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WISDOM OF THE EAST
THE ALCHEMY OF
HAPPINESS
BY AL GHAZZALI
TRANSLATED FROM THE HINDUSTANI
BY CLAUD FIELD
“Knowledge of a part is better than ignorance
of the whole” (Abu’l Feda)
LONDON
JOHN MURRAY, ALBEMARLE STREET, W.
1910
PRINTED BY
HAZELL, WATSON AND VINEY, LD,
LONDON AND AYLESBURY.
CONTENTS
PAGE
Preface . 7
Introduction ...17
CHAP.
I. The Knowledge of Self . . .19
II. The Knowledge of God .... 31
III. The Knowledge of this World . . 43
IV. The Knowledge of the Next World . 51
Y. Concerning Music and Dancing as Aids
to the Religious Life ... 64
YI. Concerning Self-examination and the
Recollection of Cod . . . .75
VII. Marriage as a Help or Hindrance to
the Religious Life .... 87
VIII. The Love of God .
. 100
EDITORIAL NOTE
rpHE object of the Editors of this series is a
-L very definite one. They desire above ail
things that, in their humble way, these books
shall be the ambassadors of good-will and
understanding between East and West—the old
world of Thought and the new of Action. In
this endeavour, and in their own sphere, they
are but followers of the highest example in the
land. They are confident that a deeper know¬
ledge of the great ideals and lofty philosophy
of Oriental thought may help to a revival of
that true spirit of Charity which neither despises
nor fears the nations of another creed and colour.
Finally, in thanking press and public for the
very cordial reception given to the “ Wisdom
of the East ” Series, they wish to state that
no pains have been spared to secure the best
specialists for the treatment of the various
subjects at hand.
L. CRANMER-BYNG.
S. A. KAPADIA.
Northbrook Society,
185 Piccadilly, W.
6
PREFACE
Renan, whose easy-going mind was the exact
antithesis to the intense earnestness of Ghazzali,
calls him “ the most original mind among Arabian
philosophers.” 1 Notwithstanding this, his fame
as a philosopher has been greatly overshadowed
by Avicenna, his predecessor, and Averroes, his
successor and opponent. It is a significant fact
that the Encyclopcedia Britannica devotes five
columns to each of the others and only a column
and a half to Ghazzali. Yet it is doubtful
whether it is as a philosopher that he would have
wished to be chiefly remembered. Several
of his works, it is true, are polemics against the
philosophers, especially his Tehafot-al-falasifa, or
“ Destruction of the Philosophers,” and, as
Solomon Munk says in his Mela?iges de philosophise
Juive et Arabe, Ghazzali dealt “ a fatal blow ”
to Arabian philosophy in the East, from which it
never recovered, though it revived for a while in
Spain and culminated in Averroes. Philosopher
and sceptic as he was by nature, Ghazzali’s chief
work was that of a theologian, moralist, and
1 Renan : Averroes et Averroisme.
7
8
PREFACE
mystic, though his mysticism was strongly
balanced by common sense. He had, as he tells
us in his Confessions, experienced “ conversion ” ;
God had arrested him “ on the edge of the fire,”
and thenceforth what Browning says of the
French poet, Rene Gentilhomme, was true of
him:
Human praises scare
Rather than soothe ears all a-tingle yet
With tones few hear and live, and none forget.
In the same work he tells us that one of his
besetting weaknesses had been the craving for
applause, and in his Iliya ul-ulum (“ Revival of the
Religious Sciences”) he devotes a long chapter
to the dangers involved in a love of notoriety and
the cure for it.
After his conversion he retired into religious
seclusion for eleven years at Damascus (a corner
of the mosque there still bears his name—“ The
Ghazzali Corner ”) and Jerusalem, where he gave
himself up to intense and prolonged meditation.
But he was too noble a character to concentrate
himself entirely on his own soul and its eternal
prospects. The requests of his children—and
other family affairs of which we have no exact
information—caused him to return home. Besides
this, the continued progress of the Ismailians
(connected with the famous Assassins), the
spread of irreligious doctrines and the increasing
PREFACE
9
religious indifference of the masses not only filled
Ghazzali and his Sufi friends with profound
grief, but determined them to stem the evil with
the whole force of their philosophy, the ardour of
vital conviction, and the authority of noble
example.
In his autobiography referred to above Ghaz¬
zali tells us that, after emerging from a state of
Pyrrhonic scepticism, he had finally arrived at
the conclusion that the mystics were on the right
path and true “ Arifin,” or Knowers of God. 1
But in saying this he meant those Sufis whose
mysticism did not carry them into extravagant
utterances like that of Mansur Hallaj, who was
crucified at Bagdad (a.d. 922) for exclaiming “ I
am the Truth, or God.” In his Ihya-ul-ulum
Ghazzali says : “ The matter went so far that
certain persons boasted of a union with the
Deity, and that in His unveiled presence they
beheld Him, and enjoyed familiar converse with
Him, saying, ‘ Thus it was spoken unto us and
thus we speak.’ Bayazid Bistami (ob. a.d. 875)
is reported to have exclaimed, ‘ Glory be to me ! ’
This style of discourse exerts a very pernicious
influence on the common people. Some husband¬
men indeed, letting their farms run to waste,
set up similar pretensions for themselves ; for
human nature is pleased with maxims like these,
1 It may bo noted that there was a contemporary sect
called “ La-adria ”—agnostics.
10
PREFACE
which permit one to neglect useful labour with
the idea of acquiring spiritual purity through the
attainment of certain mysterious degrees and
qualities. This notion is productive of great
injury, so that the death of one of these foolish
babblers would be a greater benefit to the cause
of true religion than the saving alive of ten of
them.”
For himself Ghazzali was a practical mystic.
His aim was to make men better by leading them
from a merely notional acquiescence in the
stereotyped creed of Islam to a real knowledge of
God. The first four chapters of The Alchemy of
Happiness are a commentary on the famous
verse in the Hadis (traditional sayings of Mu¬
hammad), 44 He who knows himself knows God.”
He is especially scornful of the parrot-like repe¬
tition of orthodox phrases. Thus alluding to the
almost hourly use by Muhammadans of the
phrase, “ I take refuge in God ” (Ma‘udhib'illah /),
Ghazzali says, in the Ihya-ul-ulum : 44 Satan laughs
at such pious ejaculations. Those who utter
them are like a man who should meet a lion in a
desert, while there is a fort at no great distance,
and, when he sees the evil beast, should stand
exclaiming, 4 I take refuge in that fortress,’ with¬
out moving a step towards it. What will such
an ejaculation profit him ? In the same way
the mere exclamation, 4 1 take refuge in God,’
will not protect thee from the terrors of His
PREFACE
li
judgment unless thou really take refuge in Him.”
It is related of some unknown Sufi that when
asked for a definition of religious sincerity he
drew a red-hot piece of iron out of a blacksmith’s
forge, and said, “ Behold it ! ” This “ red-hot ”
sincerity is certainly characteristic of Ghazzali,
and there is no wonder that he did not admire his
contemporary, Omar Khayyam.
The little picture of the lion and the fort in
the above passage is a small instance of another
conspicuous trait in Ghazzali’s mind—his turn
for allegory. Emerson says, “ Whoever thinks
intently will find an image more or less luminous
rise in his mind.” In Ghazzali’s writings many
such images arise, some grotesque and some
beautiful. His allegory of the soul as a fortress
beleaguered by the “ armies of Satan ” is a
striking anticipation of the Holy War of Bunyan.
The greatest of all the Sufi poets, Jalaluddin
Rumi, born a century after Ghazzali’s death
(a.d. 1207), has paid him the compliment of
incorporating several of these allegories which
occur in the Iliya into his own Masnavi . Such
is the famous one of the Chinese and Greek artists,
which runs as follows :
“ Once upon a time the Chinese having chal¬
lenged the Greeks to a trial of skill in painting,
the Sultan summoned them both into edifices
built for the purpose directly facing each other,
and commanded them to show proof of their art.
12
PREFACE
The painters of the two nations immediately
applied themselves with diligence to their work.
The Chinese sought and obtained of the king
every day a great quantity of colours, but the
Greeks not the least particle. Both worked in
profound silence, until the Chinese, with a
clangor of cymbals and of trumpets, announced
the end of their labours. Immediately the king,
with his courtiers, hastened to their temple, and
there stood amazed at the wonderful splendour
of the Chinese painting and the exquisite beauty
of the colours. But meanwhile the Greeks, who
had not sought to adorn the walls with paints,
but laboured rather to erase every colour, drew T
aside the veil which concealed their work. Then,
wonderful to tell, the manifold variety of the
Chinese colours was seen still more delicately
and beautifully reflected from the walls of the
Grecian temple, as it stood illuminated by the
rays of the midday sun.”
This parable, of course, illustrates the favourite
Sufi tenet that the heart must be kept pure and
calm as an unspotted mirror. Similarly, the apo¬
logue of the elephant in the dark ( vide chap. II.)
has been borrowed by Jalaluddin Rumi from
Ghazzali.
Another characteristic of Ghazzali which ap¬
peals to the modern mind is the way in which he
exjDounds the religious argument from probability
much as Bishop Butler and Browning do (vide
PREFACE
13
the end of Chapter IV. in the present book).
Ghazzali might have said, with Blougram :
With me faith means perpetual unbelief
Kept quiet like the snake ’neath Michael’s foot,
Who stands calm just because he feels it writhe.
This combination of ecstatic assurance and
scepticism is one of those antinomies of the
human mind which annoy the rationalist and
rejoice the mystic. Those in whom they co-exist,
like Ghazzali in the eleventh century and Cardinal
Newman in the nineteenth, are a perpetual
problem to understand and therefore perennially
interesting :
He may believe, and yet, and yet.
How can he ?
Another point in which Ghazzali anticipates
Bishop Butler is his representation of punishment
as the natural working out of consequences, and
not an arbitrary infliction imposed ab extra . He
tries to rationalise the lurid threatenings of the
Koran.
In his own day Ghazzali was accused of having
one doctrine for the multitude and one for himself
and his intimate friends. Professor D. B. Mac¬
donald, of Hartford, after going thoroughly into
the matter, says, “ If the charge of a secret
doctrine is to be proved against Ghazzali it must
14
PREFACE
be on other and better evidence than that which
is now before ns.”
At any rate, Ghazzali has been accepted as an
orthodox authority by the Muhammadans, among
whom his title is Hujjat-el-Islam, “ The Proof of
Islam,” and it has been said, “ If all the books
of Islam were destroyed it would be but a slight
loss if only the Ihya of Ghazzali were preserved.”
The great modern reformer of Islam in India, the
late Sir Syud Ahmed, has had some portions of
this enormous work printed separately for the
purpose of familiarising the young Moslems at
Aligarh with Ghazzali.
The Ihya was written in Arabic, and Ghazzali
himself wrote an abridgment of it in Persian for
popular use which he entitled Kimiyale Saadat
(“ The Alchemy of Happiness ”). This little
book contains eight sections of that abridgment.
Theologians are the best judges of theologians,
and in conclusion we may quote Dr. August
Tholuck’s opinion of Ghazzali: “ This man, if ever
any have deserved the name, was truly a ‘ divine,’
and he may be justly placed on a level with
Origen, so remarkable was he for learning and
ingenuity, and gifted with such a rare faculty
for the skilful and worthy exposition of doctrine.
All that is good, noble, and sublime that his
great soul had compassed he bestowed upon
Muhammadanism, and he adorned the doctrines
of the Koran with so much piety and learning
PREFACE
15
that, in the form given them by him, they seem,
in my opinion, worthy the assent of Christians.
Whatsoever was most excellent in the philosophy
of Aristotle or in the Sufic mysticism he discreetly
adapted to the Muhammadan theology ; from
every school he sought the means of shedding
light and honour upon religion ; while his sincere
piety and lofty conscientiousness imparted to all
his writings a sacred majesty. He was the first
of Muhammadan divines.”
THE ALCHEMY OE
HAPPINESS
INTRODUCTION
Know, 0 beloved, that man was not created in
jest or at random, but marvellously made and
for some great end. Although he is not from
everlasting, yet he lives for ever; and though his
body is mean and earthly, yet his spirit is lofty
and divine. When in the crucible of abstinence
he is purged from carnal passions he attains to
the highest, and in place of being a slave to lust
and anger becomes endued with angelic qualities.
Attaining that state, he finds his heaven in the
contemplation of Eternal Beauty, and no longer
in fleshly delights. The spiritual alchemy which
operates this change in him, like that which trans¬
mutes base metals into gold, is not easily dis¬
covered, nor to be found in the house of every
old woman. It is to explain that alchemy and
its methods of operation that the author has
17 2
18
INTRODUCTION
undertaken this work, which he has entitled,
The Alchemy of Happiness. Now the treasuries
of God, in which this alchemy is to be sought,
are the hearts of the prophets, and he who seeks
it elsewhere will be disappointed and bankrupt
on the day of judgment when he hears the words,
“We have lifted the veil from off thee, and thy
sight to-day is keen.”
God has sent on earth a hundred and twenty-
four thousand prophets 1 to teach men the pre¬
scription of this alchemy, and how to purify
their hearts from baser qualities in the crucible
of abstinence. This alchemy may be briefly
described as turning away from the world to God,
and its constituents are four :
1. The knowledge of self.
2. The knowledge of God.
3. The knowledge of this world as it really is.
4. The knowledge of the next world as it
really is.
We shall now proceed to expound these four
constituents in order.
1 This is the fixed number of the prophets accordi ig to
Muhammadan tradition.
CHAPTER I
THE 3\N0WLEDGE OF SELF
Knowledge of self is the key to the knowledge
of God, according to the saying : “ He who
knows himself knows God,” 1 and, as it is written
in the Koran, “We will show them Our signs
in the world and in themselves , that the truth
may be manifest to them.” Now nothing is
nearer to thee than thyself, and if thou knowest
not thyself how canst thou know anything
else ? If thou sayest “ I know myself,” meaning
thy outward shape, body, face, limbs, and so
forth, such knowledge can never be a key to the
knowledge of God. Nor, if thy knowledge as
to that which is within only extends so far,
that when thou art hungry thou eatest, and
when thou art angry thou attachest some one,
wilt thou progress any further in this path,
for the beasts are thy partners in this. But
real self-knowledge consists in knowing the
following things : What art thou in thyself,
and from whence hast thou come ? Whither
1 Traditional saying of Muhammad.
19
20 THE KNOWLEDGE OF SELF
art thou going, and for what purpose hast thou
come to tarry here awhile, and in what does
thy real happiness and misery consist ? Some
of thy attributes are those of animals, some
of devils, and some of angels, and thou hast to
find out which of these attributes are accidental
and which essential. Till thou knowest this,
thou canst not find out where thy real happiness
lies. The occupation of animals is eating, sleeping,
and fighting ; therefore, if thou art an animal,
busy thyself in these things. Devils are busy
in stirring up mischief, and in guile and deceit ;
if thou belongest to them, do their work. Angels
contemplate the beauty of God, and are entirely
free from animal qualities ; if thou art of angelic
nature, then strive towards thine origin, that
thou mayest know and contemplate the Most
High, and be delivered from the thraldom of
lust and anger. Thou shouldest also discover
whv thou hast been created with these two
«/
animal instincts : whether that they should subdue
and lead thee captive, or whether that thou
shouldest subdue them, and, in thy upward
progress, make of one thy steed and of the other
thy weapon.
The first step to self-knowledge is to know
that thou art composed of an outward shape,
called the body, and an inward entity called the
heart, or soul. By “ heart,” I do not mean the
piece of flesh situated in the left of our bodies,
THE REALITY OF THE HEART 21
but that which uses all the other faculties as its
instruments and servants. In truth it does not
belong to the visible world, b ut to the invisible,
and has come into this world as a traveller visits *
a foreign country for the sake of merchandise,
and will presently return to its native land. It
is the knowledge of this entity and its attributes
which is the key to the knowledge of God.
Some idea of the reality of the heart, or spirit,
may be obtained by a man closing his eyes and
forgetting everything around except his indi¬
viduality. He will thus also obtain a glimpse of
the unending nature of that individuality. Too
* close inquiry, however, into the essence of spirit
is forbidden by the Law. In the Koran it is
written : “ They will question thee concerning
the spirit. Say : 4 The Spirit comes by the
command of my Lord.’ ” Thus much is known
of it that it is an indivisible essence belonging to
the world of decrees, and that it is not from
everlasting, but created. An exact philosophical
knowledge of the spirit is not a necessary pre¬
liminary to walking in the path of religion, but
comes rather as the result of self-discipline and
perseverance in that path, as it is said in the
Koran : “ Those who strive in our way, verily
we will guide them to the right paths.”
For the carrying on of this spiritual warfare
by which the knowledge of oneself and of God
is to be obtained, the body may be figured as a
22 THE KNOWLEDGE OF SELF
kingdom, the soul as its king, and the different
senses and faculties as constituting an army.
Reason may be called the vizier, or prime minister,
passion the revenue-collector, and anger the
police-officer. Under the guise of collecting
revenue, passion is continually prone to plunder
on its own account, while resentment is always
inclined to harshness and extreme severity.
Both of these, the revenue-collector and the
police-officer, have to be kept in due subordination
to the king, but not killed or expelled, as they
have their own proper functions to fulfil. But
if passion and resentment master reason, the
ruin of the soul infallibly ensues. A soul which
allows its lower faculties to dominate the higher
is as one who should hand over an angel to the
power of a dog or a Mussalman to the tyranny
of an unbeliever. The cultivation of demonic,
animal, or angelic qualities results in the pro¬
duction of corresponding characters, which in
the Day of Judgment will be manifested in visible
shapes, the sensual appearing as swine, the
ferocious as dogs and wolves, and the pure as
^angels. The aim of moral discipline is to purify *
the heart from the rust of passion and resentment,
till, like a clear mirror, it reflects the light of God.
- Some one may here object, “ But if man has
been created with animal and demonic qualities
as well as angelic, how are we to know that the
latter constitute his real essence, while the former
MAN’S HIGHEST FACULTY
23
are merely accidental and transitory ? ” To this
I answer that the essence of each creature is to
be sought in that which is highest in it and
peculiar to it. Thus the horse and the ass are
both burden-bearing animals, but the superiority
of the horse to the ass consists in its being adapted
for use in battle. If it fails in this, it becomes
degraded to the rank of burden-bearing animals.
Similarly with man : the highest faculty in him
is reason, which fits him for the contemplation of
God. If this predominates in him, when he dies,
he leaves behind him all tendencies to passion
and resentment, and becomes capable of associ¬
ation with angels. As regards his mere animal
' qualities, man is inferior to many animals, but
reason makes him superior to them, as it is
written in the Koran : “ To man we have subjected
all things in the earth.” But if his lower ten¬
dencies have triumphed, after death he will ever
be looking towards the earth and longing for
earthly delights.
Now the rational soul in man abounds in
marvels, both of knowledge and power. By
means of it he masters arts and sciences, can pass
in a flash from earth to heaven and back again,
can map out the skies and measure the distances
between the stars. By it also he can draw the
fish from the sea and the birds from the air, and
can subdue to his service animals like the elephant,
the camel, and the horse. His five senses are
24
THE KNOWLEDGE OF SELF
like five doors opening on the external world;
but, more wonderful than this, his heart has a
window which opens on the unseen world of
spirits. In the state of sleep, when the avenues
of the senses are closed, this window is opened
and man receives impressions from the unseen
world and sometimes foreshadowings of the
future. His heart is then like a mirror which
reflects what is pictured in the Tablet of Fate.
But, even in sleep, thoughts of worldly things
dull this mirror, so that the impressions it receives
are not clear. After death, however, such
thoughts vanish and things are seen in their naked
reality, and the saying in the Koran is fulfilled :
“ We have stripped the veil from off thee and
thy sight to-day is keen.”
This opening of a window in the heart towards
the unseen also takes place in conditions ap¬
proaching those of prophetic inspiration, when
intuitions spring up in the mind unconveyed
through any sense-channel. The more a man
purifies himself from fleshly lusts and concen¬
trates his mind on God, the more conscious will
he be of such intuitions. Those who are not
conscious of them have no right to deny their
i reality.
Nor are such intuitions confined only to those
of prophetic rank. Just as iron, by sufficient
polishing, can be made into a mirror, so any mind
by due discipline can be rendered receptive of
THE POWER OE THE SOUL
25
such impressions. It was at this truth the
Prophet hinted when he said, “ Every child is
born with a predisposition towards Islam ; then
his parents make a Jew, or a Christian, or a star-
worshipper of him.” Every human being has in
the depths of his consciousness heard the question
“ Am I not your Lord ? ” and answered 44 Yes ”
to it. But some hearts are like mirrors so befouled
with rust and dirt that they give no clear reflec¬
tions, while those of the prophets and saints,
though they are men 44 of like passions with us,”
are extremely sensitive to all divine impressions.
Nor is it only by reason of knowledge acquired
and intuitive that the soul of man holds the
first rank among created things, but also by
reason of power. Just as angels preside over
the elements, so does the soul rule the members
of the body. Those souls which attain a special
degree of power not only rule their own body
but those of others also. If they wish a sick man
to recover he recovers, or a person in health to
fall ill he becomes ill, or if they will the presence
of a person he comes to them. According as
the effects produced by these powerful souls are
.-good or bad they are termed miracles or sorceries,
^ddiese souls differ from common folk in three
ways : (1) What others only see in dreams they
see in their waking moments. (2)~WhIIe others’
wills only affecUThelr^own bodies, these, by will-
j power, can move bodies extraneous to themselves.
26
THE KNOWLEDGE OF SELF
(3) The knowledge which others acquire by
laborious learning comes to them by intuition.
These three, of course, are not the only marks
which differentiate them from common people,
but the only ones that come within our cognis¬
ance. Just as no one knows the real nature of
God but God Himself, so no one knows the real
nature of a prophet but a prophet. Nor is this
to be w r ondered at, as in every-day matters we
see that it is impossible to explain the charm of
poetry to one whose ear is insusceptible of cadence
and rhythm, or the glories of colour to one who
is stone-blind. Besides mere incapacity, there
are other hindrances to the attainment of spiritual
truth. One of these is externally acquired know¬
ledge. To use a figure, the heart may be repre¬
sented as a well, and the five senses as five streams
which are continually conveying water to it. In
order to find out the real contents of the heart
these streams must be stopped for a time, at any
rate, and the refuse they have brought with them
must be cleared out of the well. In other words,
if we are to arrive at pure spiritual truth, we
must put away, for the time, knowledge which
has been acquired by external processes and
which too often hardens into dogmatic prejudice.
A mistake of an opposite kind is made by
shallow people who, echoing some phrases which
they have caught from Sufi teachers, go about
decrying all knowledge. This is as if a person
THE PERCEPTION OF TRUTH 27
who was not an adept in alchemy were to go
about saying, “ Alchemy is better than gold,”
and were to refuse gold when it was offered to
him. Alchemy is better than gold, but real
alchemists are very rare, and so are real Sufis.
He who has a mere smattering of Sufism is not
superior to a learned man, any more than he who
has tried a few experiments in alchemy has
ground for despising a rich man.
Any one who will look into the matter will see
that happiness is necessarily linked with the
knowledge of God. Each faculty of ours delights
in that for which it was created : lust delights in
accomplishing desire, anger in taking vengeance,
the eye in seeing beautiful objects, and the ear
in hearing harmonious sounds. The highest
function of the soul of man is the perception of *
truth ; in this accordingly it finds its special
delight. Even in trifling matters, such as learning
chess, this holds good, and the higher the subject-
matter of the knowledge obtained the greater the
delight. A man would be pleased at being ad¬
mitted into the confidence of a prime minister,
but how much more if the king makes an intimate
of him and discloses state secrets to him !
An astronomer who, by his knowledge, can map
the stars and describe their courses, derives more
pleasure from his knowledge than the chess¬
player from his. Seeing, then, that nothing is
higher than God, how great must be the delight
28
THE KNOWLEDGE OF SELF
which springs from the true knowledge of
Him !
A person in whom the desire for this know¬
ledge has disappeared is like one who has lost his
appetite for healthy food, or who prefers feeding
on clay to eating bread. All bodily appetites
perish at death with the organs they use, but the
soul dies not, and retains whatever knowledge of
God it possesses; nay, increases it.
An important part of our knowledge of God
arises from the study and contemplation of our
own bodies, which reveal to us the power, wisdom,
and love of the Creator. His power, in that from
a mere drop He has built up the wonderful frame
of man ; His wisdom is revealed in its intricacies
and the mutual adaptibility of its parts; and His
love is shown by His not only supplying such
organs as are absolutely necessary for existence,
as the liver, the heart, and the brain, but those
which are not absolutely necessary, as the hand,
the foot, the tongue, and the eye. To these He
has added, as ornaments, the blackness of the
hair, the redness of lips, and the curve of the
eyebrows.
Man has been trulv termed a “ microcosm,” or
little world in himself, and the structure of his
body should be studied not only by those who
wish to become doctors, but by those who wish
to attain to a more intimate knowledge of God,
just as close study of the niceties and shades of
THE STEED AND ITS RIDER 29
language in a great poem reveals to us more and
more of the genius of its author.
But, when all is said, the knowledge of the soul
plays a more important part in leading to the
knowledge of God than the knowledge of our
body and its functions. The body may be
compared to a steed and the soul to its rider ;
the body was created for the soul, the soul for the
body. If a man knows not his own soul, which
is the nearest thing to him, what is the use of his
claiming to know others ? It is as if a beggar
who has not the wherewithal for a meal should
claim to be able to feed a town.
In this chapter we have attempted, in some
degree, to expound the greatness of man’s soul.
He who neglects it and suffers its capacities to
rust or to degenerate must necessarily be the
loser in this world and the next. The true
greatness of man lies in his capacity for eternal
progress, otherwise in this temporal sphere he is
the weakest of all things, being subject to hunger,
thirst, heat, cold, and sorrow. Those things he
takes most delight in are often the most injurious
to him, and those things which benefit him are
not to be obtained without toil and trouble. As
to his intellect, a slight disarrangement of matter
in his brain is sufficient to destroy or madden
him ; as to his power, the sting of a wasp is suffi¬
cient to rob him of ease and sleep ; as to his
temper, he is upset by the loss of a sixpence; as
30
THE KNOWLEDGE OF SELF
to his beauty, he is little more than nauseous
matter covered with a fair skin. Without fre¬
quent washing he becomes utterly repulsive and
disgraceful.
In truth, man in this world is extremely weak
and contemptible ; it is only in the next that he
will be of value, if by means of the 44 alchemy of
happiness 55 he rises from the rank of beasts to
that of angels. Otherwise his condition will be
worse than the brutes, which perish and turn to
dust. It is necessary for him, at the same time
that he is conscious of his superiority as the
climax of created things, to learn to know also
his helplessness, as that too is one of the keys to
the knowledge of God.
CHAPTER II
THE KNOWLEDGE OF GOD
It is a well-known saying of the Prophet that
“ He who knows himself, knows God ” ; that is,
by contemplation of his own being and attributes
man arrives at some knowledge of God. But
since many who contemplate themselves do not
find God, it follows that there must be some
special way of doing so. As a matter of fact,
there are two methods of arriving at this know¬
ledge, but one is so abstruse that it is not adapted
to ordinary intelligences, and therefore is better
left unexplained. The other method is as follows :
When a man considers himself he knows that
there was a time when he was non-existent, as
it is written in the Koran : “ Does it not occur to
man that there was a time when he was nothing ? ”
Further, he knows that he was made out of a drop
of water in which there was neither intellect,
nor hearing, sight, head, hands, feet, etc. From
this it is obvious that, whatever degree of per¬
fection he may have arrived at, he did not make
himself, nor can he now make a single hair.
31
32
THE KNOWLEDGE OF GOD
How much more helpless, then, was his condition
when he was a mere drop of water! Thus, as we
have seen in the first chapter, he finds in his own
being reflected in miniature, so to speak, the
power, wisdom, and love of the Creator. If all
the sages of the v r orld were assembled, and their
lives prolonged for an indefinite time, they could
not effect any improvement in the construction
of a single part of the body.
For instance, in the adaptation of the front
and side-teeth to the mastication of food, and
in the construction of the tongue, salivating
glands, and throat for its deglutition, we find a
contrivance which cannot be improved upon.
Similarly, whoever considers his hand, with its
five fingers of unequal lengths, four of them with
three joints and the thumb with only two, and
the way in wdiich it can be used for grasping, or
for carrying, or for smiting, will frankly acknow¬
ledge that no amount of human wdsdom could
better it by altering the number and arrangement
of the fingers, or in any other way.
When a man further considers how his various
* wants of food, lodging, etc., are amply supplied
from the storehouse of creation, he becomes aware
that God’s mercy is as great as His power and
wisdom, as He has Himself said, “ My mercy is
greater than My wrath,” and according to the
Prophet’s saying, “ God is more tender to His
servants than a mother to her suckling-child.”
GOD’S ATTRIBUTES REFLECTED 33
Thus from his own creation man comes to know
God’s existence, from the wonders of his bodily
frame God’s power and wisdom, and from the
ample provision made for his various needs
God’s love. In this way the knowledge of oneself
becomes a key to the knowledge of God.
Not only are man’s attributes a reflection of
God’s attributes, but the mode of existence of
man’s soul affords some insight into God’s mode
of existence. That is to say, both God and the
soul are invisible, indivisible, unconfined by
space and time, and outside the categories of
quantity and quality ; nor can the ideas of shape,
colour, or size attach to them. People find it
hard to form a conception of such realities as are
devoid of quality and quantity, etc., but a similar
difficulty attaches to the conception of our every¬
day feelings, such as anger, pain, pleasure, or love.
They are thought-concepts,and cannot be cognised
by the senses ; whereas quality, quantity, etc., are
sense-concepts. Just as the ear cannot take
cognisance of colour, nor the eye of sound, so, in
conceiving of the ultimate realities, God and the
soul, we find ourselves in a region in which sense-
concepts can bear no part. So much, however,
we can see, that, as God is Ruler of the universe,
and, being Himself beyond space and time,
quantity and quality, governs things that are so
conditioned, so the soul rules the body and its
members, being itself invisible, indivisible, and
3
34
THE KNOWLEDGE OF GOD
unlocated in any special part. For how can the
indivisible be located in that which is divisible ?
From all this we see how true is the saying of the
Prophet, “ God created man in His own likeness.”
r And, as we arrive at some knowledge of God’s
essence and attributes from the contemplation of
the soul’s essence and attributes, so we come to
understand God’s method of working and govern¬
ment and delegation of power to angelic forces,
etc., by observing how each of us governs his
own little kingdom. To take a simple instance :
suppose a man wishes to write the name of God.
First of all the wish is conceived in his heart, it
is then conveyed to the brain by the vital spirits,
>.the form of the word “ God ” takes shape in the
thought-chambers of the brain, thence it travels
by the nerve-channels, and sets in motion the
fingers, which in their turn set in motion the pen,
and thus the name “ God ” is traced on paper
exactly as it had been conceived in the writer’s
brain. Similarly, when God wills a thing it
appears in the spiritual plane, which in the Koran
is called “ The Throne ” 1 ; from the throne it
passes, by a spiritual current, to a lower plane
called “ The Chair” 2 ; then the shape of it appears
on the “ Tablet of Destiny ” 3 ; whence, by the
mediation of the forces called “ angels,” it
assumes actuality, and appears on the earth in
the form of plants, trees, and animals, repre-
1 A1 Arsh. 2 A1 Kursi. 3 A1 Lauh A1 Mahfuz.
A KING IN MINIATURE
35
senting the will and thought of God, as the
written letters represent the wish conceived in
the heart and the shape present in the brain of
the writer.
No one can understand a king but a king ;
therefore God has made each of us a king in
miniature, so to speak, over a kingdom which is
an infinitely reduced copy of His own. In the
kingdom of man God’s “ throne ” is represented
by the soul, the Archangel by the heart, “ the
chair ” by the brain, “ the tablet ” by the
treasure-chamber of thought. The soul, itself
unlocated and indivisible, governs the body as
God governs the universe. In short, each of us
is entrusted with a little kingdom, and charged
not to be careless in the administration of it.
As regards the recognition of God’s providence,
there are many degrees of knowledge. The mere
physicist is like an ant who, crawling on a sheet
of paper and observing black letters spreading
over it, should refer the cause to the pen alone.
The astronomer is like an ant of somewhat wider
vision who should catch sight of the fingers moving
the pen, i.e. he knows that the elements are under
the power of the stars, but he does not know that
the stars are under the power of the angels.
Thus, owing to the different degrees of perception
in people, disputes must arise in tracing effects to
causes. Those whose eyes never see beyond the
world of phenomena are like those who mistake
36
THE KNOWLEDGE OF GOD
servants of the lowest rank for the king. The
laws of phenomena must be constant, or there
could be no such thing as science; but it is a
great error to mistake the slaves for the master.
As long as this difference in the perceptive
faculty of observers exists, disputes must neces¬
sarily go on. It is as if some blind men, hearing
that an elephant had come to their town, should
go and examine it. The only knowledge of it
which they can obtain comes through the sense
of touch : so one handles the animal’s leg,
another his tusk, another his ear, and, according
to their several perceptions, pronounce it to be
a column, a thick pole, or a quilt, each taking
a part for the whole. So the physicist and
astronomer confound the laws they perceive with
the Lawgiver. A similar mistake is attributed
to Abraham in the Koran, where it is related that
he turned successively to stars, moon, and sun
as the objects of his worship, till, grown aware of
Him who made all these, he exclaimed, “ I love
not them that set.”
We have a common instance of this referring
to second causes what ought to be referred to the
First Cause in the case of so-called illness. For
instance, if a man ceases to take any interest in
worldly matters, conceives a distaste for common
pleasures, and appears sunk in depression, the
doctor will say, “ This is a case of melancholy,
1 Koran, chap. vi.
FROM THE WORLD TO THE CREATOR 37
and requires such and such a prescription.”
The physicist will say, “ This is a dryness of the
brain caused by hot weather and cannot be re¬
lieved till the air becomes moist.” The astrologer
will attribute it to some particular conjunction
or opposition of planets. “ Thus far their
wisdom reaches,” says the Koran. It does not
occur to them that what has really happened is
this : that the Almighty has a concern for the
welfare of that man, and has therefore com¬
manded his servants, the planets or the elements,
to produce such a condition in him that he may
turn away from the world to his Maker. The
knowledge of this fact is a lustrous pearl from
the ocean of inspirational knowledge, to which
all other forms of knowledge are as islands in
the sea.
The doctor, physicist, and astrologer are
doubtless right each in his particular branch of
knowledge, but they do not see that illness is,
so to speak, a cord of love by which God draws
to Himself the saints concerning whom He has
said, “ I was sick and ye visited Me not.” Illness
itself is one of those forms of experience by which
man arrives at the knowledge of God, as He says
by the mouth of His Prophet, ct Sicknesses them¬
selves are My servants, and are attached to My
chosen.”
The foregoing remarks may enable us to enter
a little more fully into the meaning of those
38
THE KNOWLEDGE OF GOD
exclamations so often on the lips of the Faithful :
“ God is holy,” “ Praise be to God,” “ There is
no God but God,” “ God is great.” Concerning
the last we may say that it does not mean that
God is greater than creation, for creation is His
manifestation as light manifests the sun, and it
would not be correct to say that the sun is
greater than its own light. It rather means that
God’s greatness immeasurably transcends our
cognitive faculties, and that we can only form
a very dim and imperfect idea of it. If a child
asks us to explain to him the pleasure which
exists in wielding sovereignty, we may say it is
like the pleasure he feels in playing bat and ball,
though in reality the two have nothing in common
except that they both come under the category of
pleasure. Thus, the exclamation “ God is great ”
means that His greatness far exceeds all our
powers of comprehension. Moreover, such im¬
perfect knowledge of God as we can attain to
is not a mere speculative knowledge, but must
be accompanied by devotion and worship. When
a man dies he has to do with God alone, and if
we have to live with a person, our happiness
entirely depends on the degree of affection we
feel towards him. Love is the seed of happiness,
and love to God is fostered and developed by
worship. Such worship and constant remem¬
brance of God implies a certain degree of austerity
and curbing of bodily appetites. Not that a
SPIRITUAL GUIDES
39
man is intended altogether to abolish these, for
then the human race would perish. But strict
limits must be set to their indulgence, and as
a man is not the best judge in his own case as to
what these limits should be, he had better con¬
sult some spiritual guide on the subject. Such
spiritual guides are the prophets, and the laws
which they have laid down under divine inspira¬
tion prescribe the limits which must be observed
in these matters. He who transgresses these
limits “ wrongs his own soul,” as it is written in
the Koran.
Notwithstanding this clear pronouncement of
the Koran there are those who, through their
ignorance of God, do transgress these limits, and
this ignorance may be due to several different
causes : Firstly, there are some who, failing to
find God by observation, conclude that there is
no God and that this world of wonders made
itself, or existed from everlasting. They are
like a man who, seeing a beautifully-written
letter, should suppose that it had written itself
without a writer, or had always existed. People
in this state of mind are so far gone in error that
it is of little use to argue with them. Such are
some of the physicists and astronomers to whom
we referred above.
Some, through ignorance of the real nature of
the soul, repudiate the doctrine of a future life,
in which man will be called to account and be
40
THE KNOWLEDGE OF GOD
rewarded or punished. They regard themselves
as no better than animals or vegetables, and
equally perishable. Some, on the other hand,
believe in God and a future life, but with a weak
belief. They say to themselves, “ God is great
and independent of us ; our worship or abstin¬
ence from worship is a matter of entire indiffer¬
ence to Him.” Their state of mind is like that
of a sick man who, when prescribed a certain
regime by his doctor, should say, “ Well, if I
follow it or don’t follow it, what does it matter
to the doctor ? ” It certainly does not matter to
the doctor, but the patient may destroy himself
by his disobedience. Just as surely as unchecked
sickness of body ends in bodily death, so does
uncured disease of the soul end in future misery,
according to the saying of the Koran, “ Only
those shall be saved who come to God with a
sound heart.”
A fourth kind of unbelievers are those who
say, “ The Law tells us to abstain from anger,
lust, and hypocrisy. This is plainly impossible,
for man is created with these qualities inherent
in him. You might as well tell us to make black
white.” These foolish people ignore the fact
that the law does not tell us to uproot these
passions, but to restrain them within due limits,
so that, by avoiding the greater sins, we may
obtain forgiveness of the smaller ones. Even
the Prophet of God said, “ I am a man like you,
EXCEPT YE STRIVE
41
and get angry like others ” ; and in the Koran it
is written, “ God loves those who swallow down
their anger,” not those who have no anger at all.
A fifth class lay stress on the beneficence of
God, and ignore His justice, saying to themselves,
“ Well, whatever we do, God is merciful.” They
do not consider that, though God is merciful,
thousands of human beings perish miserably in
hunger and disease. They know that whosoever
wishes for a livelihood, or for wealth, or learning,
must not merely say, “ God is merciful,” but
must exert himself. Although the Koran says,
“ Every living creature’s support comes from
God,” it is also written, “ Man obtains nothing
except by striving.” The fact is, such teaching
is really from the devil, and such people only
speak with their lips and not with their heart.
A sixth class claim to have reached such a
degree of sanctity that sin cannot affect them.
Yet, if you treat one of them with disrespect, he
will bear a grudge against you for years, and if
one of them be deprived of a morsel of food
which he thinks his due, the whole world will
appear dark and narrow to him. Even if any of
them do really conquer their passions, they have
no right to make such a claim, for the prophets,
the highest of human kind, constantly confessed
and bewailed their sins. Some of them had
such a dread of sin that they even abstained from
lawful things ; thus, it is related of the Prophet
42
THE KNOWLEDGE OF GOD
that, one day, when a date had been brought to
him he would not eat it, as he was not sure that
it had been lawfully obtained. Whereas these
free-livers will swallow gallons of wine and claim
(I shudder as I write) to be superior to the Prophet
whose sanctity was endangered by a date, while
theirs is unaffected by all that wine ! Surely
they deserve that the devil should drag them
down to perdition. Real saints know that he
who does not master his appetites does not de¬
serve the name of a man, and that the true
Moslem is one who will cheerfully acknowledge
the limits imposed by the Law. He who endeav¬
ours, on whatever pretext, to ignore its obliga¬
tions is certainly under Satanic influence, and
should be talked to, not with a pen, but with a
sword. These pseudo-mystics sometimes pretend
to be drowned in a sea of wonder, but if you ask
them what they are wondering at they do not
know. They should be told to wonder as much
as they please, but at the same time to remember
that the Almighty is their Creator and that they
are His servants.
CHAPTER III
THE KNOWLEDGE OF THIS WORLD
This world is a stage or market-place passed by
pilgrims on their way to the next. It is here
that they are to provide themselves with pro¬
visions for the way; or, to put it plainly, man
acquires here, by the use of his bodily senses,
some knowledge of the works of God, and, through
them, of God Himself, the sight of whom will
constitute his future beatitude. It is for the
acquirement of this knowledge that the spirit of
man has descended into this world of water and
clay. As long as his senses remain with him he
is said to be “in this world ” ; when they depart,
and only his essential attributes remain, he is
said to have gone to “ the next world.”
While man is in this world, two things are
necessary for him: first, the protection and nurture
of his soul ; secondly, the care and nurture of his
body. The proper nourishment of the soul, as
above shown, is the knowledge and love of God,
and to be absorbed in the love of anything but
43
44 THE KNOWLEDGE OF THIS WORLD
God is the ruin of the soul. The body, so to
speak, is simply the riding-animal of the soul, and
perishes while the soul endures. The soul should
take care of the body, just as a pilgrim on his
way to Mecca takes care of his camel; but if
the pilgrim spends his whole time in feeding and
adorning his camel, the caravan will leave him
behind, and he will perish in the desert.
Man’s bodily needs are simple, being comprised
under three heads : food, clothing, and a dwelling-
place ; but the bodily desires which were im¬
planted in him with a view to procuring these
are apt to rebel against reason, which is of
later growth than they. Accordingly, as we
saw above, they require to be curbed and re¬
strained by the divine laws promulgated by the
prophets.
Considering the world with which we have for
a time to do, we find it divided into three depart¬
ments—animal, vegetable, and mineral. The
products of all three are continually needed by
man and have given rise to three principal
occupations—those of the weaver, the builder,
and the worker in metal. These, again, have
many subordinate branches, such as tailors,
masons, smiths, etc. None can be quite inde¬
pendent of others ; this gives rise to various
business-connections and relations, and these too
frequently afford occasions for hatred, envy,
jealousy, and other maladies of the soul. Hence
THE THREE NECESSITIES
15
come quarrels and strife, and the need of political
and civil government and knowledge of law.
Thus the occupations and businesses of the
world have become more and more complicated
and troublesome, chiefly owing to the fact that
men have forgotten that their real necessities are
only three—clothing, food, and shelter, and that
these exist only with the object of making the
body a fit vehicle for the soul in its journey to¬
wards the next world. They have fallen into
the same mistake as the pilgrim to Mecca, men¬
tioned above, who, forgetting the object of his
pilgrimage and himself, should spend his whole
time in feeding and adorning his camel. Unless
a man maintains the strictest watch he is certain
to be fascinated and entangled by the world,
which, as the Prophet said, is “ a more potent
sorcerer than Harut and Marut.” 1
The deceitful character of the world comes out
in the following ways. In the first place, it
pretends that it will always remain with you,
while, as a matter of fact, it is slipping away from
you, moment by moment, and bidding you fare¬
well, like a shadow which seems stationary, but
is actually always moving. Again, the world
presents itself under the guise of a radiant but
immoral sorceress, pretends to be in love with
you, fondles you, and then goes off to your
enemies, leaving you to die of chagrin and despair.
1 Two fallen angels.
46 THE KNOWLEDGE OF THIS WORLD
Jesus (upon whom be peace !) saw the world
revealed in the form of an ugly old hag. He
asked her how many husbands she had possessed ;
she replied that they were countless. He asked
whether they had died or been divorced ; she
said that she had slain them all. “I marvel,”
he said, “ at the fools who see what you have
done to others, and still desire you.”
This sorceress decks herself out in gorgeous
and jewelled apparel and veils her face. Then
she goes forth to seduce men, too many of whom
follow her to their own destruction. The Prophet
has said that in the Judgment Day the world will
appear in the form of a hideous witch with green
eyes and projecting teeth. Men, beholding her,
will say, “ Mercy on us ! who is this ? ” The
angels will answer, “ This is the world for whose
sake you quarrelled and fought and embittered one
another’s lives.” Then she will be cast into hell,
whence she will cry out, “ 0 Lord ! where are
those, my former lovers ? ” God will then com¬
mand that they be cast after her.
Whoever will seriously contemplate the past
eternity during which the world was not in
existence, and the future eternity during which
it will not be in existence, will see that it is
essentially like a journey, in which the stages
are represented by years, the leagues by months,
the miles by days, and the steps by moments.
What words, then, can picture the folly of the
INDULGENCE AND RETRIBUTION 47
man who endeavours to make it liis permanent
abode, and forms plans ten years ahead regarding
things he may never need, seeing that very
possibly he may be under the ground in ten days !
Those who have indulged without limit in the
pleasures of the world, at the time of death will
be like a man who has gorged himself to repletion
on delicious viands and then vomits them up.
The deliciousness has gone, but the disgrace
remains. The greater the abundance of the
possessions which they have enjoyed in the shape
of gardens, male and female slaves, gold, silver,
etc., the more keenly they will feel the bitterness
of parting from them. This is a bitterness which
will outlast death, for the soul which has con¬
tracted covetousness as a fixed habit will neces¬
sarily in the next world suffer from the pangs of
unsatisfied desire.
Another dangerous property of worldly things
is that they at first appear as mere trifles, but
each of these so-called “ trifles ” branches out
into countless ramifications until they swallow up
the whole of a man’s time and energy. Jesus
(on whom be peace !) said, “ The lover of the
world is like a man drinking sea-water ; the more
he drinks, the more thirsty he gets, till at last
he perishes with thirst unquenched.” The Pro¬
phet said, “You can no more mix with the
world without being contaminated by it than
you can go into water without getting wet.”
48 THE KNOWLEDGE OF THIS WORLD
The world is like a table spread for successive
relays of guests who come and go. There are
gold and silver dishes, abundance of food and
perfumes. The wise guest eats as much as is
sufficient for him, smells the perfumes, thanks
his host, and departs. The foolish guest, on the
other hand, tries to carry off some of the gold
and silver dishes, only to find them wrenched out
of his hands and himself thrust forth, disappointed
and disgraced.
We may close these illustrations of the deceit¬
fulness of the world with the following short
parable. Suppose a ship to arrive at a certain
well-wooded island. The captain of the ship
tells the passengers he will stop a few hours
there, and that they can go on shore for a short
time, but warns them not to delay too long.
Accordingly the passengers disembark and stroll
in different directions. The wisest, however,
return after a short time, and, finding the ship
empty, choose the most comfortable places in it.
A second band of the passengers spend a some¬
what longer time on the island, admiring the
foliage of the trees and listening to the song of
the birds. Coming on board, they find the best
places in the ship already occupied, and have to
content themselves with the less comfortable
ones. A third party wander still farther, and,
finding some brilliantly coloured stones, carry
them back to the ship. Their lateness in coming
KNOWLEDGE AND GOOD DEEDS 49
on board compels them to stow themselves away
in the lower parts of the ship, where they find
their loads of stones, which by this time have
lost all their brilliancy, very much in their way.
The last group go so far in their wanderings that
they get quite out of reach of the captain’s voice
calling them to come on board, and at last he has
to sail away without them. They wander about
in a hopeless condition and finally either perish
of hunger or fall a prey to wild beasts.
The first group represents the faithful who
keep aloof from the world altogether, and the
last group the infidels who care only for this
world and nothing for the next. The two inter¬
mediate classes are those who preserve their
faith, but entangle themselves more or less with
the vanities of things present.
Although we have said so much against the
W'orld, it must be remembered that there are
some things in the world which are not oj it,
such as knowledge and good deeds. A man
carries what knowledge he possesses with him
into the next world, and, though his good deeds
have passed, yet the effect of them remains in
his character. Especially is this the case with
acts of devotion, which result in the perpetual
remembrance and love of God. These are among
“ those good things ” which, as the Koran says,
“ pass not away.”
Other good things there are in the world, such
4
50 THE KNOWLEDGE OF THIS WOELD
as marriage, food, clothing, etc., which a wise
man uses just in proportion as they help him to
attain to the next world. Other things which
engross the mind, causing it to cleave to this
world and to be careless of the next, are purely
evil and were alluded to by the Prophet when he
said, “ The world is a curse, and all which is in
it is a curse, except the remembrance of God, and
that which aids it.”
CHAPTER IV
THE KNOWLEDGE OF THE NEXT WORLD
As regards the joys of heaven and the pains of
hell which will follow this life, all believers in the
Koran and the Traditions are sufficiently informed.
But it often escapes them that there is also a
spiritual heaven and hell, concerning the former
of which God said to His Prophet, “ Eye hath
not seen, nor ear heard, neither hath it entered
into the heart of man to conceive the things
which are prepared for the righteous.” In the
heart of the enlightened man there is a window
opening on the realities of the spiritual world, so
that he knows, not by hearsay or traditional *
belief, but by actual experience, what produces
wretchedness or happiness in the soul just as
clearly and decidedly as the physician knows
what produces sickness or health in the body.
He recognises that knowledge of God and worship
are medicinal, and that ignorance and sin are
deadly poisons for the soul. Many even so-
called “ learned ” men, from blindly following
51
52 KNOWLEDGE OF THE NEXT WORLD
others’ opinions, have no real certainty in their
beliefs regarding the happiness or misery of souls
in the next world, but he who will attend to the
matter with a mind unbiassed by prejudice will
arrive at clear convictions on this matter.
The effect of death on the composite nature of
man is as follows : Man has two souls, an animal
soul and a spiritual soul, which latter is of angelic
nature. The seat of the animal soul is the
heart, from which this soul issues like a subtle
vapour and pervades all the members of the body,
giving the power of sight to the eye, the power
of hearing to the ear, and to every member the
faculty of performing its own appropriate func¬
tions. It may be compared to a lamp carried
about within a cottage, the light of which falls
upon the walls wherever it goes. The heart is
the wick of this lamp, and when the supply of oil
is cut off for any reason, the lamp dies. Such is
the death of the animal soul. With the spiritual,
or human soul, the case is different. It is in¬
divisible, and by it man knows God. It is, so to
speak, the rider of the animal soul, and when that
perishes it still remains, but is like a horseman
who has been dismounted, or like a hunter who
has lost his weapons. That steed and those
weapons were granted the human soul that by
means of them it might pursue and capture the
Phoenix of the love and knowledge of God. If it
has effected that capture, it is not a grief but
INDIVIDUALITY OF THE SOUL 53
rather a relief to be able to lay those weapons
aside, and to dismount from that weary steed.
Therefore the Prophet said, “ Death is a welcome
gift of God to the believer.” But alas for that
soul which loses its steed and hunting-weapons
before it has captured the prize ! Its misery and
regret will be indescribable.
A little further consideration will show how
| entirely distinct the human soul is from the body
i'and its members. Limb after limb may be para¬
lysed and cease working, but the individuality of
the soul is unimpaired. Further, the body which
you have now is no longer the body which you
had as a child, but entirely different, yet your
Personality now is identical with your personality
then. It is therefore easy to conceive of it as
persisting when the body is done with altogether,
along with its essential attributes which were
independent of the body, such as the knowledge
and love of God. This is the meaning of that
saying of the Koran, “ The good things abide.”
But if, instead of carrying away with you know¬
ledge, you depart in ignorance of God, this ignor¬
ance also is an essential attribute, and will abide as
darkness of soul and the seed of misery. Therefore
the Koran says, “He who is blind in this life will be
blind in the next life, and astray from the path.”
The reason of the human spirit seeking to return
to that upper world is that its origin was from
thence, and that it is of angelic nature. It was
54 KNOWLEDGE OF THE NEXT WORLD
sent down into this lower sphere against its will
to acquire knowledge and experience, as God said
in the Koran : “Go down from hence, all of you ;
there will come to you instruction from Me, and
they who obey the instruction need not fear,
neither shall they be grieved.” The verse, “ I
breathed into man of My spirit,” also points to
the celestial origin of the human soul. Just as
the health of the animal soul consists in the
equilibrium of its component parts, and this
equilibrium is restored, when impaired, by appro¬
priate medicine, so the health of the human soul
consists in a moral equilibrium which is main¬
tained and repaired, when needful, by ethical
instruction and moral precepts.
As regards its future existence, we have already
seen that the human soul is essentially inde¬
pendent of the body. All objections to its
existence after death based on the supposed
necessity of its recovering its former body fall,
therefore, to the ground. Some theologians have
supposed that the human soul is annihilated
after death and then restored, but this is con¬
trary both to reason and to the Koran. The
former shows us that death does not destroy the
essential individuality of a man, and the Koran
says, “ Think not that those who are slain in the
path of God are dead ; nay, they are alive,
rejoicing in the presence of their Lord, and in
the grace bestowed on them.” Not a word is
REVELATIONS OF THE UNSEEN 55
said in the Law about any of the dead, good or
bad, being annihilated. Nay, the Prophet is said
to have questioned the spirits of slain infidels as
to whether they had found the punishments,
with which he had threatened them, real or not.
When his followers asked him what was the good
of questioning them, he replied, “ They hear my
words better than you do.”
Some Sufis have had the unseen world of
heaven and hell revealed to them when in a state
of death-like trance. On their recovering con¬
sciousness their faces betray the nature of the
revelations they have had by marks of joy or
terror. But no visions are necessary to prove
what will occur to every thinking man, that when
death has stripped him of his senses and left him
nothing but his bare personality, if while on earth
he has too closely attached himself to objects
perceived by the senses, such as wives, children,
wealth, lands, slaves, male and female, etc., he
must necessarily suffer when bereft of those
objects. Whereas, on the contrary, if he has as
far as possible turned his back on all earthly
objects and fixed his supreme affection upon
God, he will welcome death as a means of escape
from worldly entanglements, and of union with
Him whom he loves. In his case the Prophet’s
sayings will be verified : “ Death is a bridge which
unites friend to friend,” and “ The world is a
paradise for infidels, but a prison for the faithful.”
KNOWLEDGE OF THE NEXT WORLD
On the other hand, the pains which souls suffer
after death all have their source in excessive love
of the w T orld. The Prophet said that every un¬
believer, after death, will be tormented by ninety-
nine snakes, each having nine heads. Some
simple-minded people have examined the un¬
believers’ graves and wondered at failing to see
these snakes. They do not understand that
these snakes have their abode within the unbe¬
liever’s spirit, and that they existed in him even
^before he died, for they were his own evil qualities
Isymbolised, such as jealousy, hatred, hypocrisy,
pride, deceit, etc., every one of which springs,
directly or remotely, from love of the world.
Such is the doom of those who, in the words of
the Koran, “ set their hearts on this world rather
than on the next.” If those snakes were merely
external they might hope to escape their torment,
if it were but for a moment; but, being their own
inherent attributes, how can they escape ?
Take, for instance, the case of a man who has
sold a slave-girl without knowing how much he
was attached to her till she is quite out of his
reach. Then the love of her, hitherto dormant,
wakes up in him with such intensity as to amount
to torture, stinging him like a snake, so that he
would fain cast himself into fire or water to escape
it. Such is the effect of love of the world, which
those who have it often suspect not till the world
is taken from them, and then the torment of vain
THEIR INSTRUMENTS OF PUNISHMENT 57
longing is such that they would gladly exchange
it for any number of mere external snakes and
scorpions.
Every sinner thus carries with him into the
world beyond death the instruments of his own
punishment ; and the Koran says truly, “ Verily
you shall see hell ; you shall see it with the
eye of certainty,” and “ hell surrounds the un¬
believers.” It does not say “ will surround
them,” for it is round them even now.
Some may object, “ If such is the case, then
who can escape hell, for who is not more or less
bound to the world by various ties of affection
and interest ? ” To this we answer that there are
some, notably the faqirs, who have entirely dis¬
engaged themselves from love of the world. But
even among those who have worldly possessions
such as wife, children, houses, etc., there are
those who, though they have some affection for
these, love God yet more. Their case is like that
of a man who, though he may have a dwelling
which he is fond of in one city, when he is called
by the king to take up a post of authority in
another city, does so gladly, as the post of
authority is dearer to him than his former
dwelling. Such are many of the prophets and
saints.
Others there are, and a great number, who have
some love to God, but the love of the world so
preponderates in them that they will have to
58 KNOWLEDGE OF THE NEXT WORLD
suffer a good deal of pain after death before they
are thoroughly weaned from it. Many profess
to love God, but a man may easily test himself
by watching which way the balance of his affec¬
tion inclines when the commands of God come
into collision with some of his desires. The
profession of love to God which is insufficient to
restrain from disobedience to God is a lie.
We have seen above that one kind of spiritual
hell is the forcible separation from worldly things
to which the heart clave too fondly. Many carry
about within them the germs of such a hell with¬
out being aware of it ; hereafter they will feel
like some king who, after living in luxury, has
been dethroned and made a laughing-stock. The
second kind of spiritual hell is that of shame,
when a man wakes up to see the nature of the
actions he committed in their naked reality.
Thus he who slandered will see himself in the
guise of a cannibal eating his dead brother’s
flesh, and he who envied as one who cast stones
against a wall, which stones, rebounding, put
out the eyes of his own children.
This species of hell, i.e. of shame, may be
symbolised by the following short parable :
Suppose a certain king has been celebrating his
son’s marriage. In the evening the young man
goes off with some companions and presently
returns to the palace (as he thinks) intoxicated.
He enters a chamber where a light is burning and
SOME SPIRITUAL HELLS
59
lies down, as he supposes, by his bride. In the
morning, when soberness returns, he is aghast to
find himself in a mortuary of the fire-worshippers,
his couch a bier, and the form which he mistook
for that of his bride the corpse of an old woman
beginning to decay. On emerging from the
mortuary with his garments all soiled, what is
his shame to see his father, the king, approaching
with a retinue of soldiers ! Such is a feeble
picture of the shame those will feel in the next
world who in this have greedily abandoned them¬
selves to what they thought were delights.
The third spiritual hell is that of disappoint¬
ment and failure to reach the real objects of
existence. Man was intended to mirror forth
the light of the knowledge of God, but if he arrives *
in the next world with his soul thickly coated
with the rust of sensual indulgence he will entirely
fail of the object for which he was made. His
disappointment may be figured in the following
way: Suppose a man is passing with some com¬
panions through a dark wood. Here and there,
glimmering on the ground, lie variously coloured
stones. His companions collect and carry these
and advise him to do the same. “For,” say they,
“ we have heard that these stones will fetch a
high price in the place whither we are going.”
He, on the other hand, laughs at them and calls
them fools for loading themselves in the vain
hope of gain, while he walks free and unencum-
60 KNOWLEDGE OF THE NEXT WORLD
bered. Presently they emerge into the full day¬
light and find that these coloured stones are
rubies, emeralds, and other jewels of priceless
value. The man’s disappointment and chagrin
at not having gathered some when so easily
within his reach may be more easily imagined
than described. Such will be the remorse of
those hereafter, who, while passing through this
world, have been at no pains to acquire the
jewels of virtue and the treasures of religion.
This journey of man through the world may be
divided into four stages—the sensuous, the ex¬
perimental, the instinctive, the rational. In the
first he is like a moth which, though it has sight,
has no memory, and will singe itself again and
again at the same candle. In the second stage
he is like a dog which, having once been beaten,
will run away at the sight of a stick. In the
third he is like a horse or a sheep, both of which
instinctively fly at the sight of a lion or a wolf,
their natural enemies, while they will not fly
from a camel or a buffalo, though these last are
much greater in size. In the fourth stage man
altogether transcends the limits of the animals
and becomes capable, to some extent, of fore¬
seeing and providing for the future. His move¬
ments at first may be compared to ordinary
walking on land, then to traversing the sea in a
ship, then, on the fourth plane, where he is
conversant with realities, to walking on the sea,
FROM ANIMAL TO ANGEL
61
while beyond this plane there is a fifth, known to
the prophets and saints, whose progress may be
compared to flying through the air.
Thus man is capable of existing on several
different planes, from the animal to the angelic,
and precisely in this lies his danger, i.e. of falling
to the very lowest. In the Koran it is written,
“We proposed the burden (i.e. responsibility or
free-will) to the heavens and the earth and the
mountains, and they refused to undertake it.
But man took it upon himself : Verily he is
ignorant.” Neither animals nor angels can
change their appointed rank and place. But
man may sink to the animal or soar to the angel,
and this is the meaning of his undertaking that
“ burden ” of which the Koran speaks. The
majority of men choose to remain in the two
lower stages mentioned above, and the stationary
are always hostile to the travellers or pilgrims,
whom they far outnumber.
Many of the former class, having no fixed
convictions about the future world, when mastered
by their sensual appetites, deny it altogether.
They say that hell is merely an invention of
theologians to frighten people, and they regard
theologians themselves with thinly veiled con¬
tempt. To argue with fools of this kind is of
very little use. This much, however, may be
said to such a man, with the possible result of
making him pause and reflect : “ Do you really
62 KNOWLEDGE OF THE NEXT WORLD
think that the hundred and twenty-four thousand 1
prophets and saints who believed in the future
life were all wrong, and you are right in deny¬
ing it ? 75 If he replies, “ Yes ! I am as sure
as I am that two are more than one, that there
is no soul and no future life of joy and penalty, 77
then the case of such a man is hopeless ; all one
can do is to leave him alone, remembering the
words of the Koran, “ Though thou call them
to instruction, they will not be instructed.”
But, should he say that a future life is possible
but that the doctrine is so involved in doubt and
mystery that it is impossible to decide whether it
be true or not, then one may say to him : “ Then
you had better give it the benefit of the doubt !
Suppose you are about to eat food and some one
tells you a serpent has spat venom on it, you
would probably refrain and rather endure the
pangs of hunger than eat it, though your in¬
formant may be in jest or lying. Or suppose
you are ill and a charm-writer says, ‘ Give me
a rupee and I will write a charm which you can
tie round your neck and which will cure you,’
you would probably give the rupee on the chance
of deriving benefit from the charm. Or if an
astrologer say, ‘ When the moon has entered a
certain constellation, drink such and such a
medicine, and you will recover,’ though you
1 The number of prophets according to Muhammadan
tradition.
LORD ALI AND THE UNBELIEVER 63
may have very little faith in astrology, yon very
likely would try the experiment on the chance
that he might be right. And do you not think
that reliance is as well placed on the words of all
the prophets, saints, and holy men, convinced as
they were of a future life, as on the promise of
a charm-writer or an astrologer ? People take
perilous voyages in ships for the sake of merely
probable profit, and will you not suffer a little
pain of abstinence now for the sake of eternal
joy hereafter ? ”
The Lord Ah once, in arguing with an unbeliever,
said, “ If you are right, then neither of us will be
any the worse in the future; but if we are right,
then we shall escape, and you will suffer.” This
he said not because he himself was in any doubt,
but merely to make an impression on the unbe¬
liever. From all that we have said it follows
that man’s chief business in this world is to
prepare for the next. Even if he is doubtful
about a future existence, reason suggests that he
should act as if there were one, considering the
tremendous issues at stake. Peace be on those
who follow the instruction !
CHAPTER V
CONCERNING MUSIC AND DANCING AS AIDS TO THE
RELIGIOUS LIFE
The heart of man has been so constituted by the
Almighty that, like a flint, it contains a hidden
fire which is evoked by music and harmony, and
renders man beside himself with ecstasy. These
harmonies are echoes of that higher world of
beauty which we call the world of spirits ; they
remind man of his relationship to that world, and
produce in him an emotion so deep and strange
that he himself is powerless to explain it. The
effect of music and dancing is deeper in proportion
as the natures on which they act are simple and
prone to emotion ; they fan into a flame what¬
ever love is already dormant in the heart, whether
it be earthly and sensual, or divine and spiritual.
Accordingly there has been much dispute
among theologians as to the lawfulness of music
and dancing regarded as religious exercises. One
sect, the Zahirites, 1 holding that God is altogether
1 Literally, “ Outsiders.”
64
MUSIC AND THE EMOTIONS
65
incommensurable with man, deny the possibility
of man’s really feeling love to God, and say that
he can only love those of his own species. If he
does feel what he thinks is love to his Creator they
say it is a mere projection, or shadow cast by his
own fantasy, or a reflection of love to the creature ;
music and dancing, according to them, have only
to do with creature love, and are therefore un¬
lawful as religious exercises. If we ask them
what is the meaning of that “ love to God ”
which is enjoined by the religious law, they reply
that it means obedience and worship. This is
an error which we hope to confute in a later
chapter dealing with the love of God. At present
we content ourselves with saying that music and
dancing do not put into the heart what is not
there already, but only fan into a flame dormant
emotions. Therefore if a man has in his heart
that love to God which the Law enjoins it is
perfectly lawful, nay, laudable in him to take
part in exercises which promote it. On the
other hand, if his heart is full of sensual desires,
music and dancing will only increase them, and
are therefore unlawful for him. While, if he
listens to them merely as a matter of amusement,
they are neither lawful nor unlawful, but in¬
different. For the mere fact that they are
pleasant does not make them unlawful, any more
than the pleasure of listening to the singing of
birds or looking at green grass and running water
66 CONCERNING MUSIC AND DANCING
is unlawful. The innocent character of music
and dancing, regarded merely as a pastime, is also
corroborated by an authentic tradition which we
have from the Lady Ayesha, 1 who narrates : “ One
festival-day some negroes were performing in a
mosque. The Prophet said to me, 4 Do you wish
to see them ? ’ I replied, 6 Yes.’ Accordingly
he lifted me up with his own blessed hand, and
I looked on so long that he said more than once,
6 Haven’t you had enough ? ’ ” Another tradi¬
tion from the Lady Ayesha is as follows : 44 One
festival-day two girls came to my house and
began to play and sing. The Prophet came in
and lay down on the couch, turning his face
away. Presently Abu Bakr 1 entered, and, seeing
the girls playing, exclaimed, 4 What ! the pipe
of Satan in the Prophet’s house ! ’ Whereupon
the Prophet turned and said, 4 Let them alone,
Abu Bakr, for this is a festival-day.’ ”
Passing over the cases where music and dancing
rouse into a flame evil desires already dormant in
the heart, we come to those cases where they are
quite lawful. Such are those of the pilgrims who
celebrate the glories of the House of God at
Mecca in song, and thus incite others to go on
pilgrimage, and of minstrels whose music and
songs stir up martial ardour in the breasts of
their auditors and incite them to fight against
1 Muhammad’s favourite wife.
2 Subsequently the first caliph.
MUSIC AND RELIGION
67
the infidels. Similarly, mournful music which
excites sorrow for sin and failure in the religious
life is lawful; of this nature was the music of
David. But dirges which increase sorrow for
the dead are not lawful, for it is written in the
Koran, “ Despair not over what you have lost.”
On the other hand, joyful music at weddings and
feasts and on such occasions as a circumcision or
the return from a journey is lawful.
We come now to the purely religious use of
music and dancing : such is that of the Sufis,
who by this means stir up in themselves greater
love towards God, and, by means of music, often
obtain spiritual visions and ecstasies, their heart
becoming in this condition as clean as silver in
the flame of a furnace, and attaining a degree of
purity which could never be attained by any
amount of mere outward austerities. The Sufi
then becomes so keenly aware of his relationship
to the spiritual world that he loses all conscious¬
ness of this world, and often falls down senseless.
It is not, however, lawful for the aspirant to
Sufiism to take part in this mystical dancing
without the permission of his “ Pir,” or spiritual
director. It is related of the Sheikh Abu’l Qasim
Girgani that, when one of his disciples requested
leave to take part in such a dance, he said, 14 Keep
a strict fast for three days ; then let them cook
for you tempting dishes; if, then, you still prefer
the ‘ dance,’ you may take part in it.” The
68 CONCERNING MUSIC AND DANCING
disciple, however, whose heart is not thoroughly
purged from earthly desires, though he may have
obtained some glimpse of the mystics’ path,
should be forbidden by his director to take part
in such dances, as they will do him more harm
than good.
Those who deny the reality of the ecstasies and
other spiritual experiences of the Sufis merely
betray their own narrow-mindedness and shallow
insight. Some allowance, however, must be
made for them, for it is as difficult to believe in
the reality of states of which one has no personal
experience as it is for a blind man to understand
the pleasure of looking at green grass and running
water, or for a child to comprehend the pleasure
of exercising sovereignty. A wise man, though he
himself may have no experience of those states,
will not therefore deny their reality, for what
folly can be greater than his who denies the
reality of a thing merely because he himself has
not experienced it ! Of such people it is written
in the Koran, “ Those who have not the guidance
will say, ‘ This is a manifest imposture.’ ”
As regards the erotic poetry which is recited in
Sufi gatherings, and to which people sometimes
make objection, we must remember that, when
in such poetry mention is made of separation
from or union with the beloved, the Sufi, who is
an adept in the love of God, applies such expres¬
sions to separation from or union with Him.
THE SYMBOLISM OF POETRY 69
Similarly, “dark locks” are taken to signify
the darkness of unbelief ; “ the brightness of the
face ” the light of faith, and drunkenness the
Sufi’s ecstasy. Take, for instance, the verse :
Thou may’st measure out thousands of measures of wine,
But, till thou drink it, no joy is thine.
By this the writer means that the true delights
of religion cannot be reached by way of formal
instruction, but by felt attraction and desire. A
man may converse much and write volumes
concerning love, faith, piety, and so forth, and
blacken paper to any extent, but till he himself
possesses these attributes all this will do him no
good. Thus, those who find fault with the Sufis
for being powerfully affected, even to ecstasy, by
these and similar verses, are merely shallow
and uncharitable. Even camels are sometimes
so powerfully affected by the Arab-songs of
their drivers that they will run rapidly, bearing-
heavy burdens, till they fall down in a state of
exhaustion.
The Sufi hearer, however, is in danger of
blasphemy if he applies some of the verses which
he hears to God. For instance, if he hears such
a verse as “ Thou art changed from thy former
inclination,” he must not apply it to God, who
cannot change, but to himself and his own varia¬
tions of mood. God is like the sun, which is
70 CONCERNING MUSIC AND DANCING
always shining, but sometimes for us His light
is eclipsed by some object which intervenes
between us and Him.
Regarding some adepts it is related that they
attain to such a degree of ecstasy that they lose
themselves in God. Such was the case with
Sheikh Abu’l Hassan Nuri, who, on hearing a
certain verse, fell into an ecstatic condition, and,
coming into a field full of stalks of newly cut
sugar-canes, ran about till his feet were wounded
and bleeding, and, not long afterwards, expired.
In such cases some have supposed that there
occurs an actual descent of Deity into humanity,
but this would be as great a mistake as that of
one who, having for the first time seen his re¬
flection in a mirror, should suppose that, some¬
how or other, he had become incorporated with
the mirror, or that the red-and-white hues which
the mirror reflects were qualities inherent in it.
The states of ecstasy into which the Sufis fall
vary according to the emotions which pre¬
dominate in them—love, fear, desire, repentance,
etc. These states, as we have mentioned above,
are often the result not only of hearing verses of
the Koran, but erotic poetry. Some have ob¬
jected to the reciting of poetry, as well as of the
Koran, on these occasions; but it should be re¬
membered that all the verses of the Koran are
not adapted to stir the emotions—such, for in¬
stance, as that which commands that a man should
SUFI STATES OF ECSTASY
71
leave his mother the sixth part of his property
and his sister the hah, or that which orders that
a widow must wait four months after the death
of her husband before becoming espoused to
another man. The natures which can be thrown
into religious ecstasy by the recital of such verses
are peculiarly sensitive and very rare.
Another reason for the use of poetry as well as
of the Koran on these occasions is that people are
so familiar with the Koran, many even knowing
it by heart, that the effect of it has been dulled
by constant repetition. One cannot be always
quoting new verses of the Koran as one can of
poetry. Once, when some wild Arabs were
hearing the Koran for the first time and were
strongly moved by it, Abu-Bakr said to them,
“ We were once like you, but our hearts have
grown hard,” meaning that the Koran loses some
of its effect on those familiar with it. For the
same reason the Caliph Omar used to command
the pilgrims to Mecca to leave it quickly, “ For,”
he said, “ I fear if you grow too familiar with
the Holy City the awe of it will depart from
your hearts.”
There is, moreover, something pertaining to
the light and frivolous, at least in the eyes of the
common people, in the use of singing and musical
instruments, such as the pipe and drum, and it
is not befitting that the majesty of the Koran
should be, even temporarily, associated with
72 CONCERNING MUSIC AND DANCING
these things. It is related of the Prophet that
once, when he entered the house of Rabia, the
daughter of Mauz, some singing-girls who were
there began extemporising in his honour. He
abruptly bade them cease, as the praise of the
Prophet was too sacred a theme to be treated in
that way. There is also some danger, if verses
of the Koran are exclusively used, that the hearers
should attach to them some private interpretation
of their own, and this is unlawful. On the other
hand, no harm attaches to interpreting lines of
poetry in various ways, as it is not necessary to
apply to a poem the same meaning which the
author had.
Other features of these mystic dances are the
bodily contortions and tearing of clothes with
which they are sometimes accompanied. If
these are the result of genuine ecstatic conditions
there is nothing to be said against them, but if
they are self-conscious and deliberate on the part
of those who wish to appear “ adepts,” then they
are merely acts of hypocrisy. In any case the
more perfect adept is he who controls himself
till he is absolutely obliged to give vent to his
feelings. It is related of a certain youth who
was a disciple of the Sheikh Junaid that, on
hearing singing commence in an assembly of the
Sufis, he could not restrain himself, but began to
shriek in ecstasy. Junaid said to him, “ If you
do that again, don’t remain in my company.”
MYSTIC DANCES
73
After this the youth used to restrain himself on
such occasions, but at last one day his emotions
were so powerfully stirred that, after long and
forcible repression of them, he uttered a shriek
and died.
To conclude: in holding these assemblies,
regard must be had to time and place, and
that no spectators come from unworthy motives.
Those who participate in them should sit in
silence, not looking at one another, but keeping
their heads bent, as at prayer, and concen¬
trating their minds on God. Each should watch
for whatever may be revealed to his own heart,
and not make any movements from mere self-
conscious impulse. But if any one of them
stands up in a state of genuine ecstasy all the
rest should stand up with him, and if any one’s
turban fall off the others should also lay their
turbans down.
Although these matters are comparative novel¬
ties in Islam and have not been received from
the first followers of the Prophet, we must re¬
member that all novelties are not forbidden, but
only those which directly contravene the Law.
For instance, the “ Tarawih,” or night-prayer,
was first instituted by the Caliph Omar. The
Prophet said, “ Live with each man according to
his habits and disposition,” therefore it is right
to fall in with usages that please people, when
non-conformity would vex them. It is true that
74 CONCERNING MUSIC AND DANCING
the Companions were not in the habit of rising
on the entrance of the Prophet, as they disliked
this practice ; but where it has become established,
and abstaining from it would cause annoyance, it
is better to conform to it. The Arabs have their
own customs, and the Persians have theirs, and
God knoweth which is best.
CHAPTER VI
CONCERNING SELF-EXAMINATION AND THE
RECOLLECTION OF GOD
Know, O brother, that in the Koran God hath
said, “ We will set up a just balance on the day
of resurrection, and no soul shall be wronged in
anything.” Whosoever has wrought a grain of
good or ill shall then behold it. In the Koran it
is also written, “ Let every soul see what it sends
on before it for the day of account.” It was a
saying of the Caliph Omar’s, “ Call yourselves to
account before ye be called to account”; and
God says, “0 ye believers, be patient and strive
against your natural desires, and maintain the
strife manfully.” The saints have always under¬
stood that they have come into this world to
carry on a spiritual traffic, the resulting gain or
loss of which is heaven or hell. They have, there¬
fore, always kept a jealous eye upon the flesh,
which, like a treacherous partner in business, may
cause them great loss. He, therefore, is a wise
man who, after his morning prayer, spends a whole
75
76 CONCERNING SELF-EXAMINATION
hour in making a spiritual reckoning, and says
to his soul, “ 0 my soul, thou hast only one life ;
no single moment that has passed can be re¬
covered, for in the counsel of God the number
of breaths allotted thee is fixed, and cannot be
increased. When life is over no further spiritual
traffic is possible for thee ; therefore what thou
doest, do now ; treat this day as if thy life had
been already spent, and this were an extra day
granted thee by the special favour of the Almighty.
What can be greater folly than to lose it ? ”
At the resurrection a man will find all the
hours of his life arranged like a long series of
treasure-chests. The door of one will be opened,
and it will be seen to be full of light : it repre¬
sents an hour which he spent in doing good.
His heart will be filled with such joy that even a
fraction of it would make the inhabitants of hell
forget the fire. The door of a second will be
opened ; it is pitch-dark within, and from it
issues such an evil odour as will cause every one
to hold his nose : it represents an hour which
he spent in ill-doing, and he will suffer such terror
that a fraction of it would embitter Paradise for
the blessed. The door of a third treasure-chest
will be opened; it will be seen to be empty and
neither light nor dark within : this represents
the hour in which he did neither good nor evil.
Then he will feel remorse and confusion like that
of a man who has been the possessor of a great
SEVEN GATES TO HELL
77
treasure and wasted it or let it slip from his
grasp. Thus the whole series of the hours of his
life will be displayed, one by one, to his gaze.
Therefore a man should say to his soul every
morning, “ God has given thee twenty-four
treasures ; take heed lest thou lose any one of
them, for thou wilt not be able to endure the
regret that will follow such loss.”
The saints have said, “ Even suppose God
should forgive thee, after a wasted life, thou
wilt not attain to the ranks of the righteous and
must deplore thy loss ; therefore keep a strict
watch over thy tongue, thine eye, and each of
thy seven members, for each of these is, as it
were, a possible gate to hell. Say to thy flesh,
‘ If thou art rebellious, verily I will punish thee ’;
for, though the flesh is headstrong, it is capable
of receiving instruction, and can be tamed by
austerity.” Such, then, is the aim of self-examina¬
tion, and the Prophet has said, “ Happy is he
who does now that which will benefit him after
death.”
We come now to the recollection of God. This
consists in a man’s remembering that God
observes all his acts and thoughts. People only
see the outward, while God sees both the outer
and the inner man. He who really believes this
will have both his outer and inner being well
disciplined. If he disbelieve it, he is an infidel,
and if, while believing it, he acts contrary to that
78 CONCERNING SELF-EXAMINATION
belief, he is guilty of the grossest presumption.
One day a negro came to the Prophet and said,
“ O Prophet of God ! I have committed much
sin. Will my repentance be accepted, or not ? ”
The Prophet said “Yes.” Then the negro said,
“ O Prophet of God, all the time I was committing
sin, did God really behold it ? ” “ Yes,” was
the answer. The negro uttered a cry and fell
lifeless. Till a man is thoroughly convinced of
the fact that he is always under God’s observation
it is impossible for him to act rightly.
A certain sheikh once had a disciple whom he
favoured above his other disciples, thus exciting
their envy. One day the sheikh gave each of
them a fowl and told each to go and kill it in a
place where no one could see him. Accordingly
each killed his fowl in some retired spot and
brought it back, with the exception of the sheikh’s
favourite disciple, who brought his back alive,
saying, “ I have found no such place, for God
sees everywhere.” The sheikh said to the others,
“You see now this youth’s real rank ; he has
attained to the constant remembrance of God.”
When Zuleikha tempted Joseph she cast a
cloth over the face of the idol she used to worship.
Joseph said to her, “ 0 Zuleikha, thou art ashamed
before a block of stone, and should I not be
ashamed before Him who created the seven
heavens and the earth ? ” A man once came to
the saint Junaid and said, “ I cannot keep my
STORY OF THE CALIPH OMAR 79
eyes from casting lascivious looks. How shall I
do so ? ” “ By remembering,” Junaid answered,
“ that God sees you much more clearly than you
see any one else.” In the traditions it is written
that God has said, “ Paradise is for those who
intend to commit some sin and then remember
that My eye is upon them and forbear.” Ab¬
dullah Ibn Dinar relates, “ Once I was walking
with the Caliph Omar near Mecca when we met
a shepherd’s slave-boy driving his flock. Omar
said to him, “ Sell me a sheep.” The boy
answered, “ They are not mine, but my master’s.”
Then, to try him, Omar said, “ Well, you can
tell him that a wolf carried one off, and he will
know nothing about it.” “ No, he won’t,” said
the boy, “but God will.” Omar then wept, and,
sending for the boy’s master, purchased him and
set him free, exclaiming, “ For this saying thou
art free in this world and shalt be free in the
next.”
There are two degrees of this recollection of
God. The first degree is that of those saints
whose thoughts are altogether absorbed in the
contemplation of the majesty of God, and have
no room in their hearts for anything else at all.
This is the lower degree of recollection, for when
a man’s heart is fixed, and his limbs are so con¬
trolled by his heart that they abstain from even
lawful actions, he has no need of any device or
safeguard against sins. It was to this kind of
80 CONCERNING SELF-EXAMINATION
recollection that the Prophet referred when he
said, “ He who rises in the morning with only God
in his mind, God shall look after him, both in
this world and the next.”
Some of these recollectors of God are so ab¬
sorbed in the thought of Him that, if people speak
to them they do not hear, or walk in front of
them they do not see, but stumble as if they
collided with a wall. A certain saint relates as
follows : “ One day I passed by a place where
archers were having a shooting-match. Some
way off a man was sitting alone. I approached
him and attempted to engage him in talk, but
he replied, “ The remembrance of God is better
than talk.” I said, “ Are you not lonely ? ”
“ No,” he answered, “ God and two angels are
with me.” Pointing to the archers, T asked,
“ Which of these has carried off the prize ? ”
“ That one,’ was his reply, “ to whom God has
allotted it.” Then I inquired, “Where does this
road come from ? ” Upon which, lifting up his
eyes to heaven, he rose and departed, saying,
“ 0 Lord ! many of Thy creatures hold one back
from the remembrance of Thee ! ”
The saint Shibli one day went to see the Sufi
Thaury ; he found him sitting so still in con¬
templation that not a hair of his body moved.
He asked him, “ From whom didst thou learn to
practise such fixity of contemplation ? ” Thaury
answered, “ From a cat which I saw waiting at a
THE RECOLLECTION OF THE SAINTS 81
mouse-hole in an attitude of even greater fixity
than this.” Ibn Hanif relates : “I was informed
that in the city of Sur a sheikh and his disciple
were always sitting lost in the recollection of God.
I went there and found them both sitting with
their faces turned in the direction of Mecca. I
saluted them thrice, but they gave no answer.
I said, ‘ I adjure you, by God, to return my saluta¬
tion.’ 1 The youth raised his head and replied,
‘ O Ibn Hanif ! The world lasts but for a little
time, and of this little time only a little is re¬
maining. Thou art hindering us by requiring us
to return thy salutation.’ He then bent his
head again and was silent. I was hungry and
thirsty at the time, but the sight of those two
quite carried me out of myself. I remained
standing and prayed with them the afternoon
and evening prayer. I then asked them for some
spiritual advice. The younger replied, ‘ 0 Ibn
Hanif, we are afflicted ; we do not possess that
tongue which gives advice.’ I remained standing
there three days and nights ; no word passed
between us and none of us slept. Then I said
within myself, ‘ I will adjure them by God to
give me some counsel.’ The younger, divining
my thoughts, again raised his head : ‘ Go and
seek such a man, the visitation of whom will
bring God to thy remembrance and infix His
1 A Moslem is bound by the Koran to return the salutation
of a Moslem.
6
82 CONCERNING SELF-EXAMINATION
fear in thy heart, and he will give thee that
counsel which is conveyed by silence and not by
speech.’ ”
Such is the “ recollection ” of the saints which
consists in being entirely absorbed in the con¬
templation of God. The second degree of the
recollection of God is that of “ the companions
of the right hand.” 1 These are aware that God
knows all about them, and feel abashed in His
presence, yet they are not carried out of them¬
selves by the thought of His majesty, but remain
clearly conscious of themselves and of the world.
Their condition is like that of a man who should
be suddenly surprised in a state of nakedness and
should hastily cover himself, while the other
class resemble one who suddenly finds himself
in the presence of the King and is confused and
awestruck. The former subject every project
which enters their minds to a thorough scrutiny,
for at the Last Day three questions will be asked
respecting every action : the first, “ Why did
you do this ? ” the second, “ In what way did
you do this ? ” the third, “ For what purpose
did you do this ? ” The first will be asked
because a man should act from divine and not
merely Satanic or fleshly impulse. If this ques¬
tion is satisfactorily answered, the second will
test in what way the action was done, wisely, or
carelessly and negligently, and the third, whether
1 Koranic phrase for the righteous.
QUESTIONS AT THE RESURRECTION 83
it was done simply to please God, or to gain
the approval of men. If a man understands the
meaning of these questions he will be very watch¬
ful over the state of his heart, and how he enter¬
tains thoughts which are likely to end in action.
Rightly to discriminate among such thoughts is
a very difficult and delicate matter, and he who
is not capable of it should attach himself to
some spiritual director, intercourse with whom
may illuminate his heart. He should avoid with
the utmost care the merely worldly learned man
who is an agent of Satan. God said to David,
“ 0 David ! ask no questions of the learned man
who is intoxicated with love of the world, for he
will rob thee of My love,” and the Prophet said:
“ God loves that man who is keen to discern in
doubtful things, and who suffers not his reason
to be swayed by the assaults of passion.” Reason
and discrimation are closely connected, and he in
whom reason does not rule passion will not be
keen to discriminate.
Besides such cautious discrimination before
acting a man should call himself strictly to ac¬
count for his past actions. Every evening he
should examine his heart as to what he has done
to see whether he has gained or lost in his spiritual
capital. This is the more necessary as the heart
is like a treacherous business-partner, always
ready to cajole and deceive ; sometimes it pre¬
sents its own selfishness under the guise of
84 CONCERNING SELF-EXAMINATION
obedience to God, so that a man supposes he has
gained, whereas he has really lost.
A certain saint named Amiya, sixty years of
age, counted up the days of his life. He found
they amounted to twenty-one thousand six
hundred days. He said to himself, “ Alas ! if
I have committed one sin every day, how can I
escape from the load of twenty-one thousand six
hundred sins ? ” He uttered a cry and fell to
the ground ; when they came to raise him they
found him dead. But most people are heedless,
and never think of calling themselves to account.
If for every sin a man committed he placed a
stone in an empty house, he would soon find that
house full of stones ; if his recording angels 1
demanded wages of him for writing down his
sins, all his money would soon be gone. People
count on their rosaries 2 with self-satisfaction the
numbers of times they have recited the name of
God, but they keep no rosary for reckoning the
numberless idle words they speak. Therefore the
Caliph Omar said, “ Weigh well your words and
deeds before they be weighed at the Judgment.”
He himself, before retiring for the night, used to
strike his feet with a scourge and exclaim, “ What
hast thou done to-day ? ” Abu Talha was once
praying in a palm-grove, when the sight of a
1 Two of these are attached to every man.
9 The Muhammadan rosary consists of ninety-nine beads,
each representing a name of God.
INFLUENCE OF THE SAINTS
85
beautiful bird which flew out of it caused him to
make a mistake in counting the number of pro¬
strations he had made. To punish himself for
his inattention, he gave the palm-grove away.
Such saints knew that their sensual nature was
prone to go astray, therefore they kept a strict
watch over it, and punished it for each trans¬
gression.
If a man finds himself sluggish and averse
from austerity and self-discipline he should con¬
sort with one who is a proficient in such practices
so as to catch the contagion of his enthusiasm.
One saint used to say, “ When I grow lukewarm
in self-discipline, I look at Muhammad Ibn Wasi,
and the sight of him rekindles my fervour for at
least a week.” If one cannot find such a pattern
of austerity close at hand, then it is a good thing
to study the fives of the saints ; he should also
exhort his soul somewhat in the following way :
“ O my soul ! thou thinkest thyself intelligent
and art angry at being called a fool, and yet what
else art thou, after all ? Thou preparest cloth¬
ing to shield thee from the cold of winter, yet
makest no preparation for the after-life. Thy
state is like that of a man who in mid-winter
should say, ‘ I will wear no war m clothing, but
trust to God’s mercy to shield me from the cold.
He forgets that God, at the sa me time that He
created cold, showed man th e way to make
clothing to protect himself from it, and provided
86 CONCERNING SELF-EXAMINATION
the material for that clothing. Remember this
also, O soul, that thy punishment hereafter will
not be because God is angry with thy disobedience ;
and say not, 4 How can my sin hurt God ? ’
It is thy lusts themselves which will have kindled
the flames of hell within thee ; just as, from eating
unwholesome food, disease is caused in a man’s
body, and not because his doctor is vexed with
him for disobeying his orders.
“ Shame upon thee, 0 soul, for thy over¬
weening love of the world ! If thou dost not
believe in heaven or hell, at any rate thou be-
lievest in death, which will snatch from thee all
worldly delights and cause thee to feel the pangs
of separation from them, which will be intenser
just in proportion as thou hast attached thyself
to them. Why art thou mad after the world ?
If the whole of it, from East to West, were thine
and worshipped thee, yet it would all, in a brief
space, turn to dust along with thyself, and
oblivion would blot out thy name, as those of
ancient kings before thee. But now, seeing thou
hast only a very small fragment of the world,
and that a defiled one, wilt thou be so mad as to
barter eternal joy for it, a precious jewel for a
broken cup of earthenware, and make thyself
the laughing-stock of all around thee ? ”
CHAPTER VII
MARRIAGE AS A HELP OR HINDRANCE TO
THE RELIGIOUS LIFE
Marriage plays such a large part in human
affairs that it must necessarily be taken into
account in treating of the religious life and be
regarded in both its aspects of advantage and
disadvantage.
Seeing that God, as the Koran says, “ only
created men and genii for the purpose of wor¬
shipping,” the first and obvious advantage of
marriage is, that the worshippers of God may
increase in number. Theologians have therefore
laid it down as a maxim that it is better to be
engaged in matrimonial duties than in superero¬
gatory devotions.
Another advantage of marriage is that, as the
Prophet said, the prayers of children profit their
parents when the latter are dead, and children
who die before their parents intercede for them
on the Day of Judgment. “ When a child,”
said the Prophet, “ is told to enter heaven, it
87
88 MARRIAGE AS A HELP OR HINDRANCE
weeps and says, ‘ I will not enter in without my
father and mother.’ ” Again, one day the Prophet
seized hold of a man’s sleeves and drew him
violently towards himself, saying, “ Even thus
shall children draw their parents into heaven.”
He added, “ Children crowd together at the
gate of heaven and cry out for their fathers
and mothers, till those of the latter who are
outside are told to enter in and join their
children.”
It is related of a certain celibate saint that he
once dreamt that the Judgment Day had come.
The sun had approached close to the earth and
people were perishing of thirst; a crowd of boys
were moving about giving them water out of
gold and silver vessels. But when the saint asked
for water he was repulsed, and one of the boys
said to him, “ Not one of us here is your son.”
As soon as the saint awoke he made preparations
to marry.
Another advantage of marriage is that to sit
with and be friendly to one’s wife is a relaxation
for the mind after being occupied in religious
duties, and after such relaxation one may return
to one’s devotions with renewed zest. Thus the
Prophet himself, when he found the weight of his
revelations press too heavily upon him touched
his wife Ayesha and said, “ Speak to me, O
Ayesha, speak to me ! ” This he did that, from
that familiar human touch, he might receive
ADVANTAGES OF MARRIAGE 89
strength to support fresh revelations. For a
similar reason he used to bid the Muezzin Bilal
give the call to prayer, and sometimes he used to
smell sweet perfumes. It is a well-known saying
of his, “ I have loved three things in the world :
perfumes, and women,and refreshment in prayer.”
On one occasion Omar asked the prophet what
were the things specially to be sought in the
world. He answered, “ A tongue occupied in the
remembrance of God, a grateful heart, and a
believing wife.”
A further advantage of marriage is that there
should be some one to take care of the house,
cook the food, wash the dishes, and sweep the
floor, etc. If a man is busy in such work he
cannot acquire learning, or carry on his business,
or engage in his devotions properly. For this
reason Abu Suleiman has said, “ A good wife is
not a blessing of this world merely, but of the
next, because she provides a man leisure in which
to think of the next world”; and one of the
Caliph Omar’s sayings is, “ After faith, no
blessing is equal to a good wife.”
Marriage has, moreover, this good in it, that to
be patient with feminine peculiarities, to provide
the necessaries which wives require, and to keep
them in the path of the law, is a very important
part of religion. The Prophet said, “ To give
one’s wife the money she requires is more im¬
portant than to give alms.” Once, when Ibn
90 MARRIAGE AS A HELP OR HINDRANCE
Mubarak was engaged in a campaign against the
infidels, one of his companions asked him, “ Is
any work more meritorious than religious war ? ”
“ Yes,” he replied : “ to feed and clothe one’s
wife and children properly.” The celebrated
saint Bishr Hafi said, “It is better that a man
should work for wife and children than merely
for himself.” In the Traditions it has been
recorded that some sins can only be atoned
for by enduring trouble for the sake of one’s
family.
Concerning a certain saint it is related that
his wife died and he would not marry again,
though people urged him, saying it was easier to
concentrate his thoughts in solitude. One night
he saw in a dream the door of heaven opened
and numbers of angels descending. They came
near and looked upon him, and one said,
“ Is this that selfish wretch ? ” and his fellow
answered, “ Yes, this is he.” The saint was too
alarmed to ask whom they meant, but presently
a boy passed and he asked him. “It is you they
are speaking about,” replied the boy ; “ only up
to a week ago your good works were being re¬
corded in heaven along with those of other saints,
but now they have erased your name from the
roll.” Greatly disturbed in mind as soon as he
awoke, he hastened to be married. From all the
above considerations it will be seen that marriage
is desirable.
DRAWBACKS TO MARRIAGE 91
We come now to treat of the drawbacks to
marriage. One of these is that there is a danger,
especially in the present time, that a man should
gain a livelihood by unlawful means in order to
support his family, and no amount of good works
can compensate for this. The Prophet said that
at the resurrection a certain man with a whole
mountain load of good works will be brought
forward and stationed near the Balance. 1 He
will then be asked, “ ‘ By what means did you
support your family ? ’ He will not be able to
give a satisfactory answer, and all his good works
will be cancelled, and proclamation will be made
concerning him, ‘ This is the man whose family
have devoured all his good deeds ! ’ ”
Another drawback to marriage is this, that to
treat one’s family kindly and patiently and to
bring their affairs to a satisfactory issue can only
be done by those who have a good disposition.
There is great danger lest a man should treat his
family harshly, or neglect them, and so bring sin
upon himself. The Prophet said: “ He who
deserts his wife and children is like a runaway
slave ; till he returns to them none of his fasts
or prayers will be accepted by God.” In brief,
man has a lower nature, and, till he can control
his own lower nature, he had better not assume
the responsibility of controlling another’s. Some
1 The Mizan, or Balance for weighing good and evil deeds,
which will be erected on the Judgment Day.
92 MARRIAGE AS A HELP OR HINDRANCE
one asked the saint Bishr Hah why he did not
marry. “ I am afraid,” he replied, “ of that
verse in the Koran, ‘ The rights of women over
men are precisely the same as the rights of men
over women.’ ”
A third disadvantage of marriage is that the
cares of a family often prevent a man from con¬
centrating his thoughts on God and on a future
life, and may, unless he is careful, lead to his
destruction, for God has said, “ Let not your
wives and children turn you away from remem¬
bering God.” He who thinks he can concen¬
trate himself better on his religious duties by
not marrying had better remain single, and he
who fears falling into sin if he does not marry,
had better do so.
We now come to the qualities which should be
sought in a wife. The most important of all is
chastity. If a wife is unchaste, and her husband
keeps silent, he gets a bad name and is hindered
in his religious life; if he speaks, his life be¬
comes embittered ; and if he divorces her, he may
feel the pang of separation. A wife who is
beautiful but of evil character is a great calamity ;
such a one had better be divorced. The Prophet
said, “ He who seeks a wife for the sake of her
beauty or wealth will lose both.”
The second desirable quality in a wife is a
good disposition. An ill-tempered or ungrateful
or loquacious or imperious wife makes existence
THE QUALITY OF WOMEN
93
unbearable, and is a great hindrance to leading
a devout life.
The third quality to be sought is beauty, as
this calls forth love and affection. Therefore
one should see a woman before marrying her.
The Prophet said, “ The women of such a tribe
have all a defect in their eyes ; he who wishes to
marry one should see her first.” The wise have
said that he who marries a wife without seeing
her is sure to repent it afterwards. It is true
that one should not marry solely for the sake of
beauty, but this does not mean that beauty
should be reckoned of no account at all.
The fourth desirable point is that the sum
paid by the husband as the wife’s marriage-portion
should be moderate. The Prophet said, “ She
is the best kind of wife whose marriage-portion
is small, and whose beauty is great.” He him¬
self settled the marriage-portion of some women
at ten dirhems, 1 and his own daughters’ marriage-
portions were not more than four hundred
dirhems.
Fifthly, she should not be barren. “ A piece
of old matting lying in the corner of the house
is better than a barren wife.” 2
Other qualities in a desirable wife are these :
she should be of a good stock, not married pre¬
viously, and not too nearly related to her husband.
1 The dirhem = about sixpence.
2 Saying of Muhammad.
94 MARRIAGE AS A HELP OR HINDRANCE
Regarding the Observances of Marriage
Marriage is a religious institution, and should
be treated in a religious way, otherwise the mating
of men and women is no better than the mating
of animals. The Law enjoins that there should
be a feast on the occasion of every marriage.
When Abdurrahman Ibn Auf married, the Prophet
said to him, “ Make a marriage-feast, even if you
have only a goat to make it with.” When the
Prophet himself celebrated his marriage with
Safia he made a marriage-feast of dates and
barley. It is also right that marriage should be
accompanied with the beating of drums and of
music, for man is the crown of creation.
Secondly, a man should remain on good terms
with his wife. This does not mean that he
should never cause her pain, but that he should
bear any annoyance she causes him, whether by
her unreasonableness or ingratitude, patiently.
Woman is created weak, and requiring conceal¬
ment ; she should therefore be borne with
patiently, and kept secluded. The Prophet said,
“ He who bears the ill-humour of his wife pati¬
ently will earn as much merit as Job did by the
patient endurance of his trials.” On his death¬
bed also he was heard to say, “ Continue in
prayer and treat your wives well, for they are
your prisoners.” He himself used to bear pati¬
ently the tempers of his wives. One day Omar’s
THE TREATMENT OF WIVES 95
wife was angry and scolded him. He said to
her, “ Thou evil-tongued one, dost thou answer
me back ? ” She replied, “ Yes ! the Lord of
the prophets is better than thou, and his wives
answer him back.” He replied, “ Alas for Hafsa
[Omar’s daughter and Muhammad’s wife] if she
does not humble herself ” ; and when he met her
he said, “ Take care not to answer the Prophet
back.” The Prophet also said, “ The best of
you is he who is best to his own family, as I am
the best to mine.”
Thirdly, a man should condescend to his wife’s
recreations and amusements, and not attempt to
check them. The Prophet himself actually on
one occasion ran races with his young wife
Ayesha. The first time he beat her, and the
second time she beat him. Another time he held
her up in his arms that she might look at some
performing negroes. In fact, it would be difficult
to find any one who was so kind to his wives as
the Prophet was to his. Wise men have said,
“ A man should come home smiling and eat what
he finds and not ask for anything he does not
find.” However, he should not be over-indul¬
gent, lest his wife lose her respect for him. If he
sees anything plainly wrong on her part, he
should not ignore but rebuke it, or he will become
a laughing-stock. In the Koran it is written,
“ Men should have the upper hand over women,”
and the Prophet said, “ Woe to the man who is
96 MARRIAGE AS A HELP OR HINDRANCE
the servant of his wife,” for she should be his
servant. Wise men have said, “ Consult women,
and act the contrary to what they advise.” In
truth there is something perverse in women, and
if they are allowed even a little licence, they get
out of control altogether, and it is difficult to
reduce them to order again. In dealing with
them one should endeavour to use a mixture of
severity and tenderness, with a greater propor¬
tion of the latter. The Prophet said, “Woman
was formed of a crooked rib ; if you try to bend
her, you will break her ; if you leave her alone,
she will grow more and more crooked ; therefore
treat her tenderly.”
As regards propriety, one cannot be too careful
not to let one’s wife look at or be looked at by a
stranger, for the beginning of all mischief is in
the eye. As far as possible, she should not be
allowed out of the house, nor to go on the roof,
nor to stand at the door. Care should be taken,
however, not to be unreasonably jealous and
strict. The Prophet one day asked his daughter
Fatima, “ What is the best thing for women ? ”
She answered, “ They should not look on
strangers, nor strangers on them.” The Prophet
was pleased at this remark, and embraced her,
saying, “ Verily, thou art a piece of my liver ! ”
The Commander of the Faithful, Omar, said,
“ Don’t give women fine clothes, for as soon as
they have them they will want to go out of the
A WIFE’S MAINTENANCE
97
house.” In the time of the Prophet women had
permission to go to the mosques and stand in the
last row of the worshippers ; but this was sub¬
sequently forbidden.
A man should keep his wife properly supplied
with money, and not stint her. To give a wife
her proper maintenance is more meritorious than
to give alms. The Prophet said, “ Suppose a
man spends one dinar 1 in religious war, another
in ransoming a slave, a third in charity, and
gives the fourth to his wife, the giving of this
last surpasses in merit all the others put together.”
A man should not eat anything especially good
by himself, or, if he has eaten it, he should keep
silent about it and not praise it before his wife.
It is better for husband and wife to eat together,
if a guest be not present, for the Prophet said,
“ When they do so, God sends His blessing upon
them, and the angels pray for them.” The most
important point to see to is that the supplies
given to one’s wife are acquired by lawful
means.
If a man’s wife be rebellious and disobedient,
he should at first admonish her gently ; if this
is not sufficient he should sleep in a separate
chamber for three nights. Should this also fail
he may strike her, but not on the mouth, nor
with such force as to wound her. Should she be
remiss in her religious duties, he should manifest
1 About ten shillings.
7
98 MARRIAGE AS A HELP OR HINDRANCE
his displeasure to her for an entire month, as the
Prophet did on one occasion to all his wives.
The greatest care should be taken to avoid
divorce, for, though divorce is permitted, yet God
disapproves of it, because the very utterance of
the word “ divorce ” causes a woman pain, and
how can it be right to pain any one ? When
divorce is absolutely necessary, the formula for
it should not be repeated thrice all at once, but
on three different occasions. 1 A woman should
be divorced kindly, not through anger and con¬
tempt, and not without a reason. After divorce
a man should give his former wife a present, and
not tell others that she has been divorced for
such and such a fault. Of a certain man who
was instituting divorce-proceedings against his
wife it is related that people asked him, “ Why
are you divorcing her ? 55 He answered, “I do
not reveal my wife’s secrets.” When he had
actually divorced her, he was asked again, and
said, “ She is a stranger to me now ; I have
nothing to do with her private affairs.”
Hitherto we have treated of the rights of the
wife over her husband, but the rights of the
husband over the wife are even more binding.
The Prophet said, “If it were right to worship
any one except God, it would be right for wives
to worship their husbands.” A wife should not
1 The formula for divorce has to be repeated thrice to make
it complete.
THE RIGHTS OF HUSBANDS 99
boast of her beauty before her husband, she
should not requite his kindness with ingratitude,
she should not say to him, “ Why have you
treated me thus and thus ? ” The Prophet said,
“ I looked into hell and saw many women there ;
I asked the reason, and received this reply,
4 Because they abused their husbands and were
ungrateful to them.’ 55
CHAPTER VIII
THE LOVE OF GOD
The love of God is the highest of all topics, and
is the final aim to which we have been tending
hitherto. We have spoken of spiritual dangers as
they hinder the love of God in a man’s heart, and
we have spoken of various good qualities as being
the necessary preliminaries to it. Human per¬
fection resides in this, that the love of God should
conquer a man’s heart and possess it wholly, and
even if it does not possess it wholly it should
predominate in the heart over the love of all
other things. Nevertheless, rightly to under¬
stand the love of God is so difficult a matter that
one sect of theologians have altogether denied
that man can love a Being who is not of his own
species, and they have defined the love of God
as consisting merely in obedience. Those who
hold such views do not know what real religion is.
All Moslems are agreed that the love of God is
a duty. God says concerning the believers, “ He
loves them and they love Him,” 1 and the Prophet
1 Koran.
100
DEFINITION OF LOVE
101
said, “ Till a man loves God and His Prophet
more than anything else he has not the right
faith.” When the angel of death came to take
the soul of Abraham the latter said, “ Have you
ever seen a friend take his friend’s life ? ” God
answered him, “ Have you ever seen a friend
unwilling to see his friend ? ” Then Abraham
said, “ 0 Azrael ! take my soul ! ” The following
prayer was taught by the Prophet to his com¬
panions, “ 0 God, grant me to love Thee and to
love those who love Thee, and whatsoever brings
me nearer to Thy love, and make Thy love more
precious to me than cold water to the thirsty.”
Hassan Basri used to say, “ He who knows God
loves Him, and he who knows the world hates it.”
We come now to treat of love in its essential
nature. Love may be defined as an inclination
to that which is pleasant. This is apparent in
the case of the five senses, each of which may be
said to love that which gives it delight; thus the
eye loves beautiful forms, the ear music, etc.
This is a kind of love we share with the animals.
But there is a sixth sense, or faculty of perception,
implanted in the heart, which animals do not
possess, through which we become aware of
spiritual beauty and excellence. Thus, a man
who is only acquainted with sensuous delights
cannot understand what the Prophet meant
when he said he loved prayer more than perfumes
or women, though the last two were also pleasant
102
THE LOVE OE GOD
to him. But he whose inner eye is opened to
behold the beauty and perfection of God will
despise all outward sights in comparison, how T -
ever fair they may be.
The former kind of man will say that beauty
resides in red-and-white complexions, well-pro¬
portioned limbs, and so forth, but he will be
blind to moral beauty, such as men refer to when
they speak of such and such a man as possessing
a “beautiful” character. But those possessed
of inner perception find it quite possible to love
the departed great, such as the Caliphs Omar and
Abu Bakr, on account of their noble qualities,
though their bodies have long been mingled wdth
the dust. Such love is directed not towards any
outward form, but towards the inner character.
Even when we wash to excite love in a child to¬
wards any one, we do not describe their outward
beauty of form, etc., but their inner excellencies.
When we apply this principle to the love of
God we shall find that He alone is really worthy of
our love, and that, if any one loves Him not, it is
because he does not know Him. Whatever we
love in any one we love because it is a reflection of
Him. It is for this reason that we love Muham¬
mad, because he is the Prophet and the Beloved
of God, and the love of learned and pious men
is really the love of God. We shall see this more
clearly if we consider what are the causes which
excite love.
THE GIFT OF GOD
103
The first cause is this, that man loves himself
and the perfection of his own nature. This leads
him directly to the love of God, for man’s very
existence and man’s attributes are nothing else
but the gift of God, but for whose grace and
kindness man would never have emerged from
behind the curtain of non-existence into the
visible world. Man’s preservation and eventual
attainment to perfection are also entirely de¬
pendent upon the grace of God. It would
indeed be a wonder, if one should take refuge
from the heat of the sun under the shadow of a
tree and not be grateful to the tree, without which
there would be no shadow at all. Precisely in the
same way, were it not for God, man would have
no existence nor attributes at all; wherefore, then,
should he not love God, unless he be ignorant of
Him ? Doubtless fools cannot love Him, for the
love of Him springs directly from the knowledge of
Him, and whence should a fool have knowledge ?
The second cause of this love is that man loves
his benefactor, and in truth his only Benefactor
is God, for whatever kindness he receives from
any fellow-creature is due to the immediate in¬
stigation of God. Whatever motive may have
prompted the kindness he receives from another,
whether the desire to gain religious merit or a
good name, God is the Agent who set that motive
to work.
The third cause is the love that is aroused by
104
THE LOVE OF GOD
contemplation of the attributes of God, His
power and wisdom, of which human power and
wisdom are but the feeblest reflections. This
love is akin to that we feel to the great and good
men of the past, such as the Imam Malik and the
Imam Shaft, 1 though we never expect to receive
any personal benefits from them, and is therefore
a more disinterested kind of love. God said to
the prophet David, “ That servant is dearest to
Me who does not seek Me from fear of punishment
or hope of reward, but to pay the debt due to
My Deity.” And in the Psalms it is written,
“ Who is a greater transgressor than he who
worships Me from fear of hell or hope of heaven ?
If I had created neither, should I not then have
deserved to be worshipped ? ”
The fourth cause of this love is the affinity
between man and God, wffiich is referred to in the
saying of the Prophet, “ Verily God created man
in His own likeness.” Furthermore, God has
said, “ My servant seeks proximity to Me, that
I may make him My friend, and when I have
made him My friend I become his ear, his eye,
his tongue.” Again, God said to Moses, “ I was
sick, and thou didst not visit Me ? ” Moses
replied, “ 0 God ! Thou art Lord of heaven and
earth: how couldest Thou be sick ? ” God
said, “ A certain servant of Mine was sick ; hadst
thou visited him, thou wouldst have visited Me.”
1 Founders of the sects which bear their names.
AFFINITY BETWEEN GOD AND MAN 105
This is a somewhat dangerous topic to dwell
upon, as it is beyond the understanding of common
people, and even intelligent men have stumbled
in treating of it, and come to believe in incarna¬
tion and union with God. Still, the affinity
which does exist between man and God disposes
of the objection of those theologians mentioned
above, who maintain that man cannot love a
Being who is not of his own species. However
great the distance between them, man can love
God because of the affinity indicated in the
saying, “ God created man in His own likeness.”
The Vision of God
All Moslems profess to believe that the Vision
of God is the summit of human felicity, because
it is so stated in the Law; but with many this is
a mere lip-profession which arouses no emotion
in their hearts. This is quite natural, for how
can a man long for a thing of which he has no
knowledge ? We will endeavour to show briefly
why the Vision of God is the greatest happiness
to which a man can attain.
In the first place, every one of man’s faculties
has its appropriate function which it delights to
fulfil. This holds good of them all, from the
lowest bodily appetite to the highest form of
intellectual apprehension. But even a com¬
paratively low form of mental exertion affords
106
THE LOVE OF GOD
greater pleasure than the satisfaction of bodily
appetites. Thus, if a man happens to be absorbed
in a game of chess, he will not come to his meal,
though repeatedly summoned. And the higher
the subject-matter of our knowledge, the greater
is our delight in it ; for instance, we would take
more pleasure in knowing the secrets of a king
than the secrets of a vizier. Seeing, then, that
God is the highest possible object of knowledge,
the knowledge of Him must afford more delight
than any other. He who knows God, even in
this world, dwells, as it were, in a paradise, “ the
breadth of which is as the breadth of the heavens
and the earth,” 1 a paradise the fruits of which
no envy can prevent him plucking, and the extent
of which is not narrowed by the multitude of
those who occupy it.
But the delight of knowledge still falls short
of the delight of vision, just as our pleasure in
thinking of those we love is much less than the
pleasure afforded by the actual sight of them.
Our imprisonment in bodies of clay and water,
and entanglement in the things of sense constitute
a veil which hides the Vision of God from us,
although it does not prevent our attaining to
some knowledge of Him. For this reason God
said to Moses on Mount Sinai, “ Thou shalt not
see Me.” 2
The truth of the matter is this, that, just as the
1 Koran. 2 Ibid.
IN MANY MIRRORS
107
seed of man becomes a man, and a buried date-
stone becomes a palm-tree, so the knowledge of
God acquired on earth will in the next world
change into the Vision of God, and he who has
never learnt the knowledge will never have the
Vision. This Vision will not be shared alike by
all who know, but their discernment of it will
vary exactly as their knowledge. God is one,
but He will be seen in many different ways, just
as one object is reflected in different ways by
different mirrors, some showing it straight, and
some distorted, some clearly and some dimly.
A mirror may be so crooked as to make even a
beautiful form appear misshapen, and a man
may carry into the next world a heart so dark
and distorted that the sight which will be a
source of peace and joy to others will be to him
a source of misery. He, in whose heart the love
of God has prevailed over all else, will derive
more joy from this vision than he in whose heart
it has not so prevailed ; just as in the case of
two men with equally powerful eyesight, gazing
on a beautiful face, he who already loves the
possessor of that face will rejoice in beholding it
more than he who does not. For perfect happi¬
ness mere knowledge is not enough, unaccom¬
panied by love, and the love of God cannot take
possession of a man’s heart till it be purified
from love of the world, which purification can
only be effected by abstinence and austerity.
108
THE LOVE OF GOD
While lie is in this world a man’s condition with
regard to the Vision of God is like that of a lover
who should see his Beloved’s face in the twilight,
while his clothes are infested with hornets and
scorpions, which continually torment him. But
should the sun arise and reveal his Beloved’s
face in all its beauty, and the noxious vermin
leave off molesting him, then the lover’s joy will
be like that of God’s servant, who, released from
the twilight and the tormenting trials of this
world, beholds Him without a veil. Abu
Suleiman said, 44 He who is busy with himself
now will be busy with himself then, and he who
is occupied with God now will be occupied v r ith
Him then.”
Yahya Ibn Muaz relates, “I watched Bayazid.
Bistami at prayer through one entire night.
When he had finished he stood up and said,
4 0 Lord ! some of Thy servants have asked and
obtained of Thee the power to perform miracles,
to walk on the sea, and to fly in the air, but this
I do not ask ; some have asked and obtained
treasures, but these I do not ask.’ Then he
turned, and, seeing me, said, 4 Are you there,
Yahya ? ’ I replied, 4 Yes.’ He asked, 4 Since
when ? ’ I answered, 4 For a long time.’ I then
asked him to reveal to me some of his spiritual
experiences. 4 1 will reveal,’ he answered, 4 what
is lawful to tell you. The Almighty showed me
His kingdom, from its loftiest to its lowest; He
TREASURES SURPASSING
109
raised me above the throne and the seat and all
the seven heavens. Then He said, 44 Ask of me
whatsoever thing thon desirest.” I answered,
44 Lord ! I wish for nothing beside Thee.”
44 Verily,” He said, 44 thou art My servant.” 5 ”
On another occasion Bayazid said, 44 Were God
to offer thee the intimacy with Himself of Abra¬
ham, the power in prayer of Moses, the spirituality
of Jesus, yet keep thy face directed to Him only,
for He has treasures surpassing even these.”
One day a friend said to him, 44 For thirty years
I have fasted by day and prayed by night and
have found none of that spiritual joy of which
thou speakest.” Bayazid answered, 44 If you
fasted and prayed for three hundred years, you
would never find it.” 44 How is that ? ” asked
the other. 44 Because,” said Bayazid, 44 your
selfishness is acting as a veil between you and
God.” 44 Tell me, then, the cure.” 44 It is a cure
which you cannot carry out.” However, as his
friend pressed him to reveal it, Bayazid said,
44 Go to the nearest barber and have your beard
shaved ; strip yourself of your clothes, with the
exception of a girdle round your loins. Take a
horse’s nose-bag full of walnuts, hang it round
your neck, go into the bazaar and cry out, 4 Any
boy who gives me a slap on the nape of my neck
shall have a walnut.’ Then, in this manner, go
where the Cadi and the doctors of the law are
sitting.” 44 Bless my soul! ” said his friend,
110
THE LOVE OF GOD
“ I really can’t do that; do suggest some other
remedy.” “ This is the indispensable preliminary
to a cure,” answered Bayazid, “ but, as I told
you, you are incurable.”
The reason Bayazid indicated this method of
cure for want of relish in devotion was that his
friend was an ambitious seeker after place and
honour. Ambition and pride are diseases which
can only be cured in some such way. God said
unto Jesus, “ O Jesus ! when I see in My servants 5
hearts pure love for Myself unmixed with any
selfish desire concerning this world or the next,
I act as guardian over that love.” Again, when
people asked Jesus “ What is the highest work
of all ? ” he answered, “ To love God and to be
resigned to His will.” The saint Rabia was once
asked whether she loved the Prophet : “ The
love of the Creator,” she said, “ has prevented
my loving the creature.” Ibrahim Ben Adham,
in his prayers, said, “ 0 God ! In my eyes heaven
itself is less than a gnat in comparison with the
love of Thee and the joy of Thy remembrance
which Thou hast granted me.”
He who supposes that it is possible to enjoy
happiness in the next world apart from the love
of God is far gone in error, for the very essence
of the future life is to arrive at God as at an
Object of desire long aimed at and attained
through countless obstacles. This enjoyment of
God is happiness. But if he had no delight in
STORY OF THE SCAVENGER 111
God before, he will not delight in Him then, and
if his joy in God was but slight before it will be
but slight then. In brief, our future happiness
will be in strict proportion to the degree in which
we have loved God here.
But (and may God preserve us from such a
doom !) if in a man’s heart there has been growing
up a love of what is opposed to God, the conditions
of the next life will be altogether alien to him,,
and that which will cause joy to others will to
him cause misery.
This may be illustrated by the following
anecdote : A certain scavenger went into the
perfume-sellers’ bazaar, and, smelling the sweet
scents, fell down unconscious. People came
round him and sprinkled rose-water upon him
and held musk to his nose, but he only became
worse. At last one came who had been a
scavenger himself ; he held a little filth under
the man’s nose and he revived instantly, ex¬
claiming, with a sigh of satisfaction, “ Ah ! this
is perfume indeed ! ” Thus in the next life a
worldling will no longer find the filthy lucre and
the filthy pleasures of the world ; the spiritual
joys of that world will be altogether alien to him
and but increase his wretchedness. For the next
world is a world of Spirit and of the manifestation
of the Beauty of God ; happy is that man who
has aimed at and acquired affinity with it. All-
austerities, devotions, studies have the acquire-
112
THE LOVE OF GOD
ment of that affinity for their aim, and that
affinity is love. This is the meaning of that
saying of the Koran, “ He who has purified his
soul is happy.” Sins and lusts directly oppose
the attainment of this affinity ; therefore the
Koran goes on to say, “ And he who has cor¬
rupted his soul is miserable.” 1 Those who are
gifted with spiritual insight have really grasped
this truth as a fact of experience, and not a merely
traditional maxim. Their clear perception of it
leads them to the conviction that he by whom it
was spoken was a prophet indeed, just as a man
who has studied medicine knows when he is
listening to a physician. This is a kind of cer¬
tainty which requires no support from miracles
such as the conversion of a rod into a snake,, the
credit of which may be shaken by apparently
equally extraordinary miracles performed by
magicians.
The Signs of the Love of God
Many claim to love God, but each should ex¬
amine himself as to the genuineness of the love
which he professes. The first test is this : he
should not dislike the thought of death, for no
friend shrinks from going to see a friend. The
Prophet said, “ Whoever wishes to see God, God
wishes to see him.” It is true a sincere lover of
1 Koran, chap. 91.
TESTS OF SINCERITY
113
God may shrink from the thought of death coming
before he has finished his preparation for the
next world, but if he is sincere, he will be diligent
in making such preparation.
The second test of sincerity is that a man
should be willing to sacrifice his will to God’s,
should cleave to what brings him nearer to God,
and should shun what places him at a distance
from God. The fact of a man’s sinning is no
proof that he does not love God at all, but it
proves that he does not love Him with his whole
heart. The saint Fudhail said to a certain man,
“ If any one asks you whether you love God,
keep silent; for if you say, 4 1 do not love Him,’
you are an infidel; and if you say, ‘ I do,’ your
deeds contradict you.”
The third test is that the remembrance of God
should always remain fresh in a man’s heart
without effort, for what a man loves he constantly
remembers, and if his love is perfect he never
forgets it. It is possible, however, that, while
the love of God does not take the first place in
a man’s heart, the love of the love of God may,
for love is one thing and the love of love
another.
The fourth test is, that he will love the Koran,
which is the Word of God, and Muhammad, who
is the Prophet of God ; if his love is really strong,
he will love all men, for all are God’s servants,
nay, his love will embrace the whole creation, for
8
114
THE LOVE OF GOD
he who loves any one loves the works he composes
and his handwriting.
The fifth test is, he will be covetous of retire¬
ment and privacy for purposes of devotion ; he
will long for the approach of night, so that he
may hold intercourse with his Friend without
let or hindrance. If he prefers conversation by
day and sleep at night to such retirement, then
his love is imperfect. God said to David, “ Be
not too intimate with men ; for two kinds of
persons are excluded from My presence: those
who are earnest in seeking reward and slack when
they obtain it, and those who prefer their own
thoughts to the remembrance of Me. The sign
of My displeasure is, that I leave such to them¬
selves.”
In truth, if the love of God really take possession
of the heart all other love is excluded. One of
the children of Israel was in the habit of praying
at night, but, observing that a bird sang in a
certain tree very sweetly, he began to pray under
that tree, in order to have the pleasure of listening
to the bird. God told David to go and say to
him, “ Thou hast mingled the love of a melodious
bird with the love of Me ; thy rank among the
saints is lowered.” On the other hand, some
have loved God with such intensity that, while
they were engaged in devotion, their houses have
caught fire and they have not noticed it.
A sixth test is that worship becomes easy. A
WHO ARE THY LOVERS ?
115
certain saint said, “ During one space of thirty
years I performed my night-devotions with great
difficulty, but during a second space of thirty
years they became a delight.” When love to
God is complete no joy is equal to the joy of
worship.
The seventh test is that lovers of God will love
those who obey Him and hate the infidels and
the disobedient, as the Koran says: “ They are
strenuous against the unbelievers and merciful
to each other.” The Prophet once asked God
and said, “ 0 Lord ! who are Thy lovers ? ”
and the answer came, “ Those who cleave to Me
as a child to its mother, take refuge in the re¬
membrance of Me as a bird seeks the shelter of
its nest, and are as angry at the sight of sin as an
angry lion who fears nothing.”
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