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    Ch. 3: The Miracle of Purun Bhagat

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    The night we felt the earth would move
    We stole and plucked him by the hand,
    Because we loved him with the love
    That knows but cannot understand.

    And when the roaring hillside broke,
    And all our world fell down in rain,
    We saved him, we the Little Folk;
    But lo! he does not come again!

    Mourn now, we saved him for the sake
    Of such poor love as wild ones may.
    Mourn ye! Our brother will not wake,
    And his own kind drive us away!

    Dirge of the Langurs.

    There was once a man in India who was Prime Minister of one of
    the semi-independent native States in the north-western part of
    the country. He was a Brahmin, so high-caste that caste ceased
    to have any particular meaning for him; and his father had been
    an important official in the gay-coloured tag-rag and bobtail of
    an old-fashioned Hindu Court. But as Purun Dass grew up he felt
    that the old order of things was changing, and that if any one
    wished to get on in the world he must stand well with the
    English, and imitate all that the English believed to be good.
    At the same time a native official must keep his own master's
    favour. This was a difficult game, but the quiet, close-mouthed
    young Brahmin, helped by a good English education at a Bombay
    University, played it coolly, and rose, step by step, to be
    Prime Minister of the kingdom. That is to say, he held more real
    power than his master the Maharajah.

    When the old king--who was suspicious of the English, their
    railways and telegraphs--died, Purun Dass stood high with his
    young successor, who had been tutored by an Englishman; and
    between them, though he always took care that his master should
    have the credit, they established schools for little girls,
    made roads, and started State dispensaries and shows of
    agricultural implements, and published a yearly blue-book on
    the "Moral and Material Progress of the State," and the Foreign
    Office and the Government of India were delighted. Very few
    native States take up English progress altogether, for they will
    not believe, as Purun Dass showed he did, that what was good for

    the Englishman must be twice as good for the Asiatic. The Prime
    Minister became the honoured friend of Viceroys, and Governors,
    and Lieutenant-Governors, and medical missionaries, and common
    missionaries, and hard-riding English officers who came to shoot
    in the State preserves, as well as of whole hosts of tourists
    who travelled up and down India in the cold weather, showing how
    things ought to be managed. In his spare time he would endow
    scholarships for the study of medicine and manufactures on
    strictly English lines, and write letters to the "Pioneer",
    the greatest Indian daily paper, explaining his master's
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