Much before travelling to India for matters &lsquospiritual&rsquo became a fad, two of America&rsquos greatest poets made the journey to India. Gary Snyder, the Pulitzer-winning poet of the American wilderness, had just completed a long period of study at a Zen temple in Japan. Allen Ginsberg was dealing with the fame and notoriety that his poem Howl had received and the sudden public interest in The Beats. Both were, in their own ways, searching for some sense of permanence in an impermanent world. Ginsberg gave up on San Francisco and with his partner, the poet Peter Orlovsky, travelled to Morocco, Paris, Tangier, Greece, Tel Aviv and Mombasa before taking a ship to Bombay, and a train to Delhi. Snyder and his poet wife Joanne travelled from Kyoto to Delhi via Sri Lanka, Madras, Pondicherry and Benaras. The two sets of travellers met in Delhi and proceeded to Rishikesh to study yoga, and finally took a bus to Kausani as Snyder wanted to see Nanda Devi.