mind, adaptability, and, apart from religious emotion, no conscience. In the third
century of the Hijra (the ninth A.D.), the Persians were either devoted Shi'ites or simple
unbelievers. The one class would do anything for the descendants of Ali; the other,
anything for themselves. This second class, further, would by preference combine doing
something for themselves with doing something against Islam and the Arabs, the conquerors
of their country. So much by way of premise.
In the early part of this third century, there lived at Jerusalem a Persian oculist
named Maymun. He was a man of high education, professional and otherwise; had no beliefs
to speak of, and understood the times. He had a son, Abd Allah, and trained him carefully
for a career. Abd Allah, however—known as Abd Allah ibn Maymun—though he had thought
of starting as a prophet himself, saw that the time was not ripe, and planned a larger and
more magnificent scheme. This was to be no ordinary conspiracy to burst after a few years
or months, but one requiring generations to develop. It was to bring universal dominion to
his descendants, and overthrow Islam and the Arab rule. It succeeded in great part, very
nearly absolutely.
His plan was to unite all classes and parties in a conspiracy under one head, promising
to each individual the things which he considered most desirable. For the Shi'ites, it was
to be a Shi'ite conspiracy; for the Kharijites, it took a Kharijite tinge; for Persian
nationalists, it was anti-Arab; for freethinkers, it was frankly nihilistic. Abd Allah himself
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