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echo-chasers · 2 years
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echo-chasers · 2 years
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Mourning ring, late 18th or early 19th century
A depiction of Hope with her anchor looking after a now faded warship. A symbol that was often used to hope that the sailor would return home safe and sound.
As this is a mourning ring, the loved one never returned and Hope here is most likely the lady who lost her loved one to the sea.
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echo-chasers · 2 years
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“I ’m on the sea! I ’m on the sea! I am where I would ever be; With the blue above, and the blue below, And silence wheresoe’er I go; If a storm should come and awake the deep, What matter? I shall ride and sleep.”
— Barry Cornwall, from “The Sea”
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echo-chasers · 2 years
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A stylized illustration of a ship using the sun (and magnets, according to the caption) to navigate from Jan van der Straet’s 1590 book Noua reperta.
Full text available here.
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echo-chasers · 2 years
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"What machines we are on board of a man-of -war! We walk, talk, eat, drink, sleep, and get up, just like clock-work; we are wound up to go the twenty-four hours, and then wound up again; just like old Smallsole does the chronometers."
"Very true, Jack; but it does not appear to me, that, hitherto, you have kept very good time: you require a little more regulating," said Gascoigne.
"How can you expect any piece of machinery to go well, so damnably knocked about as a midshipman is?" replied our hero.
"Very true, Jack; but sometimes you don't keep any time, for you don't keep any watch."
— Frederick Marryat, Mr. Midshipman Easy
1881 edition of Mr. Midshipman Easy in the collection of the British Library.
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echo-chasers · 2 years
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Icebergs, Smith Sound II, 1930, oil on board, 11.8 x 14.8 in. by Lawren Harris
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echo-chasers · 2 years
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Aurora Borealis, by Frederic Edwin Church, 1865
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echo-chasers · 2 years
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Narrative of an Expedition in H.M.S. Terror, by Captain George Back 1838 after his Arctic Expedition 1836-1837
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echo-chasers · 2 years
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A Pair of Stafforshire porcelaine figures of Sir John Franklin and Lady Jane Franklin, 19th century, each 10in. (25.4cm) high
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echo-chasers · 2 years
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  Robert  Havell, Sir John  Ross, from a “Voyage of Discovery..enquiring into the possibility of a North-West Passage”, 1819
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Disruption of the Ice around Her Majesty's Ship Terror, Captain Back, July 1837, watercolour by George Smythe
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Max Haering: Wreck of HMS Terror
HMS Terror was together with HMS Erebus part of an arctic expedition which ended in a disaster (last seen 1845, discovered 2016 near King William Island) ink drawing, ca. 54 x 54 cm, 2018/2021
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echo-chasers · 2 years
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HMS Terror in the ice, drawn by Lieutenant Owen Stanley, who took part in Sir George Back’s Arctic expedition in 1836 and 1837 
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Frank Wilbert Stokes - Oil sketches from polar expeditions, 1886-1902
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Arctic sun.  More Adventures. 1940.  Armstrong Sperry. 
Internet Archive
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echo-chasers · 2 years
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Sorry I’ve been gone for a bit! The rain put me in a bit of a funk- disappointment over not having a thunderstorm and it either slowed my internet connection down or cut out service completely. But- it does mean that soon we’ll have absolutely wonderful blueberries.
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echo-chasers · 2 years
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The northern sun. Ballads of a Cheechako. 1917.
Internet Archive
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