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Assassins, the Qarmatians and the Druses; certainly, wherever we can test them there is
the most singular agreement. It is a mechanical and aesthetic pantheism, a glorification
of Pythagoreanism, with its music and numbers; idealistic to the last degree; a worship
and pursuit of a conception of a harmony and beauty in all the universe, to find which is
to find and know the Creator Himself. It is thus far removed from materialism and atheism,
but could easily be misrepresented as both. This, it is true, is a very different
explanation from the one given in our first Part; it can only be put along-side of that
and left there. The one expresses the practical effect of the Isma'ilians in Islam; the
other what may have been their ideal. However we judge them, we must always remember that
somewhere in their teaching, at its best, there was a strange attraction for thinking and
troubled men. Nasir ibn Khusraw, a Persian Faust, found peace at Cairo between 437 and 444
in recognizing the divine Imamship of al-Mustansir, and after a life of persecution died
in that faith as a hermit in the mountains of Badakhshan in 481. The great Spanish poet,
Ibn Hani, who died in 362, similarly accepted al-Mu'izz as his spiritual chief and guide.
Another eclectic sect, but on a very different principle, was that of the Karramites,
founded by Abu Abd Allah ibn Karram, who died in 256. Its teachings had the honor to be
accepted and protected by no less a man than the celebrated Mahmud of Ghazna (388-421),
Mahmud the Idol-breaker, the first invader of India and the patron of al-Beruni, Firdawsi,
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Ibn Sina and many another. But that, to which we will return, belongs to a later date
and, probably, to a modified form of Ibn Karram's teaching. For himself, he was an ascetic
of Sijistan and, according to the story, a man of no education. He lost himself in
theological subtleties which he seems to have failed to understand. However, out of them
all he put together a book which he called "The Punishment of the Grave," which
spread widely in Khurasan. It was, in part, a frank recoil to the crassest
anthropomorphism. Thus, for him, God actually sat upon the throne, was in a place, had
direction and so could move from one point to another. He had a body with flesh, blood,
and limbs; He could be embraced by those who were purified to the requisite point. It was
a literal acceptance of the material expressions of the Qur'an along with a consideration
of how they could be so, and an explanation by comparison with menall opposed to the
principle bila kayfa. So, apparently, we must understand the curious fact that he
was also a Murji'ite and held faith to be only acknowledgment with the tongue. All men,
except professed apostates, are believers, he said, because of that primal covenant, taken
by God with the seed of Adam, when He asked, "Am I not your Lord?" (Alastu
bi-rabbikum) and they, brought forth from Adam's loins for the purpose, made answer,
"Yea, verily, in this covenant we remain until we formally cast it off." This,
of course, involved taking God's qualities in the most literal sense. So, if we are to see
in the Mu'tazilites scholastic commentators trying to reduce Muhammad, the poet, to
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