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Life of Mahomet [Volume IV Supplement to Chapter 37]
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THE BIOGRAPHY OF MAHOMET, AND RISE OF ISLAM.
SUPPLEMENT TO CHAPTER THIRTY-SEVENTH.
Extracts from the Secretary of Wackidi
I PROPOSE in this appendix to place before the reader some specimens
of the traditions embodied by the Secretary of Wackidi in
the section of his work devoted to the person and character of
Mahomet. These will, I hope, prove interesting from the facts
they relate, as well as illustrate generally the style and
contents of the Mahometan biographies of the Prophet.
Prophecies regarding Mahomet
"Description of Mahomet in the Old Testament and the Gospels-
Mahomet was thus foretold: 'O Prophet! We have sent thee
to be a Witness and a Preacher of good tidings, and a Warner,
and a Defender of the Gentiles. Thou art my servant and my
messenger. I have called thee Al Mutawakkil (he that trusteth
in the Lord). He shall not be one that doeth iniquity, nor
one that crieth aloud in the streets; he shall not recompense evil
with evil, but he shall be one that passeth over and forgiveth. His
kingdom shall be Syria. Mahomet is my elected servant; he
shall not be severe nor cruel. I shall not take him away by
death, till he make straight the crooked religion; and till the
people say,- There is no God but the Lord alone. He shall open the
eyes of the blind, and the ears of the deaf; and the covered
hearts."
These are evident perversions of passages in Isaiah xlii. and lxi.
Ayesha in one set of traditions represents them as prophecies from
the Gospel, in ignorance apparently that they were quoted there
(Matt. xii. 18) as applying to Jesus.
His disposition
His disposition. When Ayesha was questioned about Mahomet,
she used to say: "He was a man like yourselves; he laughed
often and smiled much."- But how would he occupy himself at
home? "Even as any of you occupy yourselves. He would
mend his clothes, and cobble his shoes. He used to help me in
my household duties; but what he did oftenest was to sew. If he
had the choice between two matters, he would choose the easiest,
if no sin accrued therefrom. He never took revenge excepting
where the honour of God was concerned. When angry with any
person he would say "what hath taken such a one that he should
soil his forehead in the mud!"
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His humility was shewn by his riding upon asses accepting the
invitation even of slaves, and when mounted, by his taking
another behind him. He would say, "I sit at meals as a servant
doeth, and I eat like a servant: for I really am a servant;" and
he would sit as one that was always ready to rise. He discouraged
(supererogatory) fasting, and works of mortification.
When seated with his followers, he would remain long silent at a
time. In the Mosque at Medina, they used to repeat pieces of
poetry, and tell stories regarding the incidents that occurred in
the days or ignorance, and laugh ; and Mahomet, listening to
them, would smile at what they said.
Mahomet hated nothing more than lying, and whenever he knew
that any of his followers had erred in this respect, he would hold
himself aloof from them until he was assured of their repentance.
His speech
His manner of speech. - He did not speak rapidly, running his
words into one another, but enunciated each syllable distinctly, so
that what he said was imprinted in the memory of every one who
heard him. When at public prayers, it might be known from a
distance that he was reading, by the motion of his beard. He never
read in a singing or chanting style but he would draw out his
voice, resting at certain places. Thus, in the opening words of
a Sura, he would do so after
, after
and after
.
Gait.
His walking.- One says that at a funeral he saw Mahomet
walking, and remarked to a friend how rapidly he moved along;
it seemed as if he "were doubling up the ground." He used to walk
so rapidly that the people half ran behind him, and could hardly
keep up with him.
Habits in eating.
His eating. - He never ate reclining, for Gabriel had told him that
such was the manner of kings; nor had he ever two men to walk
behind him. He used to eat with his thumb and his two first
fingers; and when he had done he would lick them, beginning
with the middle one. When offered by Gabriel the valley of
Mecca full of gold, he preferred to forego it,- saying, that when
he was hungry he would come before the Lord lowly; and when
full, with praise.
Moderation
Excellence of his Morals. - A servant maid being once long in
returning from an errand, Mahomet was annoyed and said, "If it
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were not for the law of retaliation, I should have punished you
with flue toothpick" (i.e. with an inappreciably light
punishment.)
Customs at prayer
Mahomet at Prayers.- He used to stand for such a length of
time at prayer that his legs would swell. When remonstrated with,
he said- "What! Shall I not behave as a thankful servant should?"
He never yawned at prayer. When he sneezed he did so with
a subdued voice, covering his face. At funerals he never rode:
he would remain silent on such occasions, as if conversing with himself,
so that the people used to think he was holding communication with
the dead.
Refusal to make personal use of the tithes
While he accepted presents, he refused to ewe anything that had
been oftered as alms; neither would he allow any of his family to use
what had been brought as alms; for, said he, "alms are the impurity
of mankind" (i.e. that which cleanses their impurity.) His
scruples on this point were so strong, that he would not eat even
a date picked up on the road, lest perchance it might have dropped
from a load intended as tithes. One day, little Hasan was
playing by his grandfather when a basketful of dates was brought
in: on inquiry, Mahomet found that they were tithes, and ordered
them to be taken away and given to the poor Refugees. But
Hasan having taken up one to play with, had put it in his mouth;
the Prophet seeing this, opened the boy's mouth, and pulled it
out - saying, "the family of Mahomet may not eat of the
tithes."
Food
Food which he relished. - Mahomet had a special liking for
sweetmeats and honey. A tailor once invited him to his house
and placed before him barley bread, with stale suet; there was
also a pumpkin in the dish; now Mahomet greatly relished the
pumpkin. His servant Anas used to say as he looked at the
pumpkin- "Dear little plant, how the Prophet loved thee!" He
was also fond of cucumbers and of undried dates.
When a lamb or a kid was being cooked, Mahomet would go
to the pot, take out the shoulder, and eat it Abu Rafi tells us,
"I once slew a kid and dressed it. The Prophet asked me for
the forequarter and I gave it to him." Give me another, he said;
and I gave him the second. Then he asked for a third: -"O
Prophet!" I replied, "there are but two forequarters to a kid."
"Nay," said Mahomet, "hadst thou remained silent, thou wouldst
have handed to me as many forequarters as I asked for."
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He used to eat moist dates and cooked food together. What
he most relished was a mess of bread cooked with meat, and a
dish of dates dressed with butter and milk. When he ate fresh
dates he would keep the bad dates in his hand; one asked on a
certain occasion that he would give him the dates so rejected
"Not so," he answered; "what I do not like for myself; I do not
like to give to thee." Once a tray of fresh dates was brought to
him; he sat down on his knees by them, and taking them up by
handfuls, sent one to each of his wives; then taking another
handful, he ate it himself. He kept throwing the stones on his
left side, and the domestic fowls came and ate them up. Mahomet
used to have sweet (rain) water kept for his use.
Food disliked
Food which he disliked. - On Mahomet's first arrival at
Medina, Abu Ayab used to send him portions of baked food. On one
occasion the dinner was returned uneaten, without even the marks
of the Prophet's fingers. On being asked the reason, he explained
that he had, refrained from the dish because of the onions that
were in it; for the angel which visited him disliked them; but
others he said might freely eat of them. So also as to garlic;
he would never allow it to pass his lips; "for," said he,
"I have intercourse with one" (meaning Gabriel) "with
whom ye have not."
He disliked flour made of almonds, saying that it was "Spend
thrifts' food." He would never partake of the large lizard
(dhabb); for he thought it might have been the beast into
which a party of the children of Israel were changed; but he said-
there was no harm in others eating it.
When drinking milk Mahomet once said- "When a man eateth
let him pray thus - O Lord! grant thy blessing upon this, and
feed me with better than this! But to whomsoever the Lord
giveth milk to drink, let him say,- O Lord! grant thy blessing upon this,
and vouchsafe unto me an increase thereof; for there is no other
thing which doth combine both food and drink save milk alone."
Women and scents
Mahomet's fondness for women and scents. - A great array of
traditions are produced to prove that the Prophet liked these of
all things in the world the best.
Ayesha used to say,- "The Prophet loved three things,-
women, scents, and food; he had his heart’s desire of the two
first, but not of the last." In respect of scents further traditions
have been quoted in the Supplement to Vol. iii.
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Narrowness of his means at Medina.- A long chapter is devoted
to this subject, containing many such traditions as the following.
Fatima once brought Mahomet a piece of bread; it was the first
that had passed his lips for three days. Ayesha tells us that for
months together Mahomet did not get a full meal.
"Months used to pass," she says again, "and no fire would be
lighted in Mahomet's house either for baking bread or cooking
meat. How then did ye live? By the 'two black things'
dates and water, and by what the citizens used to send unto
us -the Lord requite them! such of them as had much cattle
would send us a little milk. The Prophet never enjoyed the
luxury of two kinds of food the same day; if he had flesh there
was nothing else; and so if he had dates; so likewise if he had
bread. We possessed no sieves, but used to bruise the grain and
blow off the husks. One night Abu Bakr sent Mahomet the leg
of a kid. Ayesha held it while the Prophet cut off a piece for
himself in the dark; and in his turn the Prophet held it while
Ayesha cut off a piece. 'What,' exclaimed the listeners, 'and
ye ate without a lamp!' 'Yea,' replied Ayesha, 'had we possessed
oil for a lamp, think ye not that we should have used it
for our food?"'
Abu Hureira explains the scarcity thus. "It arose," he says,
"from the great number of Mahomet's visitors and guests; for
he never sat down to food but there were some followers with
him. Even the conquest of Kheibar did not put an end to the
scarcity. Because Medina has an intractable soil, which is
ordinarily cultivated for dates only,- the staple food of its inhabitants.
There did not exist in the country means of support
sufficient for the greatly increased population. Its fruits were
the common products of the soil, which want little water; and
such water as was needed the people used to carry on their backs,
for in these days they had few camels. One year, moreover, a
disease (premature shedding) smote the palms, and the harvest
failed. It is true that a dish used to be sent for the Prophet's
table from the house of Sad ibn Obada, every day until his death,
and also in the same manner by other citizen.; and the Refugees
used to aid likewise; but the claims upon the Prophet increased
greatly, from the number of his wives and dependants."
I have noticed this subject before: Introduction, p. lx. The
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products of the surrounding country were no doubt at first inadequate
to the wants of the great numbers who flocked with
Mahomet to Medina. But it is evident that although Mahomet,
in the early years of the Hegira, may have been reduced to
common fare, he could hardly have ever suffered want, especially
with so many devoted followers about him. it was the contrast
between the luxury prevalent in the days when tradition was
growing up, and the simplicity of Mahomet's habits, which mainly
gave rise to these traditions. Thus Abd al Rahmin, when in
after years he used to fare sumptuously on fine bread and every
variety of meats, would weep at the contrast between his table
and the Prophet's straitened fare. Another upbraids a comrade
who could not live without bread made of the finest flour,-
"What," said he, "the Prophet of the Lord, to the last hour
of his life, never had two full meals on the same day, of bread
and of oil; and behold thou and thy fellows vainly luxuriate on
the delicacies of this life, as if ye were children!"
Appearance habits, &c
On Mahomet’s formal appearance. - The chief traditions on
this head have been embodied in the text. The following are of
a more special character.
He used to wear two garments. His izar (under-garment)
hung down three or four inches below his knees. His mantle
was not wrapped round him so as to cover his body; but he
would draw the end of it under his shoulder.
He used to divide his time into three parts: one was given to
God, the second allotted to his family, the third to himself.
When public business began to press upon him he gave up one half of
the latter portion to the service of others.
When he pointed he did so with his whole hand; and when he
was astonished he turned it over (with the palm upwards?) In
speaking with another, he brought his hand near to the person
addressed; and he would strike the palm of the left, on the
the thumb of the right hand. Angry, he would avert his face:
joyful, he would look downwards. He often smiled; and, when
he laughed, his teeth used to appear like hailstones.
In the interval allotted to others, he received all that came to
him, listened to their representations, and occupied himself in
disposing of their business and in hearing what they had to tell
him. He would say on such occasions:- "Let those that are
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here give information regarding that which passeth, to them
that are absent; and they that cannot themselves appear to make
known their necessities, let others report them to me in their
stead; the Lord will establish the feet of such in the day of
judgment."
Seal of prophecy
The Seal of Prophecy on the back of Mahomet -This, says one,
was a protuberance on the Prophet's back of the size and appearance
of a pigeon's egg. Abdallah ibn Sarjas describes it as having
been as large as his closed fist, with moles round about it.
Abu Ramtha, whose family were skilled in surgery, offered to
remove it; but Mahomet refused, saying,- "The Physician thereof
is he who placed it where it is." According to another tradition,
Mahomet said to Abu Ramtha "Come hither and touch my back:"
which he did, drawing his fingers over the prophetical seal; and
behold there was a collection or hairs upon the spot.
I have not noticed this "Seal" in the body of the work, because
it has been so surrounded by tradition with supernatural tales
that it is extremely difficult to determine what it really was. It
is said to have been the divine seal - which, according to the predictions
of the scriptures, marked Mahomet as the last of the Prophets
how far Mahomet himself encouraged this idea it is impossible
to say. From the traditions quoted above, it would seem to have
been nothing more than a mole of unusual size; and his saying
that "God had placed it there," was probably the germ of the
supernatural associations which grew up concerning it. Had
Mahomet really attributed any divine virtue to it, he would have
spoken very differently to one who offered to lance or remove it.
Hair
On his hair.--- It reached, says one of his followers, to his
shoulders; according to another to the tip of his ears. His hair
used to be combed: it was neither curling nor smooth. He had,
by one authority, four curled locks. His hair was ordinarily
parted, but he did not care if it was not so. According to
another tradition, - "The Jews and Christians used to let their
hair fall down, while the heathen parted it. Now Mahomet loved
to follow -the people of the Book in matters concerning which he
had no express command from above. So he used to let down
his hair without parting it. Subsequently, however, he fell Into
the habit of parting it."
Cupping
On his being cupped. - Some of the many traditions on this
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head have been quoted elsewhere. It was a cure which Gabriel
directed him to make use of. He had the blood buried lest the
dogs should get at it. On one occasion Mahomet having fainted
after being cupped, an Arab is said to have gone back from the
profession or Islam; (I suppose because the bodily weakness so
exhibited was regarded as inconsistent with the prophetic office?)
Moustache
On his moustache.- Mahomet used to clip his moustache.
A Majian once came to him and said, "You ought to clip your
beard and allow your moustaches to grow? "Nay," said the
Prophet, "for my Lord hath commanded me to clip the moustaches
and allow the beard to grow."
Dress
On his dress. - Various traditions are quoted on the different
colours he used to wear, - white chiefly, but also red, yellow, and
green. He sometimes put on woollen clothes. Ayesha, it is said,
shewed a piece of woollen stuff in which she swore that Mahomet
died. She adds that he once had a black woollen dress; and she
still remembered as she spoke, the contrast between the Prophet's
white skin, and the black cloth. "The odour of it, however,
becoming unpleasant, he cast it off,---for he loved sweet smells."
He entered Mecca, on the taking of the city (some say), with
a black turban. He had also a black standard. The end or
his turban used to hang down between his shoulders. He once
received the present of a scarf for a turban, which had a figured
or spotted fringe; and this he cut off before wearing it. He was
very fond of striped Yemen stuffs. He used to wrap his turban
many times round his head, and, "the edge of it used to appear
below like the soiled clothes of an oil-dealer."
He once prayed in a silken dress, and then cast it aside with
abhorrence, saying, "This it doth not become the pious to wear."
On another occasion, as he prayed in a figured or spotted mantle,
the spots attracted his notice; when he had ended he said,- "Take
away this mantle, for verily it hath distracted me in my prayers,
and bring me a common one." His sleeve ended at the wrist. The
robes in which he was in the habit of receiving embassies, and his fine
Hadhramaut mantle, remained with the Caliphs; when worn or
rent these garments were mended with fresh cloth; and in after
times the Caliphs used to wear them at the festivals. When he
put on new clothes, (either an under-garment, a girdle, or a
turban,) the Prophet would offer up a prayer such as this: -
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"Praise be to the Lord who hath clothed me with that which
shall hide my nakedness, and adorn me while I live, - I pray
thee for the good that is in this, and the good that hath been made
for it; and I seek refuge from the evil that is in the same, and from
the evil that hath been made for it."
Mahomet had a piece of tanned leather which was ordinarily
spread for him in the Mosque to pray upon. He had also a mat
of palm-fibre for the same purpose: this was always taken, after
the public prayers, into his wives' apartments for him to use
there.
He had a small apartment partitioned off from the Mosque
and laid with matting, into which he used to retire for the
evening prayer. The people, in their zeal to observe the fast of
Ramadhan, gathered together at a late hour in the Mosque for the nightly
prayer; and mime of them, fancying that the Prophet had fallen
asleep in his apartment, began to cough, as a sign for him to
issue forth. He came out and said,- "I have observed for some days
your coming for the nightly prayer into the Mosque, until I
feared that it would grow by custom arid prescription into a binding
ordinance for you so to come; and verily, if this were commanded,
my people could not fulfil the command. Wherefore,
my people, pray at evening-tide in your own houses. For truly
the best prayer of a man is that offered up in his own house,
excepting the prayers which are commanded to be offered in the
Mosque."
Golden Ring
On his golden ring. - Mahomet had a ring made of gold;
used to wear it, with the stone inwards, on his right hand. The
people began to follow his example and make rings of gold for
themselves. Then the Prophet sat down upon the pulpit, and
taking off the ring said,- "By the Lord, I will not wear this
ever again;" so saying, he threw it from him. And all the people
did likewise. According to another tradition, he cast it away
because it had distracted his attention when preaching; or because
the people were attracted by it. He then prohibited the use of
golden signet rings.
Silver Ring
On his silver ring. - I have given the purport of these traditions
elsewhere. Introduction, p. lxxvi.
Shoes
On his shoes.- His servant, Anas, had charge of his shoes and
of his water-pot; after his master's death he used to shew his
shoes. They were after the Hadhramaut pattern, with two thongs.
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In the year 100 or 110 A.H., one went to buy shoes at Mecca,
and the shoemaker offered to make them exactly after the model
of Mahomet's, which he, said he had seen in the possession
of Fatima, the granddaughter of Abbas. His shoes used to be
cobbled. He was in the habit of praying with his shoes on.
On one occasion, having taken them off at prayers, all the
people did likewise; but Mahomet told them there was no necessity
for doing so, for he had merely taken off his own because Gabriel
had apprised him that there was some dirt attaching to them.
The thongs of his shoes once broke and were mended by a new
piece; after the service Mahomet desired his shoes to be taken
away, and the thongs restored as they were; "for," said he, "1
was distracted at prayer thereby."
Tooth-picks
On his tooth-picks.- Ayesha tells us that
Mahomet never lay down, by night or by day, but on waking he applied the tooth-
pick to his teeth before he performed ablution. He used it so
much as to wear away his gums. The tooth-pick was always
placed conveniently for him at night, so that when he got up in
the night to pray, he might use it before his lustrations. One
says that he saw him with the tooth-pick in his mouth, and that
he kept saying
as if about to vomit. His tooth-
picks were made of the green wood of the palm tree. He never
travelled without one.
Articles of toilet
His articles of toilet. - I have noticed these in
the Supplement to Vol. iii. He very frequently oiled his hair, poured water on
his beard, and applied antimony to his eyes.
Amour.
His armour. - Four sections are devoted to the description
of Mahomet's armour, - his swords, coats of mail, shields, lances,
and bows.
Miscellaneous
The Prophet used to snuff simsim (sesamum),
and wash his hands in a decoction of the wild plum tree. When he was afraid
of forgetting anything, he would tie a thread on his finger or
his ring.
Horses
On his horses &c. - The first horse which Mahomet
ever possessed was one he purchased of the Bani Fazara, for ten owckeas
(ounces of silver); and he called its name Sakb (running water),
from the easiness of its paces. Mahomet was mounted on it at
the battle or Ohod, there being but one other horse from Medina
on the field. He had also a horse called Sabaha: he raced it.
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and it won, and he was greatly rejoiced thereat. He had a third
horse named Murtajis (neigher).
When his white mule arrived from Muckouckas, Mahomet sent
it to his wife Omm Salma; and she gave some wool and palms-
fibre, of which they made a rope and halter. Then the Prophet
brought forth a garment, doubled it fourfold, and throwing it over
the back of the beast, straightway mounted it, with one of his
followers behind him. It survived till the reign of Muavia.
Farwah (the Syrian governor, said to have died a martyr) sent
the Prophet a mule called Fizza, and he gave it to Abu Bakr;
also an ass, which died on the march back from the farewell pilgrimage.
He had another ass called Yafur.
Ali was anxious to breed a mule similar to that of Mahomet;
but Mahomet told him that "no one would propose so unnatural
a cross save he who lacked knowledge."
Riding camels
His riding camels. - Besides Al Caswa, Mahomet had a camel
called Adhba, which in speed outstripped all others. Yet one
day an Arab passed it when at its fleetest pace. The Moslems
were chagrined at this; but Mahomet said- "it is the property
of the Lord, that whensoever men exalt anything, or seek to exalt
it, then the Lord putteth down the same."
Milch camels
His milch camels. - Mahomet had twenty milch camels, the
same that were plundered at Al Ghaba. Their milk was for the
support of his family: every evening they gave two large skins
full. Omm Salma relates:- "Our chief food when we lived with
Mahomet was milk. The camels used to be brought from al Ghaba
every evening. I had one called Aris, and Ayesha one called Al
Samra. The herdman fed them at Al Juania, and brought them
to our homes in the evening. There was also one for Mahomet.
Hind and Asma, two herdmen, used to feed them one day at
Ohod, the other at Himna. They beat down leaves from the wild
trees for them, and on these the camels fed during the night.
They were milked for the guests of the Prophet, and his family got
what was over. If the evening drew in and the camels' milk was
late in being brought, Mahomet would say,- "The Lord make
thirsty him who maketh thirsty the family of Mahomet at night."
Milch flocks
His milch flocks. - Mahomet had seven goats which Omm Ayman
used to tesn (this probably refers to an early period of his
residence at Medina). His flocks grazed at Ohod and Himna
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alternately, and were brought back to the house of that wife,
whose turn it was to have Mahomet. A favourite goat having
died, the Prophet desired its skirt to be tanned. Mahomet
attached a peculiar blessing to the possession of goats.
"There is no house," he would say, "possessing a goat, but
a blessing abideth thereon; and there is no house possessing three
goats, but the angels pass the night there praying for its
inmates until the morning."
Servants
Mahomet's servants.- Fourteen or fifteen persons are
mentioned who served the Prophet at various times. his slaves he always
freed.
Houses
The houses of his wives.- Abdallah ibn Yazid relates that
he saw the houses in which the wives of the Prophet dwelt, at the time
when Omar ibn al Aziz, then governor of Medina, demolished
them.1 They were built or unburnt bricks, and had separate
apartments made of palm brandies, daubed (or built up) with
mud: he counted nine houses, each having separate apartments,
in the space from the house of Ayesha and the gate of Mahomet
to the house of Asma, daughter of Hosein. Observing the dwelling
place of Omm Salma, he questioned her grandson concerning
it; who told him that when the Prophet was absent on the expedition
to Duma, Omm Salma built up an addition to her house
with a wall of unburnt bricks. When Mahomet returned, he went
in to her and asked what that new building was. She replied, "I
purposed, O Prophet, to shut out the glances of men thereby!"
Mahomet answered, "O Omm Salma! verily, the most unprofitable
thing that eateth up the wealth of a believer is building."
A citizen of Medina, present at the time, confirmed this account,
and added that the curtains (purdas) of the doors were of black
hair-cloth. He was present, he said, when the despatch of the
Caliph Abd al Malik (A.H. 86-88) was read aloud, which commanded
that these houses should be brought within the area of the
Mosque, and he never witnessed sorer weeping than there was
amongst the people that day. One exclaimed- "I wish, by the
Lord! that they would leave them alone thus as they are; then
would those that spring up hereafter in Medina, and strangers
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from the ends of the earth, come and see what kind of abode
sufficed for the Prophet, and the sight thereof would deter men
from extravagance and pride."
There were four houses of unburned bricks, the apartments
being of palm branches; and five houses made of palm branches
built up with mud and without any separate apartments. Each
was three Arabian yards in length. Some say that they had
leather curtains for the doors. One could reach the roof with
the hand.
The house of Haritha was next to that of Mahomet. Now
whenever Mahomet took to himself another wife, he added a new
house to the row, and Haritha was obliged successively to remove
his house and build on the space beyond. At last this was
repeated so often that the Prophet said to those about him-
"Verily, it shameth me to turn Haritha over and over again out
of his house."
Properties
Mahomet's private property.- There were seven gardens which
Mukheirick, the Jew, left to Mahomet. Omar ibn at Azis, the
Caliph, said that when governor of Medina, he ate of the fruit of
these, and never tasted sweeter dates. Others say that these gardens
formed a portion of the confiscated estates of the Bani
Nadhir. They were afterwards dedicated perpetually to pious purposes.
Mukheirick is said to have been a learned Jewish priest and a
leader of the B. Cainucaa, who "recognized Mahomet by his marks,
and identified him as the promised Prophet." But the love of
his own religion prevailed,- so that he did not openly join Islam.
Nevertheless, on the day of Ohod he put on his armour, notwithstanding
it was the Sabbath day, and went forth with the Moslems
and was killed. His corpse was found and was buried near the
Moslems; but he was not prayed over, nor did Mahomet beg
mercy for his soul then or afterwards; the utmost he would say
of him was,
"Mukheirick, the best of the Jews!" He had large
possessions in groves and gardens, and left them all to Mahomet.
Mahomet had three other properties:-
I. The confiscated lands of the Bani Nadhir. The produce of
these was appropriated to his own wants. One of the plots was
called Mashruba Omm Ibrahim,- the summer garden of the slave
girl, Mary, the mother of Ibrahim,- where the Prophet used to
visit her.
page 338
II. Fadak; the fruits of this were reserved as a fund for indigent travellers.
III. The fifth share in Kheibar. This was divided into three
parts. Two were devoted for the benefit of the Moslems generally
(i.e. for state purposes); the proceeds of the third, Mahomet
assigned for the support of his own family; and what remained
over he added to the fund for the use of the Moslems.
Wells
The wells from which Mahomet drank. - A variety of wells
are
enumerated out of which Mahomet drank water, and on which
he invoked a blessing, spitting into them. One night as he sat
by the brink of the well called Gharsh, he said- "Verily, I am
sitting beside one of the fountains of Paradise." He praised its
water above that of all other wells, and not only drank of it,
but
bathed in it. He also drank from the fountain or Budhaa, taking
up the water in both his hands and sipping it. He would send
the sick to bathe in this fountain; "and when they had bathed,
it used to be as if they were loosed from their bonds."
The well called Ruma belonged to a man of the Bani Mozeina.
Mahomet said that it would be a meritorious deed if any one were
to buy this well and make it free to the public. Othman, hearing
this, purchased the well for 400 dinars, and attached a pulley to
it. Mahomet again happening to pass the well, was apprised of
what Othman had done; he prayed the Lord to grant him a
reward in Paradise, and calling for a bucket of water he drank
therefrom, and praised the water, saying that it was both cold
and sweet.
The Life of Mahomet, Volume IV [Table of Contents]