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thing else to put the Muslim East and mediaeval Europe in the strait waistcoat from
which the first has not yet emerged and the second only shook itself free in the
seventeenth century. He was a student of Aristotle and a mystic, as all Muslim students of
Aristotle have been. How far his mysticism enabled him to square the Qur'an with his
philosophy is not clear; such men seldom said exactly what they meant and all that they
thought. He was also a diligent student and reader of the Qur'an and faithful in his
public religious duties. Yet the Muslim world asserts that he left behind him a
testamentary tractate (wasiya) defending dissimulation as to the religion of the
country in which we might be; that it was not wrong for the philosopher to go through
religious rites which for him had no meaning. He, too, is significant for his time, and,
if our interest were philosophy, would call for lengthened treatment. As it is, he marks
for us the accomplished separation between students of theology and students of
philosophy.
An equally well known and by us much better loved name is that of Umar al-Khayyam, who
died later, about 515, but who may fitly be grouped with Ibn Sina. He, too, was a bon
vivant, but of a deeper, more melancholy strain. His wine meant more than friendly
cups; it was a way of escape from the world and its burden. His science, too, went deeper.
He was not a gatherer and arranger of the wisdom of the past; his reformed calendar is
more perfect than that which we even now use. His faith is a riddle to us, as it was to
his comrades. But it was because he had no certain truth to proclaim that Umar did not
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speak out clearly. His last words were almost those of Rabelais, "I go to meet the
great Perhaps." Anecdotage connects his name with that of al-Ghazzali. Neither had
escaped the pall of universal scepticism which must have descended upon their time. But
al-Ghazzali, by God's grace, as he himself reverently says, was enabled to escape. Umar
died under it.
A very different man was Abu-l-Ala al-Ma'arri, the blind poet and singer of
intellectual freedom. In Arabic literature there is no other voice like his, clear and
confident. He was a man of letters; no philosopher nor theologian nor scientist, though at
one time he seems to have come in contact with a circle like that of Ikhwan as-safa,
perhaps the same; and his spirit was like that of one of the heroic poets of the old
desert life, whose hand was taught to keep his head, whose tongue spared nothing from
heaven to earth, and who lived his own life out in his own way, undaunted. In his darkness
he nourished great thoughts and flung out a saeva indignatio on hypocrisy and
subservience which reminds of Lessing. But Abu-l-Ala was a great poet, and his scorn of
priests and courtiers and their lies, his pity for suffering humanity and his confidence
in the light of reason are thrown into scraps of burning, echoing verse without their like
in Arabic. He died at the town of his birth, Ma'arrat au-Nu'man, in northern Syria, in
449. The problem is how he was suffered to live out his long life of eighty-six years.
We can now return to the development of scholastic theology in the orthodox church at
the hands of
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