Government, as an eminent advocate can ? " This was the wise counsel of an uncommonly far-seeing man and would have been faithfully carried out, but fate was against it. How true it is that there is a providence in everything I It intervened on this occasion to change Mr. Nizamuddin Ahmed's plan of life. Orders were issued for his appointment in March, 1897, and he went to Parbhani at a week's notice. When he returned to Hyderabad during the summer vacation in May, his father was ill, under- going an operation, and died in July. Through the good offices of his uncle, Nawab Emad Jung, he got an officiating appointment at Hyderabad where his presence was necessary to attend to domestic affairs. And thus the idea of practice Imdjto^be^giyen^^up. Towards the end ol 1897, he acted for a few months as Second Assistant Home Secretary in such a way as to earn high praise from Moulvi Aziz Mirza, the acting Home Secretary. After that he was Registrar of the High Court for a year till he was appointed Chief^City Magis- Jrat£. In 1898 occurred an event which was for him a test of character and moral courage. A criminal case had been brought against the^Chief Engineer (Mr. Buchanan) and the Magistrate proceeded to try .it in spite of a hint from the higher authorities that it had better be dropped. " I was not influenced by the wishes of the Prime Minister (Sir Viqar-ul-Umara) who had ap- pointed me. His Government wanted me to stop the case, but I went on with it as I was bound to