DELHI, THE CITY IMPERIAL 9 boundless wealth," and his young mind began to dream of a dominion far greater than Samarkhand. So, when he came to India, he came to Delhi, the Capital of this country. Like the beads in the rosary of history six ruined cities of Delhi, strewn haphazard, on the right bank of the Jumna, each tell the story of its successive phases through the centuries; while Old Delhi and New Delhi of our day form an unbroken link between Mughal times and the British Raj. Most ancient of all is the solitary Old Fort (Puran Qilla) of the epic age; the Qutb Minar marka the site where the first Mohammedan dynasty of kings built its seat over the ruins of the capital of the last Hindu king of Delhi, Prithviraj. Seven temples were used in the construction of the Qufcb Minar, and nothing now remains of the earlier city save a few columns and arches, exquisitely carved, and a stout metal pillar with ancient Hindu inscriptions, whose' founding, erection, and durability puzzle archaeologist and historian. The ruined piles of Tughlukabad. Fort and. the evocative peacefulness of the Kotia Gardens are filled with the memory of the Tughlak dynasty, and the scattered fragments of monuments that make the Delhi golf links so unique and picturesque are all that remain of the Lodi city. Siri was the name of Khiiji Delhi, but that city has now completely disappeared; only the gigantic base of a column intended to surpass the Qutb Minar tells of Khiiji ambitions. Delhi of the Mnghals, the seventh Delhi, still survives with its palaces, mosques, tombs and gardens— tokens of the love of the G-reat Mughals for art and