CHAPTER VI.—As OTHERS SEE HIM As with all literary men, papers consisting of old letters and memoranda had collected in the side rooms of Sir Niza- mat Jung's library. It was with modest diffidence that he gave me permission to examine their contents and the trouble I took over the search has been by no means in vain. The quotations given in this Chapter are extracts from various letters ranging from 1911 to the present day. Some specifically deal with one or two of his books; others are tributes to his works in general or to his philosophy and personality. But each and every one of them expresses the unfailing sense of elevation which people experience when coming in contact with Sir Nizamat or his writings. Extracts from Letters SABOJINI NAIDU. " It has been, to me a great privilege as well as a great pleasure to be allowed to come into touch with a spirit so delicately and sensitively responsive to the tenderest chord of beauty; a mind so attuned to fine ideals and lofty moods, albeit full of that melancholy and concentration and remoteness from the larger humanity of life which would appear to be inseparable from those spiritual and mental gifts I find in your verses." " You have a large vision or rather capacity for a large vision, and I think you will have in proportion the capacity for a large utterance, and we Indians need some poet who has a like vision and the voice/'