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There are two statues of Triton, God of the Waves, on the Lowestoft Promenade. They were commissioned by Sir Morton Peto and carved by John Thomas (1813 - 1862), British sculptor and architect and were erected in 1850.
For many years I thought that Neptune (who was Triton's father) was strangling a herring, to show how hard it was to make a living from the sea, but I was wrong.
Triton, the father of mermaids and mermen and God of the waves, is holding a cornucopia that spills out the wealth of the sea. He faces the town in a symbolic gesture to show the prosperity (the cornucopia) that Sir Peto bought to Lowestoft with his buildings and the railway lines.
I prefer my herring version, even if it's wrong.
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