224 friend. It was not long before we felt drawn towards each other, and his affection for me was genuine —strengthened, possibly, by the fact that my uncle, Nawab Emad Jung, was an old friend whom he respected. My estimate of his character, tested by time, is this : a cheerful nature with a ceaseless desire to please as a means to being pleased. He remind- ed me of Goldsmith's lines: "They please, are pleased; they give to give esteem, Till seeming blest, they grow to what they seem. " A haunting fear of disobliging anyone by word or by manner, and an almost feminine softness and inability to say ' no ' made him what he seemed. But with all this, he had a practical shrewdness which enabled him to keep out of intrigue, though he must have been perilously near it at times. His happy disposition and irrepressible sociability were of great help to him in keeping on the best of terms with Europeans and Indians alike. His effusive gush and beaming smile were very useful personal assistants, His popularity with the British was bound to increase his influence with the Prime Ministers under whom he served, and this made his position as a " Liaison Officer " unassailable. Not only the Ministers but the Nizam himself looked upon him for a long time as almost indispensable. He served under four Ministers down to the time of the third Salar Jung and uniformly maintained