Zeid the Hanif (p. 80, note), from Zoroastrianism (pp. 387, 394), and that his teaching
shows a gradual development (pp. 398-400). In this I quite agree with him; but no orthodox Muslim
would consider this other than gross blasphemy.
The Sayyid has so far profited from Western thought that he is able to declare himself the foe of
polygamy and slavery. But he demands too much from our credulity, or depends unduly on the crassness
of our ignorance of the Qur'an when he ventures to tell us that Muhammad agreed with him in
all this. His attempt to explain Muhammad's many marriages as being formed only from motives of the
purest and most unselfish charity (p. 331, sqq.) is admirable as an example of able
casuistry. The method in which he strives to rescue his master's memory from the stain of cruel and
cowardly murder is ingenious in the extreme, if not ingenuous, but is by no means convincing to
those who have even the very slightest acquaintance with Ibn Hisham and Muhammad's other Arabian
biographers (p. 162, sqq.).
The Sayyid endeavours with great ability to show that the spirit of Islam has ever been forward
in the encouragement of learning and science. But he (quite unintentionally) refutes himself by
confessing that the very dynasties (e.g. that of the Fatimides in Egypt; and the 'Abbasides
in Mesopotamia) under which Muhammadan (so called) learning flourished were devoted
followers of the I'tizal and similar schools of philosophy, which he himself compares (and
rightly) with the Rationalistic movement in Modern Europe (pp. 496, 520, 571, 610, sqq.,
646). "Distinguished scholars, prominent physicists, mathematicians, historiansall the world
of intellect in fact, including the Caliphs, belonged to the Mu'tazalite School" (p. 610).