The Complete Works of Swami Vivekananda/Volume 8/Epistles - Fourth Series/CLXX Dhira Mata
CLXX
To Mrs. Ole Bull
1719 TURK STREET,
SAN FRANCISCO,
1st April, 1900.
DEAR DHIRA MATA,
Your kind note came this morning. I am so happy to learn that all the New
York friends are being cured by Mrs. Milton. She has been very unsuccessful,
it seems, in Los Angeles, as all the people we introduced tell me. Some are
in a worse state than before the skin paring. Kindly give Mrs. Milton my
love; her rubbings used to do me good at the time at least. Poor Dr. Hiller!
We send him over post-haste to Los Angeles to get his wife cured. You ought
to have seen him the other morning and heard him too! Mrs. Hiller, it
appears, is many times worse for all the rubbings given; and she is only a
few bones; and, above all, the doctor had to spend 500 dollars in Los
Angeles. That makes him feel very bad. I, of course, would not write this to
Joe; she is happy in her dreams of having done so much good to poor
sufferers. But oh, if she could hear the Los Angeles folks and this old Dr.
Hiller, she would change her mind at once and learn wisdom from an old adage
not to recommend medicine to any one. I am so glad I did not write of old
Dr. Hiller's alacrity in getting over to Los Angeles when he heard of this
cure from Joe. She ought to have seen the old man dance about my room, with
greater alacrity! 500 dollars was too much for the old man; he is a German;
he dances about, slaps his pockets and says, "You can'th have goth the five
hundred, buth for this silly cure!"
Then there are poor people who paid her three dollars a rubbing sometimes
and now complimenting Joe and myself. Don't tell this to Joe. You and she
can afford to lose money on anyone. So also the old German doctor, but the
poor boy finds it a bit hard. The old doctor is now persuaded that some
devils are misarranging his affairs of late. He had counted on so much to
have me as his guest, and his wife righted, but he had to run to Los Angeles
and that upset the whole plan; and now, though he tries his best to get me
in as his guest, I fight shy, not of him, but of his wife and sister-in-law.
He is sure, "Devils must be in it"; he has been a Theosophical student. I
told him to write to Miss MacLeod to hunt up a devil-driver somewhere so
that he might run with his wife and spend another five hundred! Doing good
is not always smooth!
As for me, I get the fun out of it — as long as Joe pays — bone-cracker, or skin-parer, or any system whatever. But this was not fair of Joe — after having got in all these people to get rubbed down, to run off and let me bear all the compliments! I am glad she is not introducing any outsiders to be skinned. Otherwise Joe would be gone to Paris, leaving poor Mr. Leggett to collect the compliments. I sent in a Christian Science healer to Dr. Hiller as a make-up of Joe's misdemeanour, but his wife slammed the door in her face and would have nothing to do with queer healing.
Anyhow, I sincerely hope and pray Mrs. Leggett will be well this time. Did
they analyse the sting?
I hope the will will arrive soon; I am a bit anxious about it. I expected to get a draft trust-deed also by this mail from India; no letters came, not even Awakened India, though I find Awakened India has reached San Francisco.
I read in the papers the other day of 500 deaths in one week of plague in
Calcutta! Mother knows what is good.
So Mr. Leggett has got the V. Society up. Good.
How is Olea? Where is Margot? I wrote her a letter the other day to 21 W. 34, N.Y. I am so happy that she is making headway. With all love,
Ever your son,
VIVEKANANDA.
PS. I am getting all the work I can do and more. I will make my passage, anyhow. Though they cannot pay me much, yet they pay some, and by constant work I will make enough to pay my way and have a few hundred in the pocket anyhow. So you needn't be the least anxious about me.
V.