ROVER AND HIS
LITTLE MASTER.
[Illustration: ROVER AND HIS LITTLE MASTER.]
“Come, Rover!” said Harry,
as he passed a fine old Newfoundland dog that lay
on a mat at the door; “come, Rover! I am
going down to the river to sail my boat, and I want
you to go with me.”
Rover opened his large eyes, and looked
lazily at his little master.
“Come! Rover! Rover!”
But the dog didn’t care to move,
and so Harry went off to the river side alone.
He had not been gone a great while, before a thought
of her boy came suddenly into the mother’s mind.
Remembering that he had a little vessel, and that
the river was near, it occurred to her that he might
have gone there.
Instantly her heart began to throb with alarm.
“Is Harry with you?” she
called up to Harry’s father, who was in his study.
But Harry’s father said he was not there.
“I’m afraid he’s
gone to the river with his boat,” said the mother.
“To the river!” And Mr
Lee dropped his pen, and came quickly down. Taking
up his hat, he went hurriedly from the house.
Rover was still lying upon the mat, with his head
upon his paws and his eyes shut.
“Rover!” said his master,
in a quick, excited voice, “where is Harry?
Has he gone to the river? Away and see! quick!”
The dog must have understood every
word, for he sprang eagerly to his feet, and rushed
toward the river. Mr Lee followed as fast as he
could run. When he reached the river bank, he
saw his little boy in the water, with Rover dragging
him toward the shore. He was just in time to receive
the half-drowned child in his arms, and carry him
home to his mother.
Harry, who remained insensible, was
placed in a warm bed. He soon, however, revived,
and in an hour or two was running about again.
But after this, Rover would never leave the side of
his little master, when he wandered beyond the garden
gate. Wherever you found Harry, there Rover was
sure to be—sometimes walking by his side,
and sometimes lying on the grass, with his big eyes
watching every movement.
Once Harry found his little vessel,
which had been hidden away since he went with it to
the river, and, without his mother’s seeing him,
he started again for the water. Rover, as usual,
was with him. On his way to the river, he saw
some flowers, and, in order to gather them, put his
boat down upon the grass. Instantly Rover picked
it up in his mouth, and walked back toward the house
with it. After going a little way, he stopped,
looked around, and waited until Harry had got his
hand full of flowers. The child then saw that
Rover had his boat, and tried to get it from him; but
Rover played around him, always keeping out of his
reach, and retreating toward the house, until he got
back within the gate. Then he bounded into the
house, and laid the boat at the feet of Harry’s
mother.
Harry was a little angry with the
good old dog, at first, but when his mother explained
to him what Rover meant, he hugged him around the neck,
and said he would never go down to the river again
any more.
Harry is a man now, and Rover has
long since been dead; but he often thinks of the dear
old dog that saved him from drowning when he was a
child; and it gives him great pleasure to remember
that he never beat Rover, as some boys beat their
dogs, when they are angry, and was never unkind to
him. Had it been otherwise, the thought would
have given him great pain.