The Press and Journal (Inverness, Highlands, and Islands)

Bronte Society to bring Charlotte’s ‘little book’ home

Literature: Writer’ s teenage work sold at auction

- BY ALEX GREEN

The Bronte Society has purchased an “extraordin­ary” book written by one of the famed literary siblings at auction for just over £511,000.

The book, by a teenage Charlotte Bronte, went under the hammer at the Drouot auction house in Paris, fetching €600,000 (£511,885).

The society’s success – backed by its president, Dame Judi Dench – will see the book returned to the Bronte family home, now the Bronte Parsonage Museum, in West Yorkshire.

Auctioneer­s had predicted that the book, which features three handwritte­n stories, could sell for up to €800,000.

Charlotte, the oldest of the sisters, wrote one of her “little books” in 1830 when she was 14, with five others known to have survived.

The sale came after a four-week campaign and support from the National Heritage Memorial Fund, the John R Murray Charitable Trust and the Pilgrim Trust, among other organisati­ons.

The society also raised more than £85,000 through a Crowdfunde­r campaign.

Executive director of the Bronte Society Kitty Wright said: “We were determined to do everything we could to bring back this extraordin­ary ‘little book’ to the Bronte Parsonage Museum and now can’t quite believe that it will in fact be coming home to where it was written 189 years ago.”

Principal curator at the Bronte Parsonage Museum, Ann Dinsdale, said: “That this unique manuscript will be back in Haworth is an absolute highlight of my 30yearswor­kingatthe museum.

“Charlotte wrote this miniscule magazine for the toy soldiers she and her siblings played with and, as we walk through the same rooms they did, it seems immensely fitting that it is coming home and we would like to say an enormous thank-you to everyone who made it possible.”

Titled The Young Men’s Magazine, its existence came to light in 2011 when it was auctioned at Sotheby’s but the Bronte Parsonage Museum was outbid.

It had been in private hands since it left the Brontes’ home following Charlotte’s death aged 38 in 1855.

 ??  ?? EXTRAORDIN­ARY: The miniscule magazine created by one of the famed literary siblings fetched £511k in Paris
EXTRAORDIN­ARY: The miniscule magazine created by one of the famed literary siblings fetched £511k in Paris

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