Lippincott's Magazine of Popular Literature and Science - Volume 17, No. 100, April, 1876 by Various
page 37 of 284 (13%)
page 37 of 284 (13%)
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and Lahore, and here centres the railway system which unites these
widely-separated points. Add to this singular union of commercial advantages the circumstance--so important in an India controlled by Englishmen--that the climate, though warm, is perfectly wholesome, and you will see that Allahabad must soon be a great emporium of trade." "Provided," I suggested, "Benares yonder--Benares is too close by to feel uninterested--will let it be so." "Oh! Benares is the holy city. Benares is the blind Teiresias of India: it has beheld the Divine Form, and in this eternal grace its eyes have even lost the power of seeing those practical advancements which usually allure the endeavors of large cities. Allahabad, although antique and holy also, has never become so wrapped up in religious absorption." On the day after our arrival my companion and I were driven by an English friend engaged in the cultivation of indigo to an indigo-factory near the town, in compliance with a desire I had expressed to witness the process of preparing the dye for market. "Not long ago," I said to our friend as we were rolling out of the city, "I was wandering along the banks of that great lagoon of Florida which is called the Indian River, and my attention was often attracted to the evidences of extensive cultivation which everywhere abounded. Great ditches, growths of young forests upon what had evidently been well-ploughed fields within a century past, and various remains of settlements constantly revealed themselves. On inquiry I learned that these were the remains of those great proprietary indigo-plantations which were cultivated here by English grantees soon after Florida |
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