Near the city of Alundil there was a rich grove of blue-barked trees,
having purple foliage like feathers. It was famous for its beauty and the
shrinelike peace of its shade.
In that wood did this teacher abide with his followers, and when they
walked forth into the town at midday their begging bowls never went
unfilled.
Alundil was not an overly large city. It had its share of thatched huts, as
well as wooden bungalows; its main roadway was unpaved and rutted; it
had two large bazaars and many small ones; there were wide fields of grain,
owned by the Vaisyas, tended by the Sudras, which flowed and rippled,
blue-green, about the city; it had many hostels (though none so fine as the
legendary hostel of Hawkana, in far Mahartha), because of the constant
passage of travelers; it had its holy men and its storytellers; and it had its
Temple.