Page:Malabari, Behramji M. - Gujarat and the Gujaratis (1882).djvu/83

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BARODA.
67

traordinary, are being regularly supplied to him. Dr. Seward[1] treats him and his family, we are told, with a "combination of firmness and tenderness."

The Governor-General's Agent.

Of Mr. Melvill's worth and abilities I have spoken elsewhere at length. Let us now see what the Dewán has got to say of him. And who better able to speak of the Agent than the Dewán Sir Mádav Row, after gratefully acknowledging "the generous confidence and uniform support" accorded to his administration by the Government of India, records the following brief acknowledgment to Mr. Melvill:—"The administration is deeply indebted to Mr. Melvill, who, as Agent to Governor-General, does all that is possible to give effect to the high aims and to follow the great principles of the Government of India." From all that I know of Baroda affairs, Ican honestly bear out Sir Mádav Row's opinion of the Agent of the paramount power. Mr. Melvill has nothing of the petty intermeddling spirit which, unfortunately, characterises the generality of Political Agents; and

  1. The Ex-Guicowár's keeper at Madras.