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logic and sense, we must see in Ibn Karram one of those wooden-minded literalists, for
whom a metaphor is a ridiculous lie if it cannot be taken in its external meaning. He was
part of the great stream of conservative reaction, in which we find also such a man as
Ahmad ibn Hanbal. But the saving salt of Ahmad's sense and reverence kept him by the safe
proviso "without considering how and without comparison." All Ahmad's later
followers were not so wise. In his doctrine of the state Ibn Karram inclined to the
Kharijites.
Before we return to al-Jubba'i and the fate of the Mu'tazilites, it remains to trace
more precisely the thread of mysticism, that kashf, revelation, which we have
already mentioned several times. Its fundamental fact is that it had two sides, an ascetic
and a speculative, different in degree, in spirit and in result, and yet so closely
entangled that the same mystic has been assigned, in good and in bad faith, as an adherent
of both.
It is to the form of mysticism which sprang from asceticism that we must first turn.
Attention has been given above to the wandering monks and hermits, the sa'ihs
(wanderers) and rahibs who caught Muhammad's attention and respect. We have seen,
too, how Muslim imitators began in their turn to wander through the land, clad in the
coarse woollen robes which gave them the name of Sufis, and living upon the alms of the
pious. How early these appeared in any number and as a fixed profession is uncertain, but
we find stories in circulation of meetings between such mendicant friars and al-Hasan
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al-Basri himself. Women, too, were among them, and it is possible that to their
influence a development of devotional love-poetry was due. At least, many verses of this
kind are ascribed to a certain Rabi'a, an ascetic and ecstatic devotee of the most extreme
other-worldliness, who died in 135. Many other women had part in the contemplative life.
Among them may be mentioned, to show its grasp and spread, A'isha, daughter of Ja'far as-Sadiq,
who died in 145; Fatima of Naysabur, who died in 223, and the Lady Nafisa, a contemporary
and rival in learning with ash-Shafi'i and the marvel of her time in piety and the ascetic
life. Her grave is one of the most venerated spots in Cairo, and at it wonders are still
worked and prayer is always answered. She was a descendant of al-Hasan, the martyred
ex-Khalifa, and an example of how the fated family of the Prophet was an early school for
women saints. Even in the Heathenism we have traces of female penitents and hermits, and
the tragedy of Ali and his sons and descendants gave scope for the self-sacrifice, loving
service and religious enthusiasm with which women are dowered.
All these stood and stand in Islam on exactly the same footing as men. The distinction
in Roman Christendom that a woman cannot be a priest there falls away, for in Islam is
neither priest nor layman. They lived either as solitaries or in conventual life exactly
as did the men. They were called by the same terms in feminine form; they were Sufiyas
beside the Sufis; Zahidas (ascetics) beside the Zahids; Waliyas (friends of God) beside
the Walis;
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