When Ailie wanted to get up unusually
early in the morning she made use of Tammy for an
alarm-clock. A crippled laddie who must “mak’
‘is leevin’ wi’ ’is heid”
can waste no moment of daylight, and in the ancient
buildings around Greyfriars the maximum of daylight
was to be had only by those able and willing to climb
to the gables. Tammy, having to live on the lowest,
darkest floor of all, used the kirkyard for a study,
by special indulgence of the caretaker, whenever the
weather permitted.
From a window he dropped his books
and his crutches over the wall. Then, by clasping
his arms around a broken shaft that blocked the casement,
he swung himself out, and scrambled down into an enclosed
vault yard. There he kept hidden Mistress Jeanie’s
milking stool for a seat; and a table-tomb served
as well, for the laddie to do his sums upon, as it
had for the tearful signing of the Covenant more than
two hundred years before. Bobby, as host, greeted
Tammy with cordial friskings and waggings, saw him
settled to his tasks, and then went briskly about his
own interrupted business of searching out marauders.
Many a spring dawn the quiet little boy and the swift
and silent little dog had the shadowy garden all to
themselves, and it was for them the song-thrushes and
skylarks gave their choicest concerts.
On that mid-April morning, when the
rising sun gilded the Castle turrets and flashed back
from the many beautiful windows of Heriot’s Hospital,
Tammy bundled his books under the table-tomb of Mistress
Jean Grant, went over to the rear of the Guildhall
at the top of the Row, and threw a handful of gravel
up to Ailie’s window. Because of a grandmither,
Ailie, too, dwelt on a low level. Her eager little
face, lighted by sleep-dazzled blue eyes, popped out
with the surprising suddenness of the manikins in
a Punch-and-Judy show.
“In juist ane meenit, Tammy,”
she whispered, “no’ to wauken the grandmither.”
It was in so very short a minute that the lassie climbed
out onto the classic pediment of a tomb and dropped
into the kirkyard that her toilet was uncompleted.
Tammy buttoned her washed-out cotton gown at the back,
and she sat on a slab to lace her shoes. If the
fun of giving Bobby his bath was to be enjoyed to
the full there must be no unnecessary delay.
This consideration led Tammy to observe:
“Ye’re no’ needin’
to comb yer hair, Ailie. It leuks bonny eneugh.”
In truth, Ailie was one of those fortunate
lassies whose crinkly, gold-brown mop really looked
best when in some disorder; and of that advantage
the little maid was well aware.
“I ken a’ that, Tammy.
I aye gie it a lick or twa wi’ a comb the nicht
afore. Ca’ the wee doggie.”
Bobby fully understood that he was
wanted for some serious purpose, but it was a fresh
morning of dew and he, apparently, was in the highest
of spirits. So he gave Ailie a chase over the
sparkling grass and under the showery shrubbery.
When he dropped at last on Auld Jock’s grave
Tammy captured him. The little dog could always
be caught there, in a caressable state of exhaustion
or meditation, for, sooner or later, he returned to
the spot from every bit of work or play. No one
would have known it for a place of burial at all.
Mr. Brown knew it only by the rose bush at its head
and by Bobby’s haunting it, for the mound had
sunk to the general level of the terrace on which it
lay, and spreading crocuses poked their purple and
gold noses through the crisp spring turf. But
for the wee, guardian dog the man who lay beneath had
long lost what little identity he had ever possessed.
Now, as the three lay there, the lassie
as flushed and damp as some water-nymph, Bobby panting
and submitting to a petting, Tammy took the little
dog’s muzzle between his thin hands, parted the
veil, and looked into the soft brown eyes.
“Leak, Ailie, Bobby’s
wantin’ somethin’, an’ is juist haudin’
’imsel’.”
It was true. For all his gaiety
in play and his energy at work Bobby’s eyes
had ever a patient, wistful look, not unlike the crippled
laddie’s. Ah, who can say that it did not
require as much courage and gallant bravado on the
part of that small, bereft creature to enable him to
live at all, as it did for Tammy to face his handicapped
life and “no’ to remember ’is bad
legs”?
In the bath on the rear steps of the
lodge Bobby swam and splashed, and scattered foam
with his excited tail. He would not stand still
to be groomed, but wriggled and twisted and leaped
upon the children, putting his shaggy wet paws roguishly
in their faces. But he stood there at last, after
the jolliest romp, in which the old kirkyard rang with
laughter, and oh! so bonny, in his rippling coat of
dark silver. No sooner was he released than he
dashed around the kirk and back again, bringing his
latest bone in his mouth. To his scratching on
the stone sill, for he had been taught not to scratch
on the panel, the door was opened by snod and smiling
Mistress Jeanie, who invited these slum bairns into
such a cozy, spotless kitchen as was not possible in
the tenements. Mr. Brown sat by the hearth, bundled
in blue and white blankets of wonderfully blocked
country weaving. Bobby put his fore paws on the
caretaker’s chair and laid his precious bone
in the man’s lap.
“Eh, ye takin’ bit rascal;
loup!” Bobby jumped to the patted knee, turned
around and around on the soft bed that invited him,
licked the beaming old face to show his sympathy and
friendliness, and jumped down again. Mr. Brown
sighed because Bobby steadily but amiably refused to
be anybody’s lap-dog. The caretaker turned
to the admiring children.
“Ilka morn he fetches ‘is
bit bane up, thinkin’ it a braw giftie for an
ill man. An’ syne he veesits me twa times
i’ the day, juist bidin’ a wee on the
hearthstane, lollin’ ‘is tongue an’
waggin’ ’is tail, cheerfu’-like.
Bobby has mair gude sense in ’is heid than mony
a man wha comes ben the hoose, wi’ a lang
face, to let me ken I’m gangin’ to dee.
Gin I keep snug an’ canny it wullna gang to the
heart. Jeanie, woman, fetch ma fife, wull ye?”
Then there were strange doings in
the kirkyard lodge. James Brown “wasna
gangin’ to dee” before his time came, at
any rate. In his youth, as under-gardener on
a Highland estate, he had learned to play the piccolo
flute, and lately he had revived the pastoral art of
piping just because it went so well with Bobby’s
delighted legs. To the sonsie air of “Bonnie
Dundee” Bobby hopped and stepped and louped,
and he turned about on his hind feet, his shagged
fore paws drooped on his breast as daintily as the
hands in the portraits of early Victorian ladies.
The fire burned cheerily in the polished grate, and
winked on every shining thing in the room; primroses
bloomed in the diamond-paned casement; the skylark
fluttered up and sang in its cage; the fife whistled
as gaily as a blackbird, and the little dog danced
with a comic clumsiness that made them all double
up with laughter. The place was so full of brightness,
and of kind and merry hearts, that there was room for
nothing else. Not one of them dreamed that the
shadow of the law was even then over this useful and
lovable little dog’s head.
A glance at the wag-at-the-wa’
clock reminded Ailie that Mr. Traill might be waiting
for Bobby.
Curious about the mystery, the children
took the little dog down to the gate, happily.
They were sobered, however, when Mr. Traill appeared,
looking very grand in his Sabbath clothes. He
inspected Bobby all over with anxious scrutiny, and
gave each of the bairns a threepenny-bit, but he had
no blithe greeting for them. Much preoccupied,
he went off at once, with the animated little muff
of a dog at his heels. In truth, Mr. Traill was
thinking about how he might best plead Bobby’s
cause with the Lord Provost. The note that was
handed him, on leaving the Burgh court the day before,
had read:
“Meet me at the Regent’s
Tomb in St. Giles at eight o’clock in the morning,
and bring the wee Highlander with you. Glenormiston.”
On the first reading the landlord’s
spirits had risen, out of all proportion to the cause,
owing to his previous depression. But, after
all, the appointment had no official character, since
the Regent’s Tomb in St. Giles had long been
a sort of town pump for the retailing of gossip and
for the transaction of trifling affairs of all sorts.
The fate of this little dog was a small matter, indeed,
and so it might be thought fitting, by the powers
that be, that it should be decided at the Regent’s
Tomb rather than in the Burgh court.
To the children, who watched from
the kirkyard gate until Mr. Traill and Bobby were
hidden by the buildings on the bridge, it was no’
canny. The busy landlord lived mostly in shirt-sleeves
and big white apron, ready to lend a hand in the rush
hours, and he never was known to put on his black
coat and tall hat on a week-day, except to attend a
funeral. However, there was the day’s work
to be done. Tammy had a lesson still to get,
and returned to the kirkyard, and Ailie ran up to the
dining-rooms. On the step she collided with a
red headed, freckle-faced young man who asked for
Mr. Traill.
“He isna here.” The
shy lassie was made almost speechless by recognizing,
in this neat, well-spoken clerk, an old Heriot boy,
once as poor as herself.
“Do you wark for him, lassie?
Weel, do you know how he cam’ out in the Burgh
court about the bit dog?”
There was only one “bit dog”
in the world to Ailie. Wild eyed with alarm at
mention of the Burgh court, in connection with that
beloved little pet, she stammered: “It’s it’s no’
a coort he gaed to. Maister Traill’s tak’n
Bobby awa’ to a braw kirk.”
Sandy nodded his head. “Ay,
that would be the police office in St. Giles.
Lassie, tell Mr. Traill I sent the Lord Provost, and
if he’s needing a witness to ca’
on Sandy McGregor.”
Ailie stared after him with frightened
eyes. Into her mind flashed that ominous remark
of the policeman two days before: “I didna
ken ye had a dog, John?” She overtook Sandy
in front of the sheriff’s court on the bridge.
“What what hae the police to do wi’
bittie dogs?”
“If a dog has nae master to
pay for his license the police can tak’ him
up and put him out o’ the way.”
“Hoo muckle siller are they wantin’?”
“Seven shullings. Gude
day, lassie; I’m fair late.” Sandy
was not really alarmed about Bobby since the resourceful
Mr. Traill had taken up his cause, and he had no idea
of the panic of grief and fright that overwhelmed
this forlorn child.
Seven shullings! It was an enormous
sum to the tenement bairn, whose half-blind grandmither
knitted and knitted in a dimly lighted room, and hoarded
halfpennies and farthings to save herself from pauper
burial. Seven shullings would pay a month’s
rent for any one of the crowded rooms in which a family
lived. Ailie herself, an untrained lassie who
scarcely knew the use of a toasting-fork, was overpaid
by generous Mr. Traill at sixpence a day. Seven
shullings to permit one little dog to live! It
did not occur to Ailie that this was a sum Mr. Traill
could easily pay. No’ onybody at all had
seven shullings all at once! But, oh! everybody
had pennies and halfpennies and farthings, and she
and Tammy together had a sixpence.
Darting back to the gate, to catch
the laddie before he could be off to school, she ran
straight into the policeman, who stood with his hand
on the wicket. He eyed her sharply.
“Eh, lassie, I was gangin’
to spier at the lodge, gin there’s a bit dog
leevin’ i’ the kirkyaird.”
“I I dinna
ken.” Her voice was unmanageable. She
had left to her only the tenement-bred instinct of
concealment of any and all facts from an officer of
the law.
“Ye dinna ken! Maister
Traill said i’ the coort a’ the bairns
aboot kenned the dog. Was he leein’?”
The question stung her into angry
admission. “He wadna be leein’.
But but the bittie dog isna
here noo.”
“Syne, whaur is he? Oot wi’ it!”
“I dinna ken!”
She cowered in abject fear against the wall. She
could not know that this officer was suffering a bad
attack of shame for his shabby part in the affair.
Satisfied that the little dog really did live in the
kirkyard, he turned back to the bridge. When Tammy
came out presently he found Ailie crumpled up in a
limp little heap in the gateway alcove. In a
moment the tale of Bobby’s peril was told.
The laddie dropped his books and his crutches on the
pavement, and his head in his helpless arms, and cried.
He had small faith in Ailie’s suddenly conceived
plan to collect the seven shullings among the dwellers
in the tenements.
“Do ye ken hoo muckle siller
seven shullin’s wad be? It’s auchty-fower
pennies, a hundred an’ saxty-aucht ha’pennies
an’ an’ I canna think
hoo mony farthings.”
“I dinna care a bittie bit.
There’s mair folk aroond the kirkyaird than
there’s farthings i’ twa, three times seven
shullin’s. An’ maist ilka body kens
Bobby. An’ we hae a saxpence atween us noo.”
“Maister Brown wad gie us anither
saxpence gin he had ane,” Tammy suggested, wistfully.
“Nae, he’s fair ill.
Gin he doesna keep canny it wull gang to ’is
heart. He’d be aff ’is heid, aboot
Bobby. Oh, Tammy, Maister Traill gaed to gie
‘im up! He was wearin’ a’ ‘is
gude claes an’ a lang face, to gang to
Bobby’s buryin’.”
This dreadful thought spurred them
to instant action. By way of mutual encouragement
they went together through the sculptured doorway,
that bore the arms of the ancient guild of the candlemakers
on the lintel, and into the carting office on the
front.
“Do ye ken Greyfriars Bobby?”
Tammy asked, timidly, of the man in charge.
He glowered at the laddie and shook
his head. “Havers, mannie; there’s
no’ onybody named for an auld buryin’ groond.”
The children fled. There was
no use at all in wasting time on folk who did not
know Bobby, for it would take too long to explain him.
But, alas, they soon discovered that “maist
ilka body” did not know the little dog, as they
had so confidently supposed. He was sure to be
known only in the rooms at the rear that overlooked
the kirkyard, and, as one went upward, his identity
became less and less distinct. He was such a
wee, wee, canny terrier, and so many of the windows
had their views constantly shut out by washings.
Around the inner courts, where unkempt women brought
every sort of work out to the light on the galleries
and mended worthless rags, gossiped, and nursed their
babies on the stairs, Bobby had sometimes been heard
of, but almost never seen. Children often knew
him where their elders did not. By the time Ailie
and Tammy had worked swiftly down to the bottom of
the Row other children began to follow them, moved
by the peril of the little dog to sympathy and eager
sacrifice.
“Bide a wee, Ailie!” cried
one, running to overtake the lassie. “Here’s
a penny. I was gangin’ for milk for the
porridge. We can do wi’oot the day.”
And there was the money for the broth
bone, and the farthing that would have filled the
gude-man’s evening pipe, and the ha’penny
for the grandmither’s tea. It was the world-over
story of the poor helping the poor. The progress
of Ailie and Tammy through the tenements was like
that of the piper through Hamelin. The children
gathered and gathered, and followed at their heels,
until a curiously quiet mob of threescore or more
crouched in the court of the old hall of the Knights
of St. John, in the Grassmarket, to count the many
copper coins in Tammy’s woolen bonnet.
“Five shullin’s, ninepence,
an’ a ha’penny,” Tammy announced.
And then, after calculation on his fingers, “It’ll
tak’ a shullin’ an’ twapenny ha’penny
mair.”
There was a gasping breath of bitter
disappointment, and one wee laddie wailed for lost
Bobby. At that Ailie dashed the tears from her
own eyes and sprang up, spurred to desperate effort.
She would storm the all but hopeless attic chambers.
Up the twisting turnpike stairs on the outer wall
she ran, to where the swallows wheeled about the cornices,
and she could hear the iron cross of the Knights Templars
creak above the gable. Then, all the way along
a dark passage, at one door after another, she knocked,
and cried,
“Do ye ken Greyfriars Bobby?”
At some of the doors there was no
answer. At others students stared out at the
bairn, not in the least comprehending this wild crying.
Tears of anger and despair flooded the little maid’s
blue eyes when she beat on the last door of the row
with her doubled fist.
“Do ye ken Greyfriars Bobby?
The police are gangin’ to mak’ ’im
be deid ” As the door was flung open
she broke into stormy weeping.
“Hey, lassie. I know the dog. What
fashes you?”
There stood a tall student, a wet
towel about his head, and, behind him, the rafters
of the dormer-lighted closet were as thickly hung
with bunches of dried herbs from the Botanical Garden
as any auld witch wife’s kitchen.
“Oh, are ye kennin’ ‘im?
Isna he bonny an’ sonsie? Gie me the shullin’
an’ twapenny ha’ penny we’re needin’,
so the police wullna put ’im awa’.”
“Losh! It’s a license
you’re wanting? I wish I had as many shullings
as I’ve had gude times with Bobby, and naething
to pay for his braw company.”
For this was Geordie Ross, going through
the Medical College with the help of Heriot’s
fund that, large as it was, was never quite enough
for all the poor and ambitious youths of Edinburgh.
And so, although provided for in all necessary ways,
his pockets were nearly as empty as of old. He
could spare a sixpence if he made his dinner on a potato
and a smoked herring. That he was very willing
to do, once he had heard the tale, and he went with
Ailie to the lodgings of other students, and demanded
their siller with no explanation at all.
“Give the lassie what you can
spare, man, or I’ll have to give you a licking,”
was his gay and convincing argument, from door to door,
until the needed amount was made up. Ailie fled
recklessly down the stairs, and cried triumphantly
to the upward-looking, silent crowd that had grown
and grown around Tammy, like some host of children
crusaders.
While Ailie and Tammy were collecting
the price of his ransom Bobby was exploring the intricately
cut-up interior of old St. Giles, sniffing at the
rifts in flimsily plastered partitions that the
Lord Provost pointed out to Mr. Traill. Rats
were in those crumbling walls. If there had been
a hole big enough to admit him, the plucky little dog
would have gone in after them. Forbidden to enlarge
one, Bobby could only poke his indignant muzzle into
apertures, and brace himself as for a fray. And,
at the very smell of him, there were such squeakings
and scamperings in hidden runways as to be almost
beyond a terrier’s endurance. The Lord
Provost watched him with an approving eye.
“When these partitions are tak’n
down Bobby would be vera useful in ridding our
noble old cathedral of vermin. But that will not
be in this wee Highlander’s day nor, I fear,
in mine.” About the speech of this Peebles
man, who had risen from poverty to distinction, learning,
wealth, and many varieties of usefulness, there was
still an engaging burr. And his manner was so
simple that he put the humblest at his ease.
There had been no formality about
the meeting at all. Glenormiston was standing
in a rear doorway of the cathedral near the Regent’s
Tomb, looking out into the sunny square of Parliament
Close, when Mr. Traill and Bobby appeared. Near
seventy, at that time, a backward sweep of white hair
and a downward flow of square-cut, white beard framed
a boldly featured face and left a generous mouth uncovered.
“Gude morning, Mr. Traill.
So that is the famous dog that has stood sentinel
for more than eight years. He should be tak’n
up to the Castle and shown to young soldiers who grumble
at twenty-four hours’ guard duty. How do
you do, sir!” The great man, whom the Queen knighted
later, and whom the University he was too poor to
attend as a lad honored with a degree, stooped from
the Regent’s Tomb and shook Bobby’s lifted
paw with grave courtesy. Then, leaving the little
dog to entertain himself, he turned easily to his
own most absorbing interest of the moment.
“Do you happen to care for Edinburgh
antiquities, Mr. Traill? Reformation piety made
sad havoc of art everywhere. Man, come here!”
Down into the lime dust the Lord Provost
and the landlord went, in their good black clothes,
for a glimpse of a bit of sculpturing on a tomb that
had been walled in to make a passage. A loose
brick removed, behind and above it, the sun flashed
through fragments of emerald and ruby glass of a saint’s
robe, in a bricked up window. Such buried and
forgotten treasure, Glenormiston explained, filled
the entire south transept. In the High Kirk,
that then filled the eastern end of the cathedral,
they went up a cheap wooden stairway, to the pew-filled
gallery that was built into the old choir, and sat
down. Mr. Traill’s eyes sparkled.
Glenormiston was a man after his own heart, and they
were getting along famously; but, oh! it began to
seem more and more unlikely that a Lord Provost, who
was concerned about such braw things as the restoration
of the old cathedral and letting the sun into the
ancient tenements, should be much interested in a
small, masterless dog.
“Man, auld John Knox will turn
over in his bit grave in Parliament Close if you put
a ‘kist o’ whustles’ in St. Giles.”
Mr. Traill laughed.
“I admit I might have stopped
short of the organ but for the courageous example
of Doctor Lee in Greyfriars. It was from him that
I had a quite extravagant account of this wee, leal
Highlander a few years ago. I have aye meant
to go to see him; but I’m a busy man and the
matter passed out of mind. Mr. Traill, I’m
your sadly needed witness: I heard you from the
doorway of the court-room, and I sent up a note confirming
your story and asking, as a courtesy, that the case
be turned over to me for some exceptional disposal.
Would you mind telling another man the tale that so
moved Doctor Lee? I’ve aye had a fondness
for the human document.”
So there, above the pulpit of the
High Kirk of St. Giles, the tale was told again, so
strangely did this little dog’s life come to
be linked with the highest and lowest, the proudest
and humblest in the Scottish capital. Now, at
mention of Auld Jock, Bobby put his shagged paws up
inquiringly on the edge of the pew, so that Mr. Traill
lifted him. He lay down flat between the two
men, with his nose on his paws, and his little tousled
head under the Lord Provost’s hand.
Auld Jock lived again in that recital.
Glenormiston, coming from the country of the Ettrick
shepherd, knew such lonely figures, and the pathos
of old age and waning powers that drove them in to
the poor quarters of towns. There was pictured
the stormy night and the simple old man who sought
food and shelter, with the devoted little dog that
“wasna ’is ain.” Sick unto death
he was, and full of ignorant prejudices and fears
that needed wise handling. And there was the well-meaning
landlord’s blunder, humbly confessed, and the
obscure and tragic result of it, in a foul and swarming
rookery “juist aff the Coogate.”
“Man, it was Bobby that told
me of his master’s condition. He begged
me to help Auld Jock, and what did I do but let my
fule tongue wag about doctors. I nae more than
turned my back than the auld body was awa’ to
his meeserable death. It has aye eased my conscience
a bit to feed the dog.”
“That’s not the only reason
why you have fed him.” There was a twinkle
in the Lord Provost’s eye, and Mr. Traill blushed.
“Weel, I’ll admit to you
that I’m fair fulish about Bobby. Man, I’ve
courted that sma’ terrier for eight and a half
years. He’s as polite and friendly as the
deil, but he’ll have naething to do with me or
with onybody. I wonder the intelligent bit doesn’t
bite me for the ill turn I did his master.”
Then there was the story of Bobby’s
devotion to Auld Jock’s memory to be told the
days when he faced starvation rather than desert that
grave, the days when he lay cramped under the fallen
table-tomb, and his repeated, dramatic escapes from
the Pentland farm. His never broken silence in
the kirkyard was only to be explained by the unforgotten
orders of his dead master. His intelligent effort
to make himself useful to the caretaker had won indulgence.
His ready obedience, good temper, high spirits and
friendliness had made him the special pet of the tenement
children and the Heriot laddies. At the very last
Mr. Traill repeated the talk he had had with the non-commissioned
officer from the Castle, and confessed his own fear
of some forlorn end for Bobby. It was true he
was nobody’s dog; and he was fascinated by soldiers
and military music, and so, perhaps
“I’ll no’ be reconciled
to parting Eh, man, that’s what Auld
Jock himsel’ said when he was telling me that
the bit dog must be returned to the sheep-farm:
‘It wull be sair partin’.’”
Tears stood in the unashamed landlord’s eyes.
Glenormiston was pulling Bobby’s
silkily fringed ears thoughtfully. Through all
this talk about his dead master the little dog had
not stirred. For the second time that day Bobby’s
veil was pushed back, first by the most unfortunate
laddie in the decaying tenements about Greyfriars,
and now by the Lord Provost of the ancient royal burgh
and capital of Scotland. And both made the same
discovery. Deep-brown pools of love, young Bobby’s
eyes had dwelt upon Auld Jock. Pools of sad memories
they were now, looking out wistfully and patiently
upon a masterless world.
“Are you thinking he would be
reconciled to be anywhere away from that grave?
Look, man!”
“Lord forgive me! I aye
thought the wee doggie happy enough.”
After a moment the two men went down
the gallery stairs in silence. Bobby dropped
from the bench and fell into a subdued trot at their
heels. As they left the cathedral by the door
that led into High Street Glenormiston remarked, with
a mysterious smile:
“I’m thinking Edinburgh
can do better by wee Bobby than to banish him to the
Castle. But wait a bit, man. A kirk is not
the place for settling a small dog’s affairs.”
The Lord Provost led the way westward
along the cathedral’s front. On High Street,
St. Giles had three doorways. The middle door
then gave admittance to the police office; the western
opened into the Little Kirk, popularly known as Haddo’s
Hole. It was into this bare, whitewashed chapel
that Glenormiston turned to get some restoration drawings
he had left on the pulpit. He was explaining them
to Mr. Traill when he was interrupted by a murmur
and a shuffle, as of many voices and feet, and an
odd tap-tap-tapping in the vestibule.
Of all the doorways on the north and
south fronts of St. Giles the one to the Little Kirk
was nearest the end of George IV Bridge. Confused
by the vast size and imposing architecture of the
old cathedral, these slum children, in search of the
police office, went no farther, but ventured timidly
into the open vestibule of Haddo’s Hole.
Any doubts they might have had about this being the
right place were soon dispelled. Bobby heard
them and darted out to investigate. And suddenly
they were all inside, overwrought Ailie on the floor,
clasping the little dog and crying hysterically.
“Bobby’s no’ deid!
Bobby’s no’ deid! Oh, Maister Traill,
ye wullna hae to gie ’im up to the police!
Tammy’s got the seven shullin’s in ’is
bonnet!”
And there was small Tammy, crutches
dropped and pouring that offering of love and mercy
out at the foot of an altar in old St. Giles.
Such an astonishing pile of copper coins it was, that
it looked to the landlord like the loot of some shopkeeper’s
change drawer.
“Eh, puir laddie, whaur did
ye get it a’ noo?” he asked, gravely.
Tammy was very self-possessed and
proud. “The bairnies aroond the kirkyaird
gie’d it to pay the police no’ to mak’
Bobby be deid.”
Mr. Traill flashed a glance at Glenormiston.
It was a look at once of triumph and of humility over
the Herculean deed of these disinherited children.
But the Lord Provost was gazing at that crowd of pale
bairns, products of the Old Town’s ancient slums,
and feeling, in his own person, the civic shame of
it. And he was thinking, thinking, that he must
hasten that other project nearest his heart, of knocking
holes in solid rows of foul cliffs, in the Cowgate,
on High Street, and around Greyfriars. It was
an incredible thing that such a flower of affection
should have bloomed so sweetly in such sunless cells.
And it was a new gospel, at that time, that a dog
or a horse or a bird might have its mission in this
world of making people kinder and happier.
They were all down on the floor, in
the space before the altar, unwashed, uncombed, unconscious
of the dirty rags that scarce covered them; quite
happy and self-forgetful in the charming friskings
and friendly lollings of the well-fed, carefully groomed,
beautiful little dog. Ailie, still so excited
that she forgot to be shy, put Bobby through his pretty
tricks. He rolled over and over, he jumped, he
danced to Tammy’s whistling of “Bonnie
Dundee,” he walked on his hind legs and louped
at a bonnet, he begged, he lifted his short shagged
paw and shook hands. Then he sniffed at the heap
of coins, looked up inquiringly at Mr. Traill, and,
concluding that here was some property to be guarded,
stood by the “siller” as stanchly as a
soldier. It was just pure pleasure to watch him.
Very suddenly the Lord Provost changed
his mind. A sacred kirk was the very best place
of all to settle this little dog’s affairs.
The offering of these children could not be refused.
It should lie there, below the altar, and be consecrated
to some other blessed work; and he would do now and
here what he had meant to do elsewhere and in a quite
different way. He lifted Bobby to the pulpit
so that all might see him, and he spoke so that all
might understand.
“Are ye kennin’ what it
is to gie the freedom o’ the toon to grand folk?”
“It’s it’s
when the bonny Queen comes an’ ye gie her the
keys to the burgh gates that are no’ here ony
mair.” Tammy, being in Heriot’s, was
a laddie of learning.
“Weel done, laddie. Lang
syne there was a wa’ aroond Edinburgh wi’
gates in it.” Oh yes, all these bairnies
knew that, and the fragment of it that was still to
be seen outside and above the Grassmarket, with its
sentry tower by the old west port. “Gin
a fey king or ither grand veesitor cam’, the
Laird Provost an’ the maigestrates gied ’im
the keys so he could gang in an’ oot at ‘is
pleesure. The wa’s are a’ doon noo,
an’ the gates no’ here ony mair, but we
hae the keys, an’ we mak’ a show o’
gien’ ’em to veesitors wha are vera
grand or wise or gude, or juist usefu’ by the
ordinär’.”
“Maister Gladstane,” said Tammy.
“Ay, we honor the Queen’s
meenisters; an’ Miss Nightingale, wha nursed
the soldiers i’ the war; an’ Leddy Burdett-Coutts,
wha gies a’ her siller an’ a’ her
heart to puir folk an’ is aye kind to horses
and dogs an’ singin’ birdies; an’
we gie the keys to heroes o’ the war wha are
brave an’ faithfu’. An’ noo,
there’s a wee bit beastie. He’s weel-behavin’,
an’ isna makin’ a blatterin’ i’
an auld kirkyaird. He aye minds what he’s
bidden to do. He’s cheerfu’ an’
busy, keepin’ the proolin’ pussies an’
vermin frae the sma’ birdies i’ the nests.
He mak’s friends o’ ilka body, an’
he’s faithfu’. For a deid man he lo’ed
he’s gaun hungry; an’ he hasna forgotten
’im or left ’im by ’is lane at nicht
for mair years than some o’ ye are auld.
An’ gin ye find ‘im lyin’ canny,
an’ ye tak’ a keek into ’is bonny
brown een, ye can see he’s aye greetin’.
An’ so, ye didna ken why, but ye a’ lo’ed
the lanely wee ”
“Bobby!” It was an excited
breath of a word from the wide-eyed bairns.
“Bobby! Havers! A
bittie dog wadna ken what to do wi’ keys.”
But Glenormiston was smiling, and
these sharp witted slum bairns exchanged knowing glances.
“Whaur’s that sma’ ?”
He dived into this pocket and that, making a great
pretense of searching, until he found a narrow band
of new leather, with holes in one end and a stout buckle
on the other, and riveted fast in the middle of it
was a shining brass plate. Tammy read the inscription
aloud:
GREYFRIARS BOBBY
From the Lord
Provost
1867 Licensed
The wonderful collar was passed from
hand to hand in awed silence. The children stared
and stared at this white-haired and bearded man, who
“wasna grand ava,” but who talked
to them as simply and kindly as a grandfaither.
He went right on talking to them in his homely way
to put them at their ease, telling them that nobody
at all, not even the bonny Queen, could be more than
kind and well-behaving and faithful to duty.
Wee Bobby was all that, and so “Gin dizzens an’
dizzens o’ bairns war kennin’ ‘im,
an’ wad fetch seven shullin’s i’
their ha’pennies to a kirk, they could buy the
richt for the braw doggie to be leevin’, the
care o’ them a’, i’ the auld kirkyaird
o’ Greyfriars. An’ he maun hae the
collar so the police wull ken ‘im an’ no’
ever tak’ ’im up for a puir, gaen-aboot
dog.”
The children quite understood the
responsibility they assumed, and their eyes shone
with pride at the feeling that, if more fortunate friends
failed, this little creature must never be allowed
to go hungry. And when he came to die oh,
in a very, very few years, for they must remember
that “a doggie isna as lang-leevin’
as folk” they must not forget that
Bobby would not be permitted to be buried in the kirkyard.
“We’ll gie ’im a
grand buryin’,” said Tammy. “We’ll
find a green brae by a babblin’ burn aneath
a snawy hawthorn, whaur the throstle sings an’
the blackbird whustles.” For the crippled
laddie had never forgotten Mr. Traill’s description
of a proper picnic, and that must, indeed, be a wee
dog’s heaven.
“Ay, that wull do fair weel.”
The collar had come back to him by this time, and
the Lord Provost buckled it securely about Bobby’s
neck.