i8o all religions and to none in particular ! Though tfls marriage with a Mohammedan lady proved him to have been a Muslim, the burning of his body after death restored it to Hinduism. He called himself a sufi and a fakir. Sufism, as he under- stood it, was perhaps no more than a quest of the abstract spirit of religion beyond any denomina- tional form of it. So far as I could judge, he did not reveal any of the peculiar characteristics of mysticism, and I never heard of any absorption or emotional contemplation leading him towards spiritual ecstasy. The habit of his mind seemed to be eclectic, rather than intuitive. And though he liked to call himself & fakir, the stern self- abnegation which is the essential quality of a fakir, seemed to be beyond him. He had always been anxious to obtain a Firman from His Exalted Highness regarding the devolu- tion^ of his estate after him ; and his desire was that Kis son by his Rani, Khwaja Pershad, should be his successor. He asked me to use my influence to persuade the Nizam to issue a Firman to that effect; and upon my submitting the matter to His Exalted Highness I was told there was no need for hurry. And time showed that His Exalted Highness was right. The unfortunate Khwaja Pershad had .been brought up with great expectations as he was the sole survivor of the many sons by the Maharaja's Hindu wives. His name, Khwaja Pershad, had been suggested by the Maharaja's faith in the