.6 PICTURES AND PEN-PICTURES times pilgrims have trodden the large flag-stones that pave the narrow streets that change direction at abrupt angles and lead into tiny, unsuspected squares made bright by piles of rich and varied, fruit. Pilgrims have catered to their wants at one or the other of the close-packed booths that sell tasty food, savoury tea, sweet-scented flowers, or coloured baskets of graceful shapes. Picturesque balconied houses with Ganges- cleansed clothes hung out to dry, line the streets and tower above the booths; yet, Hardwar streets are not dark, for the limpid mountain air pervades the town and the bright, joyful sun playfully catches and lights up a sparkle from a polished apple, a brass vessel, or from the glossy tresses of a maiden pilgrim. Down in the crysfcaline waters all along the ghats, innumerable fish, from the tiniest silver thread to arrogant black giants the size of plantain trunks, sport and jostle one another for favours from devotees. There are neither fishermen nor fishing nets, for the fish of Hardwar are sacred- The first day of the Hindu solar year dawns— it is the great religious fair of Hardwar. Every twelve years this festival, the Great Kumbh Mela, takes place; the Little, or Half Kumbh is every six- While Hard-war prepares for this Kumbh Mela for months ahead, pilgrims from every corner of India take the road to this holy spot. Sadhus and ascetics, religious leaders and leaders of every Hindu community meet in Hardwar; here, caparisoned elephants carry them from shrine to ghat and ghat to shrine during the festivities, and elephant processions occur almost every day, just as in ages gone by, .JOnly the newsreel cameraman