222 Sir Ali to stay, we both felt that it would hardly be just to accept his condition, namely that the member in question should be removed from office, which would have meant dismissal. I submitted that the offence was not so serious as to call for such a severe punishment, and His Exalted Highness agreed. I had occasion to explain the matter to the Resident also in the same way. Sir Ali Imam's arrival had raised great expecta- tions and his untimely departure changed the course of events in Hyderabad, and mucli which could not then be foreseen, has come out of it. His presence, suggestive of power wholesomely exercised, would have kept unscrupulous officials in awe. Though he was a little impulsive and hasty and self-conscious, his nature was not ungene- rous, and he was not self-seeking. If he had remained on, he could have done much valuable work—cleansing and constructive. His great scheme for bringing under cultivation and popu- lating vast areas of fallow land in the Dominions, when completed, would have meant increased prosperity. He could have rendered useful service to Hyderabad by recasting the whole system of departmental work, cutting out unnecessary accretions and rooting out that despicable form of selfishness, corruption. He could have helped to maintain a higher standard of public conduct, but it was not to be.