Sea, o^ne can tell ; there are many other ColJeftions of 
the fame kind of Pillars^, fituated in and about this Place, 
as two leller but more imperfect and broken Caufwaysy 
as we may call them, that both lie at fome Diftance o'the 
Left Hand of the great one, as you face the North : and 
a little farther into the Sea, fome Rocks fliew themfeives 
above Water.^ when the Tide is low, that feem all made 
ftill of the fame Stone. And if you afcend towards the 
Land in the Hill above the Caufway next and immediate- 
ly adjoining to it, you meet with more of the (ame fort 
of Pillars, but in a different Situation, not perpendicu- 
lar and ereft, but lying as 'twere on their Sides, in a 
flanting Pofture. 
Beyond this Hill Eaftward, at feveral Diilances ftand 
many fcts of ftreight and upright Colums ranged in cu- 
rious Order along the Sides of the Hills : that Parcel of 
them which is moft confpicuous and neareft the Caufway 
the Country People call, the Looms or Organs, from its 
formal Shape,- which is fb very regular, that all its fe- 
veral Pillars may be diftinftly counted, and they are juft 
Fifty in Number, the largefl: and tailed at leaft Forty 
Foot high, confifts of Forty Four diftind: Joints, and 
Hands diredly in the middle of all the reft, they gradu- 
ally decreafing in Length on both Sides of it, like Organ 
Pipes. 
- Fo^r Miles Weftward of the Giants Caufway, a Mile 
and a half diftant^rom the Sea, Three Miles from the 
Town oi Coleraine, and about Two from Di^;^/^^-^, an old 
Seat of the Marque[fes of Antrim ; feveral Ranges of tall 
Pillars fliew themfelves alongft the Side of a Rock for 
about Three Hundred Paces together : a Church within 
a Quarter of a Mile of them, called, Baliywillan-Church^ 
I am told was built for the moft part with Stone taken 
from thefe Pillars, which are all of the fame fort of Stone 
with the Colums of the Giants Caufway^ (as I find by 
care- 
