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            | 150 | SPRENGER'S CONCLUSIONS |  | 
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  There is a depth of truth and reality underlying these sentiments. But it is
  needful to guard them by two considerations. In the first place, however much
  the nation was inclined to hand down only those traditions which symbolised
  with the tendency to glorify Mahomet, and also glorify the reciters
  themselves, and to throw the rest away,still there were, fortunately for
  history, causes at work which to a certain degree counteracted the process.
  For Mahometan society was, from the earliest period, riven into factions which
  opposed each other with a mortal strife, and consequently were not indisposed
  to perpetuate traditions which would aid their cause by depreciating their
  adversaries; and partizanship has fortunately thus secured for us a large
  amount of historical fact which would otherwise have sunk unnoticed. Moreover,
  in the Biographers themselves we are bound to acknowledge the honest endeavour
  to draw with faithfulness the lineaments of the Prophet's life, though
  naturally in exaggerated outlines as seen through the medium of a supernatural
  atmosphere. 
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  As regards tradition being "the voice of the people," Bunsen would
  hardly have recognised the applicability of his dictum to a state of society
  in which the range of thought was sternly circumscribed, and its results
  dwarfed, by the pains and penalties of a system far more powerful than the
  Inquisition,a system which proscribed the free exercise of thought and
  discussion as incompatible with the profession of Islam. The result is not the
  vox populi in any intelligible sense 
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  The plastic period, however, soon passed away, and left the material of
  tradition in a form which, though it might be worked up into any of the
  Theological systems, could not henceforward in its own substance be altered.
  This is well stated by Sprenger in his concluding paragraph: 
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  | " The time of creative activity, the gestation era
  of Moslem " knowledge, passed away. Hajjâj choked the young life in its
 " own blood; and the Abbâside dynasty with kingly patriotism
 " sold the dearly-bought conquests of the nation, first to the
 " Persians, and then to Turkish slaves, with the view of procuring
 " an imaginary security for their throne. And thus there arose
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