70 dreaming, there comes a flash of thought or a snatch of song like a shooting star and I hasten to capture and confine it. Sometimes a few lines of some great poet come to remind me of some duty to be done ; the words of Shakespeare or some other English poet, or some moral maxims of Horace bring a plea- sant change to dispel dullness." I cannot do better than reproduce some of his own notes to throw more light on his person- ality. " Kind people may think (or say) that I have done some good work in life. I wonder if I have. Both as regards the nature of the work and its quality, we are apt to differ. Some people would naturally think of my offi- cial work and those who have thought of me since as a religious devotee and nothing else, would only be harping on my 'sanctimonious theory/ A small band of the initiated among my countrymen, might occasionally think of me as a literary man, a poet, a scholar^ a er^ etc. But I do not like to think of such things. " Sir Nizamat Jung is one who finds more satis- faction in recalling the performance of some hum- ble duty than in thinking of his more meritorious official or literary work. I quote the following from his notes. : "It is my good fortune to have been of some little help to people who were working in a noble cause, and to have found it possible