the East India United Services Club.'' This was his first introduction to English social life. He goes on to say, " When Sir Salar Jung the Second came to London after Sir Asman Jah's departure and occupied 19, Rutland Gate, I had the honour of lunching with him more than once. Every time I saw him, there was the same tragic mask on his face. He seemed to have some great sorrow at his heart. His face was lifeless and lightless, and his silence was awful and ominous. He looked like a man who was slowly and deliberately walking to his death."* " My first long vacation at Cambridge," he says, (July to September, 1887), " was delight- ful. It was not really mine because I had not yet joined the University ; but I shared it with my brother and cousin with whom I was staying at Trinity Hall. The novelty of the experience with its half and half character—both Uni- versity and non-University—gave it a charm. I was not capped and gowned as yet but began to feel cap and gown growing upon me. All this brought new feelings that breathed a new life into me, and I was happy," Mr. Nizamuddin Ahmed had studied up to the F.A. standard of Indian Universities though he was only sixteen; but that was sufficient to enable him to prepare for the Previous Examination of Cambridge University. He had not done any Latin *This is a significant glimpse of Salar Jung II who was nearing his melancholy end. He died broken-hearted in 1889.