TO tXAMlNE THE REMAÏNS, &C. 9 



butpei-ceivc^d nothin^ rcaiarkable, exccpting two 

 small Tigers well dc^picted on one corner stonc. 

 The vvhole of the area was so miich incumber- 

 ed witb stoiies, weeds aiid bushes that I could 

 not positively determine the number or regular 

 planof their distribatioii ; biit I shoiild giiess 

 thcre were altogether about 9 ör lö of these 

 separate structures vvitbin this square. 



9 — After- making these observations on the 



riiiiis of Brambana, we were carried in our chairs 



through the paddy fields in a northerly direction 



about a miie ; here we observed the paths bniit up 



frequeiitly with ent and scnlptured stones, the 



remains of the aiicient works ; at last passing 



through groves of trees^ we arrived at the com- 



mencemeiit of the Chandi* Sewo Tempje, the 



same which Major Cornelius describes in a Me- 



moir of 1807. The bushes here are so thick 



thdt we did not perccive, tiil we came sud- 



denlv 011 them, two gigantic iigures of porfer??^ 



apparenliy kneeling oo pedestals facing each 



other, resting oa clubs held in oi\3 hand; 



a snake winds round one arm, and in the other 



thej seem also to hold another. These images 



* Chandi, a BuUdins: or Tempie — Sewo, one thomand— Chandi Pewo 

 the thousand Teinpliis or 3uiI.iiRg5. 



