Keats's rediscovered love letters go on view in London ahead of auction at Sotheby's this June
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Keats's rediscovered love letters go on view in London ahead of auction at Sotheby's this June
The collection of eight letters includes the first letter Keats wrote to Brawne in 1819. Courtesy Sotheby's.



LONDON.- A remarkable group of eight autograph letters signed by John Keats to his fiancée, Fanny Brawne - recently recovered to their current owners after being stolen some 40 years ago - will now be offered at Sotheby’s. Ahead of their auction in New York this June, the letters will travel to London, where they will go on public exhibition at Sotheby’s New Bond Street, between 11th to 15th May. The occasion marks a major homecoming for the letters, which were first sold by Sotheby’s London in 1885. They will be offered at auction at Sotheby’s New York this June with an estimate of $1.5–2.5 million.

The letters, which were recovered in New York this year, form part of a larger body of approximately 37 written by Keats to Brawne between 1819 and 1820, composed during their courtship and engagement. Among them is the earliest known letter Keats wrote to Brawne, dating from July 1819, in which he opens with the tender confession that “the morning is the only proper time for me to write to a beautiful Girl whom I love so much.” In the same letter, he pleads for reassurance in a way that captures the intensity of their bond, asking her to console him with words “rich as a draught of poppies.”

Originally preserved by Brawne herself, the correspondence remained in her possession until her death in 1865, after which it passed to her children. The letters were then sold at Sotheby’s in 1885, before eventually being acquired by Helen Hay. They then descended through the Whitney family, and were kept at Greentree in Manhasset, Long Island.

In the 1980s, the volume was thought to have been stolen and remained untraced for almost 40 years. It resurfaced in 2025 when it was brought to a rare book dealer in Manhattan. While the contents of Keats’s letters to Brawne have long been known through 19th‑century published transcripts, this substantial grouping of the originals had been presumed lost. After being returned to the estate of Betsey Cushing Whitney on 20 April by New York District Attorney Alvin Bragg, the collection will now be offered at Sotheby’s New York, where it will lead an auction of Important Books and Manuscripts on 25 June.

John Keats and Fanny Brawne

“I almost wish we were butterflies, and liv’d but three summer days — three such days with you I could fill with more delight than fifty common years could ever contain.” – John Keats, July 1, 1819.

John Keats and Fanny Brawne shared a profound attachment during the final years of Keats’s life. Their relationship, beginning in 1818, was conducted largely through letters, in which the emotional and poetic depth for which Keats is celebrated is clearly present. In one of these letters, he reflects on the “pains and torments” of their separation and the “ecstasies” of their happiest days, a testament to the emotional extremes that shaped both his life and his art.

Though constrained by the fragility of Keats’s health – he was already suffering from tuberculosis – their correspondence captures remarkable intimacy and devotion. In another letter, he reassures Brawne of the constancy of his feelings, writing, “My dear Girl I love you ever and ever and without reserve,” before expanding on the depth of that love in language that grows more ardent with each phrase.

The letters, which span the most intense, formative period of their relationship, include expressions of longing, reflections on mortality, and declarations of love that have become some of the most celebrated in English literature. In one of the later letters, Keats tells Brawne that even the simplest goodnight from her would be cherished enough to “put under my pillow,” while another contains his famous meditation on beauty and legacy, written as he confronted the possibility of an early death.

The relationship inspired the 2009 film Bright Star, starring Ben Whishaw and Abbie Cornish and directed by multi‑Academy Award–winning filmmaker Jane Campion.

Recovery of the Keats–Brawne Letters

The larger group of 35 letters, consigned by Brawne’s son Herbert Lindon, were sold at Sotheby’s in 1885. This group of eight was eventually acquired by Helen Hay and passed by descent through the Whitney family, ultimately becoming part of the collection of Betsey Cushing Whitney. The initial sale was famously objected to by Oscar Wilde, among many others, who penned the poem "On the Sale By Auction of Keats’ Love Letters" to mark the occasion.

Their reemergence after decades is a remarkable story of loss and recovery. The letters were identified as missing through estate inventories, which recorded their presence in 1982 and their absence by 1989. Decades later, they resurfaced when they were presented to Manhattan book dealers for potential sale. The extraordinary Keats letters – along with several other works – were quickly flagged as suspicious, leading to further investigation and, ultimately, the recovery of the collection. The letters were then returned to the Whitney estate on 20 April, in coordination with the New York District Attorney’s office.










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