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environments were there when I was born. In my boyhood I learnt the trade; I am unattached, and I try to do my duty well. I try to do my duty, as a householder, and I try to do all I can to make my father and mother happy.' I neither know your Yoga, npr have I become a Sannyasin, nor ever did I go out of the world into a forest; nevertheless, all this that you have heard and seen has come to me through the unattached doing of the duty which belongs to my position.”
. There is a sage in India, a great Yogin, one of the most wonderful men I have ever seen in my life. He is a peculiar man; he will not teach any one; if you ask him a question he will not answer. It is too much for himoto take up the position of a teacher; he will not do it. If you ask a question, and ifs.you wait for some days, in the course of conversation he will bring the
subject out himself, and wonderful light will he " then throw on it. He told me once the secret of perfect work, and what he said was, "Let the end and the means be joined into one, and that is the