In no part of Edinburgh did summer
come up earlier, or with more lavish bloom, than in
old Greyfriars kirkyard. Sheltered on the north
and east, it was open to the moist breezes of the
southwest, and during all the lengthening afternoons
the sun lay down its slope and warmed the rear windows
of the overlooking tenements. Before the end of
May the caretaker had much ado to keep the growth
in order. Vines threatened to engulf the circling
street of sepulchers in greenery and bloom, and grass
to encroach on the flower plots.
A half century ago there were no rotary
lawnmowers to cut off clover heads; and, if there
had been, one could not have been used on these dropping
terraces, so populous with slabs and so closely set
with turfed mounds and oblongs of early flowering
annuals and bedding plants. Mr. Brown had to
get down on his hands and knees, with gardener’s
shears, to clip the turfed borders and banks, and
take a sickle to the hummocks. Thus he could
dig out a root of dandelion with the trowel kept ever
in his belt, consider the spreading crocuses and valley
lilies, whether to spare them, give a country violet
its blossoming time, and leave a screening burdock
undisturbed until fledglings were out of their nests
in the shrubbery.
Mistress Jeanie often brought out
a little old milking stool on balmy mornings, and
sat with knitting or mending in one of the narrow aisles,
to advise her gude-mon in small matters.
Bobby trotted quietly about, sniffing at everything
with the liveliest interest, head on this side or
that, alertly. His business, learned in his first
summer in Greyfriars, was to guard the nests of foolish
skylarks, song-thrushes, redbreasts and wrens, that
built low in lilac, laburnum, and flowering currant
bushes, in crannies of wall and vault, and on the ground.
It cannot but be a pleasant thing to be a wee young
dog, full of life and good intentions, and to play
one’s dramatic part in making an old garden of
souls tuneful with bird song. A cry of alarm from
parent or nestling was answered instantly by the tiny,
tousled policeman, and there was a prowler the less,
or a skulking cat was sent flying over tomb and wall.
His duty done, without noise or waste
of energy, Bobby returned to lie in the sun on Auld
Jock’s grave. Over this beloved mound a
coverlet of rustic turf had been spread as soon as
the frost was out of the ground, and a bonny briar
bush planted at the head. Then it bore nature’s
own tribute of flowers, for violets, buttercups, daisies
and clover blossoms opened there and, later, a spike
or so of wild foxglove and a knot of heather.
Robin redbreasts and wrens foraged around Bobby, unafraid;
swallows swooped down from their mud villages, under
the dizzy dormers and gables, to flush the flies on
his muzzle, and whole flocks of little blue titmice
fluttered just overhead, in their rovings from holly
and laurel to newly tasseled firs and yew trees.
The click of the wicket gate was another
sort of alarm altogether. At that the little
dog slipped under the fallen table-tomb and lay hidden
there until any strange visitor had taken himself away.
Except for two more forced returns and ingenious escapes
from the sheepfarm on the Pentlands, Bobby had lived
in the kirkyard undisturbed for six months. The
caretaker had neither the heart to put him out nor
the courage to face the minister and the kirk officers
with a plea for him to remain. The little dog’s
presence there was known, apparently, only to Mr.
Traill, to a few of the tenement dwellers, and to the
Heriot boys. If his life was clandestine in a
way, it was as regular of hour and duty and as well
ordered as that of the garrison in the Castle.
When the time-gun boomed, Bobby was
let out for his midday meal at Mr. Traill’s
and for a noisy run about the neighborhood to exercise
his lungs and legs. On Wednesdays he haunted
the Grassmarket, sniffing at horses, carts and mired
boots. Edinburgh had so many shaggy little Skye
and Scotch terriers that one more could go about unremarked.
Bobby returned to the kirkyard at his own good pleasure.
In the evening he was given a supper of porridge and
broo, or milk, at the kitchen door of the lodge, and
the nights he spent on Auld Jock’s grave.
The morning drum and bugle woke him to the chase,
and all his other hours were spent in close attendance
on the labors of the caretaker. The click of the
wicket gate was the signal for instant disappearance.
A scramble up the wall from Heriot’s
Hospital grounds, or the patter of bare feet on the
gravel, however, was notice to come out and greet
a friend. Bobby was host to the disinherited children
of the tenements. Now, at the tap-tap-tapping
of Tammy Barr’s crutches, he scampered up the
slope, and he suited his pace to the crippled boy’s
in coming down again. Tammy chose a heap of cut
grass on which to sit enthroned and play king, a grand
new crutch for a scepter, and Bobby for a courtier.
At command, the little dog rolled over and over, begged,
and walked on his hind legs. He even permitted
a pair of thin little arms to come near strangling
him, in an excess of affection. Then he wagged
his tail and lolled his tongue to show that he was
friendly, and trotted away about his business.
Tammy took an oat-cake from his pocket to nibble, and
began a conversation with Mistress Jeanie.
“I broucht a picnic wi’ me.”
“Did ye, noo? An’ hoo did ye ken
aboot picnics, laddie?”
“Maister Traill was tellin’
Ailie an’ me. There’s ilka thing to
mak’ a picnic i’ the kirkyaird. They
couldna mak’ my legs gude i’ the infairmary,
but I’m gangin’ to Heriot’s.
I’ll juist hae to airn ma leevin’ wi’
ma heid, an’ no’ remember aboot ma
legs, ava. Is he no’ a bonny doggie?”
“Ay, he’s bonny.
An’ ye’re a braw laddie no’ to fash
yersel’ aboot what canna be helped.”
The wifie took his ragged jacket and
mended it, dropped a tear in an impossible hole, and
a ha’penny in the one good pocket. And by
and by the pale laddie slept there among the bright
graves, in the sun. After another false alarm
from the gate she asked her gude-mon, as she had
asked many times before:
“What’ll ye do, Jamie,
when the meenister kens aboot Bobby, an’ ca’s
ye up afore kirk sessions for brakin’ the rule?”
“We wullna cross the brig till
we come to the burn, woman,” he invariably answered,
with assumed unconcern. Well he knew that the
bridge might be down and the stream in flood when he
came to it. But Mr. Traill was a member of Greyfriars
auld kirk, too, and a companion in guilt, and Mr.
Brown relied not a little on the landlord’s fertile
mind and daring tongue. And he relied on useful,
well-behaving Bobby to plead his own cause.
“There’s nae denyin’
the doggie is takin’ in ’is ways.
He’s had twa gude hames fair thrown at ’is
heid, but the sperity bit keeps to ’is ain mind.
An’ syne he’s usefu’, an’ hauds
’is gab by the ordinär’.”
He often reinforced his inclination with some such
argument.
With all their caution, discovery
was always imminent. The kirkyard was long and
narrow and on rising levels, and it was cut almost
across by the low mass of the two kirks, so that many
things might be going on at one end that could not
be seen from the other. On this Saturday noon,
when the Heriot boys were let out for the half-holiday,
Mr. Brown kept an eye on them until those who lived
outside had dispersed. When Mistress Jeanie tucked
her knitting-needles in her belt, and went up to the
lodge to put the dinner over the fire, the caretaker
went down toward Candlemakers Row to trim the grass
about the martyrs’ monument. Bobby dutifully
trotted at his heels. Almost immediately a half-dozen
laddies, led by Geordie Ross and Sandy McGregor, scaled
the wall from Heriot’s grounds and stepped down
into the kirkyard, that lay piled within nearly to
the top. They had a perfectly legitimate errand
there, but no mission is to be approached directly
by romantic boyhood.
“Hist!” was the warning,
and the innocent invaders, feeling delightfully lawless,
stole over and stormed the marble castle, where “Bluidy”
McKenzie slept uneasily against judgment day.
Light-hearted lads can do daring deeds on a sunny
day that would freeze their blood on a dark and stormy
night. So now Geordie climbed nonchalantly to
a seat over the old persecutor, crossed his stout,
bare legs, filled an imaginary pipe, and rattled the
three farthings in his pocket.
“I’m ‘Jinglin’ Geordie’
Heriot,” he announced.
“I’ll show ye hoo a prood
goldsmith ance smoked wi’ a’.”
Then, jauntily: “Sandy, gie a crack to
‘Bluidy’ McKenzie’s door an’
daur the auld hornie to come oot.”
The deed was done amid breathless
apprehensions, but nothing disturbed the silence of
the May noon except the lark that sprang at their feet
and soared singing into the blue. It was Sandy
who presently whistled like a blackbird to attract
the attention of Bobby.
There were no blackbirds in the kirkyard,
and Bobby understood the signal. He scampered
up at once and dashed around the kirk, all excitement,
for he had had many adventures with the Heriot boys
at skating and hockey on Duddingston Lock in the winter,
and tramps over the country and out to Leith harbor
in the spring. The laddies prowled along the
upper wall of the kirks, opened and shut the wicket,
to give the caretaker the idea that they had come
in decorously by the gate, and went down to ask him,
with due respect and humility, if they could take
Bobby out for the afternoon. They were going to
mark the places where wild flowers might be had, to
decorate “Jinglin’ Geordie’s”
portrait, statue and tomb at the school on Founder’s
Day. Mr. Brown considered them with a glower
that made the boys nudge each other knowingly.
“Saturday isna the day for ‘im to be gaen
aboot. He aye has a washin’ an’ a
groomin’ to mak’ ‘im fit for the
Sabbath. An’, by the leuk o’ ye,
ye’d be nane the waur for soap an’ water
yer ainsel’s.”
“We’ll gie ’im ‘is
washin’ an’ combin’ the nicht,”
they volunteered, eagerly.
“Weel, noo, he wullna hae ’is dinner till
the time-gun.”
Neither would they. At that,
annoyed by their persistence, Mr. Brown denied authority.
“Ye ken weel he isna ma dog.
Ye’ll hae to gang up an’ spier Maister
Traill. He’s fair daft aboot the gude-for-naethin’
tyke.”
This was understood as permission.
As the boys ran up to the gate, with Bobby at their
heels, Mr. Brown called after them: “Ye
fetch ’im hame wi’ the sunset bugle, an’
gin ye teach ‘im ony o’ yer unmannerly
ways I’ll tak’ a stick to yer breeks.”
When they returned to Mr. Traill’s
place at two o’clock the landlord stood in shirt-sleeves
and apron in the open doorway with Bobby, the little
dog gripping a mutton shank in his mouth.
“Bobby must tak’ his bone
down first and hide it awa’. The Sabbath
in a kirkyard is a dull day for a wee dog, so he aye
gets a catechism of a bone to mumble over.”
’The landlord sighed in open
envy when the laddies and the little dog tumbled down
the Row to the Grassmarket on their gypsying.
His eyes sought out the glimpse of green country on
the dome of Arthur’s Seat, that loomed beyond
the University towers to the east. There are times
when the heart of a boy goes ill with the sordid duties
of the man.
Straight down the length of the empty
market the laddies ran, through the crooked, fascinating
haunt of horses and jockeys in the street of King’s
Stables, then northward along the fronts of quaint
little handicrafts shops that skirted Castle Crag.
By turning westward into Queensferry Street a very
few minutes would have brought them to a bit of buried
country. But every expedition of Edinburgh lads
of spirit of that day was properly begun with challenges
to scale Castle Rock from the valley park of Princes
Street Gardens on the north.
“I daur ye to gang up!”
was all that was necessary to set any group of youngsters
to scaling the precipice. By every tree and ledge,
by every cranny and point of rock, stoutly rooted
hazel and thorn bush and clump of gorse, they climbed.
These laddies went up a quarter or a third of the
way to the grim ramparts and came cautiously down again.
Bobby scrambled higher, tumbled back more recklessly
and fell, head over heels and upside down, on the
daisied turf. He righted himself at once, and
yelped in sharp protest. Then he sniffed and busied
himself with pretenses, in the elaborate unconcern
with which a little dog denies anything discreditable.
There were legends of daring youth having climbed
this war-like cliff and laying hands on the fortress
wall, but Geordie expressed a popular feeling in declaring
these tales “a’ lees.”
“No’ ony laddie could
gang a’ the way up an’ come doon wi’
’is heid no’ broken. Bobby couldna
do it, an’ he’s mair like a wild fox than
an ordinär’ dog. Noo, we’re
the Light Brigade at Balaklava. Chairge!”
The Crimean War was then a recent
event. Heroes of Sebastopol answered the summons
of drum and bugle in the Castle and fired the hearts
of Edinburgh youth. Cannon all around them, and
“theirs not to reason why,” this little
band stormed out Queensferry Street and went down,
hand under hand, into the fairy underworld of Leith
Water.
All its short way down from the Pentlands
to the sea, the Water of Leith was then a foaming
little river of mills, twisting at the bottom of a
gorge. One cliff-like wall or the other lay to
the sun all day, so that the way was lined with a
profusion of every wild thing that turns green and
blooms in the Lowlands of Scotland. And it was
filled to the brim with bird song and water babble.
A crowd of laddies had only to go
inland up this gorge to find wild and tame bloom enough
to bury “Jinglin’ Geordie” all over
again every year. But adventure was to be had
in greater variety by dropping seaward with the bickering
brown water. These waded along the shallow margin,
walked on shelving sands of gold, and, where the channel
was filled, they clung to the rocks and picked their
way along dripping ledges. Bobby missed no chance
to swim. If he could scramble over rough ground
like a squirrel or a fox, he could swim like an otter.
Swept over the low dam at Dean village, where a cup-like
valley was formed, he tumbled over and over in the
spray and was all but drowned. As soon as he got
his breath and his bearings he struck out frantically
for the bank, shook the foam from his eyes and ears,
and barked indignantly at the saucy fall. The
white miller in the doorway of the gray-stone, red-roofed
mill laughed, and anxious children ran down from a
knot of storybook cottages and gay dooryards.
“I’ll gie ye ten shullin’s for the
sperity bit dog,” the miller shouted, above
the clatter of the’ wheel and the swish of the
dam.
“He isna oor ain dog,”
Geordie called back. “But he wullna droon.
He’s got a gude heid to ‘im, an’
wullna be sic a bittie fule anither time.”
Indeed he had a good head on him!
Bobby never needed a second lesson. At Silver
Mills and Canon Mills he came out and trotted warily
around the dam. Where the gorge widened to a
valley toward the sea they all climbed up to Leith
Walk, that ran to the harbor, and came out to a wonder-world
of water-craft anchored in the Firth. Each boy
picked out his ship to go adventuring.
“I’m gangin’ to Norway!”
Geordie was scornful. “Hoots,
ye tame pussies. Ye’re fleid o’ gettin’
yer feet wat. I’ll be rinnin’ aff
to be a pirate. Come awa’ doon.”
They followed the leader along shore
and boarded an abandoned and evil-smelling fishingboat.
There they ran up a ragged jacket for a black flag.
But sailing a stranded craft palled presently.
“Nae, I’m gangin’
to be a Crusoe. Preserve me! If there’s
no’ a futprint i’ the sand Bobby’s
ma sma’ man Friday.”
Away they ran southward to find a
castaway’s shelter in a hollow on the golf links.
Soon this was transformed into a wrecker’s den,
and then into the hiding-place of a harried Covenanter
fleeing religious persecution. Daring things
to do swarmed in upon their minds, for Edinburgh laddies
live in a city of romantic history, of soldiers, of
near-by mountains, and of sea rovings. No adventure
served them five minutes, and Bobby was in every one.
Ah, lucky Bobby, to have such gay playfellows on a
sunny afternoon and under foot the open country!
And fortunate laddies to have such
a merry rascal of a wee dog with them! To the
mile they ran, Bobby went five, scampering in wide
circles and barking and louping at butterflies and
whaups. He made a detour to the right to yelp
saucily at the red-coated sentry who paced before the
Gothic gateway to the deserted Palace of Holyrood,
and as far to the left to harry the hoofs of a regiment
of cavalry drilling before the barracks at Piershill.
He raced on ahead and swam out to scatter the fleet
of swan sailing or the blue mirror of Duddingston Loch.
The tired boys lay blissfully up the
sunny side of Arthur’s Seat in a thicket of
hazel while Geordie carried out a daring plan for which
privacy was needed. Bobby was solemnly arraigned
before a court on the charge of being a seditious
Covenanting meenister, and was required to take the
oath of loyalty to English King and Church on pain
of being hanged in the Grassmarket. The oath
had been duly written out on paper and greased with
mutton tallow to make it more palatable. Bobby
licked the fat off with relish. Then he took
the paper between his sharp little teeth and merrily
tore it to shreds. And, having finished it, he
barked cheerful defiance at the court. The lads
came near rolling down the slope with laughter, and
they gave three cheers for the little hero. Sandy
remarked, “Ye wadna think, noo, sic a sonsie
doggie wad be leevin’ i’ the murky auld
kirkyaird.”
Bobby had learned the lay of the tipped-up
and scooped-out and jumbled auld toon, and he led
the way homeward along the southern outskirts of the
city. He turned up Nicolson Street, that ran northward,
past the University and the old infirmary. To
get into Greyfriars Place from the east at that time
one had to descend to the Cowgate and climb out again.
Bobby darted down the first of the narrow wynds.
Suddenly he turned ’round and
’round in bewilderment, then shot through a
sculptured door way, into a well-like court, and up
a flight of stone stairs. The slamming of a shutter
overhead shocked him to a standstill on the landing
and sent him dropping slowly down again. What
memories surged back to his little brain, what grief
gripped his heart, as he stood trembling on a certain
spot in the pavement where once a long deal box had
rested!
“What ails the bittie dog?”
There was something here that sobered the thoughtless
boys. “Come awa’, Bobby!”
At that he came obediently enough.
But he trotted down the very middle of the wynd, head
and tail low, and turned unheeding into the Saturday-evening
roar of the Cowgate. He refused to follow them
up the rise between St. Magdalen’s Chapel and
the eastern parapet of the bridge, but kept to his
way under the middle arch into the Grassmarket.
By way of Candlemakers Row he gained the kirkyard gate,
and when the wicket was opened he disappeared around
the church. When Bobby failed to answer calls,
Mr. Brown grumbled, but went after him. The little
dog submitted to his vigorous scrubbing and grooming,
but he refused his supper. Without a look or
a wag of the tail he was gone again.
“Noo, what hae ye done to’im?
He’s no’ like ‘is ainsel’ ava.”
They had done nothing, indeed.
They could only relate Bobby’s strange behavior
in College Wynd and the rest of the way home.
Mistress Jeanie nodded her head, with the wisdom of
women that is of the heart.
“Eh, Jamie, that wad be whaur
’is maister deed sax months syne.”
And having said it she slipped down the slope with
her knitting and sat on the mound beside the mourning
little dog.
When the awe-struck lads asked for
the story Mr. Brown shook his head. “Ye
spier Maister Traill. He kens a’ aboot it;
an’ syne he can talk like a beuk.”
Before they left the kirkyard the
laddies walked down to Auld Jock’s grave and
patted Bobby on the head, and they went away thoughtfully
to their scattered homes.
As on that first morning when his
grief was new, Bobby woke to a Calvinistic Sabbath.
There were no rattling carts or hawkers crying their
wares. Steeped in sunshine, the Castle loomed
golden into the blue. Tenement dwellers slept
late, and then moved about quietly. Children
with unwontedly clean faces came out to galleries and
stairs to study their catechisms. Only the birds
were unaware of the seventh day, and went about their
melodious business; and flower buds opened to the
sun.
In mid-morning there suddenly broke
on the sweet stillness that clamor of discordant bells
that made the wayfarer in Edinburgh stop his ears.
All the way from Leith Harbor to the Burghmuir eight
score of warring bells contended to be heard.
Greyfriars alone was silent in that babblement, for
it had lost tower and bell in an explosion of gunpowder.
And when the din ceased at last there was a sound of
military music. The Castle gates swung wide,
and a kilted regiment marched down High Street playing
“God Save the Queen.” When Bobby was
in good spirits the marching music got into his legs
and set him to dancing scandalously. The caretaker
and his wifie always came around the kirk on pleasant
mornings to see the bonny sight of the gay soldiers
going to church.
To wee Bobby these good, comfortable,
everyday friends of his must have seemed strange in
their black garments and their serious Sunday faces.
And, ah! the Sabbath must, indeed, have been a dull
day to the little dog. He had learned that when
the earliest comer clicked the wicket he must go under
the table-tomb and console himself with the extra bone
that Mr. Traill never failed to remember. With
an hour’s respite for dinner at the lodge, between
the morning and afternoon services, he lay there all
day. The restaurant was closed, and there was
no running about for good dogs. In the early
dark of winter he could come out and trot quietly
about the silent, deserted place.
As soon as the crocuses pushed their
green noses through the earth in the spring the congregation
began to linger among the graves, for to see an old
burying ground renew its life is a peculiar promise
of the resurrection. By midsummer visitors were
coming from afar, some even from over-sea, to read
the quaint inscriptions on the old tombs, or to lay
tributes of flowers on the graves of poets and religious
heroes. It was not until the late end of such
a day that Bobby could come out of hiding to stretch
his cramped legs. Then it was that tenement children
dropped from low windows, over the tombs, and ate their
suppers of oat cake there in the fading light.
When Mr. Traill left the kirkyard
in the bright evening of the last Sunday in May he
stopped without to wait for Dr. Lee, the minister of
Greyfriars auld kirk, who had been behind him to the
gate. Now he was nowhere to be seen. With
Bobby ever in the background of his mind, at such
times of possible discovery, Mr. Traill reentered the
kirkyard. The minister was sitting on the fallen
slab, tall silk hat off, with Mr. Brown standing beside
him, uncovered and miserable of aspect, and Bobby
looking up anxiously at this new element in his fate.
“Do you think it seemly for
a dog to be living in the churchyard, Mr. Brown?”
The minister’s voice was merely kind and inquiring,
but the caretaker was in fault, and this good English
was disconcerting. However, his conscience acquitted
him of moral wrong, and his sturdy Scotch independence
came to the rescue.
“Gin a bit dog, wha hands ’is
gab, isna seemly, thae pussies are the deil’s
ain bairns.”
The minister lifted his hand in rebuke.
“Remember the Sabbath Day. And I see no
cats, Mr. Brown.”
“Ye wullna see ony as lang
as the wee doggie is leevin’ i’ the kirkyaird.
An’ the vermin hae sneekit awa’ the first
time sin’ Queen Mary’s day. An’
syne there’s mair singin’ birdies than
for mony a year.”
Mr. Traill had listened, unseen.
Now he came forward with a gay challenge in broad
Scotch to put the all but routed caretaker at his
ease.
“Doctor, I hae a queistion to
spier ye. Which is mair unseemly: a weel-behavin’
bittie tyke i’ the kirkyaird or a scandalous
organ i’ the kirk?”
“Ah, Mr. Traill, I’m afraid
you’re a sad, irreverent young dog yourself,
sir.” The minister broke into a genial laugh.
“Man, you’ve spoiled a bit of fun I was
having with Mr. Brown, who takes his duties ‘sairiously."’
He sat looking down at the little dog until Bobby came
up to him and stood confidingly under his caressing
hand. Then he added: “I have suspected
for some months that he was living in the churchyard.
It is truly remarkable that an active, noisy little
Skye could keep so still about it.”
At that Mr. Brown retreated to the
martyrs’ monument to meditate on the unministerial
behavior of this minister and professor of Biblical
criticism in the University. Mr. Traill, however,
sat himself down on the slab for a pleasant probing
into the soul of this courageous dominie, who had
long been under fire for his innovations in the kirk
services.
“I heard of Bobby first early
in the winter, from a Bible-reader at the Medical
Mission in the Cowgate, who saw the little dog’s
master buried. He sees many strange, sad things
in his work, but nothing ever shocked him so as the
lonely death of that pious old shepherd in such a
picturesque den of vice and misery.”
“Ay, he went from my place,
fair ill, into the storm. I never knew whaur
the auld man died.”
The minister looked at Mr. Traill,
struck by the note of remorse in his tone.
“The missionary returned to
the churchyard to look for the dog that had refused
to leave the grave. He concluded that Bobby had
gone away to a new home and master, as most dogs do
go sooner or later. Some weeks afterward the
minister of a small church in the hills inquired for
him and insisted that he was still here. This
last week, at the General Assembly, I heard of the
wee Highlander from several sources. The tales
of his escapes from the sheep-farm have grown into
a sort of Odyssey of the Pentlands. I think,
perhaps, if you had not continued to feed him, Mr.
Traill, he might have remained at his old home.”
“Nae, I’m no’ thinking
so, and I was no’ willing to risk the starvation
of the bonny, leal Highlander.”
Until the stars came out Mr. Traill
sat there telling the story. At mention of his
master’s name Bobby returned to the mound and
stretched himself across it. “I will go
before the kirk officers, Doctor Lee, and tak’
full responseebility. Mr. Brown is no’ to
blame. It would have tak’n a man with a
heart of trap-rock to have turned the woeful bit dog
out.”
“He is well cared for and is
of a hardy breed, so he is not likely to suffer; but
a dog, no more than a man, cannot live on bread alone.
His heart hungers for love.”
“Losh!” cried Mr. Brown.
“Are ye thinkin’ he isna gettin’
it? Oor bairns are a’ oot o’ the
hame nest, an’ ma woman, Jeanie, is fair daft
aboot Bobby, aye thinkin’ he’ll tak’
the measles. An’ syne, there’s a’
the tenement bairns cryin’ oot on ‘im
ilka meenit, an’ ane crippled laddie he een
lets fondle ’im.”
“Still, it would be better if
he belonged to some one master. Everybody’s
dog is nobody’s dog,” the minister insisted.
“I wish you could attach him to you, Mr. Traill.”
“Ay, it’s a disappointment
to me that he’ll no’ bide with me.
Perhaps, in time ”
“It’s nae use, ava,”
Mr. Brown interrupted, and he related the incident
of the evening before. “He’s cheerfu’
eneugh maist o’ the time, an’ likes to
be wi’ the laddies as weel as ony dog, but he
isna forgettin’ Auld Jock. The wee doggie
cam’ again to ‘is maister’s buryin’.
Man, ye ne’er saw the like o’ it.
The wifie found ’im flattened oot to a furry
door-mat, an’ greetin’ to brak ’is
heart.”
“It’s a remarkable story;
and he’s a beautiful little dog, and a leal
one.” The minister stooped and patted Bobby,
and he was thoughtful all the way to the gate.
“The matter need not be brought
up in any formal way. I will speak to the elders
and deacons about it privately, and refer those wanting
details to you, Mr. Traill. Mr. Brown,”
he called to the caretaker who stood in the lodge
door, “it cannot be pleasing to God to see the
little creature restrained. Give Bobby his liberty
on the Sabbath.”