It was more than two hours after he
left Bobby in Queen Margaret’s Chapel that the
sergeant turned into the officers’ mess-room
and tried to get an orderly to take a message to the
captain who had noticed the little dog in the barracks.
He wished to report that Bobby could not be found,
and to be excused to continue the search.
He had to wait by the door while the
toast to her Majesty was proposed and the band in
the screened gallery broke into “God Save the
Queen”; and when the music stopped the bandmaster
came in for the usual compliments.
The evening was so warm and still,
although it was only mid-April, that a glass-paneled
door, opening on the terrace, was set ajar for air.
In the confusion of movement and talk no one noticed
a little black mop of a muzzle that was poked through
the aperture. From the outer darkness Bobby looked
in on the score or more of men doubtfully, ready for
instant disappearance on the slightest alarm.
Desperate was the emergency, forlorn the hope that
had brought him there. At every turn his efforts
to escape from the Castle had been baffled. He
had been imprisoned by drummer boys and young recruits
in the gymnasium, detained in the hospital, captured
in the canteen.
Bobby went through all his pretty
tricks for the lads, and then begged to be let go.
Laughed at, romped with, dragged back, thrown into
the swimming-pool, expected to play and perform for
them, he rebelled at last. He scarred the door
with his claws, and he howled so dismally that, hearing
an orderly corporal coming, they turned him out in
a rough haste that terrified him. In the old
Banqueting Hall on the Palace Yard, that was used
as a hospital and dispensary, he went through that
travesty of joy again, in hope of the reward.
Sharply rebuked and put out of the
hospital, at last, because of his destructive clawing
and mournful howling, Bobby dashed across the Palace
Yard and into a crowd of good-humored soldiers who
lounged in the canteen. Rising on his hind legs
to beg for attention and indulgence, he was taken
unaware from behind by an admiring soldier who wanted
to romp with him. Quite desperate by that time,
he snapped at the hand of his captor and sprang away
into the first dark opening. Frightened by the
man’s cry of pain, and by the calls and scuffling
search for him without, he slunk to the farthest corner
of a dungeon of the Middle Ages, under the Royal Lodging.
When the hunt for him ceased, Bobby
slipped out of hiding and made his way around the
sickle-shaped ledge of rock, and under the guns of
the half-moon battery, to the outer gate. Only
a cat, a fox, or a low, weasel-like dog could have
done it. There were many details that would have
enabled the observant little creature to recognize
this barrier as the place where he had come in.
Certainly he attacked it with fury, and on the guards
he lavished every art of appeal that he possessed.
But there he was bantered, and a feint was made of
shutting him up in the guard-house as a disorderly
person. With a heart-broken cry he escaped his
tormentors, and made his way back, under the guns,
to the citadel.
His confidence in the good intentions
of men shaken, Bobby took to furtive ways. Avoiding
lighted buildings and voices, he sped from shadow
to shadow and explored the walls of solid masonry.
Again and again he returned to the postern behind
the armory, but the small back gate that gave to the
cliff was not opened. Once he scrambled up to
a loophole in the fortifications and looked abroad
at the scattered lights of the city set in the void
of night. But there, indeed, his stout heart failed
him.
It was not long before Bobby discovered
that he was being pursued. A number of soldiers
and drummer boys were out hunting for him, contritely
enough, when the situation was explained by the angry
sergeant. Wherever he went voices and footsteps
followed. Had the sergeant gone alone and called
in familiar speech, “Come awa’ oot, Bobby!”
he would probably have run to the man. But there
were so many calls in English, in Celtic,
and in various dialects of the Lowlands that
the little dog dared not trust them. From place
to place he was driven by fear, and when the calling
stopped and the footsteps no longer followed, he lay
for a time where he could watch the postern. A
moment after he gave up the vigil there the little
back gate was opened.
Desperation led him to take another
chance with men. Slipping into the shadow of
the old Governor’s House, the headquarters of
commissioned officers, on the terrace above the barracks,
he lay near the open door to the mess-room, listening
and watching.
The pretty ceremony of toasting the
bandmaster brought all the company about the table
again, and the polite pause in the conversation, on
his exit, gave an opportunity for the captain to speak
of Bobby before the sergeant could get his message
delivered.
“Gentlemen, your indulgence
for a moment, to drink another toast to a little dog
that is said to have slept on his master’s grave
in Greyfriars churchyard for more than eight years.
Sergeant Scott, of the Royal Engineers, vouches for
the story and will present the hero.”
The sergeant came forward then with
the word that Bobby could not be found. He was
somewhere in the Castle, and had made persistent and
frantic efforts to get out. Prevented at every
turn, and forcibly held in various places by well-meaning
but blundering soldiers, he had been frightened into
hiding.
Bobby heard every word, and he must
have understood that he himself was under discussion.
Alternately hopeful and apprehensive, he scanned each
face in the room that came within range of his vision,
until one arrested and drew him. Such faces,
full of understanding, love and compassion for dumb
animals, are to be found among men, women and children,
in any company and in every corner of the world.
Now, with the dog’s instinct for the dog-lover,
Bobby made his way about the room unnoticed, and set
his short, shagged paws up on this man’s knee.
“Bless my soul, gentlemen, here’s
the little dog now, and a beautiful specimen of the
drop-eared Skye he is. Why didn’t you say
that the ‘bittie’ dog was of the Highland
breed, Sergeant? You may well believe any extravagant
tale you may hear of the fidelity and affection of
the Skye terrier.”
And with that wee Bobby was set upon
the polished table, his own silver image glimmering
among the reflections of candles and old plate.
He kept close under the hand of his protector, but
waiting for the moment favorable to his appeal.
The company crowded around with eager interest, while
the man of expert knowledge and love of dogs talked
about Bobby.
“You see he’s a well-knit
little rascal, long and low, hardy and strong.
His ancestors were bred for bolting foxes and wildcats
among the rocky headlands of the subarctic islands.
The intelligence, courage and devotion of dogs of
this breed can scarcely be overstated. There is
some far away crossing here that gives this one a
greater beauty and grace and more engaging manners,
making him a ‘sport’ among rough farm
dogs but look at the length and strength
of the muzzle. He’s as determined as the
deil. You would have to break his neck before
you could break his purpose. For love of his
master he would starve, or he would leap to his death
without an instant’s hesitation.”
All this time the man had been stroking
Bobby’s head and neck. Now, feeling the
collar under the thatch, he slipped it out and brought
the brass plate up to the light.
“Propose your toast to Greyfriars
Bobby, Captain. His story is vouched for by no
less a person than the Lord Provost. The ‘bittie’
dog seems to have won a sort of canine Victoria Cross.”
The toast was drunk standing, and,
a cheer given. The company pressed close to examine
the collar and to shake Bobby’s lifted paw.
Then, thinking the moment had come, Bobby rose in
the begging attitude, prostrated himself before them,
and uttered a pleading cry. His new friend assured
him that he would be taken home.
“Bide a wee, Bobby. Before
he goes I want you all to see his beautiful eyes.
In most breeds of dogs with the veil you will find
the hairs of the face discolored by tears, but the
Skye terrier’s are not, and his eyes are living
jewels, as sunny a brown as cairngorms in pebble brooches,
but soft and deep and with an almost human intelligence.”
For the third time that day Bobby’s
veil was pushed back. One shocked look by this
lover of dogs, and it was dropped. “Get
him back to that grave, man, or he’s like to
die. His eyes are just two cairngorms of grief.”
In the hush that fell upon the company
the senior officer spoke sharply: “Take
him down at once, Sergeant. The whole affair is
most unfortunate, and you will please tender my apologies
at the churchyard and the restaurant, as well as your
own, and I will see the Lord Provost.”
The military salute was given to Bobby
when he leaped from the table at the sergeant’s
call: “Come awa’, Bobby. I’ll
tak’ ye to Auld Jock i’ the kirkyaird
noo.”
He stepped out onto the lawn to wait
for his pass. Bobby stood at his feet, quivering
with impatience to be off, but trusting in the man’s
given word. The upper air was clear, and the sky
studded with stars. Twenty minutes before the
May Light, that guided the ships into the Firth, could
be seen far out on the edge of the ocean, and in every
direction the lamps of the city seemed to fall away
in a shower of sparks, as from a burst meteor.
But now, while the stars above were as numerous and
as brilliant as before, the lights below had vanished.
As the sergeant looked, the highest ones expired in
the rising fog. The Island Rock appeared to be
sinking in a waveless sea of milk.
A startled exclamation from the sergeant
brought other men out on the terrace to see it.
The senior officer withheld the pass in his hand, and
scouted the idea of the sergeant’s going down
into the city. As the drum began to beat the
tattoo and the bugle to rise on a crescendo of lovely
notes, soldiers swarmed toward the barracks. Those
who had been out in the town came running up the roadway
into the Castle, talking loudly of adventures they
had had in the fog. The sergeant looked down at
anxious Bobby, who stood agitated and straining as
at a leash, and said that he preferred to go.
“Impossible! A foolish
risk, Sergeant, that I am unwilling you should take.
Edinburgh is too full of pitfalls for a man to be going
about on such a night. Our guests will sleep
in the Castle, and it will be safer for the little
dog to remain until morning.”
Bobby did not quite understand this
good English, but the excited talk and the delay made
him uneasy. He whimpered piteously. He lay
across the sergeant’s feet, and through his
boots the man could feel the little creature’s
heart beat. Then he rose and uttered his pleading
cry. The sergeant stooped and patted the shaggy
head consolingly, and tried to explain matters.
“Be a gude doggie noo.
Dinna fash yersel’ aboot what canna be helped.
I canna tak’ ye to the kirkyaird the nicht.”
“I’ll take charge of Bobby,
Sergeant.” The dog-loving guest ran out
hastily, but, with a wild cry of reproach and despair,
Bobby was gone.
The group of soldiers who had been
out on the cliff were standing in the postern a moment
to look down at the opaque flood that was rising around
the rock. They felt some flying thing sweep over
their feet and caught a silvery flash of it across
the promenade. The sergeant cried to them to
stop the dog, and he and the guest were out in time
to see Bobby go over the precipice.
For a time the little dog lay in a
clump of hazel above the fog, between two terrors.
He could see the men and the lights moving along the
top of the cliff, and he could hear the calls.
Some one caught a glimpse of him, and the sergeant
lay down on the edge of the precipice and talked to
him, saying every kind and foolish thing he could think
of to persuade Bobby to come back. Then a drummer
boy was tied to a rope and let down to the ledge to
fetch him up. But at that, without any sound at
all, Bobby dropped out of sight.
Through the smother came the loud
moaning of fog-horns in the Firth. Although nothing
could be seen, and sounds were muffled as if the ears
of the world were stuffed with wool, odors were held
captive and mingled in confusion. There was nothing
to guide a little dog’s nose, everything to
make him distrust his most reliable sense. The
smell of every plant on the crag was there; the odors
of leather, of paint, of wood, of iron, from the crafts
shops at the base. Smoke from chimneys in the
valley was mixed with the strong scent of horses,
hay and grain from the street of King’s Stables.
There was the smell of furry rodents, of nesting birds,
of gushing springs, of the earth itself, and something
more ancient still, as of burned-out fires in the
Huge mass of trap-rock.
Everything warned Bobby to lie still
in safety until morning and the world was restored
to its normal aspects. But ah! in the highest
type of man and dog, self-sacrifice, and not self-preservation,
is the first law. A deserted grave cried to him
across the void, the anguish of protecting love urged
him on to take perilous chances. Falling upon
a narrow shelf of rock, he had bounded off and into
a thicket of thorns. Bruised and shaken and bewildered,
he lay there for a time and tried to get his bearings.
Bobby knew only that the way was downward.
He put out a paw and felt for the edge of the shelf.
A thorn bush rooted below tickled his nose. He
dropped into that and scrambled out again. Loose
earth broke under his struggles and carried him swiftly
down to a new level. He slipped in the wet moss
of a spring before he heard the tinkle of the water,
lost his foothold, and fell against a sharp point
of rock. The shadowy spire of a fir-tree looming
in a parting of the vapor for an instant, Bobby leaped
to the ledge upon which it was rooted.
Foot by foot he went down, with no
guidance at all. It is the nature of such long,
low, earth dogs to go by leaps and bounds like foxes,
calculating distances nicely when they can see, and
tearing across the roughest country with the speed
of the wild animals they hunt. And where the
way is very steep they can scramble up or down any
declivity that is at a lesser angle than the perpendicular.
Head first they go downward, setting the fore paws
forward, the claws clutching around projections and
in fissures, the weight hung from the stout hindquarters,
the body flattened on the earth.
Thus Bobby crept down steep descents
in safety, but his claws were broken in crevices and
his feet were torn and pierced by splinters of rock
and thorns. Once he went some distance into a
cave and had to back up and out again. And then
a promising slope shelving under suddenly, where he
could not retreat, he leaped, turned over and over
in the air, and fell stunned. His heart filled
with fear of the unseen before him, the little dog
lay for a long time in a clump of whins. He may
even have dozed and dreamed, to be awakened with starts
by his misery of longing, and once by the far-away
barking of a dog. It came up deadened, as if
from fathoms below. He stood up and listened,
but the sound was not repeated. His lacerated
feet burned and throbbed; his bruised muscles had
begun to stiffen, so that every movement was a pain.
In these lower levels there was more
smoke, that smeared out and thickened the mist.
Suddenly a breath of air parted the fog as if it were
a torn curtain. Like a shot Bobby went down the
crag, leaping from rock to rock, scrambling under
thorns and hazel shrubs, dropping over precipitous
ledges, until he looked down a sheer fall on which
not even a knot of grass could find a foothold.
He took the leap instantly, and his thick fleece saved
him from broken bones; but when he tried to get up
again his body was racked with pain and his hind legs
refused to serve him.
Turning swiftly, he snarled and bit,
at them in angry disbelief that his good little legs
should play false with his stout heart. Then he
quite forgot his pain, for there was the sharp ring
of iron on an anvil and the dull glow of a forge fire,
where a smith was toiling in the early hours of the
morning. A clever and resourceful little dog,
Bobby made shift to do without legs. Turning
on his side, he rolled down the last slope of Castle
Rock. Crawling between two buildings and dropping
from the terrace on which they stood, he fell into
a little street at the west end and above the Grassmarket.
Here the odors were all of the stables.
He knew the way, and that it was still downward.
The distance he had to go was a matter of a quarter
of a mile, or less, and the greater part of it was
on the level, through the sunken valley of the Grassmarket.
But Bobby had literally to drag himself now; and he
had still to pull him self up by his fore paws over
the wet and greasy cobblestones of Candlemakers Row.
Had not the great leaves of the gate to the kirkyard
been left on the latch, he would have had to lie there
in the alcove, with his nose under the bars, until
morning. But the gate gave way to his push, and
so, he dragged himself through it and around the kirk,
and stretched himself on Auld Jock’s grave.
It was the birds that found him there
in the misty dawn. They were used to seeing Bobby
scampering about, for the little watchman was awake
and busy as early as the feathered dwellers in the
kirkyard. But, in what looked to be a wet and
furry door-mat left out overnight on the grass, they
did not know him at all. The throstles and skylarks
were shy of it, thinking it might be alive. The
wrens fluffed themselves, scolded it, and told it
to get up. The blue titmice flew over it in a
flock again and again, with much sweet gossiping,
but they did not venture nearer. A redbreast
lighted on the rose bush that marked Auld Jock’s
grave, cocked its head knowingly, and warbled a little
song, as much as to say: “If it’s
alive that will wake it up.”
As Bobby did not stir, the robin fluttered
down, studied him from all sides, made polite inquiries
that were not answered, and concluded that it would
be quite safe to take a silver hair for nest lining.
Then, startled by the animal warmth or by a faint,
breathing movement, it dropped the shining trophy
and flew away in a shrill panic. At that, all
the birds set up such an excited crying that they waked
Tammy.
From the rude loophole of a window
that projected from the old Cunzie Neuk, the crippled
laddie could see only the shadowy tombs and the long
gray wall of the two kirks, through the sunny haze.
But he dropped his crutches over, and climbed out
onto the vault. Never before had Bobby failed
to hear that well-known tap-tap-tapping on the graveled
path, nor failed to trot down to meet it with friskings
of welcome. But now he lay very still, even when
a pair of frail arms tried to lift his dead weight
to a heaving breast, and Tammy’s cry of woe rang
through the kirkyard. In a moment Ailie and Mistress
Jeanie were in the wet grass beside them, half a hundred
casements flew open, and the piping voices of tenement
bairns cried-down:
“Did the bittie doggie come hame?”
Oh yes, the bittie doggie had come
hame, indeed, but down such perilous heights as none
of them dreamed; and now in what a woeful plight!
Some murmur of the excitement reached
an open dormer of the Temple tenements, where Geordie
Ross had slept with one ear of the born doctor open.
Snatching up a case of first aids to the injured, he
ran down the twisting stairs to the Grassmarket, up
to the gate, and around the kirk, to find a huddled
group of women and children weeping over a limp little
bundle of a senseless dog. He thrust a bottle
of hartshorn under the black muzzle, and with a start
and a moan Bobby came back to consciousness.
“Lay him down flat and stop
your havers,” ordered the business-like, embryo
medicine man. “Bobby’s no’ dead.
Laddie, you’re a braw soldier for holding your
ain feelings, so just hold the wee dog’s head.”
Then, in the reassuring dialect: “Hoots,
Bobby, open the bit mou’ noo, an’
tak’ the medicine like a mannie!” Down
the tiny red cavern of a throat Geordie poured a dose
that galvanized the small creature into life.
“Noo, then, loup, ye bonny rascal!”
Bobby did his best to jump at Geordie’s
bidding. He was so glad to be at home and to
see all these familiar faces of love that he lifted
himself on his fore paws, and his happy heart almost
put the power to loup into his hind legs. But
when he tried to stand up he cried out with the pains
and sank down again, with an apologetic and shamefaced
look that was worthy of Auld Jock himself. Geordie
sobered on the instant.
“Weel, now, he’s been
hurt. We’ll just have to see what ails the
sonsie doggie.” He ran his hand down the
parting in the thatch to discover if the spine had
been injured. When he suddenly pinched the ball
of a hind toe Bobby promptly resented it by jerking
his head around and looking at him reproachfully.
The bairns were indignant, too, but Geordie grinned
cheerfully and said: “He’s no’
paralyzed, at ony rate.” He turned as footsteps
were heard coming hastily around the kirk.
“A gude morning to you, Mr.
Traill. Bobby may have been run over by a cart
and got internal injuries, but I’m thinking it’s
just sprains and bruises from a bad fall. He
was in a state of collapse, and his claws are as broken
and his toes as torn as if he had come down Castle
Rock.”
This was such an extravagant surmise
that even the anxious landlord smiled. Then he
said, drily:
“You’re a braw laddie,
Geordie, and gudehearted, but you’re no’
a doctor yet, and, with your leave, I’ll have
my ain medical man tak’ a look at Bobby.”
“Ay, I would,” Geordie
agreed, cordially. “It’s worth four
shullings to have your mind at ease, man. I’ll
just go up to the lodge and get a warm bath ready,
to tak’ the stiffness out of his muscles, and
brew a tea from an herb that wee wild creatures know
all about and aye hunt for when they’re ailing.”
Geordie went away gaily, to take disorder
and evil smells into Mistress Jeanie’s shining
kitchen.
No sooner had the medical student
gone up to the lodge, and the children had been persuaded
to go home to watch the proceedings anxiously from
the amphitheater of the tenement windows, than the
kirkyard gate was slammed back noisily by a man in
a hurry. It was the sergeant who, in the splendor
of full uniform, dropped in the wet grass beside Bobby.
“Lush! The sma’ dog
got hame, an’ is still leevin’. Noo,
God forgie me ”
“Eh, man, what had you to do with Bobby’s
misadventure?”
Mr. Traill fixed an accusing eye on
the soldier, remembering suddenly his laughing threat
to kidnap Bobby. The story came out in a flood
of remorseful words, from Bobby’s following
of the troops so gaily into the Castle to his desperate
escape over the precipice.
“Noo,” he said, humbly,
“gin it wad be ony satisfaction to ye, I’ll
gang up to the Castle an’ put on fatigue dress,
no’ to disgrace the unifarm o’ her Maijesty,
an’ let ye tak’ me oot on the Burghmuir
an’ gie me a gude lickin’.”
Mr. Traill shrugged his shoulders.
“Naething would satisfy me, man, but to get
behind you and kick you over the Firth into the Kingdom
of Fife.”
He turned an angry back on the sergeant
and helped Geordie lift Bobby onto Mrs. Brown’s
braided hearth-rug and carry the improvised litter
up to the lodge. In the kitchen the little dog
was lowered into a hot bath, dried, and rubbed with
liniments under his fleece. After his lacerated
feet had been cleaned and dressed with healing ointments
and tied up, Bobby was wrapped in Mistress Jeanie’s
best flannel petticoat and laid on the hearth-rug,
a very comfortable wee dog, who enjoyed his breakfast
of broth and porridge.
Mr. Brown, hearing the commotion and
perishing of curiosity, demanded that some one should
come and help him out of bed. As no attention
was paid to him he managed to get up himself and to
hobble out to the kitchen just as Mr. Traill’s
ain medical man came in. Bobby’s spine was
examined again, the tail and toes nipped, the heart
tested, and all the soft parts of his body pressed
and punched, in spite of the little dog’s vigorous
objections to these indignities.
“Except for sprains and bruises
the wee dog is all right. Came down Castle Crag
in the fog, did he? He’s a clever and plucky
little chap, indeed, and deserving of a hero medal
to hang on the Lord Provost’s collar. You’ve
done very well, Mr. Ross. Just take as good care
of him for a week or so and he could do the gallant
deed again.”
Mr. Brown listened to the story of
Bobby’s adventures with a mingled look of disgust
at the foolishness of men, pride in Bobby’s prowess,
and resentment at having been left out of the drama
of the night before. “It’s maist
michty, noo, Maister Traill, that ye wad tak’
the leeberty o’ leein’ to me,” he
complained.
“It was a gude lee or a bad
nicht for an ill man. Geordie will tell
you that a mind at ease is worth four shullings, and
I’m charging you naething. Eh, man, you’re
deeficult to please.” As he went out into
the kirkyard Mr. Traill stopped to reflect on a strange
thing: “’You’ve done very well,
Mr. Ross.’ Weel, weel, how the laddies do
grow up! But I’m no’ going to admit
it to Geordie.”
Another thought, over which he chuckled,
sent him off to find the sergeant. The soldier
was tramping gloomily about in the wet, to the demoralization
of his beautiful boots.
“Man, since a stormy nicht
eight years ago last November I’ve aye been
looking for a bigger weel meaning fule than my ain
sel’. You’re the man, so if
you’ll just shak’ hands we’ll say
nae more about it.”
He did not explain this cryptic remark,
but he went on to assure the sorry soldier that Bobby
had got no serious hurt and would soon be as well
as ever. They had turned toward the gate when
a stranger with a newspaper in his hand peered mildly
around the kirk and inquired “Do ye ken whaur’s
the sma’ dog, man?” As Mr. Traill continued
to stare at him he explained, patiently: “It’s
Greyfriars Bobby, the bittie terrier the Laird Provost
gied the collar to. Hae ye no’ seen ‘The
Scotsman’ the day?”
The landlord had not. And there
was the story, Bobby’s, name heading quite a
quarter of a broad column of fine print, and beginning
with: “A very singular and interesting
occurrence was brought to light in the Burgh court
by the hearing of a summons in regard to a dog tax.”
Bobby was a famous dog, and Mr. Traill came in for
a goodly portion of reflected glory. He threw
up his hands in dismay.
“It’s all over the toon,
Sergeant.” Turning to the stranger, he assured
him that Bobby was not to be seen. “He hurt
himsel’ coming down Castle Rock in the nicht,
and is in the lodge with the caretaker, wha’s
fair ill. Hoo do I ken?” testily.
“Weel, man, I’m Mr. Traill.”
He saw at once how unwise was that
admission, for he had to shake hands with the cordial
stranger. And after dismissing him there was another
at the gate who insisted upon going up to the lodge
to see the little hero. Here was a state of things,
indeed, that called upon all the powers of the resourceful
landlord.
“All the folk in Edinburgh will
be coming, and the poor woman be deaved with their
spiering.” And then he began to laugh.
“Did you ever hear o’ sic a thing as poetic
justice, Sergeant? Nae, it’s no’ the
kind you’ll get in the courts of law. Weel,
it’s poetic justice for a birkie soldier, wha
claims the airth and the fullness thereof, to have
to tak’ his orders from a sma’ shopkeeper.
Go up to the police office in St. Gila now and ask
for an officer to stand at the gate here to answer
questions, and to keep the folk awa’ from the
lodge.”
He stood guard himself, and satisfied
a score of visitors before the sergeant came back,
and there was another instance of poetic justice, in
the crestfallen Burgh policeman who had been sent with
instructions to take his orders from the delighted
landlord.
“Eh, Davie, it’s a lang
lane that has nae turning. Ye’re juist to
stand here a’ the day an’ say to ilka
body wha spiers for the dog: ’Ay, sir,
Greyfriars Bobby’s been leevin’ i’
the kirkyaird aucht years an’ mair, an’
Maister Traill’s aye fed ‘im i’ the
dining-rooms. Ay, the case was dismissed i’
the Burgh coort. The Laird Provost gied a collar
to the bit Skye because there’s a meddlin’
fule or twa amang the Burgh police wha’d be
takin’ ‘im up. The doggie’s
i’ the lodge wi’ the caretaker, wha’s
fair ill, an’ he canna be seen the day.
But gang aroond the kirk an’ ye can see Auld
Jock’s grave that he’s aye guarded.
There’s nae stave to it, but it’s neist
to the fa’en table-tomb o’ Mistress Jean
Grant. A gude day to ye.’ Hae ye got
a’ that, man? Weel, cheer up. Yell
hae to say it nae mair than a thousand times or twa,
atween noo an’ nichtfa’.”
He went away laughing at the penance
that was laid upon his foe. The landlord felt
so well satisfied with the world that he took another
jaunty crack at the sergeant: “By richts,
man, you ought to go to gaol, but I’ll just
fine you a shulling a month for Bobby’s natural
lifetime, to give the wee soldier a treat of a steak
or a chop once a week.”
Hands were struck heartily on the
bargain, and the two men parted good friends.
Now, finding Ailie dropping tears in the dish-water,
Mr. Traill sent her flying down to the lodge with
instructions to make herself useful to Mrs. Brown.
Then he was himself besieged in his place of business
by folk of high and low degree who were disappointed
by their failure to see Bobby in the kirkyard.
Greyfriars Dining-Rooms had more distinguished visitors
in a day than they had had in all the years since
Auld Jock died and a little dog fell there at the landlord’s
feet “a’ but deid wi’ hunger.”
Not one of all the grand folk who,
inquired for Bobby at the kirkyard or at the restaurant
got a glimpse of him that day. But after they
were gone the tenement dwellers came up to the gate
again, as they had gathered the evening before, and
begged that they might just tak’ a look at him
and his braw collar. “The bonny bit is the
bairns’ ain doggie, an’ the Laird Provost
himsel’ told ’em he wasna to be neglectet,”
was one mother’s plea.
Ah! that was very true. To the
grand folk who had come to see him, Bobby was only
a nine-days’ wonder. His story had touched
the hearts of all orders of society. For a time
strangers would come to see him, and then they would
forget all about him or remember him only fitfully.
It was to these poor people around the kirkyard, themselves
forgotten by the more fortunate, that the little dog
must look for his daily meed of affection and companionship.
Mr. Traill spoke to them kindly.
“Bide a wee, noo, an’ I’ll fetch
the doggie doon.”
Bobby had slept blissfully nearly
all the day, after his exhausting labors and torturing
pains. But with the sunset bugle he fretted to
be let out. Ailie had wept and pleaded, Mrs.
Brown had reasoned with him, and Mr. Brown had scolded,
all to the end of persuading him to sleep in “the
hoose the nicht.” But when no one was
watching him Bobby crawled from his rug and dragged
himself to the door. He rapped the floor with
his tail in delight when Mr. Traill came in and bundled
him up on the rug, so he could lie easily, and carried
him down to the gate.
For quite twenty minutes these neighbors
and friends of Bobby filed by silently, patted the
shaggy little head, looked at the grand plate with
Bobby’s and the Lord Provost’s names upon
it, and believed their own wondering een. Bobby
wagged his tail and lolled his tongue, and now and
then he licked the hand of a baby who had to be lifted
by a tall brother to see him. Shy kisses were
dropped on Bobby’s head by toddling bairns,
and awkward caresses by rough laddies. Then they
all went home quietly, and Mr. Traill carried the
little dog around the kirk.
And there, ah! so belated, Auld Jock’s
grave bore its tribute of flowers. Wreaths and
nosegays, potted daffodils and primroses and daisies,
covered the sunken mound so that some of them had to
be moved to make room for Bobby. He sniffed and
sniffed at them, looked up inquiringly at Mr. Traill;
and then snuggled down contentedly among the blossoms.
He did not understand their being there any more than
he understood the collar about which everybody made
such a to-do. The narrow band of leather would
disappear under his thatch again, and would be unnoticed
by the casual passer-by; the flowers would fade and
never be so lavishly renewed; but there was another
more wonderful gift, now, that would never fail him.
At nightfall, before the drum and
bugle sounded the tattoo to call the scattered garrison
in the Castle, there took place a loving ceremony
that was never afterward omitted as long as Bobby lived.
Every child newly come to the tenements learned it,
every weanie lisped it among his first words.
Before going to bed each bairn opened a casement.
Sometimes a candle was held up a little
star of love, glimmering for a moment on the dark;
but always there was a small face peering into the
melancholy kirkyard. In midsummer, and at other
seasons if the moon rose full and early and the sky
was clear, Bobby could be seen on the grave. And
when he recovered from these hurts he trotted about,
making the circuit below the windows. He could
not speak there, because he had been forbidden, but
he could wag his tail and look up to show his friendliness.
And whether the children saw him or not they knew
he was always there after sunset, keeping watch and
ward, and “lanely” because his master had
gone away to heaven; and so they called out to him
sweetly and clearly:
“A gude nicht to ye, Bobby.”