258 thought and morality, and conformed to the old high standard of decency and respectability in all essential matters, is to be regretted. The nobi- lity and gentry of Hyderabad towards the close of the last century, though not quite the same in these respects as their predecessors of the seventies, were yet of a higher type than is seen nowadays. This gradual decay of the best local product, together with the gradual growth and spread of a hybrid type, has undoubtedly lowered the standard, not of mere mechanical efficiency, perhaps, but of true worth and refine- ment. " " I base the distinction between ' Mulki' and ' non-Mulki' on grounds very different from those generally accepted. It is not the accident of birth alone that makes a man Mulki in the best sense of the word ; it is the Mulki heart to give that does it. It implies devotion, self-sacrifice, absence of a mercenary spirit, will- ingness to give to the country of one's best with- out any thought of recognition, remuneration or reward, and to work for the country as one does for one's self or for one's own family. Let a person work with this feeling in his heart for Hyderabad, and I would honour him as a Mulki whether he be a Christian, a Jew, or a Muslim, a Hindu or a Parsi; and whether he came from Bombay or Madras ; or from Delhi or Lucknow. " * * * 17*