THE NEWFOUNDLAND DOG.
Character, &c., [133]—saves people from drowning, [135]—Baby, [136]—saves a child from being run over, [136]—saves a spaniel from being drowned, [137]—saves a gentleman from drowning at Portsmouth, [138]—saves a man in a mill-stream, [138]—calculating dogs, [138]—Sabbath party disturbed by a dog, [139]—Archdeacon Wix's dog, [140]—a Newfoundland brings away breeches containing money belonging to his master, [143]—commits suicide, [145]—saves a coachman in the Thames, [146]—tries to drown a spaniel, [147]—uses his paw as a fishing-bait, [148]—in carrying two hats puts one inside other, [148]—three dogs previously enemies unite against a common foe, [149]—a dog saves his drowning enemy, [151]—releases himself and companions from captivity, [152]—a swimming-wager amusingly lost by a dog's care, [153]—the dog as postman, [153]—swims for ten hours in a tempestuous sea, [153]—saves his dead master's pocket-book, [154]—Lord Grenville's lines on the, [155]—Newfoundland dog ducks his aggressor, [157]—carries a rope to the shore, [158]—saves an ungrateful master, [158]—guardian of a lady's honour, [160]—anecdotes of Mr. M'Intyre's dog Dandie, [160]-5—a Newfoundland causes the detection of a dishonest porter, [165]—saves twelve persons from drowning, [166]—watches over his drunken master, [167]—his humanity occasions a disturbance at Woolwich Theatre, [167]—carries a lanthorn before his master, [168]—saves the lives of all on board the Durham Packet, [170]—drowns a pet lamb out of jealousy, [171]—rescues a canary which had flown into the sea, [171]—saves his old master from robbers, [173]—St. John's and Labrador dogs, [176]—long remembrance of injuries, [177]—discovers a poacher, [178]—discretion and revenge, [178]—returns from Berwick to London, [179]—the Romans had some dog of the same kind, [179]—liberates a man who had fallen into a gravel-pit, [180]—Boatswain provides his mistress a dinner, [181]—a trespasser detained, [181]—Victor at the Battle of Copenhagen, [182]—a Newfoundland dog retrieves on the ice, [182]—fetches a coat from the tailor's, [183]—lines by Lord Eldon, [184].
THE COLLEY OR SHEPHERD'S DOG.
Saves the life of Mr. Satterthwaite, [186]—the Ettrick Shepherd's dog, Sirrah, collects a scattered flock at midnight, [188]—Hector, [189]—points the cat, [191]—has an ear for music, [194]—hears where his master is going, and precedes him, [196]—a wonderful sheep-dog, [199]—a bitch having pupped deposits her young in the hills, and afterwards fetches them home, [201]—cunning of sheep-stealing dogs, [202]-5—a sheep-dog dies of starvation whilst tending his charge, [206]—discrimination of a sheep-dog, [207]—a sheep-dog remembers all the turnings of a road, [208]—follows a young woman who had borrowed his mistress's cloak, [211]—Drummer saves a cow, [212]—Cæsar rescues his master from an avalanche, [213]—a sheep-dog snatches away a beggar's stick, [214]—a colley conducts the flock whilst his master is drinking, [214]—dishonesty punished, [215]—a sporting colley, [216]—a colley buries her drowned offspring, [217]—brings assistance to her helpless master, [217]—saves his master from being frozen to death, [219]—his master having broken his arm sends home his dog for assistance, [220]—a colley punishes a tailor's dog for worrying his flock, [221]—the sheep-stealing colley, [222]—a colley distinguishes diseased sheep, [228]—the Ettrick Shepherd's story of the dog Chieftain, [230]—a colley feeds his master's lost child on the Grampian Hills, [232]—the shepherds' dogs of North Wales, [235]—training a colley, [238].