#1 out of 2
crime19h ago
John Keats’s love letters returned to owner after being stolen in the 1980s
- Eight Keats letters to Fanny Brawne were returned to the Whitney heirs after being stolen in the 1980s.
- The letters are valued at about $2 million and were part of a gilt morocco‑bound portfolio.
- Manhattan’s antiquities trafficking unit led the seizure and recovery process.
- The case involved other rare items, including Wilde letters and a 1939 copy of Finnegans Wake.
- The recovered collection was linked to a 2025 Manhattan discovery and subsequent sale attempts.
- Authorities seized the books and later authorized transfer to Whitney heirs.
- The return is framed as a broader win against illicit trafficking of cultural treasures.
- Keats’s letters reveal his romantic longing and his relationship with Brawne.
- Brawne bequeathed the letters to her children, who later sold them in 1885.
- Oscar Wilde’s sonnet, On the Sale By Auction of Keats’ Love Letters, was inspired by their sale.
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