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  investigations of a Sprenger and a Weil have placed in our hands (authorities
  as good as any open to themselves, and far better than those to which they are
  in the habit of referring), they will be compelled to give credit to our facts
  and listen with deference to our conclusions. If we can, front their own best
  sources, prove to them that they are deceived and superstitious in many
  important points, and can thus establish the untenableness of some of their
  positions; while we at the same time admit all statements that are grounded in
  fact;we shall have gone a great way to excite honest inquiry and induce the
  sincere investigator to follow our lead.
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  The native mind is at present not insensible to the subject. The Urdoo
  biography of Ghulâm Imâm is by no means a solitary instance. There are many
  others. One of the most remarkable is, perhaps, that which appears weekly in
  an Urdoo newspaper, the Asad ul Akhbâr published at Agra. Ever since
  its commencement in June 1847, the life of Mohammed has formed the leading
  article of this paper, and the subject is not yet concluded. This biography is
  consequently much more extensive and elaborate than Ghulâm Imâm's
  "Nativity," and goes with great detail into the historical
  traditions and legendary narratives, translated mostly from the late and
  credulous Persian biographers of Mohammed, whose narratives are possessed of
  no historical weight whatever.1
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  That an article on the biography of Mohammed should have regularly appeared
  for the last five years as the leader in a miscellaneous Urdoo newspaper, is
  certainly not one of the least remarkable signs of the times, and warrants the
  hope that intelligent and thinking Mohammedans are turning their attention
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