56 PICTURES AND PEN - PICTURES Sanskrit literature. "Amongst flowers, the jasmine; amongst cities, Eanchi", runs an ancient verse and, indeed, even today the eye perceives a well-planned city rich in temples. Countless pilgrims still come to the annual Juggernaut festival; they wander through the halls of a hundred pillars and the halls of a thousand pillars, and they look with admiration upon the gigantic towers that present a panorama of fifteen centuries of architecture—centuries in which flourished Hinduism, Buddhism, and Jainism, too, in Eancbi, the great centre of learning, South of Conjeevaram are the plains of the east coast and the Delta of the Oauvery Eiver, a region rich in crops, studded with temples, and filled with history. From Conjeevaram to Gape Gomorin, since the early ' centuries of our era, the temples and monuments stand evidence to the faith, the love of art, and the prosperity of the successive dynasties that built them. The dams across the Cauvery Eiver—the oldest dams in India— prove how much importance both people and. monarchs attached to the river that gives life to the soil of their regions. On an island of this Cauvery Elver is the Srirangam temple to Vishnu, visited by devotees from everywhere in India. In the crowded streets round the temple, like the towers of the temple that soar high above the buildings of the town, the elephant of Vishnu's shrine moves majestic and calm. Here, pilgrims buy their offerings for the idol; there, they throng in the corridors of the pillared, halls; and on the river, boatmen ply their coracles for the faithful who go midstream to offer flowers or leave lamps to float upon the waters of th©