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Mahatma’s letters, rare copy of Constitution sell big at Sotheby’s

New Delhi, December 16
An anonymous bidder bought the letter written by Mahatma Gandhi in 1922 to Rabindranath Tagore's eldest brother Dwijendranath at seven times its pre-sale estimate along with another while a rare copy of the Indian Constitution sold for nearly eight times its offered price to a private collector at a Sotheby's sale in London.

"The buyer of the Constitution copy is a private collector while an anonymous buyer bought the two letters related to Gandhi. Therefore, two separate buyers," a Sotheby's official said.

The letter written by Gandhi from Sabarmati Jail to Dwijendranath fetched 49,250 pounds at the Sotheby's sale of English Literature, History, Children's Books and Illustrations on Wednesday. It had an estimate of 5,000-7,000 pounds.

After being lodged in the jail in Ahmedabad, Gandhi wrote the letter, rejoicing that his incarceration had come at a time when he felt fully prepared and expressing joy that "India's wonderful calm at this moment is significant of her strength". He asked Dwijendranath to send messages of support to Young India journal in the two-page letter, written in pencil.

The limited first edition of the Constitution on stiff Whatman paper and with an estimate of 4,000-5,000 pounds sold for 39,650 pounds (hammer price with buyer's premium).

The copy is signed by President Rajendra Prasad in English and Devnagari on the authentication page and also by Jawaharlal Nehru and dated 1950 on the front free end papers. Another letter in which Gandhi sends condolences to an unknown friend in 1922 on hearing from Charlie (Andrews) of the death of his or her mother, but asking "should not birth and death be the same though" sold for 5,625 pounds. It had an estimate of 3,000-4,000 pounds. Last month, Gandhian author Giriraj Kishore had approached UPA chairperson Sonia Gandhi to stop the auction of the two letters. — PTI

Buyers anonymous

  • The Mahatma’s letter to Rabindranath Tagore's eldest brother Dwijendranath written from Sabarmati Jail fetched 49,250 pounds as against an estimate of 5,000-7,000 pounds
  • In the second letter written in 1922, Gandhi sends condolences to an unknown friend on hearing from Charlie (Andrews) of the death of his or her mother, but asks “should not birth and death be the same though”. It was bought for 5,625 pounds. The buyer of both the letters is anonymous
  • A limited first edition of the Indian Constitution was sold for 39,650 pounds, nearly eight times its offered price, to a private collector

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