on a mountain, close to this city, a convent, which
was the residence of several religious men living in
community, and conversant with the principles of Sufism:
they have a superior to preside over them, and one
or more servants to attend to their wants. Their
internal regulations are really admirable; each faquir
lives separately in a cell of his own, and meets his
comrades only at meals or prayers. Every morning
at daybreak the servants of the community go round
to each faquir, and inquire of him what provisions
he wishes to have for his daily consumption....
They are served with two meals a day. Their dress
consists of a coarse woollen frock, two being allowed
yearly for each man—one for winter, another
for summer. Each faquir is furnished likewise
with a regular allowance of sugar, soap to wash his
clothes, oil for his lamp, and a small sum of money
to attend the bath, all these articles being distributed
to them every Friday.... Most of the faquirs
are bachelors, a few only being married. These
live with their wives in a separate part of the building,
but are subject to the same rule, which consists in
attending the five daily prayers, sleeping at the
convent, and meeting together in a lofty-vaulted chamber,
where they perform certain devotions.... In the
morning each faquir takes his Koran and reads the
first chapter, and then that of the king;[10] and
when the reading is over, a Koran, previously divided
into sections, is brought in for each man to read in
turn, until the whole is completed. On Fridays
and other-festivals these faquirs are obliged to go
to the mosque in a body, preceded by their superior....
They are often visited by guests, whom they entertain
for a long time, supplying them with food and other
necessaries. The formalities observed with them
are as follows:—If a stranger present himself
at the door of the convent in the garb of a faquir,
namely, with a girdle round his waist, his kneeling-mat
suspended between his shoulders, his staff in his
right hand, and his drinking vessel in his left, the
porter of the convent comes up to him immediately,
and asks what country he comes from, what convent
he has resided in, or entered on the road, who was
the superior of it, and other particulars, to ascertain
that the visitor is not an impostor.... This
convent was plentifully endowed with rents for the
support of its inmates, for besides the considerable
revenue in lands which was provided by its founder,
a wealthy citizen of Malaga, who had been governor
of the city under the Almohades, pious men are continually
adding to the funds either by bequests in land or by
donations in money.”
The resemblance between these faquirs and Christian monks is sufficiently obvious, and need not be dilated upon: and though this particular convent was established at a later time, we cannot doubt that the influence, which produced such a modification of the very spirit of Islam, must have made itself felt much earlier. This is apparent in the analogous case of Moslem nuns, as a passage from an Arab writer seems to shew,[11] where it is said that the body of the Moorish king, Gehwar (1030-1043), was followed to the grave even by the damsels who had retired into solitude.