Brontë auction is on hold as group tries to keep library intact
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Brontë auction is on hold as group tries to keep library intact
A birthday message from Emily Brontė to her sister Anne, part of a recently surfaced private library of rare books and manuscripts that had been set for auction at Sotheby’s. Sotheby’s via The New York Times.

by Jennifer Schuessler



NEW YORK (NYT NEWS SERVICE).- Sotheby’s has agreed to delay the much-publicized auction of a “lost” library containing rare manuscripts by Robert Burns, Walter Scott and the Brontės, as a consortium of British libraries and museums has begun an effort to raise $21 million to preserve it for the nation.

That private library, the Honresfield Library, was assembled in the 19th century and had gone virtually unseen since the 1930s. The news last month that the library had resurfaced and would be sold at a series of auctions starting in July had drawn excited reactions from scholars and fans, as well as alarm that cultural treasures could be dispersed anew into inaccessible private collections.

In a statement on Thursday announcing the acquisition effort, the group, Friends of National Libraries, said its hope was to buy the collection whole and then allocate it to institutions around Britain “for the benefit of the public.”

“A private library of English literature of such significance has not been placed on the open market for many decades,” nor “is ever likely to appear again,” the statement said. “A major and coordinated effort is needed to save this astonishingly important collection.”

Joining together in the effort are eight institutions: the British Library, the National Library of Scotland, the Bodleian Libraries at Oxford, the Brotherton Library at the University of Leeds and house museums dedicated to Jane Austen, Walter Scott, Robert Burns and the Brontės.

The Honresfield Library was assembled starting in the 1890s by Alfred and William Law, two self-made mill owners who grew up less than 20 miles from the Brontė home in Haworth (which is now the Brontė Parsonage Museum). After their deaths, the collection passed to a nephew, who granted access to select scholars, and had facsimiles made of some items.

But after the nephew’s death in 1939, the originals fell out of public view. By the 1940s, the collection had become “well-nigh untraceable,” as a scholar put it at the time.




In a statement, Gabriel Heaton, Sotheby’s specialist in English literature and historical manuscripts, called the proposed acquisition “a fitting tribute to the Law brothers’ voracious literary interests and their family’s excellent care of this material for over a century.” Sotheby’s would not disclose the time frame of the auction delay, which it said had been agreed to by the two parties.

At the heart of the library is what the consortium described as an “astonishing set of manuscripts” by the Brontės, much of it “unseen for 80 years and never properly examined.” They include an 1844 handwritten manuscript of Emily Brontė’s poems with pencil edits by Charlotte, which had carried an auction estimate of $1.1 million to $1.7 million — a near record for a modern English literature manuscript, had it been achieved.

There are also seven miniature books by Charlotte, some 25 letters by Charlotte and a diary-style birthday note written by Emily to her sister Anne, complete with a tiny drawing of Emily at her writing desk.

Other highlights of the collection, which were recently on view at Sotheby’s in New York, include the complete working manuscript of Scott’s 1817 novel “Rob Roy” (estimate $560,000 to $840,000) and the manuscript compendium known as Burns’ “First Commonplace Book” from 1783-1785 (estimate $420,000 to $700,000), which contains some of his earliest literary writings.

The consortium’s announcement also highlighted “two hugely significant letters” by Jane Austen to her sister Cassandra, including one written on the eve of a ball, where she anticipated the end of a love affair. Only three early Austen letters are preserved in any British national collection, the group noted, with the surviving bulk instead held at the Morgan Library in New York City.

In recent years, auctions of British literary artifacts have become the focus of high-profile fundraising campaigns aimed at keeping them at home. In 2013, Jane Austen’s House Museum acquired a turquoise ring once worn by the author, after raising $236,000 to match the price paid at auction by the American singer Kelly Clarkson. And in 2019, the Brontė Society raised nearly $800,000 to buy one of Charlotte’s miniature books that it had previously escaped to France.

Richard Ovenden, the head of the Bodleian Libraries, said a similar national resolve was urgently needed now.

“Literature and the creative use of the English language and its dialects have been among the great contributions made by the people of these islands,” he said in the consortium’s announcement. “Now is a time to act together, to preserve and share some of the greatest examples of this heritage.”

This article originally appeared in The New York Times.











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