Page:The Book of the Thousand Nights and One Night, Vol 2.djvu/158

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dogs of Balkh,’ rejoined Ibrahim. ‘But we, when we are blest with plenty, we do honour to God, and when we suffer famine, we praise Him.’ And Shekic seated himself before Ibrahim and said to him, ‘Thou art my master.’” Quoth Mohammed ben Amran, “A man once asked of Hatim el Asemm,[1] ‘What maketh thee to trust in God?’ ‘Two things,’ replied he, ‘I know that what God has appointed for my daily bread shall be eaten by none but myself; so my heart is at rest as to that; and I know that I was not created without God’s knowledge and am abashed before Him.’”’

Then the fifth damsel retired and the old woman came forward and kissing the earth before thy father nine times, spoke as follows: ‘Thou hast heard, O King, what these all have said on the subject of piety; and I will follow their example in relating what I have heard of the famous men of times past. It is said that the Imam es Shafi[2] divided the night into three portions, the first for study, the second for sleep and the third for prayer. The Imam Abou Henifeh[2] was wont also to pass half the night in prayer. One day a man pointed him out to another, as he passed, and said, “Yonder man watches the whole night.” Quoth Abou Henifeh, “When I heard this, I was abashed before God, to hear myself praised for what was not in me; so, after this, I used to watch the whole night.” Er Rebya relates that Es Shafi used to recite the whole Koran seventy times over during the month of Ramazan, and that in prayer. Quoth Es Shafi (may God accept of him!), “For ten years I never ate my fill of barley-bread, for satiety hardens the heart and deadens the wit and induces sleep and enfeebles one from standing up (to pray).” It is reported of Abdallah ben Mohammed es Sekra that he said,

  1. Abou Hatim el Asemm (the Deaf), a famous Balkhi theologian of the ninth century.
  2. 2.0 2.1 Two of the most famous theologians of the second century of the Hegira and the founders of two of the four great Mohammedan schools.