148 personally. But I had to look untroubled and unhurt; and my reply was : " He was so great that it is difficult for ordinary minds nowadays to understand his greatness/' I am not sure whether this Parthian dart touched the questioner below the skin, but I had relieved my feelings by discharging it. Salar Jung's greatness lay in his penetration and his foresight, in his unerring judgment and his calm decision. This was followed up by appropriate and adequate action carefully planned and unfalteringly pursued. The period between 1 the ?4th and 2Qth years of his age was filled with the gravest concerns. He had first to save Hyder- abad from self-destruction, and then to save India from the horrors of civil war. Hyderabad was on the verge of ^bankruptcy, when he became Dewan, and many of the districts were in the hands of the Arab Chiefs and other depredators who had lent the State money and were thus repaying themselves. They had become farmers of revenue and their own paymasters, and often defied higher authority. The young Minister, though a novice in public affairs, was yet able to manage them with his fine tact and firmness, so as to pay them off and get back the districts to be administered under his own direction. He then proceeded to settle the system under which Revenue administration was to be carried on in future, and at a later stage facilitated control by the distribution of the whole country into Divisions and Districts, Another and greater achievement