Original hand coloured steel engraving from 1840.. Since these antique prints are over 150 years old they may have minor imperfections.
The Buller of Buchan, Near Peterhead - Scotland
Artist: Bartlett - Engraver: Brandar
Published c 1840!
Size: Size of the image: 4 3/4 x 7, overall 8 x 10 1/2 inches.
Condition: Excellent condition. Printed on heavier paper.
An excerpt from the original description:
THE Buller of Buchan, one of the most remarkable natural curiosities in Scotland, is about six miles south from Peterhead. It is a vast hollow in a rock projecting into the sea, open at the top, and communicating with the water by means of a natural arched passage, about fifty yards high. The basin within is nearly circular, about thirty yards in diameter; and around the extreme edge of the chasm is a narrow footpath, from which to the water in the abyss below, measures about thirty fathoms,* more or less, according to the state of the tide. It is a scene upon which all travellers dwell with feelings of mixed awe and admiration. Even Dr. Johnson, the learned philologist from whom we take our motto, visited and retired from the spot with amazement. " We soon turned our eyes," he observes, " to the Buller, or Bouilloir, of Buchan, which no man can see with indifference, who has either sense of danger or delight in rarity. It is a rock perpendicularly tubulated, united on one side with a high shore, and on the other rising steep to a great height above the main sea. The top is open, from which may be seen a dark gulf of water, which flows into the cavity through a breach made
In the lower part of the enclosing rock. It has the appearance of a vast well, bordered with a wall. The edge of the Buller is not wide, and to those who walk round appear? very narrow. He that ventures to look downward sees that, if his foot should slip, lie must fall from his dreadful elevation upon stones on one side, or into water on the other. We, however, went round, and were glad when the circuit was completed. When we came down to the sea, we saw some boats and rowers, and resolved to explore the Buller at the bottom. We entered the arch which the water had made, and found ourselves in a place which, although we could not think ourselves In danger, we could scarcely survey without some recoil of the mind.