He reached India in November 1860 and was posted to Lahore. Katherine Prior, the author of his entry in the
Oxford Dictionary of National Biography, describes that, "He was a dandyish,
Byronic figure, articulate, argumentative, and witty. Anglo-Indian society was at once both dazzled by and scornful of his languid foppishness and irreverent tongue". He was sent as a diplomatic representative to Kabul, at the end of the
Second Afghan War. He was then Governor-General's
Agent in
Central India and
Resident in
Indore; and Resident in Hyderabad. He collaborated with the pioneer Indian photographer
Lala Deen Dayal. After his return to the United Kingdom, he was Chairman of the East India Association. He was also for several years a Chairman of the Imperial Bank of Persia, and in late 1902 received the Grand Cross of the
Order of the Lion and the Sun from the Shah of Persia. He was a proponent of an Anglo-American union, he addressed a meeting on 15 October 1898 in
Luton, on the subject of the suggested Anglo-American union, Col.
John Hay, the former United States Ambassador at London attended the meeting. ==Death==