Dublin's National Library paid $1.5 million for a signed, handwritten manuscript of the longest chapter of James Joyce's ``Ulysses.''
Published:
18 December 2000 y., Monday
Dublin's National Library paid $1.5 million for a signed, handwritten manuscript of the longest chapter of James Joyce's ``Ulysses.''
The ``Circe'' episode accounts for nearly one-fifth of the 1922 epic. It describes the nightmarish journey of the book's two central characters, Leopold Bloom and Stephen Dedalus, through the Dublin underworld.
The manuscript sold at Christie's auction house on Thursday for $346,000 more than the pre-sale estimate. The $1,546,000 sale price includes the auction house's commission.The manuscript had been kept in a leather slipcase for nearly 80 years and belonged to an unidentified relative of John Quinn, an American lawyer who had once helped Joyce.
Šaltinis:
dailynews.netscape.com
Copying, publishing, announcing any information from the News.lt portal without written permission of News.lt editorial office is prohibited.
The most popular articles
Amateur detective Doreen Bell is back
more »
100 years of Magic is the title of the parades and celebrations that will mark Walt Disney's centennial.
more »
Memo to Latvian music fans: Maybe next year.
more »
Paul McCartney, John Mellencamp, The Who and Macy Gray are among the performers scheduled to participate in a concert to benefit the victims and rescue workers affected by the attacks on the World Trade Center
more »
Iļģi, the popular "post-folk" music group from Latvia, has scheduled a September tour of several East Coast and Midwest cities in the United States.
more »
``BrainStorm`` to warm up audience before ``Depeche Mode`` concerts in Baltic countries
more »
The risk takers. The innovators. The believers. The 5th Annual Webby Awards Winners.
more »
Crystal Palace FC are in talks with Walt Disney World over a lucrative deal to become the entertainment giant's official football club.
more »
Gillian Anderson will soon be another ex in The X-Files.
more »
Cher can't figure out why everyone's so crazy about reality TV shows.
more »