Page:History of Indian and Eastern Architecture Vol 2.djvu/237

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CHAP. II. GHAZNI. 195 cities are examined and photographed by some one competent to discriminate between what is good or bad, or old or new, we must be content merely to indicate the position of the style, leaving this chapter to be written when the requisite information shall have been obtained. In the meanwhile it is satisfactory to know that between Herat and the Indus there do exist a sufficient number of monuments to enable us to connect the styles of the West with those in the East. They have been casually described by travellers, but not in such a manner as to render them available for our purposes ; and in the unsettled state of the country it may be some time yet before their elucidation can be accomplished.