Lotus Buds

Amy Carmichael tells the story of work among the girls of India, who she calls "Lotus Buds".


By : Amy Wilson Carmichael (1867 - 1951)

00 - Foreword



01 - Lotus Buds



02 - Opposites



03 - The Scamp



04 - The Photographs



05 - Tara and Evu



06 - Principalities, Powers, Rulers



07 - How the Children Come



08 - Others



09 - Old Dévai



10 - Failures?



11 - God Heard: God Answered



12 - To What Purpose?



13 - A Story of Comfort



14 - Pickles and Puck



15 - The Howler



16 - The Neyoor Nursery



17 - In the Compound and Near It



18 - From the Temple of the Rock



19 - Yosépu



20 - The Menagerie



21 - More Animals



22 - The Parrot House



23 - The Bear Garden



24 - The Accals



25 - The Little Accals



26 - 'Very Common in Those Parts'



27 - The Glory of the Usual



28 - The Secret Traffic



29 - Blue Book Evidence



30 - On the Side of the Oppressors There Was Power



31 - And There Was None to Save



32 - The Power Behind the Work



33 - If This Were All



34 - 'To Continue the Succession'



35 - What If She Misses Her Chance?



36 - 'Thy Sweet Original Joy'


When first "Things as they are" trod the untrodden way, it walked as a small child walks when for the first time it ventures forth upon young, uncertain feet. It has to walk; it does not know why: it only knows there is no choice about it. But there is an eager looking for an outstretched hand, and an instant gratefulness always, for even a finger. A whole hand given without reserve is something never forgotten.

It was only a child after all, and it had not anticipated having to find its way alone among strangers. It had thought of nothing further than a very short walk among familiar faces. If it had understood beforehand how far it would have to walk, I doubt if it would have had the courage to start; for it was not naturally brave. But once on its way it could not turn back; and thanks to those kindly outstretched hands, it grew a little less afraid, and it went on.

Then another small wayfarer followed. It also was very easily discouraged; an unfriendly push would have knocked it over at once. But nobody seemed to want to push so unpretentious a thing, so it gained courage and went on.

And now a more grown-up looking traveller (though indeed its looks belie it) has started on its way; more diffident, if the truth must be told, than even its predecessors. For it thought within itself—Perhaps there will be no welcoming hands held out this time; hands may grow tired of such kind offices. But it has not been so. And now the sense of gratefulness cannot longer be repressed.

All of which means that I want to thank sincerely those kings of the Book World—Reviewers—and those dwellers in that world who are my Readers, for their insight and the sympathy to which I owe so much.

Once I read of a soldier who wrote a letter home from the midst of a battle, on a crumpled piece of paper laid upon a cannon ball. His home people he knew would overlook the appearance of the paper and the lack of various things expected in a letter written in a quiet room upon a study table. And he knew he could trust them not to bring too fine a criticism to bear upon the unstudied words hot from the battle's heart.

I have thought sometimes that these books were not unlike that soldier's letter; and those who read them seem to me very like his home people, for they have been so generous in the kindness of their welcome.

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