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.

“It’s no’ his day to sit as magistrate, and he’s no’ like to go unless it’s a fair sairious matter.”

“Ay, it is, laddie.  It’s a matter of life and death, I’m thinking!” He smiled grimly, as it entered his head that he might be driven to do violence to that meddling policeman.  The yellow gas-light gave his face such a sardonic aspect that Sandy turned pale.

“Wha’s death, man?”

Mr. Traill kept his own counsel, but at the door he turned:  “You’ll no’ be remembering the bittie terrier that lived in the kirkyard?”

The light of boyhood days broke in Sandy’s grin.  “Ay, I’ll no’ be forgetting the sonsie tyke.  He was a deil of a dog to tak’ on a holiday.  Is he still faithfu’ to his dead master?”

“He is that; and for his faithfu’ness he’s like to be dead himsel’.  The police are takin’ up masterless dogs an’ putting them out o’ the way.  I’ll mak’ a gude fight for Bobby in the Burgh court.”

“I’ll fight with you, man.”  The spirit of the McGregor clan, though much diluted and subdued by town living, brought Sandy down from a three-legged stool.  He called another clerk to take his place, and made off to find the Lord Provost, powerful friend of hameless dogs.  Mr. Traill hastened down to the Royal Exchange, below St. Giles and on the northern side of High Street.

Less than a century old, this municipal building was modern among ancient rookeries.  To High Street it presented a classic front of four stories, recessed by flanking wings, around three sides of a quadrangular courtyard.  Near the entrance there was a row of barber shops and coffee-rooms.  Any one having business with the city offices went through a corridor between these places of small trade to the stairway court behind them.  On the floor above, one had to inquire of some uniformed attendant in which of the oaken, ante-roomed halls the Burgh court was sitting.  And by the time one got there all the pride of civic history of the ancient royal Burgh, as set forth in portrait and statue and a museum of antiquities, was apt to take the lime out of the backbone of a man less courageous than Mr. Traill.  What a car of juggernaut to roll over one, small, masterless terrier!

But presently the landlord found himself on his feet, and not so ill at ease.  A Scottish court, high or low, civil or criminal, had a flavor all its own.  Law points were threshed over with gusto, but counsel, client, and witness gained many a point by ready wit, and there was no lack of dry humor from the bench.  About the Burgh court, for all its stately setting, there was little formality.  The magistrate of the day sat behind a tall desk, with a clerk of record at his elbow, and the officer gave his testimony briefly:  Edinburgh being quite overrun by stray and unlicensed dogs, orders had recently been given the Burgh police to report such animals.  In Mr. Traill’s place he had seen a small terrier that appeared to be at home there; and, indeed, on the dog’s going out, Mr. Traill had called a servant lassie to fetch a bone, and to open the door for him.  He noticed that the animal wore no collar, and felt it his duty to report the matter.

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Project Gutenberg
Greyfriars Bobby from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.