The Complete Works of Swami Vivekananda/Volume 8/Epistles - Fourth Series/XIV Diwanji Saheb
XIV
To Shri Haridas Viharidas Desai
BOMBAY,
22nd May, 1893.
DEAR DIWANJI SAHEB,
Reached Bombay a few days ago and would start off in a few days. Your
friend, the Banya gentleman to whom you wrote for the house accommodation,
writes to say that his house is already full of guests and some of them are
ill and that he is very sorry he cannot accommodate me. After all we have
got a nice, airy place.
. . . The Private Secretary of H. H. of Khetri and I are now residing together. I cannot express my gratitude to him for his love and kindness to me. He is what they call a Tazimi Sardar in Rajputana, i.e. one of those whom the Rajas receive by rising from their seats. Still he is so simple, and sometimes his service for me makes me almost ashamed.
. . . Often and often, we see that the very best of men even are troubled
and visited with tribulations in this world; it may be inexplicable; but it
is also the experience of my life that the heart and core of everything here
is good, that whatever may be the surface waves, deep down and underlying
everything, there is an infinite basis of goodness and love; and so long as
we do not reach that basis, we are troubled; but having once reached that
zone of calmness, let winds howl and tempests rage. The house which is built
on a rock of ages cannot shake. I thoroughly believe that a good, unselfish
and holy man like you, whose whole life has been devoted to doing good to
others, has already reached this basis of firmness which the Lord Himself
has styled as "rest upon Brahman" in the Gita.
May the blows you have received draw you closer to that Being who is the
only one to be loved here and hereafter, so that you may realise Him in
everything past, present, and future, and find everything present or lost in
Him and Him alone. Amen!
Yours affectionately,
VIVEKANANDA.