XV ^nit M^cl?e$ of j%Ł ^mifli ^71 TIME there was when ships with bulging sails came P- from the Far East and far-off lands to this deserted shore; great fleets of merchant ships were fitted here, and from this forgotten port embassies were sent to the Emperor of China. Silence reigns where there was so much bustle, activity, trade and. passenger traffic. In the melancholy song of the casuarina pines swaying in the soughing wind, and the distant sound of waves that wash day and night a lonely shore temple, Nature seems to mourn the fate of this solitary shore. The Shore Temple is the last of the Seven Pagodas— the other six, the story goes, lie under the sea. A modern lighthouse warns ships off this part of the coast that used to welcome them long before Madras had a harbour. Admidst the pines is a group of temples, each one exquisitely carved, and hewn out of a single rock. These rock temples, and the cave temples further on, and the monolithic animals—the lion, the elephant, and the bull—were executed in the prosperous days of this Seven Pagodas, between the third and eighth century— when the dynasty of the Pallavas ruled in Southern India. They built temples over a large portion of their territories, but the monoliths are their best claim to remembrance. The seat of these Pallavas was Oonjeevaram, Kanchi of their times, and one of the seven sacred, cities like Hardwar and Ujjain—Kanchi, the GS-olden City of