National Institute of Informatics - Digital Silk Road Project
Digital Archive of Toyo Bunko Rare Books

> > > >
Color New!IIIF Color HighRes Gray HighRes PDF   Japanese English
0237 Sand-Buried Ruins of Khotan : vol.1
Sand-Buried Ruins of Khotan : vol.1 / Page 237 (Grayscale High Resolution Image)

New!Citation Information

doi: 10.20676/00000234
Citation Format: Chicago | APA | Harvard | IEEE

OCR Text

 

CHAP, xi.]   KARAKUL MAZAR   185

of a little lake of saline water, half-cove: ed by reeds, there rises a semicircle of sandhills. On the top of one, the customary erection of poles hung with votive rags, yak's tails, and skins, indicates the supposed resting-place of a saint. Of his life and deeds I could gather nothing except that the holy man came to live here when his beard was black,

and died here as an ` Ak-sakal ' (" ` a white-beard ") . Of the vast cemetery round this shrine where Islam Akhuii alleged

that he had made finds of ancient block-prints, I could dis-

cover no sign.

The lake is fed by a small rivulet, which flows in a broad, tortuous bed about a quarter of a mile eastwards. It rises from a series of springs and pools about Hasa, and accordingly is known by the name of Kara-su (" ` black water ") ; but during the spring and early summer it is swelled by flood water (` ak-su ' or " white water ") when the snow melts on the inouiitains southward. In its bed, which we followed for about three miles to the oasis of Karatagh-aghzi, or Karataghiz, I came for the first time upon the jungle that thrives along the watercourses that penetrate into the desert. Reeds of various kinds, the hardy ` Yulghun ' plant with its heather-like small red flowers, and other shrubs filled the dry bed of the Kara-su in picturesque confusion. The autumn had already turned the leaves of many to various tints of yellow. So there was a feast for the eyes, doubly welcome after the dreary monochrome view of the Dasht. At Karatagh-aghzi I found luxuriant groves of poplar-, mulberry-, and other trees scattered among ripe fields of Indian corn. The other produce had already been harvested. The part of the cultivated land which I saw was said to have been reclaimed only some fifteen years ago. The size and luxuriance of the trees that had grown up in this short time was a striking illustration of the capability of the desert soil if once reached by water.

From Karatagh-aghzi Islam Akhuii alleged that he had visited various ruined sites which yielded him " old books "