Images Used in the Video for "Away."

 

1.  The introductory wave video is from AdobeStock (MarkOConnellExclusive/Pond5).

2.  The first image is a painting by Joseph Heard (1799-1859): The brigantine Elizabeth Taylor off Albert Dock, Liverpool. Wikimedia Commons link is here.

3.  The illustration of sailors is by George Thomas: Man-of-War's Men, published in the Illustrated London News in early 1854. Wikimedia Commons link is here.

4.  The next three illustrations, of sailors at work on ships, are from Nautical Illustrations: 681 Permission-Free Illustrations from Nineteenth-Century Sources.  Selected by Jim Harter.  (Dover Publications, Inc., 2003).

5.  The final illustration for verse one is by George Cruikshank (1792-1878): Saturday Night at Sea.  Wikimedia Commons link is here.

6.  The map used in all the choruses is a world map from 1794 by Samuel Dunn, artist Thomas Kitchin.  It is entitled A General Map of the World, or Terraqueous Globe with all the New Discoveries and Marginal Delineations, Containing the Most Interesting Particulars in the Solar, Starry and Mundane System. Wikimedia Commons link is here.

 7.  The animated character illustrations in all the choruses are from Old English Cuts and Illustrations for Artists and Craftspeople. Bowles and Carver. (Dover Publications, Inc., 1970).

8.  The first illustration in verse two is from Shutterstock and is titled Port of Spain old view, Trinidad, Caribbean sea. Created by De Berard, published on Le Tour du Monde, Paris, 1860.

 9.  The second illustration in verse two is from a book titled Perils of the deep: being an account of some of the remarkable shipwrecks and disasters at sea during the last hundred years, by Edward N. Hoare. (Society Promoting Christian Knowledge, London, 1885).  Wikimedia Commons link is here.

10.  The third illustration in verse two is from Dreamstime.com and is titled Victorian engraving of the village of Upper Largo, Fife, Scotland showing the historic church of Upper Largo. Image obtained from a high resolution scan of a print.

11.  The fourth illustration in verse two is from Nautical Illustrations: 681 Permission-Free Illustrations from Nineteenth-Century Sources.  Selected by Jim Harter. (Dover Publications, Inc., 2003).  The caption reads Nineteenth-century frigates. The Northfleet.

 12.  The first illustration in verse three is from Nautical Illustrations: 681 Permission-Free Illustrations from Nineteenth-Century Sources.  Selected by Jim Harter. (Dover Publications, Inc., 2003).  The caption reads View at piers along South Street, Manhattan, 1878.

13.  The second illustration in verse three is from AdobeStock and is titled Beautiful View: Port (LaRochelle) - 18th century.

14.  The third illustration in verse three is titled Off Cape Horn.  Wikimedia Commons link is here.

15.  The fourth illustration is a painting titled Pegasus off the China Coast (circa 1884).  Wikimedia Commons link is here.

16.  The fifth illustration is captioned The Missionary Ship "Harmony."  It is a British Library digitised image from page 261 of Strange yet True: interesting and memorable Stories retold by James Macaulay, m.d. (J. Nisbet, London, 1892).