59'2 



Seely's Wonders of Elora. 



ROUTE 



FROM 



BOMBAY TO KARLI AND ELORA. 



PLACES. 



Panwell..., 



Choke 



Capooly .... 



Cundalla .... 



Karli 



Tellegaum . 



Panowly .... 



POONA 



Corygaum . 

 Silikrapour . . . . 

 Ranjcngaiim . . 

 Seroor 



Dytiia 



Carooss 



Banjengaum . . 

 Ouchulaiiare . . 

 Ahmed-nuggur 



Iliad 



Ncmbcdura . . . . 



Wamborey . . . , 



Caulruss 



Son6 



Curkoondy . . . . 



Chincnora . . . . 



Hewra 



ToKA 



Gandapour . . . , 



Sliah-pour . . . . 

 Elora . . .' 



Miles 



23 



14 



14 



12 



10 



12 



KEMARKS. 



On the continent — out-post ot an officer and 80 men — a 

 moderale-sizcd town, and very well supplied. 



Decent village — supplies not very easily obtained — good 

 quarters in a pagoda. 



Mean, dirty village — foot of the g'liats — a very fine tank 

 and temple here. 



Top of the g'hats — village small — bazaar not badly fur- 

 nished — a leaky, tottering hovel for quarters. 



A good village, and well supplied — quarters much belter 

 than the last stage. 



Large village, with an excellent bazaar — good quarters 

 near a tatik. 



Village very insignificant — good quarters in bungalow.s, 

 built for sporting patties. 



Large Mahratta city — British cantonments, extensive and 

 convenient — supplies— coolies, cattle, &c. to be obtained. 



On the banks of the Bhema. 



Excellent quarters in the sporting lodges. 



Good quarters in a large pagoda: 



Fronlier station of the subsidiary force — excellent quarters; 

 supplies, coolies, &c. easily obtained. 



{ Small villages. 



A wretched, dirty village. 



A fortified village. 



British out-[)ost — good quarters — supplies cheap and 

 abiuidiint. 



7 N.B. This road lies to the left, and is made to avoid the 



J g'iiat, which is impassable for guns, or heavy articles. — 

 By the g'hiit it is a saving of about five miles. 



A small village — lodgings in a dirty hovel. 



7 Two villages, divided by a watercourse — bad accoinmo- 



i dation — garrisoned by thirty Arabs — belongs to Scindia. 



A ruined and desolate village — inhabitants armed with 

 bows and arrows. 



Inhabited by thieves of every description; many of whom 

 were .sitting in the road. 



Large village — out-post of a Jemidar and thirty men — 

 quarters in a stone mosque. 



An out-post of an officer and 100 Siphauees — town but ill 

 supplied. — Here the Jeendu falls into the Godavcry river. 



A miserable, <lecayed town, with many ruins. — Road in- 

 fested by Bheels. 



Small, filthy village — a dirty pagoda for quarters. 



Large village, mostly inhabited by Brahmans — belongs to 

 Rao Holkar — lodgings in a pagoda of considerable beauty 

 and size. — Caves distant three-quarters of a mile in front. 



