44 PICTURES AND PEN-PICTURES village folk are thrifty and" hardworking; and, unless famine spreads its grim shadows, the large round metal trays, the thalis, on which food is served and eaten are seldom without enough even for the uninvited guest. Be it towards the eastern borders near Baroda, or in the regions of the Grirnar Bange and the western States of Eathiawad, the traditional dance of Gujarat, the garba, performed by groups of girls and women in flowered saris is an ever popular expression of the happier side of their lives. Though most of life is rural, there are times when whole crowds come from every- where and the scene, as it were, is a sea of Gandhi Caps* Mute and reverent, thousands listen to their leader preaching on the philosophy of the charfca, the significance of non-violence, the advantages of abolish- ing untouchability, or on the greatness of the Grita. These and many other traits give the villages of Gujarat, east or west, a remarkable family resemblance. Such, in short, is the story of G-ujarat gleaned from written history; but the story would be incom- plete both for the historian of today and tomorrrow were it not remembered that G-ujarat is the land of Gand.hiji's birth—a fact that gives G-ujarat historical immortality,