
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The Coreish endeavour to make Abe Talib abandon Mahomet;
Although Mahomet himself was not yet forced to quit his native city, he was nevertheless exposed to indignity insult, while the threatening attitude of his adversaries gave good ground for apprehension and anxiety. If; indeed, it had not been for the influence and stedfast protection of Abu Talib, it is clear that the hostile intentions of the Coreish would have imperilled the liberty, perhaps the life of Mahomet. A body of their Elders24 repaired to the aged Chief; and said:- This Nephew of thine hath spoken opprobriously of our gods and our religion: and hath abused us as fools, and given out that our forefathers were all astray. Now, avenge us thyself of our adversary; or, (seeing that thou art in the came case with ourselves,) leave him to its that we may take our satisfaction. But Abu Talib
Otba, Zobeir ibn al Awwam, Musab, Tuleib, Abd al Rahman. These all subsequently emigrated with Mahomet to Medina. Several of those who returned to Mecca were confined there (as is alleged) by their relatives, and thus prevented from joining Mahomet till after the first battle. One of them, Abdallab ibn Soheil, fled from the Coreish to Mahomet’s army at the battle of Badr.
Sakran was among those who returned from Abyssinia to Mecca, where he died. It was his widow Sauda, whom Mahomet first married after Khadija's death.
Othman revisited Mecca under the guardianship of Walid, son of Mughira, the great enemy of Islam.
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answered them softly and in courteous words; so
they turned and went away.. In process of time, as
Mahomet would not change his proceedings, they
went again to Abu Talib in great exasperation;
and, reminding him of their former demand that he
would restrain his nephew from his offensive conduct,
added:-- and now verily we cannot have
patience any longer with his abuse of us, our an-
cestors, and our gods I wherefore either do thou hold
him back from us, or thyself take part with him
that the matter may be decided between us. Having
thus spoken, they departed. And it appeared
grievous to Abu Talib to break with his people,
and be at enmity with them; neither did it please
him to desert and surrender his nephew. Thus
being in straits, he sent for Mahomet, and having
communicated the saying of the Coreish, proceeded
earnestly ;Therefore, save thyself and me also;
and cast not upon me a burden heavier than I can
sustain. Mahomet was startled and alarmed. He
imagined that his uncle, finding himself unequal
to the task, had resolved to abandon him. His
high resolve did not fail him even at this
critical moment. Firmly, he replied: - if they
brought the Sun to my right hand, and the Moon to
my left, to force me from my undertaking, verily,
I would not desist therefrom- until the Lord made
manifest my cause, or I perished in the attempt.
But the thought of desertion by his kind protector
overcame him. He burst into tears, and turned to
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Abu Talib persists in his protection
depart. Then Abu Talib called aloud:- "Son of
my brother, Come back." So he returned. And
Aba Talib said; - Depart in peace, my nephew!
and say whatsoever thou desirest For, by the Lord!
I will not, in any wise, give thee up for ever.25
There is some confusion as to the time when this scene occurred.
There were probably several conferences ending in threats, and
tradition has no doubt amplified them. One of these conferences
is said to have occurred at Abu Talib's deathbed, several years
later. The Coreish, hearing that Abu Talib lay at the
point of
death, sent a deputation in order that some compact should be
made to bind both parties, after his decease should have removed
all restraint upon Mahomet. They proposed accordingly that
they should retain their ancient faith, and that Mahomet should
promise to refrain from abuse or interference; in which case they
on their part would agree not to molest him in his faith. Abu
Talib called Mahomet, and communicated to him the reasonable
request. Mahomet replied -" Nay, but there is one word, which
if ye concede, you will thereby conquer Arabia, and reduce Ajam
under subjection." "Good!" said Abu Jahl, " not one such word,
but ten." Mahomet replied,-" Then say,-There is no God but
the Lord, and abandon that which ye worship beside him." And
they clapped their hands in rage;-" Dost thou desire, indeed,
that we should turn our gods into one God? That were a strange
affair!" And they began to say one to another, "This fellow is
obstinate and impracticable. Ye will not get from him any concession that ye desire. Return, and let us walk after the faith of
our forefathers till God determine the matter betwixt us and
him." So they arose and departed. Hishami, p. 136.
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A scene at the Kaaba Abu Talib awes the Coreish
Some add the following incident. The same day, Mahomet disappeared and was no where to be found. Abu Talib, apprehensive of foul play,
forthwith made ready a band of Hashimite youths each armed with a dirk, and set out for the Kaaba. By the way, he was stopped by the intelligence that Mahomet was safe in a house on Safa; so he returned with his people home. On the morrow, the aged Chief again made ready his party and, taking Mahomet with them, repaired to the Kaaba. There, standing before the assembly of the Coreish, he desired his young men to uncover that which they had by them; and each drew forth a sharp
weapon. Then turning to the Coreish, he exclaimed - By the Lord I Had ye killed him, there had not remained one alive amongst you. You
should have perished, or WE had been annihilated. The bold front of Abu Talib awed the Coreish, and repressed their insolence.26
Personal indignities sustained by Mahomet
Though the tendency of tradition is to magnify
the insults of the unbelieving Meccans, yet apart
from invective and abuse, we read of hardly any
personal injury or suffering sustained by Mahomet
himself, A few of the inveterate enemies of Islam,
(Abu Lahab among the number,) who lived close
by his house, used spitefully to throw unclean and
offensive things at the Prophet, or upon his hearth
as he cooked his food. Once they flung into his
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house the entrails of a goat which Mahomet, putting upon a stick, carried to the door, and called aloud; "Ye children of Abd Menaf! What sort of neighbourhood is this?" Then he cast it forth into the
street.27 Two or three centuries afterwards, a little closet, a few feet square, was still shown at the entrance of Khadija’s house where, under the ledge of a projecting stone, the Prophet crouched down
when he retired for prayer, to shelter himself from the missiles of his neighbours28. There is also a legend (but ill sustained,) of actual violence once offered to Mahomet in public. As he passed through the court of the Kaaba, he was suddenly surrounded by the Coreish, who "leaped upon him as one man," and seized his mantle. But Aba Bakr stood
manfully by him' and called out; "Woe's me! Will ye slay a man because he saith that God is my Lord?" 'So they departed from him.29
In the sixth year of his mission, the cause of
Mahomet was strengthened by the accession of two
powerful citizens, HAMZA and OMAR.
Conversion of Hamza, 615 A.D.
The prophet was one day seated on the rising ground of Safa. Aba Jahl, coming up, accosted
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him with a shower of taunts and reproaches; while
Mahomet answered not a word. Both left the
place, but a slave girl had observed the scene.30
It chanced that, shortly after, Hamza returned that
way from the chase, his bow hanging from his
shoulder, (for he was a hunter of renown); and
the maid related to him with indignation the gross
abuse of Abu Jahl. Hamza was at once the uncle
of Mahomet and his foster-brother. His pride was
offended, his rage kindled. He hurried on with
rapid steps to the Kaaba; and there, in the Court
of the holy House, found Abu Jahl sitting with a
company of the Coreish. Hamza rushed upon him,
saying - Ah! hast thou been abusing him, and I
follow his religion; there (raising his bow and
striking him violently,) return that if thou darest!
The kinsmen of Abu Jahl started to his succour;
but Abu Jahl motioned them away, saying, “Let
him alone; for, indeed, I did revile his nephew
shamefully." The profession of Islam, suddenly
asserted by Hamza in the passion of the moment,
was followed up by the deliberate pledging of
himself to Mahomet, and a steady adherence ever
after to his faith.31
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Conversion of Omar 615-616
The conversion of Omar took place at the close Omar 615-616. of the sixth year of Mahomet's mission.32 He was notorious for his enmity to Islam, and the harshness and violence with which he treated its professors. His sister Fatima and her husband Said (son of the
"Enquirer" Zeid) were both converts, but secretly for fear of the Coreish. While Omar was threatening certain believers, a friend suggested to him that he had better begin at home, and hinted at the conversion of his sister and her husband. His wrath was aroused, and he proceeded forthwith to their house. They were listening to the twentieth Sura, which the slave Khobab recited to them from a manuscript. The persecutor drew near, and overheard the low murmur of the reading. At the noise of his steps, Khobab retired into a closet. What sound was that I heard just now? exclaimed Omar, entering angrily. "There was nothing; they replied. Nay; said he, swearing fiercely, I hear that ye are renegades! "But what, Oh Omar!" interposed his brother-in-law, "may there not be truth in another religion than thine?" The question confirmed the suspicions of Omar and, furiously
A tradition has been quoted above (p. 118) that Omar was the
last convert in the house of Arcam; and that the male converts
then amounted to forty.
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exasperated, he sprang upon Said and kicked him. His sister flew to the rescue. In the struggle her face was wounded, and began to bleed. Stung by the insult, she could no longer contain herself; and called aloud ; - "Yes, we are converted; we believe in God and in his Prophet; now do thy worst upon us. When Omar saw her face covered with blood he was softened; and he asked to see the paper they had been reading. But his sister required that he should first cleanse himself; “for none," said she," but the pure may touch it." So Omar arose and mashed, and took the paper (for he could read); and when he had decyphered a part thereof; he exclaimed ; How excellent is this discourse, and gracious! Then came forth Khobab from his hiding place, and said ; - "Oh Omar! I trust that the Lord hath verily set thee apart for himself; in answer to his Prophet; it was but yesterday I heard him praying thus, - Strengthen Islam, Oh God, by Abul Hakam (Abu Jahl), or
by Omar" Then said Omar, “Lead me unto Mahomet, that I may make known unto him my conversion. And he was directed to the house of
Arcam. So Omar knocked at the door; and Hamza with others looked through a crevice, and started back, exclaiming that it was Omar. But Mahomet bade them let him in and, rising to meet him, seized his skirt and the belt of his sword, saying ; - "Wilt thou not refrain from persecuting, until the Lord send
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some calamity upon thee?" And Omar replied;-
"Verily, I testify; that thou art the Prophet of God!"
And Mahomet was filled with joy, and called aloud,
GREAT IS THE LORD!33
Hishami has two versions. One is similar to that given in the
text; only it is stated that Omar was on his way to stay
Mahomet, when he was diverted by an intimation of his sister's conversion. But this incident has probably been thrown in to add to the
romantic colouring of the story. Besides its inherent improbability, it appears inconsistent with the immediately previous declaration
in Hishami, that Omar was "softened" when he saw the
believers preparing to emigrate to Abyssinia, and said,-" the
Lord go with you." Hishami, p. 103.
The second version is entirely different. here is Omar's own
alleged account'- "I was far from the faith, and a man given to
strong drink. In quest of companions one night, I repaired to
the shop of the spirit-dealer, but I did not find him. Then I said,I
will go unto the Kaaba and compass it six or seven times. So I went; and I found Mahomet praying there with his face towards Syria (i.e. looking towards Jerusalem as his Kibla). Then I said, What if I stay and hear what he is saying; I will get me near unto him
and listen, then I will startle and frighten him. So I went up towards the black stone, and hid myself behind the Kaaba curtain, and walked along softly between it and the wall, while the Prophet was
praying and repeating the Coran, till I reached the spot directly before
him - there was nothing betwixt him and me but the curtain. And
when I heard him repeating the Coran my heart softened thereat,
and I wept and was converted. And when he had ended, I followed him on his way to his house, which was in the Dar al Wackia (now in the possession of Muavia); and as I made up npon him, he heard my steps and recognized me, and thought that verily I had come to trouble him, until I unfolded unto him the truth. Then he praised God and said,- Verily, O Omar! God hath directed thee. And he touched my garment and prayed for me, that I might continue stedfast." Hishami, p. 106.
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Importance of these conversions
These conversions were a real triumph to Mahomet. Hamza and Omar both possessed, along with great bodily strength, an indomitable courage;
which, added to their social advantages, gained for them an important influence at Mecca.34 The heroism of Hamza, in the cause of Islam, earned for him the title, familiar to the present day, of the
Lion of God.
Omar described
Omar had so commanding a stature, that he rose far above the crowd, as if he had been mounted. He was stout and fair, and somewhat ruddy. Impulsive and precipitate, his anger was easily aroused; and men feared him because of his uncertain and impetuous temper. At the period of
his conversion he was but six-and-twenty;35 yet so great and immediate was the influence of his accession upon the spread of Islam, that from this era is dated the commencement of its open and fearless
profession at Mecca. Mahomet abandoned the house
This tradition is utterly inconsistent with the other. Yet it
contains details which have all the freshness and semblance of
truth, and there is no apparent reason why it should have been
fabricated. It is a strong example of the strange uncertainty of
unsupported tradition.
The version in the text is evidently the correct one, and is given
both by Hishami and the Secretary of Wackidi, with some variations, which show that each had separate and independent authority for it. Hishami, p. 103; Katib al Wackidi, p. 231 ½.
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of Arcam. The Moslems no longer concealed their worship within their own dwellings, but with conscious strength and defiant attitude, assembled in companies about the Kaaba, performed their rites of prayer, and compassed the Holy House.36 Their courage rose. Dread and uneasiness seized the Coreish.
Position and fears of the Coreish
The Coreish, indeed, had cause for alarm. They were disquieted by the hospitable reception and encouragement of the refugees at the Abyssinian
Court. An embassy of two of their chief men, laden with costly presents, had made a fruitless attempt to obtain their surrender.37 What if the
Omm Salmna (the widow of one of the refugees, afterwards
married to Mahomet) states that die Coreish despatched Abdallah
iba Abi Rabia and Amr ibn al As, with rare presents (including
stores of precious leather), for the Najfashy. They first gained
over the courtiers, then they presented their gifts to the Christian Prince, - saying, that "certain fools amongst their mm people had left their ancestral faith; they had not joined Christianity, but had set up a new religion of their own. They had therefore been deputed by die Coreish to fetch them back." The courtiers supported their prayer, but the king said he would enquire farther into the matter in the presence of the accused. Now the refugees had agreed that they would not garble their doctrine, but, come what might, say nothing more nor less than their Prophet had taught them. So on the morrow they were summoned into the royal presence, where were also the bishops with their books open before them.' The king enquired of die refugees the cause of their secession from the Coreish. Then Jafar (Mahomet's uncle) answered,
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Najashy should support them with an armed force, and seek to establish a Christian or reformed Faith
in the name of all, - "that they used to worship images, eat the
dead, commit lewdness, disregard family ties, the duties of neigh-
bourhood and hospitality, until that Mahomet arose a prophet;"
he concluded by describing his system, and the persecutions
which had forced them to flee to Abyssinia. On the king asking
him to repeat some part of the Prophet's teaching, he recited Sura
Maryam (S. xix. containing the births of John and Jesus, notices
of Abraham, Moses, &c.); and the king wept until his beard
became moist; and the bishops also wept so that their tears ran
down upon their books, saying,-" Verily, this Revelation and
that of Moses proceed from one and the same source." And the
Najashy said to the refugees, "Depart in peace, for I will never
give you up. "
Next day, it is added, Amr endeavoured to entrap the refugees
into a declaration regarding Jesus offensive to the king. But the
king fully concurred in their doctrine that Jesus was nothing
more than "a servant of God, and his Apostle; His Spirit and
His word, placed in the womb of Mary, the immaculate Virgin."
So the Meccan embassy departed in bad case.
The above story is no doubt intended to meet certain passages in the Coran to the effect that the Jews and Christians wept for joy on hearing the Revelation of Mahomet, because of its correspondence with their own Scriptures. See Sura xvii. 108; xxviii. 43. A similar tale has been invented for the bishops of Najran; and also regarding an embassy of Christians from Abyssinia, who are said to have visited Mahomet at Mecca. Hishami, p. 124. So that not much reliance can be placed on this part of the narrative.
Two other incidents are related of the Najashy. One, that
while the refugees were at his court, he was attacked by a claim-
ant of the throne. The refugees were so concerned for the result,
that they sent Zobeir (then quite a youth) over the Nile on an
inflated skin, to watch the battle; and when he returned with
tidings that the Najashy had discomfited his adversary, they
rejoiced greatly.
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at Mecca, as one of his predecessors had done in Yemen? Apart even from foreign aid, there was ground for apprehension at home. The Moslem
body no longer consisted of oppressed and despised out-casts, struggling for a weak and miserable existence. It was rather a powerful faction, adding daily to its strength by the accession of influential citizens. It challenged an open hostility. The victory of either party involved the annihilation of the other.
The Coreish cut off communications with the Moslems and their supporters
Influenced by such fears, the Coreish sought to stay the progress of secession from their ranks, by utterly severing the party of Mahomet from social and friendly communication with themselves. On the other hand, Abu Talib was supported in his defence of Mahomet by all his brothers (excepting
The Abyssinians are said to have risen up against their king
on account of the favour he showed to the Mussulman doctrine.
So the Najashy put into his pocket a scrap inscribed with the
Mahometan creed, and when his people desired him to say "that
Jesus was the Son of God," he responded thus (putting his hand
upon his pocket) "Jesus never went beyond this " - apparently
agreeing in what they said, but inwardly referring to the scrap!
-a childish story.
Mahomet is said to have regarded him as a convert to Islam;
and to have accordingly prayed for him at his death. A light is
also related to have issued from his tomb.
There is probably a basis of truth for the general outline given
in this note; but it would be difficult to draw a probable line
between the real and the fictitious parts of it. Had the leaning
towards Mahometan doctrine been really so great in Abyssinia, as
is here represented, we should have heard more or its inhabitants
in the troublous times immediately following Mahomet's decease.
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Abu Lahab,) and by the descendants generally of his grandfather Hashim, whether converts to Islam or not.38 Thus the religious struggle merged for a time into a civil feud between the Hashimites and the rest of the Coreish; and there were not wanting long-rooted political associations to add bitterness to the strife.
The Ban
To secure their purpose, the Coreish entered into
a confederacy against the Hashimites; - That they
would not marry their women, nor give their own in
marriage to them; that they would sell nothing to
them, nor buy aught from them ;-that dealings with
them of every kind should cease. The ban was
carefully committed to writing, and sealed with
three seals. When all had bound themselves by it,
the record was hung up in the Kaaba, and religious
sanction thus given to its provisions.39
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The Sheb, or Quarter of Abu Talib
The Hashimites were unable to withstand the
tide of public opinion which set in thus violently
against them; and, apprehensive perhaps that it
might be only the prelude of open attack, or of
blows in the dark still more fatal, they retired
into the secluded quarter of the city, known as the
Sheb of Abu Talib.40 It was formed by one of the
defiles. or indentations of the mountain, where the
projecting rocks of Abu Cobeis pressed upon the
eastern outskirts of Mecca. It was entered on the
city side by a low gateway, through which a camel
passed with difficulty. On all other sides it was
detached from the town by cliffs and buildings.41
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The Hashimites with Mahomet retire into the Sheb, 616-617 A.D.
On the first night of the first month of the seventh
year of the prophetic life of Mahomet, the Hashimites,
including the Prophet and his family, retired
into the quarter of Abu Talib; and with them
followed also the descendants of Al Muttalib, the
brother of Hashim. Abu Lahab alone, instigated
Burton mentions a robber's gorge called "Shuab al Haj," the
"Pilgrims' pass." In a note he adds,-" Shuab properly means
a path through mountains, or; watercourse between hills. It is
generally used in Arabia for a valley, and sometimes instead of
Nakb, a pass." Pilgrimage, ii. 14.
The several quarters of Mecca skirting the foot of Abu Cobeis
are still distinguished by the name Sheb: thus we have the Sheb
Amir, the Sheb Maulad (quarter in which Mahomet was born);
and the Sheb Ali. The latter was probably comprised in the Sheb
of Aba Talib. Burkhardt’s Arabia, pp. 123-128. "On the
east side, towards the mountain, and partly on its declivity,
stands
the quarter called Shah Aly, adjoining the Shab el Moled: here is
shown the venerated place of Aly's nativity. Both these quarters
called Shab (i.e. rock), are among the most ancient parts of the
town, where the Koreysh formerly lived: they are even now
inhabited principally by Sherifs, and do not contain any shops.
The houses are spacious and in an airy situation." Ibid. p. 124.
It was into one of these quarters of the city situated in a
defile, having behind it the steep ascent of the hill, and so built about
as to be inaccessible on all sides, except by a narrow entrance from the city,
that the Hashimites retired. These particulars enable us to understand
the account of Hakim striking his camel to make it bow down and enter
the narrow defile
; and the
voices of the wailing children being heard in the parts of the
city adjoining, but divided from, the Sheb.
Weil has misapprehended the meaning of" Sheb," and makes it
a fortified castle outside Mecca. "Hielt es Abu Talib für
gerathen, ihn mit einem Theile der Gläubigen aus Mekka zu entfernen, und
in ein Wohlbefestigtes Schloss zu bringen." Mohammed, p. 61.
So in his Einleitung, p. 9.
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by hatred of the new religion, went forth to the other party. The ban of separation was put rigorously in force. The Hashimites soon found themselves cut off from their supplies of corn and the other necessaries of life. They were not strong enough to send forth a caravan of their own; if parties of foreign merchants passed through, the Coreish instigated them to withhold their commodities, except at a most exorbitant price ;42 the Coreish themselves would sell nothing to them; and a great scarcity ensued. No one ventured forth from the Sheb, except at the season of pilgrimage, when all enmities throughout Arabia were hushed, and Mahomet and his party were free to join securely in the ceremonies.43 For two or three years, the
attitude of both parties remained unaltered, and the failing stock of the Hashimites, replenished only by occasional and surreptitious ventures, reduced them to want and distress.
Their distress
The citizens could hear the voices of the half-famished children crying within the Sheb. Many hearts were softened at the sight
Page 179
of such hardships, and mourned over the hostilities
which gave rise to them. Among these, and among
the relatives of tile isolated band, were found some
who ventured, in spite of the threats of the Coreish,
to introduce, from time to time, provisions by stealth
at night into the quarter of Abu Talib. Thus
Hisham ibn Amr would conduct a camel laden with
corn cautiously into the Sheb, and make over the
burden to the hungry inmates.44a Hakim grandson
of Khuweilid used also, though the attempt was
sometimes perilous, to carry supplies to his aunt
Khadija.44b
But stories tending to the abasement of Abu Jahl are related
by the traditionists with such evident zest, that they are to be
received by us with caution.
Page 180
Unfavourable effect or the seclusion on the cause of Mahomet.
Though the sympathies of many were called forth by the sufferings of the Hashimites, the cause of Islam itself did not advance during the period of this weary seclusion; for that seclusion had its full and expected effect in cutting off the mass of the people from the personal influence of Mahomet and of his converts. The efforts of the Prophet were
necessarily confined to the conversion of the members of his own noble clan who, though unbelievers in his mission, had resolved to defend his person; and to the strengthening of his previous converts in the faith. Accordingly, we find in the portions of the Coran delivered at this time directions from God to retire from the unbelievers, and confine his
preaching to his near kinsmen and to the faithful;--
Verily they are a rebellious people;
Wherefore turn from them, and thou shalt not be blamed.
And admonish; for admonition profiteth the believers.45
Invoke with GOD no other god, lest thou be of those consigned
to torment.
And preach unto thy Relatives, those that be of nearer kin.
And conduct thyself gently unto the Believers that follow thee.
And if they disobey thee, Say, I am free from that which ye do.
And put thy trust in Him that is glorious and merciful.46
Stretch not forth thine eye unto the provision which we have given
unto several of them, neither be covetous thereof.
But behave with gentleness (tower thy wings) unto the Believers;
And Say; Verily, I am a plain Preacher.
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The exemplary bearing of Mahomet under these trying circumstances, and the spirit of clanship uniting all that shut themselves up with him and
Abu Talib, must undoubtedly have secured in some degree for the new religion itself, the general countenance
But it drew him closer to the Hashimites
of the Hashimites, and may perhaps have the helped to add some few followers from their ranks.
But the weary years of confinement contributed probably no more important result.
Mahomet visits the fairs and assemblages of pilgrims
The time of pilgrimage alone afforded Mahomet a wider field. That interval of
universal amnesty was turned, (as it had indeed already been before the ban,)
to careful account in visiting and exhorting the various tribes that flocked
to Mecca and the adjacent fairs. Thus the Prophet used to visit the great
assemblages at Okatz, Mujanna, and Dzul Majaz, as well as the pilgrim encampments
at Mecca and Mina. He warned them against idolatry; invited them to the worship
and service of the One God; and promised them not only paradise here-after, but
prosperity and, dominion upon earth, if they would believe.47
No one responded to his call.
And publish that which thou art commanded, and withdraw from the
Idolaters.
Verily, we shall suffice for thee against the scoffers, those that
get up
with Gon other gods; but they will shortly know;
But do thou praise thy Lord with thanksgiving, and be among the
Worshippers:—
And serve thy lord until death (or the certainty) overtake thee.
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Abu Lahab would follow alter him, saying;- Believe him not, he is a lying renegade!48 And the tribes replied to Mahomet in sore and taunting words; - Thine own kindred and people should know thee best; wherefore, do they not believe and follow thee?
Is repulsed and dispirited
So the Prophet, repulsed and grieved, would look upwards and thus make his complaint unto God - Oh Lord, if Thou willedst, it would not be thus!49 But the prayer seemed to pass unheeded.
victories of Islam in his supposed address, which rather throws
doubt upon his having made any promise of worldly domination
at this time. This was the alleged drift of his preaching:
Ye people! Say, THERE IS NO GOD BUT THE LORD. Ye will be
benefitted thereby. Ye will gain the rule of all Arabia, and
of Ajam (foreign lands), and when ye die ye will reign
as kings in Paradise.
The tribes whom he thus addressed are detailed both by
Hishami and Wackidi, and include the Bani Kalb, Kinda, Harb,
Odzra, Khassafa, Saasha, Ghassan, Hanifa; from the last of which
he is related to have received the worst rebuff of all.
There would be numerous Christians and Jews at the faire,
though they did not attend the Meccan pilgrimage.
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SUPPLEMENT TO CHAPTER FIFTH.
The Coran, as Revealed during this Period.
FOLLOWING the plan observed at the close of the last chapter I
here propose to notice the character of the Suras, about twenty
in number, assignable to the period just reviewed.50
Connection with Judaism
The new and lending feature of these chapters is the close connection springing up between Mahomet and the Jewish religion.
Jewish Scriptures appealed to
The Pentateuch is now constantly mentioned as a Revelation from God to Moses. The object of the Coran is "to attest" its origin and that or the succeeding Scriptures.51 The Jewish books contain "clear evidence" of the truth of the Coran, and of the mission of Mahomet52. Jewish witnesses are appealed to in proof that the New Dispensation is "foretold" in their sacred books, and that the Coran is in close conformity with their contents.
Testimony and feelings of the Jews towards Mahomet
The confidence with which Mahomet refers to the testimony of
the Jews and of their Scriptures, is very remarkable. It leaves us no room to doubt that some amongst the Jews, possessed probably of an imperfect and superficial acquaintance with their own
books and traditions, encouraged Mahomet in the idea that he
might be, or positively affirmed that he was, that Prophet whom
the
A complete collection of all the passages of this nature in the Coran will he found in a treatise
by the author;- "The testimony borne by the Coran to the Jewish and Christian Scriptures." Agra, 1856.
Page 184
Lord their God should raise up unto them; of their brethren.
His profound veneration for the Jewish Scriptures, to the implicit
observance of which there was then fair ground for assuming that
he had pledged himself in the Coran, would lull the apprehension
of the Israelites, and draw them kindly towards him. "If this
man," they would say, "hold firmly by the Law and the Prophets,
and seek fervently the guidance of the GOD of our fathers, he will
not go astray. Peradventure, the Lord willeth through him to
lead the heathen Arabs unto salvation. Nay! What if (we erring
in our interpretation of prophecy as to the Jewish lineage of our
expected prophet,) this prove the very Messiah sprung from
the seed of Abraham? In anywise let us wait, watching the
result; and meanwhile encourage him in the love of the Word of
GOD, and the seeking of His face in prayer." All rejoiced in the
Jewish tendencies which had possessed his mind53. Some going
farther bore a direct and unequivocal testimony to his mission54.
It could have been to nothing short of such witness that he
referred,
when he said - They unto whom WE have given the Scripture recognize
the Prophet,55 as they do their own children; and-
Verily this is a Revelation (rein the Lord or Creation;
The faithful Spirit hath descended with it
Upon thy heart, that thou mightest he a Warner,
In the tongue or simple Arabic.
And verily it is in the former Scriptures;
Was it not a Sign unto them that the learned among the children of
Israel recognised it?
And if we had revealed it to a Foreigner;
And he had recited it unto them, they had not believed.56
SAY: What think ye, if this revelation be from God, end ye reject
it, and a witness from amongst the Children of Israel hath witnessed unto
the like thereof, and hath believed, and ye turn away scornfully?-Verily, God doth not direct the erring folk.57
Page 185
Conjectures as to the "Witness".
Whether the "Witness," and other Jewish supporters of Mahomet, were among his professed followers, slaves perhaps, at Mecca; or were casual visitors there from Israelitish tribes; or belonged to the Jewish residents of Medina (with the inhabitants of which city the Prophet was on the point of establishing friendly relations), we cannot do more than conjecture.
The Jews supply Mahomet with materials for the Coran
But whoever his Jewish friends may have been, it is evident that they had a knowledge-rude and imperfect perhaps, but comprehensive, - of the outlines or Jewish history and tradition. These, distorted by rabbinical fable, and embellished or parodied by the Prophet's fancy, supplied the material for the Scriptural stories, which begin to form a chief portion of the Coran. The mixture of truth and fiction, of graphic imagery and of childish inanity, the repetition over and over again of the same tale in stereotyped expression, and the constant elaborate and ill-concealed effort to draw an analogy between himself and the former Prophets by putting the speech of his own day into their lips and those or their pretended opposers, fatigue and nauseate the patient reader of the Coran.
Correspondence, and disagreement, with the Old Testament
To those who have not studied the Revelation of Mahomet, the following examples may be useful as illustrating both its remarkable correspondence with the Jewish Scriptures, and the strange and fanciful deviations from them. The fabulous turn of the stories can often be tnced to Rabbinical legend.
Illustrations
God created Adam of clay, and commanded the angels to fall down and worship him.58 The devil, alleging his nobler formation from fire, refuted and fell.59 On receiving his sentence, he threatened God that he would seduce His new-created subjects; and, in tempting them to eat of the forbidden tree, he fulfilled his threat.60
And verily WE created you, then fashioned you, then We said unto
the Angels, "Fall down and worship Adam;" and they worshipped all,
excepting Eblis, who was not one of the worshippers;-
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To the facts of Abel's history, is added the Jewish fiction that
God, by sending a raven to scratch the ground, indicated to Cain
that the corpse should be buried under the earth.61
It would
He said "what hindereth thee that thou worshippest not when I command
thee?" He answered,- "I am better than he, Thou createdst me
of Fire, and thou createdst him of clay."
He said, "Get thee down from Heaven; it shall not be given thee to
behave arrogantly therein; get thee hence, verily, thou shalt be
amongst the Despicable"
He said, "Respite me unto the Day when (all) shall be raised"
He said, "Verily, thou art of the number respited."
He said, "Now, for that Thou hast caused me to fall, I will lie
in wait for them in the straight path;
Then I will fall upon them from before and from behind, and from
their right hand and from their left; and Thou shalt not find the most
part of them thankful"
He said, "Depart from hence, despised and driven off: for those
of them that shall follow thee,- verily, I will fill hell with you
together!
And thou, Adam, dwell thou and thy Wife in Paradise, and eat from
whatever quarter ye will, but approach not this Tree, lest ye
become of the number of the Transgressors!"
And the Devil tempted them both that he might discover that which
was hidden from them of their Nakedness.
And he said, "Your Lord hath only forbidden you this Tree, lest ye
should become Angels, or become immortal"
And he swore unto them, "Verily, I am unto you one that
counselleth good."
And he misled them by ambitious Desire; and when they had tasted
of the Tree, their Nakedness appeared unto them, and they began to sew
together upon themselves the leaves of Paradise;
And their lord called unto them, "What! did I not forbid you this
Tree, and say unto you that Satan was your manifest Enemy?"
They said, "Oh, our lord! We have injured our own Souls, and if Thou forgivest us not, and art not merciful unto us, we shall be numbered amongst the Damned."
He said, "Get ye down, the one of you an Enemy to the other; and there
shall be unto you on the Earth an habitation and a provision for a
season:"-
He said, "Therein shall ye live, and therein shall ye die, and
from thence shall ye be taken forth."
The expression in the penultimate verse seems to be taken from
Genesis iii. 15. "And I will put enmity," &c.
Page 187
be a vain and unprofitable task to follow Mahomet through his
labyrinth of truth, discrepancy, and fiction. It will suffice if I
but allude to the stories of Abraham, who brake the idols of his
people, and miraculously escaped the fire into which the Tyrant
cast him :62 of the angel's visit, when "Sarah laughed" at the
promise of a son; and the Patriarch, vainly pleading for Sodom,
was told that though Lot would be saved, his wife was predestined
to destruction 63 of Abraham's hand being stayed from the
sacrifice of his son, who was ransomed by "a noble victim :"64 of Joseph,
in envy of whose beauty the Egyptian women cut their hands with
knives65 : of Jacob, who when the garment of Joseph was cut over
him by the messengers from Egypt, recovered his long lost sight:66
of Mount Sinai held above the heads of the terrified Israelites to
force their acceptance of the law: of the Seventy who, when
struck dead upon the same mount, were quickened to life again;67
of David, whom the mountains joined in singing the praises of
God: and of Solomon, on whose gigantic works the Genii and
Devils were forced to labour at his bidding: of the Genii, who
brought the throne of the Queen of Sheba to Solomon in "the
twinkling of an eye," and of the lap-wing that flew to her with
the royal summons:68 or the Jews who broke the Sabbath, and
were changed into apes:69 of Ezekiel who quickened a great multitude
the same effect. But in the Jewish tradition the raven shows the
mode of burial to Adam; in the Coran, to Cain the murderer.
Page 188
of the dead :70 and of Ezra who with his ass was raised to life after they had been dead one hundred years71.
Some favourite passages in the sacred record are the subject of special amplification and frequent repetition. Such are the history of Moses, the catastrophe of the Flood, and the overthrow of Sodom, through which the Arabian Prophet, ever recurring to them with a wearisome reiteration, seeks to deal forth exhortation and warning to the Meccans. A true conception of these curious recitals can be gained only from a perusal of the Coran itself. If the render desire a specimen, and have patience and interest for the tedious detail, let him refer to the history of Moses in the twentieth
and twenty-eighth Suras.
Time spent in study and composition
To acquire so minute a knowledge of considerable portions of
the Jewish Scriptures, to assimilate these to his former
materials,
and to work them up into the elaborate and rhythmical Suras
which begin now to extend to a considerable length, it was neces-
sary to devote much time and careful study. The revelation is
now seldom the spontaneous and impassioned eloquence of a
burning Faith; it is rather the tame and laboured result of
ordinary composition. For this end many a midnight hour must
have been stolen from sleep. - though ostensibly devoted to prayer
and the recitation of God's word. Such employment is probably
referred to in passages like the following;-
Oh thou that art wrapped up?
Arise during the Night, excepting a small portion thereof:-
A Half of it; or diminish therefrom a little,
Or add thereto. And recite the Coran with well measured
recitation.
Verily, We shall inspire thee with weighty words.
Verily, the hours of Night are the best for fervent maceration,
and distinct utterance.
Truly by Day thou hast a protracted Labour.
And commemorate the name of thy Lord, and consecrate thyself solely
unto Him.72
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Mahomet may have deceived himself into blending study and inspiration together
It is possilile that the convictions of Mahomet may have become
so blended with his grand object and course of action, that
the very study of the Coran, and effort to compose it, were
regarded as his best season of devotion. But the stealthy and
disingenuous manner in which he now availed himself of Jewish
information, producing the result, not only as original, but as
evidence of inspiration,73
begins to furnish proof of an active, though it may have been unconscious,
course of dissimulation and falsehood, to be palliated only by the miserable
apology of a pious end.
Imputations of his enemies
On this weak point his enemies were not slow to seize. They
accused him of fabrication, and of being assisted therein by
others; - "They are fables" said they "of the ancients which he hath had
written down; they are dictated unto him morning and evening."
To these most damaging imputations Mahomet could only answer; -
"He hath revealed it who knoweth that which is hidden in
heaven and in earth: He is forgiving and merciful 74."
Christian Scriptures little mentioned as yet
Up to this period there is hardly any mention of the Christian
Scriptures. The available sources of information regarding them
were probably as yet imperfect.
The Life of Mahomet, Volume II [Table of Contents]