58 PICTURES AND PEN " PICTURES which a library has found a haven for its treasures, very precious and. ancient palm-leaf manscripts. Eeminiscent of the missionary who lived many years of toil in Tanjore is the church of Schwarz. In the town, the main thoroughfare is busy with its little shops, its beggars, its scorpion-trainers, its hawkers, and its tiny wayside stalls of fly-blackened fruit: oxen- drawn hackney carts, awkward, blary "horned buses and motor-cars, reckless cyclists, jostling pedestrians, and streams of country folk carrying strange assortments of sundry village produce all mingle with unconscious incongruity in this Tanjore that is as old as it is semi-new. Dusty roads lead out of Tanjore to its environs and neighbouring towns. Along the roads the eye perceives a succession of ruined temples and wayside shrines: bridges connect the towns of this tract through which flow the many branches of the Cauvery. Every town has its temples and its own history; for, it was in the South that the historic houses of the Pallavas, the Cholas, the Oheras, and the Pandyas ruled. The Pandyas had Madura for their capital, an ancient city where lived great Tamil scholars, and where Tamil literature reached its meridian; Madura with its wonderful temple to the G-oddess of the Almond Eyes— Meenakshi of Madura. The peasants are busy in their fields; while the men plough and the women sow, the children chase away the crows. In the harvest season there is thresh- ing and winnowing of the grain. As the eye gazes on these scenes and transmits them to *the brain, the mind te filled with questions. What would this region