) .,..fcu,rtli.H,wMMMI t !! y 11 A1lll 1'lfWP' By;.T ,,:,,; y.r-f -4wp'-wq ''Pftsf!;' r:ffl jr, v , -f " ' fiN ' , f '. ri - . 2 VOLUME 6, NUMBER 23 j Jjuii 'My- ji IT I ilia ! Iii. Ift ;4 V 'T gavo rise to the song so familiar a generation ago, "The Campbells Are Coming." Thoro are in Lucknow a number of tombs, mosques and buildings that gavo us our first glimpse of the architecture of the Mogul em perorsgreat domes, gigantic gateways and graceful minarets, stately columns and vaulted galleries. The most interesting of the buildings, Jmambarah, built by Asaf-ud-daulah, contains a great hall moro than a hundred and fifty feet long and about fifty feet in breadth and height. On one side of the court is a private mosque and on the other a group of apartments built around a woll as a protection against the sum mer's heat. From the top of the Imambarah ono obtains an oxcellent view of Lucknow and its surroundings. At Aligarh I found a great educational insti tution which must be taken in'to consideration in estimating the future of Mohammedanism in India. It was founded in 1877, largely through the influence and liberality of Sir Syed Ahmed, who until his death in 1898 devoted himself en tirely to its development. . He was a large-minded man and full of zeal for the enlightenment of his co-religionists. He recognized the low intellectual standard of the Mohammedan In dians, and the controlling purpose of his life was to assist in their improvement. At first, his edu cational enterprise met with a cold reception at the hands of tho leaders of his church. Eniisa ries wore even sent from Mecca to assassinate him, but, nothing daunted, he pursued his plans until the church authorities recognized the im portance of the school. As the Mohammedans are numerically weak er than the Hindus and unable to cope with them in intellectual contests, Sir Syed opposed the na tional congress, proposition which the Hindus have long urged, and the Aligarh school became conspicuous for its pro-British leanings on this question. This may account in part for the in . terest taken in it by the colonial government. (The Central Hindu College at Benares refuses government aid- and is, therefore, more inde pendent.) But since the death of Sir Syed the congress idea is growing among the students of Aligarh. ' Aligarh college now haB an enrollment of seven hundred and four, more than a hundred of whom are law students. It has an Englidh Cambridge graduate for president and several English professors. I might add that England, like America, has sent many teachers to India and that they are engaged in work, the impor tance of which can not" be over-estimated. I had the pleasure of meeting those connected with St. John's college at Agra as well as those at Aligarh. Delhi is one- of India's most ancient cities. ."When the Aryans came down from the north West and conquered the aboriginal tribes, they founded a city which they called Indrapat, just south of the present site of Delhi. How old it is no one knows, for tho names of its founders have been forgotten, its records, if it had any, have been destroyed, and its streets are winding foot paths which one follows with difficulty. Every wave of invasion that has swept down from the north or west has passed over Indrapat, and its stoneB would tell a thrilling story if they could but speak. Tho city has been rebuilt again and ... again, the last time about three hundred years ago but it has little to exhibit now but its an tiquity There is a massive city wall with huge gates, there are tumbled down buildings occu pied by a few people and some goats, and there Is a stone library building erected hundreds-of '7, umu rnegie was born, but the glory of Indrapat has departed. Not far from Indrapat nf B?i? d mmb o Hunyun and another or the Asoka pillars. Eleven miles south of the nreient- DpIM i what is called old Delhi (Delhi se'msTo tiavfhad KShVaMien?t0) Iramortllli by the famous Kutab Minar, or tower, erected near the -close of the twolfth century by one of the earliest Mo hammedan conquerors after the capture of Delhi. The towera tower of victory is two hundred and thlrty-eight feet in height, forty-seven feet in diameter at the base and nine at tho top. It has been described as one of tho architectural wonders of the world, and it certainly gives one a profound respect for the mind that planned it. There are so many mausoleums and mosques scat tered over the plains around roiM w - ' forbids particular description. ' ra-M m" Su? fiei: ' ? Mohan. tmnorl.r' -"'" umuu mi auacic unon Indin. 'Atldre'f. was live hundred years later before thev -xuubu masters of the great peninsula. Then hundred more it was the scene of cbn- The Commoner. flict between rival Moslems until Timur (Tamer Ian, the Tartar) plundered it and drenched it with blood. In all these wars Delhi was the strategic point, the natural capital of the north. After" Timur, came his descendant of the sixth generation, Babar, who consolidated the Indian empire by bravery, tact and wisdom. He is the first of the great Mogul rulers, but he was so occupied with the extension of his sovereignty that he was compelled to leave th development of the empire to his descendants. His grandson, Akbar,. built three great forts, one at Allahabad, to which reference has been made in another article, another at Agra, which he made his capi tal, and the third at Atok, still farther north. He also built Patepur Sikri about twenty miles from Agra. This was to be his home and here on a sandstone ridge overlooking the plain he reared a group of buildings which even now, though deserted for two centuries, attract tourists from all over the world. While the material employed is red sandstone, the buildings are models of beauty as well as strength, and the minute and elaborate carvings are masterpieces in their line. The fort built by Akbar at Agra, while not proof against "modern missies, was impregnable in its day and still bears tesUmony to the con structive genius of the second of the Moguls. Six miles from Agra at Sikandra stands the magnificent tomb which Akbar built and where he rests. It is constructed of red sandstone and is part Buddhist and part Saracenic in design. The base is three hundred and twenty feet square and its four retreating galleries terminate in a roofless court of white marble in which stands a marble casket surrounded hy screens of marble most exquisitely carved. Special interest fs felt in this tomb because" one of its ornaments was the famous Kohinoor diamond, the largest in the world. It had come down to Akbar from his grandfather, who had in turn secured It from the Rajputs. The diamond was carried away by Per sian conquerors and later was returned to India only to be transferred at last to Queen Victoria. But if Akbar 'surpassed his grandfather as a builder, he was in turn, surpassed by his grand son,' Shah Jehan. This emperor, the last of the three great Moguls who began his career- by murdering two brothers and two cousins whose rivalry he feared and who closed his career a prisoner of his rebellious son, has linked his name with some of the most beautiful structures ever conceived by the mind of man. At Agra within the walls of his grandfather's fort, he built the Pearl Mosque which has been described as "the purest, loveliest house of prayer in ex istence." It is constructed of milk white marble and combines strength, simplicity and grace. He also built the Gem' Mosque at Delhi. The fort at Delhi was built by Shah Jehan, and if its resemblance to the fort at Agra de prives him of credit for originality, that argu ment can not be raised against the palace with in, for this is unrivalled among palaces. The marble baths, the jeweled bed chambers, the pillared halls, the graceful porticoes all these abound in rich profusion. But it was upon the great hall of Private Audience that he lavished , taste and wealth. The floor is of polished marble, the pillars and the arched ceiling of polished marble inlaid with precious stones, so set as to form figures and flowers. Each square inch of it speaks of patient toil and skill, and the whole blends harmoniously. For this magnificent aud f ience room he designed a throne fit for the cham ber in which it stood. "It was called the pea cock throne because it was guarded by two pea cocks with expanded tails ornamented with jewels that reproduced the natural colors of the bird. The throne itself was made of gold, inlaid with diamonds, rubies and emeralds. Over it was a canopy of gold festooned with pearls supported by twelve pillars, all emblazoned with gems. On either side stood the Oriental embloms of roy alty, an umbrella,' each handle eight feet high and of solid gold, studded with diamonds, the covers being of crimson velvet crusted and fringed with magnificent pearls." Thus it was described. It was too tempting a prize for greedy conquerors to leave undisturbed and was carried off some two centuries ago by a Persian, Nadir Shah. Shah Jehan, after contemplating this audience chamber and throne, had inscribed upon the wall in Persian characters a verse which has been freely translated to read: "If on earth be an eden of bliss It is this, it is this, it is this." . And yet, in view of his sad fate there seems as much irony in the lines as there was in the delicately poised scales of justice which he had inlaid on one of tho walls of his palace after he had put his relatives out of the way. But of all the works of art that can be traced to his genius, nothing compares with the tomb the Taj Mahal, which he reared in honor of the best-loved of his wives, Numtaj Mahal, "the chosen of the palace.' This building, unique among buildings and alone in its class has been described so often that I know not how to speak of it without employing language already hack neyed. "When I was a student at college I heard a lecturer describe this wonderful tombr and it was one of the objective points in our visit to India. Since I first heard of it I had read so much of it and had received such glowing ac counts from those who had seen it, that I feared lest the expectations aroused might be disap pointed. We reached Agra toward midnight, and, as the moon was waning, drove at once to the Taj that we might see it under the most favor able conditions, for in the opinion of many it is ' most beautiful by moonlight. There is something fascinating in the view which it thus presents, and we feasted our eyes upon it. Shrouded in the mellow light, the veinB of the marble and the stains of more than two and a half centuries are invisible, and it stands forth like an appari tion. We visited it again in the day time, and yet again, and found that the sunlight increased "rather than diminished its grandeur. I am bringing an alabaster minature x home with me, but I am conscious that the Taj must be seen full size and silhouetted against the sky to be appreciated. Imagine a garden with flowers and lawn, walks and marble water basins and fountains; in this garden build a platform of white marble eighteen feet high and three hundred feet square, with an ornamented minaret one hundred and thirty-seven feet high at each corner; in the center of this platform rear a building one hun dred and eighty feet square and a hundred feet high, with its corners bevelled off and, like the sides, recessed into bays ; surmount it with a largo central dome ahd four .smaller ones; cover it inside and out with inlaid work of many col ored marbles and carvings of amazing delicacy; beneath the central dome place two marble cen tetaphs, Inlaid with precious stones, the tombs of Shah Jehan and his wife, and enclose them in exquisitely carved marble screens imagine all this, if you can, and then your conception of this world-famed structure will fall far below the Taj Mahal itself. It is, indeed, "a dreanfin marble." And yet, when one looks upon it and then sur veys the poverty and ignorance of the women who live within its shadow, he is tempted to ask whether the builder of the Taj might not have honored his wife more had the six million dol lars invested in this tomb been, expended on the elevation of womanhood. The contrast between this artistic pile and the miserable tenements of the people about it robs the structure of half its charms. Copyright. ..,''' THE ','LAsNE SUCCESSION" -. Professor Coburn's declination of the appoint ment as senator from Kansas' to succeed 'Senator Burton, has given rise to considerable discussion about the "fatal Lane succession." Senator Lane, who was elected in 1861, committed suicide while still a senator, and it is stated that death, dis aster or ruin has been the portion of every man who has. succeeded him in the seat. Some Kan sas paper would contribute to history by giving a complete account of the "Lane succession." The real facts might have the effect of destroy ing the popular superstition. JJJ A SLOW RACE A "slow race" which has not received tho public attention which is its due has been in pro gress for some time, the contestants being Chi cago and Kansas City. Chicago wants the tun nels under the Chicago river lowered so that tugboats and other river and lake craft can further explore that odorous stream. Kansas City wants a new union depot. And for a gen eration these two cities have been contending to see which can be the longest in getting the de sired results. There are indications' that work on the tunnels will begin shortly, although it is announced that Kansas City's new depot has reached the blue print stage., Lovers of genuine . sport who have grown tired of "pulled races," "fixed boxing contests" and "fake auto races" might turn their attention to this jibw famous and historic slow race. i V CfmA r m MM. -, J, . .... .... .i..MbuAM.& .hfflrtA. -.'AMttop&bLK,.... I'tyy-lf W