THE WRINKLED IMAGE OF LOST CITIES 23 Taxila grew in beauty and celebrity. Asoka must have recognized the importance of this city, for here he sent his son as viceroy. In the innumerable relics discovered in the mounds of Taxila, and from the monasteries that once filled the Haro Valley with life, can be traced the development and blossoming of Buddhist arfc. From the dignified simplicity of early Buddhist artistic expression to the masterpieces of sculpture and decoration, Taxila displays the whole story of a religious inspiration translated into visible form. Taxila, however, was not only a centre of Buddhism. Long ages before the birth of Gautama the Buddha, the city figures in Sanskrit literature as a < famed university and a prosperous centre of international trade. In fact, Taxila is a number of ancient cities on three separate sites. Bhir Mound, the earliest site, in its successive layers of ruins, descloses the remains of several cities—some of them believed to go back to the seventh century before the Christian era.. Rich in relics of the sojourn of Alexander the Macedonian in ^ Northern India is one of these cities. It was to Bhir Mound that his missionaries came when Asoka made Buddhism the State religion. The little that remains of the cities of Bhir Mound show the haphazard design of streete and houses in those ancient times. The second site of Taxila, Sirkap, offers an amazingly symmetrical ground-plan, with its Main Street that runs wide and straight due north and south, bisecting the city; its side streets meeting the main at right angles, and its vast palace with well defined sections. in The numerable finds of utensils, implements of