OF all Scotland’s lovely valleys, 
      none is lovelier than that through which flows the lordly Tay, and of the 
      Tay valley there is no lovelier bit than that which stretches west and 
      north from the town of Aberfeldy. Out from the mountains flows the river, 
      down the wide valley, past sloping fields rich and fertile with their cosy 
      farmsteads, sheep-runs, lands high and bare, decked out with birches, firs 
      and beeches, singly and in groups and plantations, past great houses set 
      within their policies, past pretty villages, quaint and straggling, every 
      mile rich in surpassing beauty and historic interest.
      But there is one spot where it were 
      worth while to pause, for it is the birthplace of a great man, whose name 
      is written in large letters over the Canadian West. Four miles west of the 
      town of Aberfeldy the river takes a turn about one of the Grampian spurs 
      which ends here in a bold bluff crag. At the foot of the rock, on the 
      river’s north bank, lies one of those quaint straggling villages. This 
      bluff crag is the Rock of Dull, and this straggling group of houses 
      huddling at its base is the village of Dull. In this village James 
      Robertson was born.
      The glory of the village lies in the 
      past. The ruins strewn everywhere about, gaunt and bare or half-covered 
      with kindly turf, proclaim that. It is an ancient village getting its name 
      from the ninth abbot of Iona who, when dying, commanded that they should 
      bear his body eastward towards Strathray till the withes by which the 
      coffin hung, should break. At the foot of a precipitous rock on the north 
      side of the Tay the withes broke. There they laid his saintly body to 
      rest, and from the breaking of the withes, dhullan, they named the 
      spot "Dhull," modern Dull. The place became a famous educational and 
      ecclesiastical centre. A college was established and a monastery founded, 
      with right of sanctuary attached, within a radius marked by crosses, of 
      which one, sorely battered, still stands in the village. In the time of 
      Crinan, the fighting Bishop of Dunkeld, son-in-law to King Malcolm II, and 
      father of Duncan, the unfortunate victim of Macbeth’s ambition, the 
      landholdings pertaining to the monastery of which Crinan was tenth abbot, 
      were greatly extended. The memory of this monastery demesne is preserved 
      in the Appin Abbatania of Dull. But long before the Reformation the 
      monastery was dissolved and the college transferred to St. Andrew’s, thus 
      becoming the nucleus of the oldest of the Scottish universities.
      In those great old days Dull was not 
      only an educational and ecclesiastical centre; it was a populous, 
      commercial metropolis as well, with streets devoted to certain trades and 
      offering the principal produce market for the surrounding district. But 
      now of this ancient greatness, educational, ecclesiastical and commercial, 
      all that remains is the parish school, the parish church, itself a 
      pre-Reformation relic recently restored to its former splendour, the 
      straggling village, and those eloquent gaunt or turf-clothed ruins. 
      Unchanged by the passing years, the old gray Rock abides, and the flowing 
      river, for the generations of men come and go, leaving ruins behind to 
      show where they have been and where they have wrought! Ruins? Yes, but 
      more than ruins. For lives of men are more enduring than grim rocks and 
      flowing rivers. They never die, but in a people’s character and in a 
      people’s influence and in a people’s work in their home lands and in lands 
      far across the sea, they live eternally.