part-I
indications of future greatness were conspicuousin him from his very childhood he was
a very high spirited and restless child.he was some times given to fits of temper for which
his mother found a strangremedy.it was to put him under a tap and chart shiva's name.
as he grow up he showed signs of an extradinaroy generous nature. when ever a begger
are mendicant called at his house of for alms.he readly gave away even valuable things of
his house.his was found of pet animals and birds and had several such dumpcompanions.
some of them being a cow ,a goat,a monkey,apigeon,a peacock,and two are three guinepigs.
to his young imagination the coach men with his whip was the most admirable hero.Among
the boys of his group he was the object of their admiration and always their leader in his
faviorate game of the "king and the court" he invariably played the part of the king,and
appointed other as officiers.
even in his very early days he showed signs of an expectational intelligance and of a prodigious
memoryin his early childhood he learnt by heart gencalogy of his ancestors,hymns to gods and
goddesses and the aphorism of the sanskrit grammer"mugdha bodha" by hearing them recited every
evening sitting on a lap of an old realative. He learnt his lessons from his private tutors in an
extradinary way.He would show in his english and bengali books the particular lessons to be
learnt accordingly to the direction he got from his school.
the tutorwas to read it two or three times,as he was studying it him self naren listed to the
reading ,laying or sitting that was enough for him to master the lesson.

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