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・ The Sleeper Awakes
・ The Sleepers (Chicago band)
・ The Sleepers (New Hampshire)
・ The Sleepers (San Francisco band)
・ The Sleeping
・ The Sleeping and the Dead
・ The Sleeping Beauty (ballet)
・ The Sleeping Beauty (film)
・ The Sleeping Beauty (Live in Israel)
・ The Sleeping Beauty (novel)
・ The Sleeping Beauty Quartet
・ The Sleeping Car
・ The Sleeping Car Murders
・ The Sleeping Cardinal
・ The Sleeping Child
The Sleeping Children
・ The Sleeping City
・ The Sleeping Clergyman
・ The Sleeping Dictionary
・ The Sleeping Dictionary (novel)
・ The Sleeping Father
・ The Sleeping Giant
・ The Sleeping Girl of Turville
・ The Sleeping Gypsy
・ The Sleeping House
・ The Sleeping Lady
・ The Sleeping Mountain
・ The Sleeping Place of the Stars
・ The Sleeping Prince
・ The Sleeping Prince (fairy tale)


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The Sleeping Children : ウィキペディア英語版
The Sleeping Children

''The Sleeping Children'' is a marble sculpture by Francis Chantrey. The statue depicts Ellen-Jane and Marianne Robinson asleep in each other's arms on a bed. The statue was commissioned by the mother of the two children, also named Ellen-Jane Robinson, whose daughters had died in 1813 and 1814.
The statue was placed in the south east corner of Lichfield Cathedral in 1817 where it remains today. The work is considered to be one of Chantrey's finest works and one of the greatest works of English sculpture during the period owing to its beauty, simplicity and grace.
==Subject==

The sculpture depicts the two daughters of Ellen-Jane Robinson (née Woodhouse) lying asleep on a bed in each other's arms. The tragic story depicted by the sculpture begins in 1812 when Ellen-Jane’s husband the clergyman Reverend William Robinson, who had recently become a prebendary of Lichfield Cathedral contracted tuberculosis and died. Reverend William Robinson was in his thirties at the time of his death and left his wife with their two daughters.〔
In 1813 Ellen-Jane and her daughter, Ellen-Jane were on a trip in Bath. During the trip the daughter's nightdress caught fire while she was preparing for bed and she died of the burns she received. The following year the younger daughter, Marianne, sickened and died while they were in London.〔 Within three years Ellen-Jane had lost her entire family and in her distress she commissioned Francis Chantrey to secure a likeness of her lost children.〔
During a meeting with Chantrey, Ellen-Jane expressed to him a clear idea of what she wanted. She told Chantrey of how in the past she had watched as her daughters fell asleep in each other's arms and this is how she wanted them represented.〔 She had also taken inspiration from Thomas Banks’ Boothby Monument in St Oswald's Church, Ashbourne. The statue depicts the daughter of Sir Brooke Boothby who had died during childhood. Chantrey visited this monument and then returned to his home to make a model of his proposed sculpture.〔

抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)
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