16 PICTURES AND PEN-PICTURES fort whose well-planned keeps and courtyards and countless rows of rooms suggest that it was built for residence as much as for defence. The fort is now a school for little children who clatter up the steep, narrow stone stairways to reach their class-rooms over whose doorways stand out in brutal incongruity the legends : (< He who laughs last laughs best", u A stitch in time saves nine??, (t Britannia rules the waves", and mother white chalk inscriptions in Eoman script. This fort of Kurukshetra also has its tales of Akbar and Jehangir^ of generals who tried to defy imperial majesty, of sieges aud victories. From the top-most terrace adorned with tiny Mughal kiosks, the wide panorama of the country- side shows here, the huddle of the little village, there the tall spires of a Siva temple and, yonder, the rounded dome of Gita Bhuvan rising from its nest of greenery. To his hand, says the recluse of Kurukshefcra, were mustered the forces of the Pandavas; and to bhat^ those of the Kurus. To this hand is the gentle slope of a knoll and, to that, a grassy stretch; nearby is the little shrine under a banyan tree that commemorates the spot where Krishna's chariot stood, and where Lord Vishnu left the imprint of his feet. The epic battle- ground whereon the code of morality and honour, of trufchfulness and right living, of honesty and righteous- ness (of dharma) was at stake, is now a grazing ground for sheep. Where spears flashed in combat, steel shears glint in the sun; whence rose the clangour of battle cries now swells the imtatingly plaintive bleat of the newly" shorn. HerdsnJen in great, tangled turbans and weathered blankets follow their rustic trade where once the Pandavas fought the Kurus.