From what Kamalamma, his loving companion of five decades, has discovered these private pages do not contain the usual vilifying juice and junk of high office, but, on the contrary, are filled with a critical examination of his moral being. There is a harsh scrutiny of his principles and promises. A mild anxiety if he has been able to keep the trajectory he has chosen. A meditative effort to expunge all hints of self-importance. Deep reflection where every strand of his ego comes under the microscope. Unbridled encounters with his seeming deceptions and some plain letters of confession. All of these are not in one single narrative or in a chronological sequence, but are scattered in the many papers he has left behind. In this saffron season of abuse, accusation, smirk and skulduggery, they are a serene glow that bear testimony to a rare integration of the public and private persona of an individual.
Let me offer some samples.
Here's a prayer he made before he joined government service in 1957: