An oil painting by the poet’s brother Jack, “The Sunset Belongs to You,” was the top seller on auction day, realizing £212,500 ($284,000). A writing bureau used extensively by W. B. during his later years fetched £187,500 ($251,000), well eclipsing the £30,000 high estimate. An Antonio Mancini chalk portrait of the poet from 1907 also did far better than anticipated, selling to UK art dealer Philip Mould for £112,500 ($150,000); it had been estimated at just £8,000–12,000. A rare pastel by W. B. depicting the library at Coole, the home of his friend Lady Gregory, sold for £50,000 ($67,000).
A lot described by Gould as “perhaps the scruffiest item in the sale,” an early sketchbook used by W. B. and later by his “paper-hungry father,” and containing poetic fragments by Yeats as well as lecture notes and reading lists, found a buyer at £35,000 ($47,000). The poet’s Regency-period chessboard, with a set of Chinese ivory pieces from the later part of the century, realized £11,250 ($15,000). An early seventeenth-century wooden chest, used per family tradition by W. B. for storage and known in the family as the “Monk’s Chest,” fetched £9,375 ($12,500), while a portable burr walnut writing desk used by Lily went for a steal at £750 ($1,000).
Of items that may be of particular interest to readers of this magazine, a collection of bookplates printed at the Dun Emer and Cuala Presses made £3,750 ($5,025), and thirty printing blocks, some containing illustrations by Jack, sold for £2,750 ($3,700).
About twenty-five lots went unsold on auction day. That included a collection of 133 letters between W. B. and his friend and lover Olivia Shakespear (estimated at £250,000–350,000), which Sotheby’s had described prior to the auction as “of the highest importance to literary history and … an exceptional rarity on the open market.” A number of Jack’s drawings for Cuala Press broadsides and cards and a few works by John Butler Yeats, including the watercolor, “Woman Reading,” also failed to sell.
The ongoing Yeats exhibition at the NLI has attracted more than 700,000 visitors since 2006. Collins said that many of the new acquisitions will be added to the exhibition as it is redeveloped during the current major renovation of the library’s facilities.