68 and the moments snatched for refreshment during the day's hard work, and the night spent under canvas, with all sorts of weird sounds indistinctly heard between sleeping and waking—including the rhythmic snoring and grunting of the beaters stretched round the camp fires—all this went into the charm wrought by that great enchantress, Nature, and became romance/' One of the charms of Sir Nizamat's personality arises from an unexpected combination of widely differing traits that go to form it. A lover of books and peace by disposition, of Nature and solitude by habit, one may well wonder at his love of horses and weapons and jungle life. " Yes, I was fond of weapons," said he one day, " and always kept some by me, whether they were required for use or not. Even now in m£^7qth .year I sometimes take a gun out of its case, or a sword or a dagger out of its sheath and have a good look at it for a little pleasurable excitement. I like to read history in such things ; they have played a great part in our world/' He delighted to remind people that Socrates had fought as a foot soldier at the battle olPIa- taea and JEschylus at Salamis and Marathon. Though a hermit at heart, the warrior's soul in him was always orTthe alert, and we find flashes of it in some of his poems. His daily habits are even now regular. He rises before four in the morning; sometimes between three and four for the night prayers, Tahajjud, makes a cup of coffegJor himself, repeats passages