QUEEN OF THE WEST COAST 63 the villages to the city markets, and in this the mind and the eye can perceive, perhaps, the growth of a mere fishing village into a metropolis. Time passes though traditions remain. "To market, to market "....to Crawford Market Crowds pass every day through fche wings of this spacious structure; housewives and servants, city-dwellers and . tourists, Indians and foreigners; in brief, all sorts of people from all sorts of places. Small wonder they .all come to Crawford Market, for here, everything is available and. everybody can be served; such a buying and selling and bargaining and arguments. Here are all things from the necessities of life to the articles de luxe^ from green cabbages to face creams. Around, the pretty Jumma Masjid with its impresive minarets and white marble dome are fihe streets lined with booths and. shops that sell saris, swadeshi goods, cotton piece-goods, wollen material, ready-made articles, cutlery and crockery, footwear fit for prince are peasant, and many thosands of things manufactured all over the world. Follow the crowds from these godowns and markets to and through Bhnleshwar and they will lead to perhaps the most congested quarter of Bombay. Bhuleshwar's narrow lanes and streets, paved with flagstones, are crowded with hawkers and merchants whose shops purvey anything that glitters, from tinsel to pure gold lace. There -are many small shrines and many -well-known temples in this area;' to them, since Bhuleshwar was famous, have came the pilgrims and pigeons that abound, in temple, tower, and building where the people of Bhnleshwar dwell. ThQ