<h2>CHAPTER VIII</h2>
<h3>Others</h3>
<div class="figcenter"> <ANTIMG src="images/illus-11.jpg" width-obs="550" height-obs="386" alt="STURDY AND STOLID, AND LITTLE VEERA —whose story, however, is different." title="" /> <span class="caption">STURDY AND STOLID, AND LITTLE VEERA<br/>—whose story, however, is different.<br/><br/></span></div>
<div class='cap'>WE have some children who were not in Temple
danger, but who could not have grown up good if
we had not taken them. "If peril to the soul
is of importance," wrote the pastor who sent us two little
girls, "then it is important you should take them": so we
took them. These little ones were in "peril to the soul,"
because their nominal Christian mother had, after her
husband's death, married a Hindu, against the rules of her
religion and his. The children were under the worst influence;
and both were winning little things, who might
have drifted anywhere. We have found it impossible to
refuse such little ones, even though danger of the Temple
kind may not be probable.</div>
<p>Such a child, for example, is the little girl the
Moslem is ready to adopt and convert to the faith. Our
first redeemed from this captivity (literally slavery under
the name of adoption) was a cheerful little person of six,
with the sturdy air the camera caught, and a manner all
her own. An American missionary in an adjoining district
heard of her and her little sister, and wrote to know if we
would take them if he could save them. We could not
say No; so he tried, and succeeded in getting the elder<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_64" id="Page_64">[64]</SPAN></span>
child; the little one had been already "adopted," and he
could not get her. "The whole affair was the most
astonishing thing I have ever seen in India," he wrote when
he sent the little girl. The child upon arrival made friends
with another, and confided to her in a burst of confidence:
"Ah, she was a jewel, my own little sister—not like me,
not dark of skin, but 'fair' and tender; and the great
man in the turban saw her and desired her, and he took
her away; and she cried and cried and cried, because she
was only such a very little girl."</p>
<p>"The business was being discussed out in the open
street"—the writer was another missionary—"the pastor
heard of it from a Christian who was passing, and saw the
cluster of Muhammadans round the mother and her children.
It was touch-and-go with the child." These two, Sturdy and
Stolid, side by side in the photograph, are in all ways quite
unlike the typical Temple child; but the danger from which
they were delivered is as real, and perhaps in its way as
grave.</p>
<div class="sidenote">We know what her Heart is Saying</div>
<p>One of the sweetest of our little girls, a child with a
spiritual expression which strikes all who see her, came to
us through a young catechist who heard of her and
persuaded her people to let her come to Dohnavur. She
is an orphan; and being "fair" and very gentle, needed
a mother's care. Her nearest relatives had families of
their own, and were not anxious for this addition to their
already numerous daughters; and the little girl, feeling
herself unwanted, was fretting sadly. Then an offer came
to the relations—not made expressly in words, but implied—by
which they would be relieved of the responsibility of
the little niece's future. All would not have been straight
for the child, however, and they hesitated. The temptation
was great; and in the end it is probable they would have
yielded, had not the catechist heard of it, and influenced<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_65" id="Page_65">[65]</SPAN></span>
them to turn from temptation. It was the evening of our
Prayer-day when the little Pearl came; and when we saw
the sweet little face, with the wistful, questioning eyes like
the eyes of a little frightened dog taken away alone among
strangers, and when we heard the story, and knew what
the child's fate might have been, then we welcomed her as
another Prayer-day gift. We do not look for gratitude
in this work; who does? But sometimes it comes of itself;
and the grateful love of a child, like the grateful love of a
little affectionate animal lifted out of its terror and comforted,
is something sweet and tender and very good to
know. The Pearl says little; but her soft brown eyes look
up into ours with a trustful expression of peaceful
happiness; and as she slips her little hand into ours and gives
it a tight squeeze, we know what her heart is saying,
and we are content.</p>
<p>Two more of these "others" are the two in the photograph
who are playing a pebble game. Their parents died leaving
them in the care of an aunt, a perfectly heartless woman
whose record was not of the best. She starved the children,
though she was not poor; and then punished them severely
when, faint with hunger, they took food from a kindly
woman of another caste. Finally she gave them to a
neighbour, telling her to dispose of them as she liked.</p>
<p>About this time our head worker, Ponnamal, was travelling
in search of a child of whom we had heard in a town near
Palamcottah. She could not find the child, and, tired and
discouraged, turned into the large Church Missionary Society
hall, where a meeting was being held to welcome our new
Bishop. As Ponnamal was late, she sat at the back, and
could not hear what was going on; so she gave herself up
to prayer for the little child whom she had not found,
and asked that her three days' journey might not be all
in vain.<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_66" id="Page_66">[66]</SPAN></span></p>
<div class="figleft"> <ANTIMG src="images/illus-12.jpg" width-obs="351" height-obs="500" alt="PEBBLES." title="" /> <span class="caption">PEBBLES.</span></div>
<p>As she prayed in silence thus, another woman came in
and sat down at the back near Ponnamal. When Ponnamal
looked up, she saw it was a friend she had not met for years.
She began to tell her about her search for the child; and
this led on to telling about the children in general, and the
work we were trying to do. The other had known nothing
of it all before; but as she listened, a light broke on her
face, and she eagerly told Ponnamal how that same morning
she had come across a Hindu woman in charge of two little
girls. The Tamils when they meet, however casually, have
a useful habit of exchanging confidences. The woman had
told Ponnamal's friend what her errand was. Ponnamal's
talk about children in danger recalled the conversation of
the morning. In a few hours more Ponnamal was upon the
track of the Hindu woman and her two little charges. It
ended in the two little girls being saved.</p>
<hr style="width: 65%;" /><p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_69" id="Page_69">[69]</SPAN></span></p>
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