I cannot think of two other locations that are as terribly twinned by imperfectly forgotten textbooks and by the laxities of everyday language as Ajantaayellora. The phonetic demands of this compound &mdash the vowels that end one name and begin the other ask of the tongue a bridge &mdash irritate me and the variation I come up with is Elloraajanta, the same number of letters in writing and yet a good three syllables shorter in the saying. I discard it in no time. Ajanta disappears a little in this version and it sounds rather like a disastrous train-name, the sort of failure by which we might remember an otherwise obscure railway minister. The common form, however cumbersome, is historically accurate &mdash some of the caves at Ajanta did come into existence much before the oldest caves at Ellora. I wonder also if this way of combining the two names represents an ordering of wonder &mdash do the fading paintings at Ajanta take precedence in the popular gaze over the sturdier work at Ellora The journey begins thus in irritation and questions.