LABURNUM ROAD,
GAMDEVI, BOMBAY,
June 27, 1919
MY DEAR HENRY,
I am dictating this after 11 p.m.
You will not therefore expect anything lengthy from me. I hope you received my
cable in fairly good time. Here is a copy of my cable to Mr. Montagu.1
I delayed sending it for four days. I enclose copy of instructions2
issued by me to be followed after my incarceration. By the time this reaches
you, many things would have happened here. The only thing therefore that I need
say to you is that I am embarking on civil disobedience because I am no longer
able to bear the agony of remaining free while the Rowlatt Act is on the
Statute-book; add to this the events in the Punjab, the martial law proceedings,
the heavy sentences, the iniquitous conviction of Babu Kalinath Roy. The only
thing that deterred me from offering civil disobedience was the recrudescence of
violence and it is that fear which has made me restrict civil disobedience to
myself. To send others to jail would have caused less stir, but it would not
have been satyagraha. The more I think into the thing, the more truly I perceive
the beauty and the strength of my own statement that one satyagrahi, if he is a
genuine article is enough for a win.
Please show this to Mr. Shastriar to
whom also I sent the cable that I sent to you.
Remember me to everybody. My love to
you and Millie. The Transvaal Bill1 is wretched. I have written to the Viceroy.
It is too terrible for words.