As the days wore  on at Nagpur, Shri Nathji’s work continued unabated. It was impossible for any  human being to speak for so long at such great length in a continuous unending  flow of words. And words were not all, there was a divine feeling that  accompanied the words. People were lost in another world from the sound of the  voice alone. Most were so totally absorbed in Shri Nathji’s beautiful  personality that the words became mere ornamentations.
    It was impossible  for any human being to contain so much of divine knowledge, which flowed out so  easily and so spontaneously, answering the call of the human soul.
    Shri Nathji never  read books. His knowledge was his own, it came from the depths of his inner  being. His words were so overpowering, and his renderings of them so lucid and  so simple, and there was so much authority in them, that it touched the hearts  of the young and the old, men, women and children, the intellectuals as well as  the ordinary folk.
    What was most  marked was the feeling of intense Love Divine that his words carried, which at  once bathed and purified the human soul.
    It was just as  natural for Shri Nathji to speak over the microphone to large audiences in  public halls, as it was to speak to groups of visitors at home. It made no  difference to Shri Nathji whether there was one man before him or the entire  world. He would pour out the depths of his soul for one solitary visitor as he  would to large crowds.
    There were  moments when he continued to pour out his spiritual gems to the home group,  which included Sahadeva and Mrs. Bhutt. Some of his finest and greatest  spiritual revelations flowed out in front of just one or two people. Shri  Nathji had done this ever since the days of his youth.
    There were times when he was  seen speaking to the labourers and carpenters that came to his house at  Mussoorie for repairs. He would just as soon be seen speaking to the servants  and coolies and chowkidars at Mussoorie as he would to Pran Priya’s friends  from school. He had given a long sermon to the technician who came to repair  Priya Nath’s tape recorder at Nagpur.
    It was a very unique  phenomenon in history, and showed that divine grace was ever ready to pour out  to as many as came before it.