S64 A BRIEF SURVEY OF HUMAN HISTORY were great men, despite their failings and frailties, and when one turns from the cold catalogue of their defects to con- sider the unique grandeur of Fathpur-Sikri, the supreme beauty of the Taj Mahal and the Moti Masjid, the magni- ficence of the Agra and Delhi palaces, and the rare wealth of pictorial and calligraphic art, which owed its excellence to their guidance and inspiration, one feels inclined to re-echo the words of the lady Mar6chale of France concerning some peccant members of the old noblesse of the eighteenth cen- tury ; ' Depend upon it, Sir, God thinks twice before dam- ning a man of that quality !' The fame which they achieved in their own age, and which will endure, was the natural corollary of their marked intellectuality."1 1. Edwardes and Garrett, Mughal Rule in India, p. 350,