<h2>CHAPTER III</h2>
<h3>The Scamp</h3>
<div class='cap'>"PAT-A-CAKE is a thing of the past, but the stage from
the highest point of view is still distinctly attractive";
so decided Chellalu, and resolved to devote herself
thenceforth to this new and engrossing pursuit. She chose the
scene of her first public performance without consulting us. It
was the open floor of the church, on a Sunday morning, in the
midst of a large congregation. This was how it happened.</div>
<p>Chellalu's Attai, who in those days was unaware of all the
painful surprises in store, had taken her to morning service,
and allowed her to sit beside her on the mat at the back of the
church. All through the first part of the service Chellalu was
good; and as the sermon began, she was forgotten. In our
church we sit on the floor, men on one side, women and
children on the other. A broad aisle is left between, and the
Iyer (Mr. Walker), refusing to be boxed up in the usual
manner, walks up and down as he preaches. This interested
Chellalu.</p>
<p>That morning the sermon was to children, and the subject
was "Girdles." The East of this ancient India is the East to
which the prophet spoke by parable and picture; and, following
that time-worn path, the preacher pictured the parable
of Jeremiah's linen girdle: the attention of the people was<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_18" id="Page_18">[18]</SPAN></span>
riveted upon him, and no one noticed what was happening on
the mat at the end of the church. Only we, up at the front
with all the other children, saw, without being able to stop it,
the dreadful pantomime. For Chellalu, wholly absorbed and
pleased with this unexpected delight, first stood on the mat
and acted the girdle picture; then, growing bolder, advanced
out into the open aisle, and, following the preacher's gestures,
reproduced them all exactly. It was a moment of tension; but
if ever a child had a good angel in attendance, Chellalu has,
for something always stops her before the bitter end. I forget
what stopped her then; something invisible, and so, doubtless,
the angel. But we did not breathe freely till we had her safe
at home.</p>
<div class="figright"> <ANTIMG src="images/illus-04.jpg" width-obs="351" height-obs="500" alt="CHELLALU, WATCHING THE PICTURE-CATCHER WITH SOME SUSPICION. "Whatever is he doing with that black box?"" title="" /> <span class="caption">CHELLALU, WATCHING THE PICTURE-CATCHER WITH SOME SUSPICION.<br/>"Whatever is he doing with that black box?"</span></div>
<p>Chellalu's visible angel is the gentle Esli, a young convert-helper,
of a meek and lowly disposition. At first sight nothing
seems more unsuitable, for Chellalu needs a firm hand. But
firmness without wisdom would have been disastrous; so as we
had not the perfect combination, we chose the less dangerous
virtue, and gave the nursery scamp to the gentlest of us all.
Sometimes, to tell the whole unromantic truth, we have been
afraid less Esli was spilling emotion in vain upon this graceless
soul; and we have suggested an exchange of angels—but somehow
it has never come to pass. Once we almost did it. For a
noise past all bounds called us down to the nursery, and we
found the cause of it in a huddled heap in the corner.
"Chellalu! what is the matter?" Only the softest of soft
sobs, heard in the silence that followed our advent, and one
round shoulder heaved, and the curly head went down on
the arm in an attitude of woe. Now this is not Chellalu's
way at all. Soft sobbing is not in her line; and I turned to
the twenty-nine children now prancing about in unholy glee,
and they shouted the explanation: "Oh, she is Esli Accal!
She was very exceedingly naughty. She would not come when
Accal called; she raced round the room so fast that Accal<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_19" id="Page_19">[19]</SPAN></span>
could not catch her, and then she jumped out of her cumasu"
(the single small garment worn), "and ran out into the garden!
And Esli Accal sat down in a corner and cried. And Chellalu
is Esli Accal!"</p>
<div class="sidenote">Their Real Use</div>
<p>But the pet opportunity in those glad days was when some
freak of manner in friend or visitor suggested a new game.
We used to wish, sometimes, that these kind people understood
how much pleasure they were giving to the artless babe
who was studying them with such interest, while they, all
unconscious of their real use, imagined probably she was
thinking of nothing more serious than sweets. After an
hour in the bungalow, Chellalu would wander off, apparently
because she was tired of us, but really because she was full
of a new and original idea, and wanted an audience. Once
she puzzled the nursery community who had not been visiting
the bungalow, by mincing about on pointed toes, with shoulders
shrugged like a dancing master in caricature. The babies
thought this a very nice game, and for weeks they played it
industriously.</p>
<p>Chellalu talked late—she has long ago made up for lost time—but
she was never at a loss for an answer to a question which
could be answered by action. "Who is in the nursery now?"
we asked her one afternoon when she had escaped before the
tea-bell, that trumpet of jubilee to the nursery, had rung.
She smiled and sat down slowly, and then sighed. Another
sigh, and she proceeded to perform her toilet. When the
small hands went up to the head with an action of decorously
swinging the back hair up and coiling it into a loose knot, and
when a spasmodic shake suggested it must be done over again,
there was no doubt as to who was in charge. No one but the
excellent Pakium, one of our earlier workers, ever did things
quite like this. No one else was so ponderous. No one
sighed in that middle-aged manner, no one but Pakium. We
never could blame Pakium for Chellalu's escape. As well<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_20" id="Page_20">[20]</SPAN></span>
blame a mature cat for the escapades of her kitten. Chellalu,
watching for a clue as to her fate, would sigh again profoundly.
It was never easy to return her.</p>
<div class="figleft"> <ANTIMG src="images/illus-05.jpg" width-obs="354" height-obs="500" alt=""OH, IT'S A JOKE!"" title="" /> <span class="caption">"OH, IT'S A JOKE!"</span></div>
<p>We were not sorry when this phase passed into something
safer for herself, though perhaps not so charming to the
public. Chellalu at two and three-quarters had surgical
ambitions. Medical work she considered slow. She liked
operations. Her first, so far as we know, was performed
upon the unwilling eye of a smaller and weaker sister. "Lie
down!" she had commanded, and the patient had lain down.
"Open your eyes!" At this point the victim realised what
she was in for, and her howls brought deliverance; but not
before Chellalu had the agitated baby's head in a firm
grip between her knees, and holding the screwed-up
eye wide open with one hand, was proceeding to drop in
"medicine" with the other. Mercifully the medicine was
water.</p>
<p>Thwarted in this direction, Chellalu applied herself to
bandaging. She would persuade someone to lend her a
finger or a toe; the owner was assured it was sore—very
sore. She would then proceed to bandage it to the best of
her ability. But all this was mere play. What Chellalu's
soul yearned for was a real knife, or even only a needle, provided
it would prick and cause red blood to flow. Oh to
be allowed to operate properly, as grown-up people do!
Chellalu had seen them do it—had seen thorns extracted
from little bare feet, and small sores dressed; and it had
deeply interested her. The difficulty was, no one would
offer a limb. She walked up and down the nursery one
morning with a bit of an old milk tin, very jagged and sharp
and inviting, and secreted in her curls was a long, bright
darning needle; but though she took so much trouble to
prepare, no one would give her a chance to perform, and
Chellalu was disgusted. Someone who did not know her<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_21" id="Page_21">[21]</SPAN></span>
suggested she should perform on herself. This disgusted
her still more. Do doctors perform on themselves!</p>
<div class="sidenote">Yesh: No</div>
<p>Chellalu's latest phase introduces the kindergarten. For
an educational comrade, perceiving our defects in this direction,
furnished a kindergarten for us, and gave us a kind
push-off into these pleasant waters; so the little boat sails
gaily, and the children at least are content.</p>
<p>Chellalu has never been so keen about this institution as
the other babies are. "Do you like the kindergarten?" some
one asked her the other day; and she answered with her
usual decision: "Yesh. No." We thought she was talking
at random, and tested her by questions about things which
we knew she liked or disliked. But she was never caught.
"Well, then, don't you like the kindergarten?" "Yesh.
No." It was evident she knew what she meant, and said it
exactly. Bits of it she likes, other bits she thinks might
be improved. The trouble is that she has an objection to
sitting in the same place for more than a minute at
longest. Other babies, steady, mature things of five, are
already evolving quite orderly sentences in English—the
language in which the kindergarten is partly taught—and
we feel they are getting on. Chellalu never stops long
enough to evolve anything, and yet she seems to be doing
a little. From the first week she has talked all she knew
in unabashed fashion. "Good morning very much" was an
early production; and it was followed by many oddments
forgotten now, but comical in effect at the time, which
perhaps may explain the otherwise inexplicable fact that
she sometimes learns something.</p>
<p>One only of those early dashes into the unexplored land
is remembered, because it enriched us with a new synonym.
It was at afternoon tea that a sympathetic Sittie (the word
means "Mother's younger sister"), knowing that Chellalu
had received something thoroughly well earned, asked her<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_22" id="Page_22">[22]</SPAN></span>
in English: "What did Ammal give you this morning?"
Chellalu caught at the one familiar word in this sentence
(for the babies learn the names of the flowers in the garden
before they are troubled with lesser matters), and she
answered brightly: "Morning-glory!" So Morning-glory has
become to us an <i>alias</i> for smacks.</p>
<p>This same Morning-glory is the <ins title="Transcriber's Note: original reads 'subjeect'">subject</ins> of one of the
kindergarten songs. For after searching through two or
three hundred pages of nursery rhymes, and interviewing
many proper kindergarten songs, we found few that belonged
to the Indian babies' world; and so we had to make them
for ourselves. These songs are about the flowers and the
birds and other simple things, and are twittered by the
tiniest with at least some intelligence, which at present is
as much as we can wish. All the babies sing to the flowers,
but it is Chellalu who gives them surprises. One day we
saw her standing under a bamboo arch, covered with her
favourite Morning-glory. She had two smaller babies with
her, one on either side. "Amma! <i>Look!</i>" she called; but
italics are inadequate to express the emphasis. "<span class="smcap">Look</span>,
Morning—glory—kissing—'chother," and she pointed with
eagerness to the nestling little clusters of lilac, growing, as
their pretty manner is, close to each other. Then, seizing
each of the babies in a fervent and somewhat embarrassing
embrace, she hugged and kissed them both; and finally
wheeling round on the flowers, addressed them impressively:
"For—all—loving—little—Indian—children—want—to—be—like—you."</p>
<hr style="width: 65%;" /><p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_25" id="Page_25">[25]</SPAN></span></p>
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