Greyfriars Bobby eBook

Eleanor Stackhouse Atkinson
This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 237 pages of information about Greyfriars Bobby.

Greyfriars Bobby eBook

Eleanor Stackhouse Atkinson
This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 237 pages of information about Greyfriars Bobby.

All about him the birds fluttered and hopped and gossiped and foraged, unafraid.  They were used, by this time, to seeing the little dog lying motionless, his nose on his paws.  Often some tidbit of food lay there, brought for Bobby by a stranger.  He had learned that a Scotch bun dropped near him was a feast that brought feathered visitors about and won their confidence and cheerful companionship.  When he awoke he lay there lolling and blinking, following the blue rovings of the titmice and listening to the foolish squabbles of the sparrows and the shrewish scoldings of the wrens.  He always started when a lark sprang at his feet and a cataract of melody tumbled from the sky.

But, best of all, Bobby loved a comfortable and friendly robin redbreast—­not the American thrush that is called a robin, but the smaller Old World warbler.  It had its nest of grass and moss and feathers, and many a silver hair shed by Bobby, low in a near-by thorn bush.  In sweet and plaintive talking notes it told its little dog companion all about the babies that had left the nest and the new brood that would soon be there.  On the morning of that wonderful day of the Grand Leddy’s first coming, Bobby and the redbreast had a pleasant visit together before the casements began to open and the tenement bairns called down their morning greeting: 

“A gude day to ye, Bobby.”

By the time all these courtesies had been returned Tammy came in at the gate with his college books strapped on his back.  The old Cunzic Neuk had been demolished by Glenormiston, and Tammy, living in better quarters, was studying to be a teacher at Heriot’s.  Bobby saw him settled, and then he had to escort Mr. Brown down from the lodge.  The caretaker made his way about stiffly with a cane and, with the aid of a young helper who exasperated the old gardener by his cheerful inefficiency, kept the auld kirkyard in beautiful order.

“Eh, ye gude-for-naethin’ tyke,” he said to Bobby, in transparent pretense of his uselessness.  “Get to wark, or I’ll hae a young dog in to gie ye a lift, an’ syne whaur’ll ye be?”

Bobby jumped on him in open delight at this, as much as to say:  “Ye may be as dour as ye like, but ilka body kens ye’re gude-hearted.”

Morning and evening numerous friends passed the gate, and the wee dog waited for them on the wicket.  Dr. George Ross and Mr. Alexander McGregor shook Bobby’s lifted paw and called him a sonsie rascal.  Small merchants, students, clerks, factory workers, house servants, laborers and vendors, all honest and useful people, had come up out of these old tenements within Bobby’s memory; and others had gone down, alas! into the Cowgate.  But Bobby’s tail wagged for these unfortunates, too, and some of them had no other friend in the world beside that uncalculating little dog.

Copyrights
Project Gutenberg
Greyfriars Bobby from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.