Seward's snowglobe will be filled with images from his life as a doctor living in 19th century England: Everything you might expect from common-day street scenes to the halls of an asylum. What may come as a shock is the occasional darker, more mysterious flash of an image with blurry faces, ghostly images of a lady in white. She seems to appear a lot, though her identity cannot be determined and she fades into the background.
There is also various scenes which seem slightly out of place, if not foreboding, but these are seldom seen without staring into the globe for some time.
A busy daytime scene of everyday London. Carriages and throngs of people as you first peer into its surface.
A lecture hall in which Seward would often listen to Doctor van Helsing's theories in Amsterdam, when he attended school there.
The grey-stoned asylum Doctor Seward superintendents. There's something homey about it despite its function.
Doctor Seward's office and bedroom. He lived where he worked.
Lucy's Manor. A welcome place that Seward often sought refuge from time to time.
A glass casket revealing a faraway figure too hard to make out. Clearly a funeral.
Glowing lanterns light the way to the Westerna masoleum, inside the stone artifice being Miss Lucy's tomb.
The blurred form of a white-clad figure kneeling before an open stone sepulchre.