Anglo-Indian civil servant and man of letters, son of the Rev. Alfred Lyall; born in 1835, and educated at Eton and Haileybury. He entered the Bengal civil service in 1855, saw service during the Mutiny in the Bulandshahr district, at Meerut, and with the Khaki Risala of volunteers. He was commissioner in Berar (1867), secretary to the government of India in the Home and Foreign departments, lieutenant-governor of the North-western Provinces (1882–1887), and member of the Council of India (1888–1903). Among his writings, his Verses Written in India (1889) attained considerable popularity, and in his Asiatic Studies (1882 and 1899) he displays a deep insight into Indian life and character. He wrote the Life of Lord Dufferin (1905), and made numerous contributions to periodical literature. He died in the Isle of Wight on the 10th of April 1911. See also “Theology in Extremis,” “Studies at Delhi” and “From ‘Sîva’.” (See authored articles: Abdur Rahman Khan, Tulasīdāsa.)