Rome

Stormy Peaks: a record-breaking first edition. Thoughts and reflections from late June

Brontë’s novel brings her the greatest honour a writer can receive; Lucio Battisti surprises with his paintings

by Teresa Scarale

Lucio Battisti, Dipinto su tela per LA CANZONE DELLA TERRA, 1971

3' min read

Translated by AI
Versione italiana

3' min read

Translated by AI
Versione italiana

At 1,206,500 pounds, or if you prefer 1,399,540 euros, 1,592,580 dollars, a first edition of *Wuthering Heights* by Emily Brontë (1818–1848), which on 30 June 2026 earned its author the auction record for a female writer and for a literary work from the nineteenth century (unlike Emerald Fennell’s film – starring Margot Robbie and Jacob Elordi – which, by contrast, struggled at the box office). Published in 1847, a year before Brontë’s death, the three volumes are still preserved in their original publisher’s cloth binding and come from the very same historic house that housed them shortly after their publication. The auction house, Christie’s, has announced that no complete copy in its original cloth binding has appeared at auction since 1908.

Curiously, the lot was not part of a specific auction dedicated to book art and manuscripts, but rather to ‘The Exceptional Sale: Masterworks Across Cultures’, a mixed sale comprising 53 lots (total proceeds of £11,777.40, 11 unsold lots) categorised by type of object and cultural provenance; indeed, the evening’s top lot was an ancient Egyptian statue of a couple from the Fifth Dynasty, dating from 2,400–2,300 years ago (£3,710,000 realised). The record in the ‘Wuthering Heights’ catalogue, however, went to the second-placed lot. Also worth noting was the success of items that belonged to Winston Churchill, all of which were sold at excellent premiums, and a couple of delightful Fabergé pieces: a glittery bunny and a gold-plated silver tea set.

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Prima edizione di «Cime tempestose (Wuthering Heights)» di Emily Brontë

Why did *Wuthering Heights* break records?

It is one of the cult classics of world literature, long celebrated for its ‘unmistakable atmosphere’ and the ‘wild intensity of its characters’. Over the years, its Gothic spirit has permeated popular culture, becoming the subject of films, songs and even comedies. It is one of the most widely studied novels in the English-speaking world. Upon its publication, its uniqueness unsettled early reviewers, who compared it to the more conventional *Jane Eyre* by Emily Brontë’s elder sister, Charlotte. For the Pre-Raphaelite painter and poet Dante Gabriel Rossetti (1828–1882), this text centred on an obsessive love was “a devil of a book, an incredible monster”. For Virginia Woolf, it was the result of a “gigantic ambition”: that of contemplating “a world torn apart by immense disorder and […] piecing it back together in a book”.

The first print run of *Wuthering Heights* was probably just 250 copies. Of these, copies preserved in their original publisher’s binding are extremely rare, whilst those bound entirely in cloth are the rarest of all. Moreover, these copies were ‘full of misprints’, as Charlotte Brontë observed: for example, in the copy that has just been sold, the page number is incorrect.

In Italia, Lucio Battisti’s paintings (and lyrics) prove a hit at auction

Well further south of the English Channel, other thoughts and other words took centre stage at the auction at Finarte’s memorabilia auction in Rome (26 June), raising a total of over 200,000 euros. The star of the session was Lucio Battisti, with letters he wrote to his mother in his youth: taken together, all the lots of letters fetched more than 35,000 euros. But what came as a surprise was Battisti’s secret artistic side – he was also a painter.

Lucio Battisti, Olio su tela per LA MACCHINA DEL TEMPO, 1974

The top lot of the entire auction was the painting on canvas ‘La canzone della terra’ from 1971 (24,130 against an estimate of 8,000–10,000 euros), which had hung in the artist’s parents’ home for many years before being exhibited at the 2011 exhibition in Rome ‘Battisti, the Stroke of Emotions’. Created on the reverse of a tapestry, this multicoloured work has a faintly expressionist feel, reflecting the singer-songwriter’s creative impulses. Also sold were: ‘La macchina del tempo’ (1974), painted on fruit crates reassembled around the mechanism of an old clock (€8,255); ‘Respirando’ (1976) (€6,350); ‘Sognando e risognando’ from 1971 for 5,715 euros and ‘Prigioniero del mondo’ from 1968 (4,445 euros).

From Dalla to D’Annunzio

Still on the subject of lyrics, someone has purchased the original manuscript of ‘Canzone’ by Lucio Dalla, one of his most beloved songs after ‘Caruso’ (7,620 euros). What makes it particularly interesting from a collector’s point of view is a significant textual variation, which was subsequently toned down in the final version of 1996.

Lucio Dalla. Canzone, 1996. Lotto venduto a € 7.620

Finally, on the day before (25 June) the auction of ‘Books, Autographs and Manuscripts”, also held at Finarte Rome, saw the Vittoriale degli Italiani acquire the correspondence between Gabriele d’Annunzio and his dear friend Giovanni Rizzo, comprising 83 handwritten documents – letters, notes and autographed envelopes, some of which are unpublished – addressed by the Vate to the police officer whom Mussolini sent to Gardone Riviera in 1923 with the official task of investigating a jewellery theft, but with the real aim of keeping the poet under surveillance. Over the years, the relationship developed into a friendship, and D’Annunzio went so far as to describe that bond as ‘far more delicate than love’.

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