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I
(Translated from Bengali)
Glory to
Ramakrishna!
BAIDYANATH,
25th December, 1889.
DEAR SIR (Shri Balaram
Bose),
I have been staying for the last few days at
Baidyanath in Purna Babu's Lodge. It is not so cold, and my health too is
indifferent. I am suffering from indigestion, probably due to excess of iron in
the water. I have found nothing agreeable here — neither the place, nor the
season, nor the company. I leave for Varanasi tomorrow. Achyutananda stopped at
Govinda Chaudhury's place at Deoghar, and the latter, as soon as he got news of
us, earnestly insisted on our becoming his guests. Finally, he met us once
again and prevailed on us to accede to his request. The man is a great worker,
but has a number of women with him — old women most of them, of the ordinary
Vaishnava type. . . . His clerks too revere us much; some of them are very much
ill-disposed towards him, and they spoke of his misdeeds. Incidentally, I
raised the topic of __. You have many wrong ideas or doubts about her; hence I
write all this after particular investigation. Even the aged clerks of this
establishment highly respect and revere her. She came to stop with __ while she
was a mere child, and ever lived as his wife. . . . Everyone admits in one
voice that her character is spotless. She was all along a perfectly chaste
woman and never behaved with __ in any relation but that of wife to husband,
and she was absolutely faithful. She came at too early an age to have incurred
any moral taint. After she had separated from __, she wrote to him to say that
she had never treated him as anything but her husband, but that it was
impossible for her to live with a man with a loose character. His old
office-bearers too believe him to be satanic in character; but they consider __
a Devi (angel), and remark that it was following her departure that __ lost all
sense of shame.
My object in writing all this is that formerly I was not a believer in the
tale of the lady's early life. The idea that there might be such purity in the
midst of a relation which society does not recognise, I used to consider as
romance. But after thorough investigation I have come to know that it is all
right. She is very pure, pure from her infancy — I have not the least doubt
about it. For entertaining those doubts, you and I and everyone are guilty to
her; I make repeated salutations to her, and ask her pardon for my guilt. She
is not a liar.
I take this opportunity to record that such courage is impossible in a lying
and unchaste woman. I have also been told that she had a lifelong ardent faith
in religion also.
Well, your disease is not yet improving! I don't think this
is a place for patients unless one is ready to spend a good deal of money.
Please think out some judicious course. Here every article will have to be
procured from elsewhere.
Yours sincerely,
VIVEKANANDA.
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