upstairs chacha told me seeking to distill his philosophy, money makes a man perfect. if a man has money, all this relatives give him honor and respect. if he has no money, he gets no -- and before you didn't mean -- need money. before it is to come from love. today there is no brotherly or sisterly love. and then the final reading is from the end of the book after this journey of immersion in a handful of indian life, living through this change. a kind of summing up of many examples of what you saw there, which is profoundly new and in some ways alien ideas of what life is and should be about, pushing into a very traditional culture. and it is not a linear, simple shift the way. these things are intermingled and very much in contention with each other and it is not always clear which will win. but the overall direction seems plain. this is from the epilogue, called midnight. i will never be able to relate the fullness of what it was to live in india in that dawn. the world turns slowly. nations, he rose, visions of regeneration, and go. to history we are ever changed