ppl. a. [f. STATUE v. and sb. + -ED.]
1. Furnished or ornamented with statues or statuary.
1806. W. Taylor, in Robberds, Mem., II. 144. The stately yew-hedge walks, and vased and statued terraces.
1855. Tennyson, Daisy, xvi. I stood among the silent statues, And statued pinnacles, mute as they.
1870. Disraeli, Lothair, lxix. An arcadian square flooded with light and resonant with the fall of statued fountains.
2. Represented in a statue or in statuary.
1839. Bailey, Festus (1852), 243. The statued satyrs seemed to grin and jibber neath her eye.
1850. Blackie, Æschylus, I. 31. And the statued forms that look from their seats With a cold smile serenely.
1875. Browning, Aristoph. Apol., 338. Free to stand Pedestaled mid the Muses temple-throng, A statued service, laureled, lyre in hand.
3. Statue-like.
1820. J. H. Wiffen, Aonian Hours (ed. 2), 108. The statued clouds scarce err Over the marbled skies.