H4 habits of life have been unanimous in their ap- preciation of the Morning Thoughts. The collection called Casual Reflections has more or less the same substance, and the true worth of his meditations lies in their suggestive- riess and power of guidance. So too are his thoughts on education contained in lectures and addresses delivered on various occasions. He always in- sists on the moral aim. In this connection, his lecture delivered at the JNizam College in Febru- ary, 1913, and his Convocation Address to the Osmaiiia University delivered in January, 1930, and his Presidential Address to the Hyderabad Teachers' Association in 1932, call for special attention. There are, some of his essays which, in my opinion, deserve to be regarded as a service to Islam ; notably An Approach to the Study of the Qur'an with its irresistible appeal to the Mus- lim heart. It has been widely appreciated and deserves to be still more widely known. Then we have The Right Path, which may be treated as a companion to it. It explains in some detail the method and course of the Quranic teaching, focussing it in moral guidance to righteous con- duct in life. A short essay on Gibbon as Histo- rian of Islam helps us to recognise Gibbon's ser- vice to Islam in giving an impressive picture of it in his great history, while it points out the obvious blemishes that detract from the great historian's treatment of such themes as the * ambition ' of the Prophet. The essence of Sir Nizaxnat Jung's criticism is that Gibbon was not 8*