[Di-]tudongkan daun Sheltered by the leaves,
Sa-hari ta’ makan, With nothing to eat for a day,
Ta’ makan sa-tahun. Nothing to eat for a year.
Here they hook their little fingers together, and rock their bodies to and fro,
singing—
Angkei-angkei p’riok ... the cooking-pot,
P’riok dĕri Jawa The cooking-pot from Java;
Datang ’Wa’ Si Bagok Here comes Uncle Bagok
Bawa kĕtam sa’ekor: Bringing a crab.
Chepong masok ayer, A dish (?) to put water in,
Chepong masok api, A dish (?) to put fire in,
O nenek, O nenek, O granny, O granny,
Rumah kita ’nak runtoh!Our house is tumbling down.
Reh! Reh! Rum! . . . . . .
Finally they sit still with hands clasped on knees, and sing—
Nuria! Nuria! . . . . . .
Tali timba ’ku The rope of my bucket,
’Nak ’nimba lubok dalam,To draw water from a deep hole,
Dalam sama tĕngah, Right in the middle of it,
Saput awan tolih mega. Veiled by the clouds, looking up at (?) the welkin.^178
Of minor children’s games the following may be mentioned:—
(1) Tuju (not tujoh,^179 ) lobang, which appears to be identifiable with “Koba,”
and which is played by throwing coins as near as possible to a hole (or holes?) in
the ground.
(2) Chimplek, which is a sort of “heads and tails” game; “heads” being called
chaping, and “tails” sim.
(3) Porok, which consists in kicking (with the side of the foot) a small cocoa-nut
shell, with the object of hitting a similar shell a few yards off.