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He combined the most abject superstitions of a superstitious age and country with lofty
ethical indignation; social humility of the most extreme with an intellectual pride and
arrogance rarely paralleled, a keen and original grasp of the canon law of the four
schools with an utter submission of the intellect to the inbreathings of the divine from
without; a power of discreet silence as to the inconvenient with an open-mouthed vehemence
in other things. He was a devoted follower of Ibn Arabi and defended his memory against
the accusation of heresy. Yet his position is singularly different from that of Ibn Arabi,
and a doubt cannot but rise as to either his knowledge, his intelligence, or his honesty.
Practically where he differs from the ordinary Muslim is in his extension of the doctrine
of saints. As to the Most Beautiful Names (al-asma al-husna), he follows Ibn Hazm.
So, too, as to God's qualities, he follows the older school and would prefer to leave them
unconsidered. But he is, otherwise and in general, a sound Ash'arite, e.g., on the
doctrine of predestination, and of man's part in his works (iktisab). There is in
him no sign of the Plotinian pantheism of Ibn Arabi. The doctrine of God's difference (mukhalafa)
he taught, and that He created the world by His will and not by any emanation of energy.
But truth for him is not to be reached by speculation and argument: its only basis is
through the unveiling; of the inner eye which brings us to the immediate Vision of the
Divine. Those who have reached that Vision, guide and teach those who cannot or have not.
Upon that Vision all systems are built,
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and reason can only serve the visionary as a defence against the gainsayer or against
his own too wild thoughts. Naturally, with such a starting-point as this the supernatural
side of things (al-ghayb) receives strong emphasis. The Jinn and the angels are
most intense realities. Ash-Sha'rani met them in familiar converse. He met, too, al-Khadir,
the undying pilgrim saint who wanders through the lands, succoring and guiding. The
details of these interviews are given with the greatest exactness. A Jinni in the form of
a dog ran into his house on such a day by such a. door, with a piece of European paper in
his mouththis is a touch of geniuson which certain theological questions were
written. The Jinni wished ash-Sha'rani's opinion as to them. Such was the origin of one of
his books, and another sprang from a similarly exactly described talk with al-Khadir. Yet
he was content also with smaller mercies and reckons as a karama that he was
enabled to read through a certain book for some time at the rate of two and a half times
daily. To all this it would be possible of course to say flatly that he lied. But such a
judgment applied to an oriental is somewhat crude, and the knot of the mystic's mind in
any land is not to be so easily cut. Further, the doctrine of the walis is
developed by him at length. They possess a certain illumination (ilham), which is,
however, different from the inspiration (wahy) of the prophets. So, too, they never
reach the grade of the prophets, or a nearness to God where the requirements of a revealed
law fall away from them, i.e., they must always walk according to the law of a
prophet. They are all guided by
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