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They had to give up the plan of further travel owing to illness and returned together to Hathras. The journey was strenuous for Sharat Chandra and at one point Swami Vivekananda carried his belongings, including his heavy boots, which Sadananda remembered throughout his life.
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Sharat Chanadra accompanied Swami Vivekananda in his journey, and together they traveled to Rishikesh. When Swami Vivekananda had asked Sharat as to what he had to offer as food to the guest, the latter replied quoting from a Persian poem, "Oh Beloved, you have come to my house, I shall prepare the most delicious dish for you with the flesh of my heart." When Swami was about to take his leave, he initiated Sharat Chandra on the latter's request. Another account asserts that Sharat Chandra Gupta saw the monk sitting in a railway compartment and, being captivated by the bright eyes of the latter, entreated him to get down and be his guest as he had dreamed of those eyes. In the words of Swami Virajananda, Sharat Chandra was enchanted by Swami Vivekananda's fascinating appearance and particularly his "devilish eyes". While he was waiting for the train, the station master of Hathras, Sharat Chandra Gupta, took notice of him and invited him to his quarters. Sometime in September 1888 Swami Vivekananda, then an unknown itinerant monk, was travelling from Vrindavan to Haridwar and decided to take a train from Hathras. There he first met the wandering monk who would become his guru. He accepted a job with the railways and was posted as a station master in Hathras railway station. Sharat Chandra possessed a strong physique and a generous nature.
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His elder brother Adharchandra Gupta had renounced worldly life and become a monk. Being brought up in North India, Sharat Chandra developed proficiency in the Hindi and Urdu languages, although his mother tongue was Bengali. In 1868, his parents migrated to Jaunpur, near Varanasi. Sharat Chandra Gupta was born in Calcutta on 6 January 1865. His notable contribution in the later part of his life was preaching the message of Swami Vivekananda, especially among youth. His later days were spent in company of Sister Nivedita as her protector and guide. One of his significant contributions was providing relief to the citizens of Calcutta during the plague epidemic of 1898–99. He was one of the leaders of early Ramakrishna Mission in its relief work. He took his monastic vows and joined Baranagar Math to serve the other disciples of Sri Ramakrishna in 1888–89 and subsequently joined the Belur Math when it was established.
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He was the first disciple according to some sources. Swami Sadananda (6 January 1865 - 18 February 1911), born Sharat Chandra Gupta, popularly known as Gupta Maharaj in the Ramakrishna Order, was a direct monastic disciple of Swami Vivekananda. For the German Gaudiya Vaishnava, see Sadananda Das.
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