The du Maurier Collection
Unknown poems by Daphne du Maurier found hidden
Auction – Saturday 27 April 2019
Comprising over 300 lots of personal correspondence, manuscripts, photographs and personal effects relating to Daphne du Maurier, her husband Lieutenant-General Frederick “Boy” Browning and the du Maurier family.
The personal collection of the Late Maureen Baker-Munton
View Catalogue
Viewing Details
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Thursday 25 April 2019 9.00am - 5.00pm
Friday 26 April 2019 9.00am - 6.00pm
Saturday 27 April 2019 9.00am - 1.00pm
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The sale commences at 1.00pm
Location: Rowley Fine Art – Ely
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Live online bidding will be available for this auction
Unknown poems by Daphne du Maurier found hidden
The du Maurier Collection
Two previously unknown poems by literary giant Daphne du Maurier have been discovered hidden inside a photograph frame.
They are thought to date from the late 1920s at the time the Jamaica Inn and Rebecca author was about 20 – and one is titled ‘Song of the Happy Prostitute’.
Auctioneer Roddy Lloyd was cataloguing an archive of her letters and pictures when something made him look more closely at the small photograph.
It depicted du Maurier in a swimming costume standing on rocks – quite possibly in Cornwall – and was contained in a five inch high blue leather frame.
He withdrew the photograph and then discovered the carefully-folded sheet of A4 paper with a poem on each side.
The title of the pencil-written poem ‘Song of the Happy Prostitute’ accurately sums up its meaning, a prostitute telling how she enjoys her work.
It includes:
“Why do they picture me as tired and old... selling myself with sorrow, just to gain a few dull pence to shield me from the rain”
On the reverse, in fountain pen, are untitled stanzas covering subjects such as loneliness and include:
“When I was ten, I thought the greatest bliss
would be to rest all day upon hot sand under a burning sun...
time has slipped by, and finally I've known
The lure of beaches under exotic skies
and find my dreams to be misguided lies
For God! how dull it is to rest alone”
The archive is being sold by Rowley’s of Ely, Cambridgeshire, on 27th April, and spans more than 40 years of correspondence between du Maurier and her close friend Maureen Baker-Munton.
It was consigned by Baker-Munton’s son Kristen and contains hundreds of lots including previously unseen photos of the Queen and Prince Philip in their early days together.
Auctioneer Roddy said: “It was by pure luck that I looked in the back of the frame and I am still not quite sure what made me do it.
“The pose of du Maurier in the photograph reminded me of Rolls-Royce’s Spirit of Ecstasy and I opened it up to take the photo out – and the piece of paper was behind it.”
“It’s always exciting when you come across something like this – it’s an auctioneer’s dream.”
“This archive has thrown up many surprises and this latest discovery I’m sure will interest du Maurier’s fans.”
“We think it dates from the 1920s when du Maurier was around 20. The poems are not juvenile ones of a child, nor the polished products of her later years.”