Page 57 (1/1)
This remark did not surprise me as it would have a feeeks before, for I had come to learn that Gas liable at any time to suddenly evince a very unferasp
Maitland had been gone just six weeks to a day e received fro upon the ive this co only a few personal observations which I do not feel justified in disclosing, and which, moreover, are not necessary to the completeness of this narrative: MY DEAR DOCTOR: I have at last sohtyou what my movements have been since ht it wise to possessthe authenticity of Mr Darrow's narrative I found without difficulty the banyan tree which had been the trysting-place, and close by it the little cave with itsin fact precisely as related, even to the "Farsees'" garden or cemetery, with its "Tower of Silence," or "Dakhma," as it is called by the natives The cave and the banyan are a the entleman, with true German hospitality, asked lad to accept his invitation, as I believed his knowledge of Boreat service to me In this I did not mistake I told hiobah, who had been so between a rishi and a fakir, and he directed me at once to a fakir named Parinama who, he said, would be able to locate ine how agreeably surprised I was to find that Parinaobah well I had anticipated so the latter's whereabouts, and here was a man who could --for a sufficient consideration--tell me much, if not all, about him I secured an interpreter, paid Parinaive you my questions and his answers just as I jotted theobah's full na have you known him?
A Thirty-five year
Q Has he always lived in Bombay?