Page:Malabari, Behramji M. - Gujarat and the Gujaratis (1882).djvu/92

From Wikisource
Jump to navigation Jump to search
This page has been proofread, but needs to be validated.
76
GUJARÁT AND THE GUJARÁTIS.

forth, and Sir Madáv alone could rescue Baroda from anarchy. He had only a short time previously afforded Lord Northbrook[1] great pleasure by his astronomical lucubrations. He was generally allowed to be a man of talent, one of the most educated men in India, with a will and capacity for work. Thus came His Excellency to Baroda, conquering and to conquer. Luckily for him, the Government sent a local Agent and Resident who was well qualified by temperament and training to second His Excellency in every detail of administration. The Dewán of Baroda had, indeed, good cause to be thankful for the appointment of Mr. P. S. Melvill; and the recent rumour of Sir Mádav Row's resignation simultaneously with the approaching retirement of his friend, the Political Agent, although unconfirmed, takes some colour from the fact of their cordial and intimate relations.

Sir Madav Row on setting to work, formed a ministry of some of the ablest native servants of the Government of Bombay. He skilfully distributed the work of administration, reserving to himself the supreme control of affairs in every

  1. Then Viceroy.