Mahatma Letter No. 27: Difference between revisions
Pablo Sender (talk | contribs) |
|||
Line 49: | Line 49: | ||
'''NOTES:''' | '''NOTES:''' | ||
* "polemical" means being argumentative or attacking a point of view. | * "polemical" means being argumentative or attacking a point of view. | ||
* "Maha Sahib" is here a reference to [[A. O. Hume]]. | |||
* "bakbak" is a Hindi word for “meaningless conversation”; chit-chat. | * "bakbak" is a Hindi word for “meaningless conversation”; chit-chat. | ||
Revision as of 19:38, 1 June 2012
This is Letter No. 101 in Barker numbering. See below for Context and background.
< Prev letter chrono
Next letter chrono >
< Prev letter Barker
Next letter Barker >
Envelope
M K. H. enclosure |
NOTES:
|
Page 1 transcription, image, and notes
Received Simla, 1881. Your letter received. I believe you had better try and see whether you could not make your ideas less polemical and dry than his. I begin to think there may be some stuff in you, since you are able so to appreciate my beloved friend and brother. I have attended to the Brahmin boy's letter and erased the offensive sentence replacing it with another. You can now show it to the Maha Sahib; him so proud in his bakbak humility and so humble in his pride. As |
|
NOTES:
|
Page 2
for phenomena you will have none — I have written through Olcott. Blessed is he who knows our Koothoomi and blessed is he who appreciates him. What I now mean you will understand some day. As for your A.O.H. I know him better than you ever will. M. |
|
NOTES: |
Context and background
Physical description of letter
Publication history
Commentary about this letter
Notes