The Throne of Solomon Zavarak took and razed the castle and returned to their inde- pendence. They are, as may be imagined, staunch supporters of the new regime. They were all out now in the meadows, threshing and winnowing—a scene of prosperity in Arcadia. Here they lifted me down and laid me on fdtMazanderani mats in a small room. They gave me glasses of tea, injected more camphor, and threw a cloth over me to keep away the flies, while the doctor chatted to the family and heard the village news. After three hours or so, we started again. "We climbed now southward, up the face of the Elburz range, which here hangs out an immense terrace, running parallel with the valley but about 1,000 feet above, and inter- sected at more or less regular intervals by wide, deep, and nearly perpendicular gullies. On this terrace are three villages, Painrud, Balarud, Verkh, each cut off from its neighbours by these gullies, each with the shoulders of Elburz behind it, and with Alamut and all the eastern hills, even to the Throne of Solomon himself supreme on the skyline, spread in a semi- circle before it. We climbed for one and a half hours, first zig-zagging up the wall from the Alamut valley and then making at a gender but still very steep gradient over the stubble-fields of the shelf, till we reached Balarud, tilted towards the north among fenced gardens, with a brook running through its scattered houses, and every sort of fruit tree, walnut, cherry, apple, pear, medlar, and poplars and willows, throwing shade upon it. 'Aziz, who had abandoned his affairs in his village of Garmrud to attend to me, now spurred up his mule. " Which house would you like?" said he. I selected a high cottage with two rooms on the roof and open spaces on three sides of it. 'Aziz went to turn out the inhabitants. [264]