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Volume 6 / Epistles - Second Series /
IL
(Translated from Bengali)
BALTIMORE, U.S.A.,
22nd October, 1894.
DEAR—, (Swami Ramakrishnananda.)
Glad to receive your letter and go through the contents. I received today a letter of Akshay Kumar Ghosh from London, which also gives me some information. . . .
Now you have come to know your own powers. Strike the iron while it is hot.
Idleness won't do. Throw overboard all idea of jealousy and egotism, once for
all. Come on to the practical field with tremendous energy; to work, in the
fullness of strength! As to the rest, the Lord will point out the way. The
whole world will be deluged by a tidal wave. Work, work, work — let this be
your motto. I cannot see anything else. There is no end of work here — I am
careering all over the country. Wherever the seed of his power will find its
way, there it will fructify —
— be it today, or
in a hundred years." You must work in sympathy with all, then only it will
lead to quick results . . . .
Our object is to do good to the world, and not the trumpeting of our own
names. Why doesn't Niranjan (Niranjanananda) learn Pali in Ceylon, and study
Buddhist books? I cannot make out what good will come of aimless rambling.
Those that have come under his protection, have virtue, wealth, desires,
and freedom lying at their feet.
— Courage!
Everything will come about by
degrees. From all of you I want this that you must discard for ever
self-aggrandisement, faction-mongering, and jealousy. You must be
all-forbearing, like Mother Earth. If you can achieve this, the world will be
at your feet. . . .
Try to give less of material food in the anniversary celebrations, and give some food for the brain instead. . . .
Yours affectionately,
VIVEKANANDA.