Frampton adopted a distinctively
Modernist style for the memorial, which comprises a high statue of Cavell in her nurse's uniform sculpted from white
Carrara marble, standing on a grey Cornish granite pedestal. The statue stands in front of the south side of a larger grey granite pylon which stands high and weighs 175 tons. The top of the block is carved into a cross and statue of a mother and child, sometimes interpreted as the
Virgin and Child. The whole memorial is elevated on three steps. On the pedestal beneath the statue of Cavell is an inscription which reads: "Edith Cavell // Brussels // Dawn // October 12th 1915 // Patriotism is not enough // I must have no hatred or // bitterness for anyone." The last three lines of the inscription quote her comment to Reverend Stirling Gahan, an Anglican chaplain who was permitted to give her Holy Communion on the night before her execution. These words were initially left off, and added in 1924 at the request of the
National Council of Women. The face of the granite block behind the statue of Cavell bears the inscription "Humanity", and higher up, below the Virgin and Child, "For King and Country". Other faces of the block bear the inscriptions, "Devotion", "Fortitude", and "Sacrifice". On the rear face of the block is a carving of a lion crushing a serpent, and higher up, the inscription, "Faithful until death". The memorial was unveiled by
Queen Alexandra on 17 March 1920. It received a
Grade II listing in 1970, and was upgraded to a Grade I listing in 2014. ==See also==