170 graceful manners distinguish him from the majo- rity of our young nobility of the present day, and he shows some promise. He is a young man who may prove useful in the service of the State and enhance its prestige by bringing once more before the public eye some of the nobler quali- ties of his ancestors, the great Paigah nobles. Nawab Sir Khurshid Jah Nawab Sir Khurshid Jah Shams-ul-Umara Amir-e-Kabir was the second of three brothers : the eldest, Sir Asman Jah was his half-brother, and Sir Viqar-ul-Umara was his own brother, but younger. Sir Khurshid Jah did not hold any office but was regarded by people generally as the typical representative of the great Shams-ul-Umara family on account of his conservative style of living which was quite Moghlai. And he was favoured by the late Nizam's personal attention more than any of his brothers ; possibly because he seemed more anxious to preserve the traditional prestige of his family. His ways and habits and style of living, all combined to keep him aloof from State affairs. Nawab Sir Khurshid Jah and his brothers, Sir Asman Jah and Sir Viqar-ul-Umara were allied to the Nizam's family by marriage, each of them having married a daughter of the Nizam, Afzal-ud- Dowlah; and this gave the family a very high status. So it was natural for him to think that the office of De-wan could not enhance his dignity.