" Thousands and thousands occupied themselves with handing
" down traditions. In every Mosque they committed them to
" memory, and rehearsed them in every social gathering. All such
" knowledge was the common property of the nation; it was learned
" by heart, and transmitted orally. It possessed therefore, in the
" highest possible degree, the elements of life and plasticity. Bun-
" sen has discovered the divinity of the Bible in its always having
" been the people's book. If this criterion be decisive, then no
" religion has better claim to be called the vox Dei, because none
" is in so full a sense the vox populi. The creations of the
period
" we have been considering possess this character for hundreds of
" millions of our fellow-men; for modern Islamism is as far removed
" from the spirit in which the Coran was composed, as Catholicism
" is from the spirit of the Gospel; and modern Islamism is grounded
" upon tradition. But in tradition we find nothing but the Ideal,
" Invention, Fancy. Historical facts, however they may have been
" floating full of life among the people in the days of Ibn Abbâs and
" the other founders of genealogy, were trodden under feet:—because
" men wished to remove every barrier which stood in the way of
" self-glorification. And, of the thousand inventions which every
" day gave birth to, only those were recognised as true which most
" flattered the religious and national pride " (vol. iii. p.
clxxviii.).