Tom, the gentleman dog
By Virginia A. Garlen
Reprinted with permission from “The Midnight Writer,” a column published in The Press-Sentinel, Jesup, GA (May, 1994)
Early in the 1980’s my husband and I bought 50 Angus/Holstein calves from a dairy farm. My job was to feed them with giant baby bottles, and then with buckets of formula. I was, for all practical purposes, their mother.
Six months into this project, it became apparent that one human female could not control 50 200 pound calves on her own. It seemed the perfect time to get an assistant, and I knew exactly what I needed.
A quick look in the state farm paper netted the name of a near-by breeder, and we were on our way to buy a Border Collie. Soon we were looking at a writhing mass of black and white—barking, jumping and obviously anxious to be let out.
At the rear of the pack was a small, wiry black dog with a sharp, pointed nose. He hung back from the others, and had to be urged out of the pen by the trainer.
“We don’t want that one,” I heard myself say to the trainer. But somehow, we found ourselves riding home with that very dog shivering in the floorboard of the truck.
He turned out to be a most excellent dog. His goal in life was to please, and he worked hard at it. When he discovered that we wanted the calves penned for feeding, he penned them with no human help—while keeping those already penned from coming out of the open gate. Of course, there was a slight communication problem. He sometimes penned them on his own, and we would look out to find a dozen or so calves who should be grazing instead being kept carefully penned up by Tom!
He never grew to be a large dog. He was narrow in the chest and walked with the slink of a wolf. He was not a beautiful dog. But he knew his business, and he worked at it happily. His black coat and white shirt-front made him look as though he wore a permanent tuxedo, and his perfect manners inspired my father-in-law to dub him “the gentleman dog.” He lived for praise, and would rather have been petted than fed.
I took him to town once in the back of the farm pickup. It was his first trip to a place he had never been before. An over-long stop at my Mom’s house ended with my discovery that he had tired of waiting and jumped out of the truck. We searched for three days with broken hearts. On the evening of the third day, we found him in the field 100 yards from the house. Filthy, blood-stained and almost dead, he had come as far as he could and collapsed.
During those three days he had traveled five miles over roads he had seen only once from the bed of the truck. He crossed the busiest intersection in our town, where two state highways cross. Like Lassie's classic tale, he had found his way home alone and unaided.
I wish this story had a happy ending. Several years later, when a puddle of blood appeared on the carport floor, I took Tom to the local vet and stood crying in the examining room as he told me there was little chance of saving my devoted friend.
During the last month of his life, he struggled to do his job as he had always done. Often, as I knelt pulling weeds in my flower beds, I would feel that long nose thrust between the crook of my arm. I never doubted that he knew he was dying. In those last months, I always stopped my weeding when he came to me. Patting his head, I told him over and over what a good job he had done. Somehow, I felt that was what he wanted to hear most.
What I could not bring myself to tell him, and what it is painful for me to admit even now—is that I could have saved his life. In those days, collies were not given monthly heartworm preventatives. I did not do my part in consistently administering the daily doses he should have had. There was a long list of excuses, but none of those excuses could have saved Tom.
The small part I play in rescue, and my work with local shelters and Paws4Vets, is my way of making some small retribution for an act of neglect that I can not undo. And so it is, that when you see me on the Rescue Boards, you will know that I am there “For Tom.”










