GUJARAT 4 Those were the days when Surat was important, wealth; and populous, and a western gateway to India. Long before Surat tose to such power, Broach wa the proud city of the western coast. When Camba; was the island empire of the Arabian Sea, Broach was t metropolis. "City of Cities" which saw the mariner of Nearchus' fleet; the sons of Borne "when Eom< was "; men of the ages of the Pharaohs; and the earih Indian travellers from Arabia- Full of classic associa fcions for the student and of proud memories for th( merchant; over which has expired the strength o Jaina, Muslim and Brahmanical power!" Such is Briggs' apostrophe to Broach in his work u The Cities of Grujarastra ". Much more so than Surat, Broach is but a shadow of its former self; it continues to be a well inhabited town and an entrepot of a high grade cotton that grows in the agricultural neighbourhood—the reputed <( Broaches " of the Cotton Exchanges. A distant view of the city from across the rivei Nerbadda presents a beautiful picture that stands out against the skies like a bas-relief, while the flowing waters of the river balance the composition and enhance the pictorial effect of the entire scene. Surat, however, retains its importance as a centre of trade and activity, and sends many of its raw and finished products to Bombay, unenvious, it seems, of Bombay's maritime greatness that, some centuries ago, was its own monopoly. But like many a city, Broach and Surafc seem to take with dignity and resignation, so characteristic of age and wisdom^ the vagaries of fortune. How strange a parallel to the lives of meny