6 Continuation of the Route of Lieut. A. Burnes [Jan. 
the slopes were only speckled at that limit. The descent was quaggy 
and tedious, but there was not much of it, and villages appeared at a 
general level of 10,500 feet. The second pass was nearly 12,000 feet, the 
adjoining villages hampered by the snow projected their grey turrets 
through the uniform field of whiteness. The third pass was accessible 
by horses*, and we descended by the hollow of a gorge into a dell that 
drained off the waters towards Kindiz and the Oxus. When I be- 
held the opposite course of the streams, | began to ask, is this the only 
range that separates Khorasan from Turkistan, and the valley of the 
Oxus; and when soon after I found our level to be close upon 5000 
feet, I conceived that other and loftier ridges crossed our route; but a 
few more days, and the 13th from Kabul, brought us upon the plains of 
Tartary, for that name is specifically apposite in the region of Asia, ad- 
joining Bokhara and Samarkhand. My understanding was now enlight- 
ened, for IT had but vague and ill-defined ideas of the geographical 
nature of this tract, but in one respect I was not wrong—I never pelieved 
there could be any flat expanse, similar to the plains of India: and the 
fact is so, and could not have been otherwise; and long after we had 
entered the open country, and crossed the Oxus, a range of snowy 
mountains on our right-hand (our face being then towards Bokhara), 
confirmed my conjectures. We were both much surprised at such a 
sight, particularly as it was of so transitory a nature as nearly to elude 
our comprehension: it was almost sunset, and the outline, just lighted 
up, gleamed for a few minutes, and faded into a dim mass. The spec- 
‘tacle was full of grandeur, and left us wondering; for we never saw 
another trace of the range, or its desolate snows. 
“« The map gives us very imperfect notions, I should say none at all, on 
the subject; for the mountains, marked there as snowy, could not have 
been in sight, and those that seem to indicate their position, are not 
only black, but occupy a very limited space. Now, heights bearing 
perennial snow, and far exceeding that marginal boundary, do not 
often start up abruptly in patches or isolated ridges from a flat ex- 
panse of plain; as the routes to Y4rkund cross them free of snow at this 
season of the year, they may not be so elevated as they appear. When 
thus in the open plains of Turkistan, the thought (which had often 
amused us) recurred, is the Hindi Kush the true limit of the great 
snowy chain that forms the northern frontier of British India? As to the 
appearance on the map, the illustration is correct, as far as it goes; but 
wenaturally, andupon cosmogonic grounds, ask,—where isthe Himalayan 
ridge ? and where should it go to, but north. It (unfortunately for 
* I should rather think my brother means inaccessible on horseback, A. G. 
