167 it was not difficult for him to become popular and to run into debt! As regards mind and ability and experience of work, it cannot be said that he achieved any- thing like distinction as Prime Minister. He too, like his predecessor, had to depend largely upon his secretaries, and some of them were men who were inclined to serve their own interests with greater zeal than his. By their insinuating manner and flattering subservience they could keep him in good humour, and so control his confi- dence. I remember some of these tacticians and their doings, but it is needless to dig out such trifles from beneath the dust of half a century. Sir Viqar, to his misfortune, soon became a centre of intrigue owing to his weak but good nature ; and of this His Highness the Nizam became aware through secret reports which reached him from time to time. One of the sources of information, and perhaps the most reliable, was Nawab Akbar Jung, Akbar-ul-Mulk, C.S.T., the lynx-eyed, lion- hearted Kotwal. The Nizam's suspicions increas- ed from day to day, until a sort of bitterness entered into their mutual relations, and he decided to change the Minister. An order was passed suddenly in 1901 removing Sir Viqar from office and appointing Maharaja Kishen Pershad, the Peshkar, in his place. Sir Viqar died soon after this while he was out on a shooting expedition in one of his jagirs.