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Updated: June 19, 2025
The name of King Arthur was given during the Middle Ages to many places and monuments supposed to have been in some way associated with his exploits, such as "Arthur's Seat," near Edinburgh, "Arthur's Oven," on the Carron, near Falkirk, etc. What was called the sepulchre of his queen was shown at Meigle, in Strathmore, in the sixteenth century.
Tommy is only a kid after all, and doesn't hear By the way, why does he never come here?" She hesitated. "Do you really not know?" Then, seeing sincerity in his eyes, she went on. "Well Joyselle made me promise mother that." "Made you!" "Yes. He you see he is old-fashioned. And well, in two words he said that unless I promised he he would not teach Tommy or even see him!" Carron whistled.
Carron very kindly took my place that I might be with Jill that last evening, and we spent it in Jill's favourite fashion, talking in the firelight. She was a little quiet and subdued, full of regret at leaving me, and more affectionate than ever. 'I have never been so happy in my life, she said, in rather a melancholy voice.
We were startled suddenly from this condition by a crash and an exceedingly sharp and bitter cry. It must be remarked here, that, in order to subdue King Frost in those northern strongholds of his, we had, besides double doors and double windows and porches, an enormous cast-iron stove from the famous Carron foundry.
Carron pulled his moustache and narrowed his tired-looking blue eyes in a way that had been very fetching fifteen years before. "You look pretty fit," he observed after a pause, as she gazed absently over his head at the carvings of the mantelpiece. "I'm ripping, thanks," she answered with a bored air.
When the women had left the dining-room Carron got up from his place and sat down by Joyselle, who looked at him with unconcealed astonishment. He had never liked Carron, and knew that the man did not like him. "When is your next concert to be, M. Joyselle?" "The third of June." "I I always come. I have come for years, and last June I heard you in Paris. You must like playing with Colonne."
There were four pages of this, growing more and more incoherent, and then at the last, the writer went on, his writing suddenly larger and more distinct, as if he had taken pains to render it legible: "I am going to die, Brigit, so good-bye. If you would have married me I should not have done this. It is all your fault. "Gerald Carron."
To this History French writers accord the important place of inspirer of a distinctively French Renaissance. The weaver being Maurice du Bourg, the chief of the factory of La Trinité, the artists were Henri Lerambert and Antoine Carron, but the set has been many times copied in various factories, and Artemisia has symbolised in turn two other widowed queens of France.
Here is another story. A woman was going through a wild glen in Strath Carron, in Sutherland the Glen Garaig carrying her infant child wrapped in her plaid. Below the path, overhung with trees, ran a very deep ravine, called Glen Odhar, or the dun glen. The child, not a year old, suddenly spoke, and said:
My own nose, and sometimes an eye, was all that protruded from the buffalo robe at such times. But Salamander never shivered, and always grinned, from which I came to understand that my pity was misplaced. About nine o'clock each night he left us to look after the great Carron stove ourselves, and we were all pretty good stokers. Self-interest kept us up to duty.
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