his position at the time of his death, [199];
his civil virtues, [200];
effect of the invention of Gabriel on his title to belief, [201];
at his death simply a successful robber, [203];
the first twelve years of the Christian faith and the first twelve years of Islam, [206];
holds in the Mohammedan system the place of Christ in the Christian, [208];
radical antagonism of that system with the Christian faith, [202];
his record by St. John Damascene, [211-214];
character and formation of the Koran, [214];
Christendom and Islam contemporaries in origin, [218];