Maud Gonne autobiography fetches €5,200 in Yeats auction

Funds to be used for WB Yeats’s old summer home at Thoor Ballylee in south Galway

Late former  minister  Sean MacBride (right) with his mother Maud Gonne MacBride and his son Tiernan, photographed in 1948. File photograph: The Irish Times
Late former minister Sean MacBride (right) with his mother Maud Gonne MacBride and his son Tiernan, photographed in 1948. File photograph: The Irish Times

A signed first edition of Maud Gonne MacBride's autobiography fetched €5,200 at a fundraiser for poet WB Yeats's former summer home at Thoor Ballylee in south Galway.

The signed copy of MacBride's A Servant of The Queen, published in 1938, was donated by Enid McAleenan to an auction run last Sunday evening by the Yeats Thoor Ballylee Society, along with a letter written by MacBride to her late aunt Eileen.

Gonne’s letter refers to the importance of living a full, adventurous life and standing up for a “free Ireland”.

Ms McAleenan contributed the book and letter in response to an Irish Times (italics) article last week on the Yeats Thoor Ballylee Society’s campaign to restore and reopen the tower to the public.

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Both items were bought by a couple from Salthill in Galway city, who beat bids from Dublin and Washington, US.

Important heirlooms

Ms McAleenan told the auction organisers she had wondered for many years what she would do with her important heirlooms and “knew at once, upon reading the article, that this was the perfect destination, and that her aunt would be delighted”.

A total of €10,000 was raised at the auction, which was held on the rooftop of Thoor Ballylee by local auctioneer Colm Farrell - dressed as Yeats.

A first-edition set of The Complete Works of JM Synge, printed by Maunsel & Co Dublin in 1910, was among other contributions, along with a donation of Vicar Street tickets by developer Harry Crosbie.

Yeats Thoor Ballylee Society chairwoman Senator Fidelma Healy Eames paid tribute to the "power and generosity of the local community" .

“Like Maud Gonne’s advice in her letter, they are standing up for what is rightfully theirs and fighting to save Yeats’s tower and their heritage,” Senator Healy Eames said.

“All funds raised will be used to open the tower to the public during the summer season in the stark absence of State funding,”she said.

Irish-American lawyer Joseph Hassett, who gave €31,000 to the community campaign, has been invited to the reopening of Thoor Ballylee on the 150th anniversary of Yeats's birth, on June 13th.

Lorna Siggins

Lorna Siggins

Lorna Siggins is the former western and marine correspondent of The Irish Times