manner, complimented Pfander on the uncommon merit of his productions, and
  informed him that he had set one of his pupils to furnish a reply.1
  The author of the present work, therefore, is not the Shiea Apologist himself,
  but his nephew, Syud Mahommed Hâdi, whose father and the Mujtahid are sons of
  the famous Syud Dildar Ali, who gained celebrity by his travels in Arabia,
  Persia, and other countries; and, being a pillar of the Shiea faith, and a man
  famed for his attainments, became the spiritual guide of the King of Oudh, and
  the Mujtahid of Lucknow. The office would thus appear to be in some measure
  hereditary, and the incumbent is said to be enriched by the free-will
  offerings of the Oudh nobility; so that the position is not only a dignified
  but a lucrative one.