His inner state will not be easily discernible to others, unless
they happen to be the few who are themselves sufficiently advanced and
sufficiently sensitive to appreciate it. Yet it is his duty to
announce the glorious news of its discovery, to publish the titanic
fact of its existence. But he will do so in his own way, according to
his own characteristics and circumstances. He will not need to
announce it in a speech, or print it in a book; he will not publish
the fact in daily newspapers or shout it from the housetops. His whole
life will be the best announcement, the grandest publication.(P)
— Notebooks Category 25: World-Mind in Individual Mind > Chapter
4: The Sage's Service > # 58 Paul Brunton
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