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Lala
Lajpatrai
We
publish elsewhere the last letter we received from Lala Lajpatrai previous to
his sudden deportation. Great has been the good fortune of the Punjab leader in
being selected as the first and noblest victim on the altar of Motherland. But
for our part, we may be pardoned if we indulge a feeling of regret and grief at
the sudden parting from a friend. We have not been acquainted with Lajpatrai for
very long but even these brief months of acquaintance and increasing friendship
have been enough to feel the charm of his personality. There was always in
Lajpatrai a singular union of tenderness with strength, of quietness with
fervour, a ready sympathy in kindly feeling which could not fail to attract.
This sympathy and kindliness is evident in the warm phrases of appreciation he
wrote to us. And there is a touch in his subscription to the letter which
subsequent events have brought startlingly home to us -
"An humble servant of the Motherland, Lajpatrai." Happy is he, for his
Mother has accepted his service and given it the highest reward for which a
Page-49
patriot can hope, the privilege of not merely serving but suffering for her.
When India raises statues to the heroes and martyrs of her emancipation, it will
inscribe on his the simple and earnest phrase which remains behind to us as his
modest boast and his sufficient message.
Bande Mataram, May 11, 1907
Page-50
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