287- recordation in yerse of such a worthy gentleman's mus- ings and prayerful meditations, Islamic Poems and its two predecessors deserve to be read with attention and respect." " Again, some of SirNizamat Jung's " Casual Reflec- tions " and " Morning Thoughts " also deserve to be called miniature essays. Sir Nizamat writes serenely and wisely on a variety of themes—" Life an Examina- tion, " "Resignation, " "Seeking Refuge from Evil," "Perpetual Change, " "Good and Bad Thoughts," "The Unreality of this World, " "The Dust of Life's Journey, " "Mind and Muscle," and scores of others; but these " Morning Thoughts, " elegant, personal, persuasive, trite, jotted down apparently without premeditation, come to us with a reassuring squeeze of one's hand. Here is a sample of Sir Nizamat's prose : 6 Look at Nature's face, and you look into her heart, and by looking into her heart you can reach God. You cannot see God except in His works, and His works are around you. They are Nature, and in Nature everything is good and beautiful. If you see anything that is not good and beautiful be sure it is your own blurred vision that makes it appear so.* "