This print depicts the ruins of Dryhope Tower and St. Mary's Loch, near Moffat in the Scottish Borders. Sir Walter Scott most famously describes St. Mary's Loch in Marmion (1808): 'Oft in my mind such thoughts awake, | By lone Saint Mary's silent lake; | Thou know'st it well,---nor fen, nor sedge, | Pollute the pure lake's crystal edge; | Abrupt and sheer, the mountains sink | At once upon the level brink; | And just a trace of silver sand | Marks where the water meets the land' (Introduction to Canto Second, lines 146-153).The surrounding landscape (Moffatdale) is also featured in Scott's novel Old Mortality (1816). The print is engraved by Joseph Swan after a painting by John Fleming.
University of Edinburgh, Corson Collection: Coll-1022/CCWS/ILL/P.1989