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|  |  | the science of Medicine. Others have able physicians among their friends. Let these   
therefore inquire whether there is a disease, often beginning in early youth or childhood,   
among the symptoms of which are some or all of the following: The patient utters a   
strange, inarticulate cry, falls   
(يُصْرَعُ)  
1 suddenly to the ground, becomes pale, then sometimes   
turns purple, the body trembles violently, the mouth foams, the eyes are shut, and the   
sick person seems on the point of death; he often sees flashes of light and bright colours,   
hears a ringing in his ears, and frequently suffers after the attack from a most violent   
headache. He often has a distinct warning before a fit comes on. It has been asserted that there is such a disease, and that it is not very rare. The 
author of these pages is not a physician, for which causeamong othershe does not 
venture to offer an opinion upon the subject. We must now leave it to our readers to consider, and by God's guidance to decide, 
whether the facts which we have learnt about Muhammad's conduct and character are such as 
to lead to the conclusion that he was really and in very truth a Prophet of God. Let it 
never be forgotten that the statements about him which we have quoted are not those of his 
enemies, but those made by his friends, his relatives, and those who most firmly believed 
in his claim to be the Seal of the Prophets, the Apostle of God. 
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|  |  | CHAPTER VIIAN INQUIRY INTO THE MANNER IN WHICH ISLAM AT FIRST SPREAD IN ARABIA 
ITSELF AND IN THE NEIGHBOURING LANDS FROM Ibn Hisham 1 and other biographers of Muhammad we learn that, when he 
arose as a Prophet in Mecca in his fortieth year, he at first adopted gentle means in 
order to spread his religion: He called it "the Religion of Abraham", he 
identified his teaching with that of Zaid the Hanif, and he employed personal influence, 
persuasion, and argument in order to induce men to abandon idolatry and to return to the 
worship of God Most High 
(الله 
تعالىَ). His wife Khadijah was perhaps his first convert; the other 
seven who soon joined him were his slave Zaid 2 ibn Harithah, Abu Bakr, 'Uthman 
ibn 'Uffan, Zubair ibnu'l 'Awam, 'Abdu'r Rahman ibn 'Auf, Sa'd ibn Abi Waqqas, and Talhah. 
Ibn Ishaq and Ibn Hisham mention the names of a number of other early converts, including 
even the infant 'Ayishah. These were privately won over to Islam during the first three 
years of Muhammad's teaching. He then began to preach in public, under the protection of 
his uncle Abu Talib, who was not then converted. It is disputed whether he ever became a 
Muslim. Only sixteen converts took part in the first Hijrah to Abyssinia in the fifth year 
3 of Muhammad's mission; but from time to time others followed them to the 
court of the Najashl, so that they finally amounted to eighty-three men, besides some 
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