IN OFFICE BY the age of twenty-one, Mr. Nizamuddin Ahmed's formal education had been completed, and from his 22nd year till the 25th he remained in London to keep his terms to qualify for the Bar, and continued as he says to read "at random but ceaselessly/' At the age of 26—a year after his last return from England—he was enrolled at the Madras High Court. He joined the State service in 1897 and officiated in some judicial posts till he was appointed undersecretary in the Legislative Department in 1901 at the age of 30. This takes us to the end of the third decade of his life, and another 10 years bring us to the period of his Home Secretaryship in 1909 before which he had served as High Court Judge for two years. After 1910 he reverted to 'the "High Court and remained there till he was made Political Secretary in 1918 and Member of the Executive Council towards the end of 1919. He continued as Political Member till the end of 1929 when he retired. I shall follow these outlines in giving a more detailed account of his official career. After his return from England in February 1896 he waited for orders for eight or nine months before deciding to go to Madras to be enrolled at the High Court. During the Christmas Recess when he returned