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Lamartine
says:
"If
greatness of purpose, smallness of
means, and astounding results are
the three
criteria
of human genius, who could dare to
compare any great man in modern
history with Muhammad? The most
famous men created arms, laws and
empires
only.
They founded, if anything at all, no
more than material powers which
often
crumbled away before their eyes.
This man moved not only armies,
legislations,
empires, peoples and dynasties, but
millions of men in one-third of the
then i
nhabited world; and more than that,
he moved the altars, the gods, the
religions,
the
ideas, the beliefs and souls. . .
his forbearance in victory, his
ambition,
which
was entirely devoted to one idea and
in no manner striving for an empire;
his
endless prayers, his mystic
conversations with God, his death
and his triumph after death; all
these attest not to an imposture but
to a firm conviction which gave him
the power to restore a dogma. This
dogma was twofold, the unity of God
and the immateriality of God; the
former telling what God is, the
latter telling what God is not; the
one overthrowing false gods with the
sword, the other starting an idea
with words.
"Philosopher, orator, apostle,
legislator, warrior, conqueror of
ideas, restorer of rational dogmas,
of a cult without images; the
founder of twenty terrestrial
empires and of one spiritual empire,
that is Muhammad. As regards all
standards by which human greatness
may be measured, we may well ask, is
there any man greater than he?"
Lamartine, HISTOIRE DE LA
TURQUIE, Paris, 1854, Vol. II, pp.
276-277. |