influenced by Christian thought and western culture; but it is difficult to 
believe that Muhammad so intended his words to be taken, or that his hearers so 
understood them. Muhammad's mind was intensely practical and not in the least 
given to mysticism. In the arrangements of the world and in the affairs of men 
he saw no difficulties and no mystery. The punishments of hell are material, no 
orthodox Muslim attempts to allegorize them; why then should the material joys 
of paradise be set aside? It must, however, be noted that these descriptions of 
a voluptuous paradise are given at a time when Muhammad was living a chaste and 
temperate life with a single wife. This is urged as a plea in support of the 
allegorical view; but it must be borne in mind that, though Muhammad was 
undoubtedly fond of and faithful to Khadija,1 yet he was subject to 
her. She was the master, she had raised him from poverty, given him a position, 
placed him in comparative affluence; but she kept her fortune in her own hands. 
Muhammad had not, even assuming that he wished so to do, the means of granting 
dowries, or of, in any way, obtaining other wives. That his moderation then was 
compulsory seems to some critics evident from the fact that as soon as he was 
free he gratified his