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| 0775 |
Ruins of Desert Cathay : vol.2 |
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of demobilizing my camping establishment and preparing
final accounts could be pushed on with ease.
But my wounds, in spite of the most expert treatment,
healed with tiresome slowness. What cheered me most
during the seventeen days spent under that hospitable
roof was a message from His Excellency the Viceroy.
Kept informed from time to time of my doings by his
Private Secretary, my old friend Colonel (now Sir James)
Dunlop Smith, Lord Minto had followed my explorations
and their results with kind and to me very encouraging
interest. He was now pleased to convey to me, through
Colonel Dunlop Smith, the anxiously awaited information
that, in response to the proposals in the letter I had
addressed to the Indian Government just a year before
from Tun-huang concerning the elaboration of my scientific
results, H.M. Secretary of State for India had agreed by
cable to allow me to proceed on special duty to England
along with my collections.
At last, towards the close of November, I could
begin my first attempts at walking with crutches, and by
December 1st start down on my way to India. My wounds
had not yet completely healed. So the rest and care I
could enjoy at Lahore under the hospitable roof of my old
Punjab friend, Mr. E. D. Maclagan, was a great boon.
There I was busily occupied with the final settlement of
accounts for the Comptroller of India Treasuries and many
other tasks. On my way to Calcutta, whither the need of
various official interviews and a kind invitation to Govern-
ment House called me, I was able to pay a flying visit to
Dehra Dun, where the friendly help of Colonel S. Burrard,
F.R.S., Superintendent of Trigonometrical Surveys, and
now Surveyor-General of India, enabled me to settle
details for the preparation and reproduction of the many
map-sheets which were to embody the results of our
surveys.
Muhammadju and Musa, the last of my Turki followers,
had left me at Lahore to return next spring to their
Yarkand home, with ample reward for their honest
services. At Dehra Dun I had the great pleasure of
being greeted again by my two highly efficient Indian
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