[The Broken Road by A. E. W. Mason]@TWC D-Link book
The Broken Road

CHAPTER XXVI
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THE BREAKING OF THE PITCHER It is a far cry from Peshawur to Ajmere, and Linforth travelled in the train for two nights and the greater part of two days before he came to it.

A little State carved out of Rajputana and settled under English rule, it is the place of all places where East and West come nearest to meeting.

Within the walls of the city the great Dargah Mosque, with its shrine of pilgrimage and its ancient rites, lies close against the foot of the Taragarh Hill.

Behind it the mass of the mountain rises steeply to its white crown of fortress walls.

In front, its high bright-blue archway, a thing of cupolas and porticoes, faces the narrow street of the grain-sellers and the locksmiths.


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