The Days of Mohammed eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 230 pages of information about The Days of Mohammed.

The Days of Mohammed eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 230 pages of information about The Days of Mohammed.

“If there be any man,” said he, “whom I have unjustly scourged, I submit my own back to the lash of retaliation.  Have I aspersed the reputation of any Mussulman?—­let him proclaim my faults in the face of the congregation.  Has anyone been despoiled of his goods?—­the little that I possess shall compensate the principal and the interest of the debt.”

He then liberated his slaves, gave directions as to the order of his funeral, and appointed Abu Beker to supply his place in offering public prayer.  This seemed to indicate that Abu Beker was to be his successor in office; and the long-tried friend accordingly became the first caliph of the Saracen empire.

After this the prophet was conveyed again to the house of Ayesha.  The fever increased, and the pain in his head became so great that he more than once pressed his hands upon it exclaiming, “The poison of Khaibar!  The poison of Khaibar!”

Once, perceiving the mother of Bashar, the soldier who had died of the poison in the fatal city, he said: 

“O mother of Bashar, the cords of my heart are now breaking of the food which I ate with your son at Khaibar!”

At another time, springing up in delirium, he called for pen and ink that he might write a new revelation; but owing to his weak state, his request was refused.  In talking to those about him he said that Azrael, the Angel of Death, had not dared to take his soul until he had asked his permission.

A few nights before his death, he awoke from a troubled sleep, and, starting wildly from his couch, sprang up with unnatural strength from his bed.

“Come, Belus!” he cried to an attendant.  “Come with me to the burial-place of El Bakia!  The dead call to me from their graves, and I must go thither to pray for them.”

Alone they passed into the night; through the long, silent streets they walked like phantoms; up the white road of Nedj they glided, until the few low tombs of the cemetery to the southeast of the city were in sight.

At the border of the bleak, lonely field, where the wind moaned among the tombs like the sighing of a weeping Rachel, Mohammed paused.

“Peace be with you, O people of El Bakia!” he cried.  “Peace be with you, martyrs of El Bakia!  One and all, peace be with you!  We verily, if Allah please, are about to join you!  O Allah, pardon us and them!  And the mercy of God and his blessings be upon us all!”

Thus he prayed, stretching his hands towards the spot where his friends lay in their long sleep.  His companion stood in awe behind him, shivering in superstitious terror, as the white tombs gleamed like moving apparitions through the gloom, and the night-owls hooted with a mournful cadence o’er the dreary waste.

When he had concluded, the prophet turned towards home.  But the excitement of mind which had endowed him with almost supernatural strength now deserted him.  His steps grew feeble and he was fain to lean upon Belus on his painful way back.

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The Days of Mohammed from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.