194 had served with the Hyderabad Contingent, in which some of mine had also served, had long settled at Aurangabad and had no home elsewhere. He was one of those able and estimable men whom Aurangabad presented to Hyderabad as an indi- genous type quite capable of holding its own against the claim of any outsider. In March, 1930, the news of his death suddenly reached me one morning at Vikarabad. My first feeling, after that of momentary surprise, was that he must have realised that beatitude for which he seemed to have been longing. He used to tell me how sudden his wife's departure had been to enter upon a happier phase of life, and I could guess that he wished for a similar end. Whenever he and I talked of death, it was with a sense of serene satisfaction, remem- bering that every human being has to be ready for the journey. He sometimes asked me, though I was a much younger man, to pray for him ; and often did I pray for him for that Peace which is everlasting! Strange that on the morning of his death my Qur'an should have opened at this verse : " O Soul satisfied ! return unto thy Lord, pleasing and pleased." Could any message be more reassuring ? Nawab Akbar-ul-Mulk Nawab Akbar-ul-Mulk (Mir Akbar Ali Khan), Kotwal of Hyderabad, was one of 13*