Page:History of Indian and Eastern Architecture Vol 2.djvu/385

 CHAP. X. MYSORE AND OUDH. 331 that in such buildings as were erected at Agra or Delhi during the lapse of the i8th century, even where no European influence can be traced, there is a feebleness and want of true perception, though occasionally combined with a considerable degree of elegance. There, however, the enquiry fails, because European Tomb of Maiji Sahiba at Junagadh. (From a Photograph.) influence made itself felt before any actual change had developed itself, but in remote corners the downward progress became apparent without any extraneous assistance. This is partially the case, as just mentioned, in Mysore ; but there is a cemetery at Junagadh, in Gujarat, where there exists a group of tombs, all erected within last century, some within the last forty or