A statue of military historian Samuel Eliot Morison by Penelope Jencks is installed along Boston's Commonwealth Avenue Mall, in the U.S. state of Massachusetts.
The 1982 bronze sculpture, set atop a sculpted granite boulder, depicts Morison holding binoculars.
Below his feet, embedded in the boulder, are bronze casts of crabs, shells, and starfish.
Etched into a smaller rock beside the boulder is inscribed his counsel to young writers: ”Dream dreams, then write them aye, but live them first.” The work was surveyed as part of the Smithsonian Institution's "Save Outdoor Sculpture!"
[1] This article about a sculpture in Massachusetts is a stub.