Hi Chris,

Thanks for your comments, and the update on the statue.

Quote Originally Posted by ChrisGeorge View Post
Excellent photographs and information here, Darren. I have been interested in the matter of Dingle Dell ever since I read Griffiths' book in the 1960's, and have also, as a poet myself, studied William Roscoe's poems.

In terms of the question about the statue note the following appeal by Dr Clemency Fisher of the Museum of Liverpool "Guest blog: Lost sculptures of Liverpool" dated (coincidentally!) November 13, 2009, at http://blogs.liverpooldailypost.co.uk/pooloflife/:

"Lost: Has anyone seen a marble lady with her foot on a water pot?

"William Roscoe (1753-1831), who could quite possibly be said to have founded culture in Liverpool, was a man with many hats - politician, solicitor, booklover, supporter of the arts, founder of the now sadly defunct Liverpool Botanic Garden, and poet. He lived in several different houses in central and south Liverpool, one being The Elms, which was on the dog-leg between Park Road and Aigburth Road (the road next to where it stood still bears this name).

"Much of Roscoe's poetry was published, and many people will know The Butterfly's Ball. One of Roscoe's other most important poems was The Nymph of the Dingle, written in about 1790. From this we get a wonderful vision of the Dingle Stream, which used to run down Park Road and then through the Dingle down to the Mersey, as it looked before it was culverted.

"'Stranger, that with careless feet, / wanderest near this green retreat, / where, through gently bending slopes, / soft the distant prospect opes: / Where the fern in fringed pride / decks the lonely valley's side / where the linnet chirps his song, / flitting as thou tread'st along .... Once a naiad rolled her flood'.

[Full version of poem below]

"The sculptor Benjamin Spence's marble Psyche at the well used to be in a cupola next to the Dingle Stream, to represent Roscoe's poem. She stood there for many years, demurely holding her water pot. We are not sure whether this sculpture is the same as the one that used to be in the Gladstone Conservatory in Stanley Park, or the statue now in the sculpture gallery at the Walker Art Gallery, or whether they were all exact copies of each other.

"Another marble lady naiad, in this case posed demurely with her foot on her water pot, used to stand in the Turner Home, the gothic mansion also on the dog-leg. This statue has been missing since the second world war, although the plinth is still there. This seems to be the version of the Nymph of the Dingle which Roscoe had copied as an illustration for the cover of his published poem.



"Does anyone know where this Turner Home sculpture is now, or what happened to it, or does anyone remember it being there, or have a photograph? Does anyone know anything about Psyche at the well and her copies? Please let us know!

"We need this information for a display on Toxteth Deer Park, for the History Detectives section at the new Museum of Liverpool. Please contact me:
clem.fisher@liverpoolmuseums.org.uk."

Chris
Clem Fisher [quoted above] mentions The Lady of the Dingle, as being one of three possible statues:

1. The one that used to be at "Gladstone Conservatory in Stanley Park"
2. The "statue now in the sculpture gallery at the Walker Art Gallery", which could be the same statue above, or a similar/ identical copy to it.
3. The statue Robert Griffiths decribed as "another marble lady naiad, in this case posed demurely with her foot on her water pot, used to stand in the Turner Home"

According to Robert Griffiths [writing in 1907] '"The Lady of The Dingle" which stood in an old alcove on the head of the promontory overlooking the Mersey. This figure stood for many years under the trees in the glen itself, and was finally moved to the grounds of the Turner Memorial Home...The figure is of plaster, and probably the work of William [or Benjamin?] Spence...which some vandel has damaged in a deplorable manner, represents a naiad sleeping, her empty urn beneath her foot...'

Robert Griffiths credits 3. [above] as being the correct one, situated in the grounds of Turner M. Home, although being constructed of 'plaster' and already 'damaged' the chances of finding it intact today would be remote? Who knows - it may turn up somewhere?


Images of the two statue designs. The RH one being favourite.

Both images from The History of the Royal and Ancient Park of Toxeth Liverpool, by Robert Griffiths.