cialities of existence in order to live a life con- cerned with realities, by means of silent commun- ion with the Infinite and disinterested service of his fellow-beings. The former carried him into the realms of religion, poetry and philosophy, while the latter made him, even as an official, a social reformer and a philanthropist. In all his discourses, public and private, I find him warning people against mistaking the shadow for the substance, and caring more for personal gain than for the real and lasting good of those around them. Even as a lover of literature, he values thought-content more than beauty of phrase. His words, spoken or written, whether in prose or in poetry, contain some high thought, some useful idea or some message from the great thinkers of the past, and more often from the Qur'an, calculated to raise humanity from the depths into which this glamorous but soulless civilization of ours seems to have fallen. If sometimes one finds him a little curt in conver- sation or uninviting in his manner or a little im- patient, it is because he is above the wiles of hypocrisy, and does not hide what he feels at the moment. Seen against the background of the social life of Hyderabad two particular characteristics emerge prominently in the life-story of Sir Nizamat Jung. One is that he did not change his principles or ways of life to suit the changing times. He did not begin to like a person merely because he found him rising to greater heights