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Volume 6 / Epistles - Second Series /
(Translated from Bengali)
ALMORA,
15th June, 1897.
MY DEAR AKHANDANANDA,
I am getting detailed reports of you and getting more and more delighted. It
is that sort of work which can conquer the world. What do differences of sect
and opinion matter? Bravo! Accept a hundred thousand embraces and blessings
from me. Work, work, work — I care for nothing else. Work, work, work, even
unto death! Those that are weak must make themselves great workers, great
heroes — never mind money, it will drop from the heavens. Let them whose gifts
you will accept, give in their own name if they like, no harm. Whose name, and
what is it worth? Who cares for name? Off with it! If in the attempt to carry
morsels of food to starving mouths, name and possession and all be doomed even
—
—thrice blessed art thou! It is the
heart, the heart that conquers, not the brain. Books and learning, Yoga and
meditation and illumination — all are but dust compared with love. It is love
that gives you the supernatural powers, love that gives you Bhakti, love that
gives illumination, and love, again, that reads to emancipation. This indeed is
worship, worship of the Lord in the human tabernacle, "
— not this that people worship". (That is things other than God.) This is but the beginning, and
unless we spread over the whole of India, nay, the whole earth, in that way,
where lies the greatness of our Lord!
Let people see whether or not the touch of our Lord's feet
confers divinity on man! It is this that is called liberation-in-life — when
the last trace of egoism and selfishness is gone. Well done! Glory to the Lord!
Gradually try to spread. If you can, go to Calcutta, and raise a fund with the
help of another band of boys; set one or two of them to work at some place, and
begin somewhere else. Spread in that way, and go on inspecting them. You will
see that the work will gradually become permanent, and spread of religion and
education will follow as a matter of course. I have given particular
instructions to them in Calcutta. Do that kind of work, and I shall carry you
on my shoulders — bravo! You will see that by degrees every district will
become a centre — and that a permanent one. I am soon going down to the plains.
I am a fighter, and shall die in the battlefield. Does it behave me to sit up
here like a zenana lady?
Yours with all love,
VIVEKANANDA.