Part 6 (1/2)

It has already been said that our earth is the first, or highest, of seven earths, which are all of equal width and thickness and at equal distances apart. Each of these earths has occupants. The occupants of the first are men, genii, brutes, etc.; the second is occupied by the suffocating wind that destroyed the infidel tribe of Ad; the third, by the stones of Jahennem (or h.e.l.l), mentioned in the ?ur-an in these words, ”the fuel of which is men and stones;”[112] the fourth, by the sulphur of Jahennem; the fifth, by its serpents; the sixth, by its scorpions, in colour and size like black mules and with tails like spears; the seventh, by Iblees and his troops.[113]

Whether these several earths are believed to be connected with each other by any means, and if so how, we are not expressly informed; but, that they are supposed to be so is evident. With respect to our earth in particular, as some think, it is said that it is supported by a rock, with which the Mountains of ?af communicate by means of veins or roots; and that when G.o.d desires to effect an earthquake at a certain place, He commands the mountain (or rock) to agitate the vein that is connected with that place.[114] But there is another account, describing our earth as upheld by certain successive supports of inconceivable magnitude, which are under the seventh earth; leaving us to infer that the seven earths are in some manner connected together. This account, as inserted in the work of one of the writers above quoted, is as follows:--The earth [under which appellation are here understood the seven earths] was, it is said, originally unstable; ”therefore G.o.d created an angel of immense size and of the utmost strength, and ordered him to go beneath it [_i.e._ beneath the lowest earth] and place it on his shoulders; and his hands extended beyond the east and west, and grasped the extremities of the earth [or, as related in Ibn-El-Wardee, the seven earths] and held it [or them]. But there was no support for his feet: so G.o.d created a rock of ruby, in which were seven thousand perforations, and from each of these perforations issued a sea, the size of which none knoweth but G.o.d, whose name be exalted; then he ordered this rock to stand under the feet of the angel. But there was no support for the rock: wherefore G.o.d created a huge bull, with four thousand eyes and the same number of ears, noses, mouths, tongues, and feet; between every two of which was a distance of five hundred years' journey; and G.o.d, whose name be exalted, ordered this bull to go beneath the rock; and he bore it on his back and his horns. The name of this bull is Kuyoota.[115] But there was no support for the bull: therefore G.o.d, whose name be exalted, created an enormous fish, that no one could look upon on account of its vast size, and the flas.h.i.+ng of its eyes, and their greatness; for it is said that if all the seas were placed in one of its nostrils, they would appear like a grain of mustard-seed in the midst of a desert: and G.o.d, whose name be exalted, commanded the fish to be a support to the feet of the bull.[116] The name of this fish is Bahamoot [Behemoth]. He placed, as its support, water; and under the water, darkness: and the knowledge of mankind fails as to what is under the darkness.”[117]--Another opinion is, that the [seventh] earth is upon water; the water, upon the rock; the rock, on the back of the bull; the bull, on a bed of sand; the sand, on the fish; the fish, upon a still, suffocating wind; the wind, on a veil of darkness; the darkness, on a mist; and what is beneath the mist is unknown.[118]

It is generally believed that under the lowest earth, and beneath seas of darkness of which the number is unknown, is h.e.l.l, which consists of seven stages, one beneath another. The first of these, according to the general opinion, is destined for the reception of wicked Mohammadans; the second, for the Christians; the third, for the Jews; the fourth, for the Sabians; the fifth, for the Magians; the sixth, for the Idolaters; the seventh, by general consent, for the Hypocrites. Jahennem is the general name for h.e.l.l, and the particular name for its first stage.[119]

The situation of h.e.l.l has been a subject of dispute; some place it in the seventh earth; and some have doubted whether it be above or below the earth which we inhabit.

At the consummation of all things, G.o.d, we are told, will take the whole earth in his [left] hand, and the heavens will be rolled together in his right hand;[120] and the earth will be changed into another earth; and the heavens, [into other heavens];[121] and h.e.l.l will be brought nigh to the [tribunal of G.o.d].[122]

FOOTNOTES:

[96] This notion of the seven heavens appears to have been taken from the ”seven spheres;” the first of which is that of the Moon; the second, of Mercury; the third, of Venus; the fourth, of the Sun; the fifth, of Mars; the sixth, of Jupiter; and the seventh, of Saturn; each of which orbs was supposed to revolve round the earth in its proper sphere. So also the idea of the seven earths seems to have been taken from the division of the earth into seven climates; a division which has been adopted by several Arab geographers.

[97] ?ur. lxv. 12, and Mo?ammad's answers to 'Abd-Allah Ibn-Selam, quoted by Ibn-El-Wardee (MS.); and Mek?ool, quoted by the same author; and Mishkat el-Ma?abee?, ii. 652, 653.

[98] Ibn-Esh-s.h.i.+?neh (MS.).

[99] In another MS. of the same author, ”yellow.”

[100] In his Khi?a? (MS.).

[101] ?ur. xiii. 3, and several other places.

[102] ?ur. ii. 20, and lxxviii. 6.

[103] ?ur. lxxi. 18.

[104] Mek?ool, quoted by Ibn-El-Wardee.

[105] Wahb Ibn-Munebbih, quoted by El-Ma?reezee in his Khi?a?.

[106] Ibn-El-Wardee, however, says that its name is derived from its terrors and difficulties.

[107] [Cp. Lane's Selections from the ?ur-an, 128 ff., 2nd ed. 1879.]

[108] History of El-Khi?r in the Mir-at ez-Zeman.

[109] El-?azweenee.

[110] Mo?ammad's answers to 'Abd-Allah Ibn-Selam, quoted by Ibn-El-Wardee.

[111] El-?azweenee.

[112] ?ur. ii. 22, and lxvi. 6.

[113] Mir-at ez-Zeman.

[114] Tradition from the Prophet, recorded by Ibn-'Abbas, and quoted by Ibn-El-Wardee; and by El-Is?a?ee, in describing an earthquake that happened in his lifetime. See also the next note.

[115] In Ibn-Esh-s.h.i.+?neh, ”Kuyoothan;” the orthography of this word is doubtful, as the vowel-points are not written. As the tradition is related in Ibn-El-Wardee, this bull takes a breath twice in the course of every day (or twenty-four hours): when he exhales, the sea flows; and when he inhales, it ebbs. But it must not be imagined that none of the Arabs has any notion of the true theory of the tides: the more learned among them explain this phenomenon by the influence of the moon. Many of the Arabs attribute earthquakes to the shaking of this bull.