no guardian of peace —against all subversive move- ments encouraged or engineered by misguided and mischievous communism." " Education in my view has to begin the work of reconstruction by placing the civil- ization of the world on its only true founda- tion—humanity and righteousness. And true education has to address itself not to B.A/s andB.Sc/s, but to infant humanity. It is best begun at home in the nursery, and the best of all teachers of humanity is the mother who can do much more than Doctors of Philosophy can. Let the mother's teaching be followed up in schools and in colleges and in universities by the training of the faculties to good-will as the mainspring of human action/1 Though Sir Nizamat Jung has not written much prose, there is sufficient material in his printed writings and notes to enable us to judge what his habitual thoughts and feelings were and how he expressed them. " My thoughts/' said he, " are always under trial, and I allow time to test their truth. The collection called Morning Thoughts consists of impromptu notes made in 1929, and whenever I glance over the pages now, I find myself in them. Those ' thoughts ' are my ' convictions/ They had welled up from within; and my friends will meet me in them/'