He is the gentlest too, and the most lovable of all dogs. He does not look it. The sweetness of his disposition would not strike the casual observer at first glance. He resembles the gentleman spoken of in the oft-quoted stanza:
“’E’s all right when yer knows ’im,
But yer’ve got to know ’im fust.”
The first time I ever met a bulldog – to speak to, that is – was many years ago. We were lodging down in the country, an orphan friend of mine, named George, and myself, and one night, coming home late from some dissolving views, we found the family had gone to bed. They had left a light in our room, however, and we went in and sat down, and began to take off our boots.
And then, for the first time, we noticed on the hearthrug a bulldog. A dog with a more thoughtfully ferocious expression – a dog with, apparently, a heart more dead to all ennobling and civilizing sentiments – I have never seen. As George said, he looked more like some heathen idol than a happy English dog.
He appeared to have been waiting for us, and he rose up and greeted us with a ghastly grin, and got between us and the door.
We smiled at him – a sickly, propitiatory smile. We said, “Good dog – poor fellow!” and we asked him, in tones implying that the question could admit of no negative, if he was not a “nice old chap”. We did not really think so. We had our own private opinion concerning him, and it was unfavourable. But we did not express it. We would not have hurt his feelings for the world. He was a visitor – our guest, so to speak – and, as well-brought-up young men, we felt that the right thing to do was for us to prevent his gaining any hint that we were not glad to see him, and to make him feel as little as possible the awkwardness of his position.
I think we succeeded. He was singularly unembarrassed, and far more at his ease than even we were. He took but little notice of our flattering remarks, but was much drawn towards George’s legs. George used to be, I remember, rather proud of his legs. I could never see enough in them, myself, to excuse George’s vanity; indeed, they always struck me as lumpy. It is only fair to acknowledge, however, that they quite fascinated that bulldog. He walked over and criticized them with the air of a long-baffled connoisseur who had at last found his ideal. At the termination of his inspection he distinctly smiled.
George, who at that time was modest and bashful, blushed and drew them up onto the chair. On the dog’s displaying a desire to follow them, George moved up onto the table, and squatted there in the middle, nursing his knees.
George’s legs being lost to him, the dog appeared inclined to console himself with mine. I went and sat beside George on the table.
Sitting with your feet drawn up in front of you, on a small and rickety one-legged table, is a most trying exercise, especially if you are not used to it. George and I both felt our position keenly. We did not like to call out for help and bring the family down. We were proud young men, and we feared lest, to the unsympathetic eye of the comparative stranger, the spectacle we should present might not prove imposing.
So we sat on in silence for about half an hour, the dog keeping a reproachful eye upon us from the nearest chair and displaying elephantine delight whenever we made any movement suggestive of climbing down.
At the end of the half-hour we discussed the advisability of “chancing it”, but decided not to. “We should never,” George said, “confound foolhardiness with courage.”
“Courage,” he continued – George had quite a gift for maxims – “courage is the wisdom of manhood; foolhardiness the folly of youth.”
He said that to get down from the table while that dog remained in the room would clearly prove us to be possessed of the latter quality, so we restrained ourselves and sat on.
We sat on for over an hour, by which time, having both grown careless of life and indifferent to the voice of wisdom, we did “chance it”; and, throwing the tablecloth over our would-be murderer, charged for the door and got out.
The next morning we complained to our landlady of her carelessness in leaving wild beasts about the place, and we gave her a brief, if not exactly truthful history of the business.
Instead of the tender womanly sympathy we had expected, the old lady sat down in the easy chair and burst out laughing.
“What! Old Boozer?” she exclaimed. “You was afraid of old Boozer! Why, bless you, he wouldn’t hurt a worm! He ain’t got a tooth in his head, he ain’t: we has to feed him with a spoon – and I’m sure the way the cat chivies him about must be enough to make his life a burden to him. I expect he wanted you to nurse him; he’s used to being nursed.”
And that was the brute that had kept us sitting on a table, with our boots off, for over an hour on a chilly night!
Another bulldog exhibition that occurs to me was one given by my uncle. He had had a bulldog – a young one – given to him by a friend. It was a grand dog, so his friend had told him; all it wanted was training – it had not been properly trained. My uncle did not profess to know much about the training of bulldogs, but it seemed a simple enough matter, so he thanked the man and took his prize home at the end of a rope.
“Have we got to live in the house with this?” asked my aunt, indignantly, coming into the room about an hour after the dog’s advent, followed by the quadruped himself, wearing an idiotically self-satisfied air.
“That!” exclaimed my uncle in astonishment. “Why, it’s a splendid dog. His father was honourably mentioned only last year at the Aquarium.”
“Ah, well, all I can say is that his son isn’t going the way to get honourably mentioned in this neighbourhood,” replied my aunt, with bitterness. “He’s just finished killing poor Mrs McSlanger’s cat, if you want to know what he has been doing. And a pretty row there’ll be about it too!”
“Can’t we hush it up?” said my uncle.
“Hush it up!” retorted my aunt. “If you’d heard the row, you wouldn’t sit there and talk like a fool. And if you’ll take my advice,” added my aunt, “you’ll set to work on this ‘training’, or whatever it is, that has got to be done to the dog, before any human life is lost.”
My uncle was too busy to devote any time to the dog for the next day or so, and all that could be done was to keep the animal carefully confined to the house.
And a nice time we had with him! It was not that the animal was bad-hearted. He meant well: he tried to do his duty. What was wrong with him was that he was too hard-working. He wanted to do too much. He started with an exaggerated and totally erroneous notion of his duties and responsibilities. His idea was that he had been brought into the house for the purpose of preventing any living human soul from coming near it, and of preventing any person who might by chance have managed to slip in from ever again leaving it.
We endeavoured to induce him to take a less exalted view of his position, but in vain. That was the conception he had formed in his own mind concerning his earthly task, and that conception he insisted on living up to with, what appeared to us to be, unnecessary conscientiousness.
He so effectually frightened away all the tradespeople that they at last refused to even enter the gate. All that they would do was to bring their goods and drop them over the fence into the front garden, from where we had to go and fetch them as we wanted them.
“I wish you’d run into the garden,” my aunt would say to me – I was stopping with them at the time – “and see if you can find any sugar; I think there’s some under the big rosebush. If not, you’d better go to Jones’s and order some.”
And, on the cook’s enquiring what she should get ready for lunch, my aunt would say:
“Well, I’m sure, Jane, I hardly know. What have we? Are there any chops in the garden, or was it a bit of steak that I noticed on the lawn?”
On the second afternoon the plumbers came to do a little job to the kitchen boiler. The dog, being engaged at the time in the front of the house, driving away the postman, did not notice
their arrival. He was broken-hearted at finding them there when he got downstairs, and evidently blamed himself most bitterly. Still, there they were, all owing to his carelessness, and the only thing to be done now was to see that they did not escape.
There were three plumbers (it always takes three plumbers to do a job: the first man comes on ahead to tell you that the second man will be there soon, the second man comes to say that he can’t stop, and the third man follows to ask if the first man has been there), and that faithful, dumb animal kept them pinned in the kitchen – fancy wanting to keep plumbers in a house longer than is absolutely necessary! – for five hours, until my uncle came home; and the bill ran: “Self and two men engaged six hours, repairing boiler tap, 18s.; materials, 2d. – total 18s. 2d.”
He took a dislike to the cook from the very first. We did not blame him for this. She was a disagreeable old woman, and we did not think much of her ourselves. But when it came to keeping her out of the kitchen, so that she could not do her work, and my aunt and uncle had to cook the dinner themselves, assisted by the housemaid – a willing enough girl, but necessarily inexperienced – we felt that the woman was being subjected to persecution.
My uncle, after this, decided that the dog’s training must be no longer neglected. The man next-door-but-one always talked as if he knew a lot about sporting matters, and to him my uncle went for advice as to how to set about it.
“Oh yes,” said the man, cheerfully, “very simple thing, training a bulldog. Wants patience, that’s all.”
“Oh, that will be all right,” said my uncle. “It can’t want much more than living in the same house with him before he’s trained does. How do you start?”
“Well, I’ll tell you,” said the next-door-but-one man. “You take him up into a room where there’s not much furniture, and you shut the door and bolt it.”
“I see,” said my uncle.
“Then you place him on the floor in the middle of the room, and you go down on your knees in front of him and begin to irritate him.”
“Oh!”
“Yes – and you go on irritating him until you have made him quite savage.”
“Which, from what I know of the dog, won’t take long,” observed my uncle thoughtfully.
“So much the better. The moment he gets savage he will fly at you.”
My uncle agreed that the idea seemed plausible.
“He will fly at your throat,” continued the next-door-but-one man, “and this is where you will have to be careful. As he springs towards you, and before he gets hold of you, you must hit him a fair straight blow on his nose and knock him down.”
“Yes, I see what you mean.”
“Quite so – well, the moment you have knocked him down, he will jump up and go for you again. You must knock him down again, and you must keep on doing this until the dog is thoroughly cowed and exhausted. Once he is thoroughly cowed, the thing’s done – dog’s as gentle as a lamb after that.”
“Oh!” said my uncle, rising from his chair. “You think that a good way, do you?”
“Certainly,” replied the next-door-but-one man. “It never fails.”
“Oh! I wasn’t doubting it,” said my uncle. “Only it’s just occurred to me that, as you understand the knack of these things, perhaps you’d like to come in and try your hand on the dog? We can give you a room quite to yourselves, and I’ll undertake that nobody comes near to interfere with you. And if… if…” continued my uncle, with that kindly thoughtfulness which ever distinguished his treatment of others, “if, by any chance, you should miss hitting the dog at the proper critical moment, or, if you should get cowed and exhausted first, instead of the dog – why, I shall only be too pleased to take the whole burden of the funeral expenses on my own shoulders; and I hope you know me well enough to feel sure that the arrangements will be tasteful and, at the same time, unostentatious!” And out my uncle walked.
We next consulted the butcher, who agreed that the prize-ring method was absurd, especially when recommended to a short-winded, elderly, family man, and who recommended instead plenty of outdoor exercise for the dog, under my uncle’s strict supervision and control.
“Get a fairly long chain for him,” said the butcher, “and take him out for a good stiff run every evening. Never let him get away from you; make him mind you, and bring him home always thoroughly exhausted. You stick to that for a month or two, regular, and you’ll have him like a child.”
“Um! Seems to me that I’m going to get more training over this job than anybody else,” muttered my uncle, as he thanked the man and left the shop, “but I suppose it’s got to be done. Wish I’d never had the d— dog now!”
So, religiously every evening, my uncle would fasten a long chain to that poor dog and drag him away from his happy home with the idea of exhausting him; and the dog would come back as fresh as paint, my uncle behind him panting and clamouring for brandy.
My uncle said he should never have dreamt there could have been such stirring times in this prosaic nineteenth century as he had experienced training that dog.
Oh, the wild, wild scamperings over the breezy common, the dog trying to catch a swallow, and my uncle, unable to hold him back, following at the other end of the chain!
Oh, the merry frolics in the fields, when the dog wanted to kill a cow, and the cow wanted to kill the dog, and they each dodged round my uncle, trying to do it!
And, oh, the pleasant chats with the old ladies when the dog wound the chain into a knot round their legs and upset them, and my uncle had to sit down in the road beside them, and untie them before they could get up again!
But a crisis came at last. It was a Saturday afternoon – uncle being exercised by dog in usual way – nervous children, playing in road, see dog, scream and run – playful young dog thinks it a game, jerks chain out of uncle’s grasp and flies after them – uncle flies after dog, calling it names – fond parent in front garden, seeing beloved children chased by savage dog, followed by careless owner, flies after uncle, calling him names – householders come to doors and cry, “Shame!” – also throw things at dog – things that don’t hit dog hit uncle – things that don’t hit uncle hit fond parent – through the village and up the hill, over the bridge and round by the green – grand run, mile and a half without a break! Children sink exhausted – dog gambols up among them – children go into fits – fond parent and uncle come up together, both breathless. “Why don’t you call your dog off, you wicked old man?”
“Because I can’t recollect his name, you old fool, you!”
Fond parent accuses uncle of having set dog on – uncle, indignant, reviles fond parent – exasperated fond parent attacks uncle – uncle retaliates with umbrella – faithful dog comes to assistance of uncle and inflicts great injury on fond parent – arrival of police – dog attacks police – uncle and fond parent both taken into custody – uncle fined five pounds and costs for keeping a ferocious dog at large – uncle fined five pounds and costs for assault on fond parent – uncle fined five pounds and costs for assault on police!
My uncle gave the dog away soon after that. He did not waste him. He gave him as a wedding present to a near relation.
But the saddest story I ever heard in connection with a bulldog was one told by my aunt herself.
Now you can rely upon this story, because it is not one of mine: it is one of my aunt’s, and she would scorn to tell a lie. This is a story you could tell to the heathen and feel that you were teaching them the truth and doing them good. They give this story out at all the Sunday schools in our part of the country, and draw moral lessons from it. It is a story that a little child can believe.
It happened in the old crinoline days. My aunt, who was then living in a country town, had gone out shopping one morning and was standing in the High Street, talking to a lady friend, a Mrs Gumworthy, the doctor’s wife. She (my aunt) had on a new crinoline that mornin
g, in which, to use her own expression, she rather fancied herself. It was a tremendously big one, as stiff as a wire fence, and it “set” beautifully.
They were standing in front of Jenkins’s, the draper’s, and my aunt thinks that it – the crinoline – must have got caught up in something, and an opening thus left between it and the ground. However this may be, certain it is that an absurdly large and powerful bulldog, who was fooling round about there at the time, managed somehow or other to squirm in under my aunt’s crinoline and effectually imprison himself beneath it.
Finding himself suddenly in a dark and gloomy chamber, the dog, naturally enough, got frightened, and made frantic rushes to get out. But whichever way he charged there was the crinoline in front of him. As he flew, he, of course, carried it before him, and with the crinoline, of course, went my aunt.
But nobody knew the explanation. My aunt herself did not know what had happened. Nobody had seen the dog creep inside the crinoline. All that the people did see was a staid and eminently respectable middle-aged lady suddenly, and without any apparent reason, throw her umbrella down in the road, fly up the High Street at the rate of ten miles an hour, rush across it at the imminent risk of her life, dart down it again on the other side, rush sideways, like an excited crab, into a grocer’s shop, run three times round the shop, upsetting the whole stock-in-trade, come out of the shop backwards and knock down a postman, dash into the roadway and spin round twice, hover for a moment, undecided, on the kerb, and then away up the hill again, as if she had only just started, all the while screaming out at the top of her voice for somebody to stop her!
Of course, everybody thought that she was mad. The people flew before her like chaff before the wind. In less than five seconds the High Street was a desert. The townsfolk scampered into their shops and houses and barricaded the doors. Brave men dashed out and caught up little children and bore them to places of safety, amid cheers. Carts and carriages were abandoned, while the drivers climbed up lamp-posts!