A rare collection of letters written by Charlotte
Bronte is to return to the writer's West Yorkshire home after they were bought
at auction for £185,000.
The recently
discovered letters, which were expected to fetch between £100,000 and £150,000,
were bought by The Bronte Society at Sotheby's in London.
They will be
returned to the Jane Eyre author's former home in Haworth, which is now the
Bronte Parsonage Museum.
The six letters
were written between 1832 and 1854. Bronte died in 1855.
School friend
Ann Dinsdale,
collections manager at the museum, said: "These are amongst the most
significant Bronte letters to come to light in decades.
"They
belong in Haworth and we are delighted that both scholars and members of the
public will now have the opportunity to study and enjoy them, either here at
the Bronte Parsonage Museum, or through our online resources."
Bronte's
closest confidante Ellen Nussey, who she met as a pupil at Roe Head school in
1831, is the recipient of all but one of the six letters.
The letters
were among a collection loaned by Nussey to Bronte's biographer Elizabeth
Gaskell in 1957.
They were
discovered in a first edition copy of Gaskell's two-volume biography, from a
private collection, which was also included in the auction lot.
The Bronte
Society were able to buy the lot following a £198,450 donation from the
National Heritage Memorial Fund.
Source: BBC
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