x ^t daiten xxf San$itxtf It^tv^ C7^[^A.NDEBING in the cities of India requires a certain '\ T flexibility of mind. One city may be purely of the living present; another, of the historical present; and. yet another may belong to the epic past and, at the same time, be a city of our India. Ohitorgrah, Delhi, and Agra belong both to the historical present and the present; Muttra, Brindhavan, and Grokul belong to the epic ages and to the present. Between Delhi and Agra lie these three towns, and the Jumna that flows alongside the Tajmahal, flows from Delhi through Muttra towards Agra. u In the days when the gods came to the earth in human form", as a Brahmin priest would tell you, Krishna was born in Muttra. His childhood he spent in Gokul, and a hundred happy days of boyhood in BrindhavaiL The Song of the Cowherd—the Gita Govinda—narrates the lyrical life of Krishna; of the milkmaids who danced to his flute, and of the miracles he performed. In Krishna's childhood days, Brindhavan was a garden of forests, today it is a town of temples. The three towns of Muttra, Brindhavan, and G-okul attract thousands of devotees from all parts of India, for here is the land where Krishna stole butter, grazed his cows, killed demons and played his flute for the entertainment of his playmates, the G-opikas. "Where Krishna sported, on its banks, to the Hindus the river Jumna is especially holy and sacred. Of the