Eight Years' Wanderings in Ceylon by Samuel White Baker




















































 -   This spot, forming, a shallow gap,
was the ancient native entrance to Newera Ellia from that side,
and the Cingalese - Page 34
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This Spot, Forming, A Shallow Gap, Was The Ancient Native Entrance To Newera Ellia From That Side, And The Cingalese Designation For The Locality Is Interpreted "The Path Of A Thousand Princes." This Name Assists In The Proof That Newera Ellia Was Formerly Of Some Great Importance.

A far more enticing name gives an interest to the first swampy portion of the plain, some three hundred paces beyond, viz., "the Valley of Rubies."

Now, having plainly discovered that Newera Ellia was of some great importance to the natives, let us consider in what that value consisted. There are no buildings remaining, no ruins, as in other parts of Ceylon, but a liquid mine of wealth poured from these lofty regions. The importance of Newera Ellia lay first in its supply of water, and, secondly, in its gems.

In all tropical countries the first principle of cultivation is the supply of water, without which the land would remain barren. In a rice-growing country like Ceylon, the periodical rains are insufficient, and the whole system of native agriculture depends upon irrigation. Accordingly, the mountains being the reservoirs from which the rivers spring, become of vital importance to the country.

The principal mountains in Ceylon are Pedrotallagalla, eight thousand two hundred and eighty feet; Kirigallapotta, seven thousand nine hundred; Totapella, eight thousand feet; and Adam's Peak, seven thousand seven hundred; but although their altitude is so considerable, they do not give the idea of grandeur which such an altitude would convey. They do not rise abruptly from a level base, but they are merely the loftiest of a thousand peaks towering from the highlands of Ceylon.

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