Yorkshire Post

Unique Hughes volume bought for £12,000

Academics in Huddersfie­ld have assembled the world’s most extensive collection of rare Ted Hughes poems after buying a handwritte­n volume for £11,000. Chris Burn reports.

- Email: chris.burn@jpress.co.uk Twitter: @chrisburn_post

ACADEMICS FROM the University of Huddersfie­ld have revealed they believe they have created the most extensive collection of rare Ted Hughes books in the world – with the latest addition to the archive a one-off handwritte­n volume of poetry purchased for almost £12,000 at auction.

A Bundle of Birds, an editionof-one bound by Hughes’s son in 1982 and given to the sister of the late Poet Laureate from Yorkshire as a present, was purchased for £11,875 in March, with the university now revealed as the buyer.

The book, which contains 23 poems, has joined more than 90 rare limited-edition Hughes volumes being collected in a new archive at the University of Huddersfie­ld, which is due to be officially opened this autumn.

Dr Steve Ely, who directs the Ted Hughes Network at the university and has written a book about the poet’s links to South Yorkshire, said researcher­s have quickly establishe­d what is a “unique archive and a unique repository for research” after beginning a global search for rare editions last year.

“There may be private collectors who have it all but we think we have the most publicly,” he said.

Dr Ely said A Bundle of Birds is the most expensive item in the collection to date. “We went for that because it is unique. It is a simply a one-off.”

Hughes was one of the great literary figures of the 20th century and was born in Mytholmroy­d, growing up in Mexborough. He later married Sylvia Plath and was Poet Laureate for 24 years until his death in 1998.

THE ATMOSPHERE grew tense as the price rose higher and higher, quickly surpassing five figures. But listening over the phone to the sale at the world-renowned London auction house Bonhams, Professor Jessica Malay held her nerve to secure what has now become the jewel in the crown of a university collection of rare Ted Hughes books for a cost of £11,875.

For the substantia­l outlay, Professor Malay had won a completely unique book from Hughes: A Bundle of

Birds contains 23 poems and was handwritte­n by Hughes and specially bound by his son Nicholas in 1982 as a gift for the Yorkshire poet’s sister Olwyn.

The book, which was won at auction in March, has become the latest addition to the University of Huddersfie­ld’s archive of rare, precious and fascinatin­g editions of the works of Ted Hughes. Academics at the university now believe the collection, which has more than 90 items, is the most comprehens­ive public collection of Hughes’s limited editions in the world and it will officially be launched in the autumn.

Dr Steve Ely, who directs the Ted Hughes Network at the university, says researcher­s led by Professor Malay have quickly establishe­d what is a “unique archive and a unique repository for research” after beginning a global search for rare editions of his work last year. “There may be private collectors who have it all but we think we have the most publicly,” he says.

Hughes is one of Yorkshire’s most famous sons, a literary giant of the 20th century who was married to Sylvia Plath and was made Poet Laureate in 1984.

Born in Mytholmroy­d in 1930, from the age of eight Hughes was raised in Mexborough in South Yorkshire and spent much of his childhood exploring nature in the Yorkshire countrysid­e – something that remained an influence on his poetry that took him to Cambridge and America.

Hughes, who was Poet Laureate from 1984 until his death in 1998, was published by the major company Faber & Faber, but also issued much of his writing in what were often exquisitel­y designed and illustrate­d editions by small presses and publishing companies – the objects the University of Huddersfie­ld is now engaged in collecting.

Dr Ely, who wrote Ted Hughes’s South Yorkshire: Made in Mexborough,

says the new collection builds on the work of Ted Hughes Network that was founded in late 2016 with the intention of establishi­ng itself as a centre of excellence for Hughes-related teaching and research.

“We realised in terms of his limited editions there didn’t seem to be anywhere in the world that had everything,” he says.

“We have got probably the most comprehens­ive collection of Ted Hughes’s limited editions and small presses in the world. We started collecting less than a year ago so it is very new.

“We know one or two people who are closely connected with Ted Hughes and the Hughes family and alert us to a lot of these things. Jessica Malay is connected with rare book dealers and they alert us when things go up for sale or auction.”

He says when the university became aware that A Bundle of Birds was due to become available at auction, money was made available from the university’s research fund to bid for it.

“With A Bundle of Birds, we went for that because it is unique. It is a simply a one-off,” he says. “Jessica Malay secured some special funding. Before this, the most we have paid for a single volume was about £1,500. Some of the things, if they come up, we will have to break the bank – there things that come up so rarely and are produced in such limited editions.

“We have got 90 per cent of the existing limited editions. Some were published in runs of just 50 and were quite expensive at the time. Professor Malay has been the real driver. We wouldn’t have this collection if it wasn’t for Jessica.”

He says the money being put in by the university should prove to be a good investment by building up a globally renowned archive. Dr Ely is putting together a research proposal to examine the themes of Hughes’s limited-edition works which he hopes will shed new light on his approach to poetry.

“By acquiring these limited editions, we are looking at the heart of Hughes’s creative processes.

“We hope that academics will become aware we have got this collection and I hope the Hughes interested public in South Yorkshire and the Upper Colne Valley will come and see it and that as a university we start to further develop our reputation as a centre for excellence on Hughes and more people will want to come and do MAs and PhDs.”

Ahead of the official launch of the archive later this year, a group taking a final-year module named Public Humanities have curated an exhibition titled Ted Hughes: You Are Who You Choose To Be at the University’s Heritage Quay archives centre which runs until July.

Dr Ely says the pace of acquisitio­ns is slowing down as it becomes something of a waiting game to get hold of items held in private collection­s.

There is one Hughes book in particular that the university is keen to secure – a 1990 publicatio­n of 20 poems entitled Capriccio.

“This is the apotheosis of small press and limited editions and was done with his long-time collaborat­or, the artist Leonard Baskin,” Ely explains. “It includes 20 poems from Hughes and 20 illustrati­ons from Baskin.

“The book is about a yard wide and two-foot across bound in expensive leather. It was published in a limited edition of 50 and sold to fine art market collectors, mostly in the US.

“We are told that is likely to be the most difficult one to acquire because of its rarity. It is going to cost probably close to £20,000.”

Among the items already in the collection is a giant version of his book

Cave Birds that was illustrate­d by Baskin and commission­ed by the Ilkley Literature Festival in 1975, as well as complete sets of works from Hughes published with the Morrigu Press and the Rainbow Press.

Efforts are even under way into acquiring copies of the Mexborough Grammar School magazine The Don &

Dearne, in which his earliest published writings appear.

Dr Ely says he has loved the poetry of Hughes since coming across it as a schoolboy. “There is something about Hughes’s poetry which is authentic, in the sense he wrote exactly how he wanted without any regard for fashion. There is a power in the writing that enables you to gain insights into human nature. There is vast erudition in Ted Hughes.

“This guy has digested the whole of English literature and the power of the canon is experience­d through Ted Hughes.”

We realised there didn’t seem to be anywhere that had everything. We have now probably got the most comprehens­ive collection of Ted Hughes’s limited editions in the world. Steve Ely, director of the Ted Hughes Network at the University of Huddersfie­ld.

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 ?? PICTURES: JAMES HARDISTY. ?? ACQUISITIO­N: Main picture, Steve Ely with the latest addition to the collection, A Bundle of Birds by the poet Ted Hughes, above.
PICTURES: JAMES HARDISTY. ACQUISITIO­N: Main picture, Steve Ely with the latest addition to the collection, A Bundle of Birds by the poet Ted Hughes, above.
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