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Preface

HE sketches which are here collected and reprinted

were some of the records of many journeys at the time the writer's avocations led him to travel almost yearly across the continent of India. They were labours of love, written during the intervals of graver occupations, and the author trusts that the work may reflect some of his own keen enjoyment in these cities, and some of their serene charm and Oriental enchantment. He has endeavoured, both by conversation and reading, to enter into the spirit of the times in which each temple or mosque or palace was produced, and into the manners and customs of those who erected it. By selections from the ancient records and old books of travels, and the great Anglo-Indian classics, he has endeavoured to give life to old scenes, and to reproduce sentiments unfamiliar to the present generation. After giving an account of the story of each city, he has referred to the prominent objects of interest in it, and he has borrowed freely from the inquirers of other days whatsoever he considered important, as illustrating their architecture or antiquity. He has endeavoured to acknowledge in all cases the sources of his information, but as some of the papers were written twenty years ago it has not always been easy to trace them. He has also borrowed from the Introductions to the volumes of State Papers edited by him, on the old principle that a man may once say a thing as he would have it said—he cannot say it twice.

These papers have been selected and arranged so that the volume might adapt itself to the traveller. The visitor, if he starts from Bombay and stays a few days at the cities in the order in which they are given in this book, will see a great deal that is best worth seeing on the continent of India, within moderate compass of time. All he can never see, and there is subject enough for twenty quartos. As a large number of people who must remain at home take an interest and feel a pride in our Indian Empire, it is hoped that these papers may offer them some pleasure and some information. Of their omissions and imperfections, no one can be more conscious than the author.

The papers headed Bombay, Delhi, and Calcutta appeared in the Pall Mall Magazine, and the permission to reprint and use the illustrations is hereby gratefully acknowledged.

It remains to thank those from whom the writer has had the privilege of receiving advice, and who have assisted him in the dull task of proof reading and correction. The spelling of Indian words is bound to cause great difficulty; but in a book of this kind it would be out of place to follow always too closely the somewhat pedantic official system of transliteration, which has proved a stumbling-block to ordinary English people, and a great non-conductor of interest.

Contents

Appearance from the sea-Occupied by Humphrey Cook, 1663—
Described by J. Fryer, 1673-Fort described by Captain A.
Hamilton-Sir Gerald Aungier's Presidentship-His death-
Bombay Green-Admiral Watson visits Bombay, 1774-Society
at Bombay in 1786 described by J. Forbes-Church at Bombay
Green-Religious disputes: Chaplain Cobbe and Mr. Braddyll-
Statue of Marquis Cornwallis-Statue of Marquis of Wellesley :
his relations with the East India Company-The Town Hall-
Literary Society of Bombay founded-Public Library-Sir Bartle
Frere-Statue of the Queen-Empress-Statue of Edward VII—
Wellington Fountain-Policy of General Wellesley-Sailors'
Home - Royal Bombay Yacht Club-Secretariat-University-
Hindu Burning-ground-Wilson College, and its founder-
Malabar Point: described by Lady Caldecott and by Moore-
Walkeshwar The Ladies' Gymkhana-Tulsi Reservoirs-The
Towers of Silence: Grose's account-Breach Candy-Mahalux-
mee-Parell: Sir James Mackintosh and Mountstuart Elphin-
ston Lady Falkland-The Victoria Gardens-Byculla Club-
Scenes in the Native City-Elephanta and its sculptures.

Architectural and historical interest-Vama Raja-Anahelavada-
Mula Raja-Invasion of Gujarat by Mahmud of Ghazni-Sidh
Raja-Muhammadan dynasty established—Ahmed Shah founds
Ahmedabad, 1411-Barbosa's description-Annexation by Ak-

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Antiquity and importance-Indrapastha-Iron pillar of Raja Dhava—
Kutb-ud-Din : his great Mosque-The Kutub Minar-Baber vic-
torious-Humayun driven out by Shir Khan-Humayun's re-
storation, and death-Tomb of Humayun-The Chansat Kham-
bah-The Mausoleum of Safdar Jung-Shah Jehan makes Delhi
the seat of Government: his magnificence-The Jumma Musjid—
Palace of Shah Jehan-Bernier's description of the Am-kas-
The Diwan-i-Khas-The Peacock Throne-The Moti Musjid, or
Pearl Mosque-Sack of Delhi by Nadir Shah-Capture of the
city by the Mahrattas-Inroad of the Rohillas-Shah Alum

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