The Complete Works of Swami Vivekananda/Volume 8/Epistles - Fourth Series/XLVII Sister
XLVII
To Miss Mary Hale
C/O MISS DUTCHER,
THOUSAND ISLAND PARK, N.Y.
26th June, 1895.
DEAR SISTER,
Many thanks for the Indian mail. It brought a good deal of good news. You
are enjoying by this time, I hope, the articles by Prof. Max Müller on the
"Immortality of the Soul" which I sent to Mother Church. The old man has
taken in Vedanta, bones and all, and has boldly come out. I am so glad to
know the arrival of the rugs. Was there any duty to pay? If so I will pay
that, I insist on it. There will come another big packet from the Raja of
Khetri containing some shawls and brocades and nick-nacks. I want to present
them to different friends. But they are not going to arrive before some
months, I am sure.
I am asked again and again, as you will find in the letters from India, to go over. They are getting desperate. Now if I go to Europe, I will go as the guest of Mr. Francis Leggett of N.Y. He will travel all over Germany, England, France, and Switzerland for six weeks. From there I shall go to India, or I may return to America. I have a seed planted here and wish it to grow. This winter's work in N.Y. was splendid, and it may die if I suddenly go over to India, so I am not sure about going to India soon.
Nothing noticeable has happened during this visit to the Thousand Islands.
The scenery is very beautiful and I have some of my friends here with me to
talk about God and soul ad libitum. I am eating fruits and drinking milk and
so forth, and studying huge Sanskrit books on Vedanta which they have kindly
sent me from India.
If I come to Chicago I cannot come at least within six weeks or more. Baby
needn't alter any of her plans for me. I will see you all somehow or other
before I go.
You fussed so much over my reply to Madras, but it has produced a tremendous effect there. A late speech by the President of the Madras Christian College, Mr. Miller, embodies a large amount of my ideas and declares that the West is in need of Hindu ideas of God and man and calls upon the young men to go and preach to the West. This has created quite a furore of course amongst the Missions. What you allude to as being published in the Arena I did not see a bit of it. The women did not make any fuss over me at all in New York. Your friend must have drawn on his imagination. They were not of the "bossing" type at all. I hope Father Pope will go to Europe and Mother Church too. Travelling is the best thing in life. I am afraid I shall die if made to stick to one place for a long time. Nothing like a nomadic life!
The more the shades around deepen, the more the ends approach and the more one understands the true meaning of life, that it is a dream; and we begin to understand the failure of everyone to grasp it, for they only attempted to get meaning out of the meaningless. To get reality out of a dream is boyish enthusiasm. "Everything is evanescent, everything is changeful" — knowing this, the sage gives up both pleasure and pain and becomes a witness of this panorama (the universe) without attaching himself to anything.
"They indeed have conquered Heaven even in this life whose mind has become
fixed in sameness. God is pure and same to all, therefore they are said to
be in God" (Gita, V.19). Desire, ignorance, and inequality — this is the
trinity of bondage.
Denial of the will to live, knowledge, and same-sightedness is the trinity
of liberation.
Freedom is the goal of the universe.
"Nor love nor hate nor pleasure nor pain nor death nor life nor religion nor
irreligion: not this, not this, not this."
Yours ever,
VIVEKANANDA.