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War Diaries And Cigar Light Up Winston Churchill AuctionBen Hoyle, A

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  • War Diaries And Cigar Light Up Winston Churchill AuctionBen Hoyle, A

    WAR DIARIES AND CIGAR LIGHT UP WINSTON CHURCHILL AUCTIONBEN HOYLE, ARTS CORRESPONDENT

    Times Online
    May 7, 2010

    Instead, his dedication in a copy of Arms and the Covenant in October
    1938 is short, effusive and loaded with irony apparent only with
    hindsight: "To Guy Burgess, from Winston S Churchill, to confirm his
    admirable sentiments."

    The inscription offers a tantalising glimpse of the encounter
    between one of Britain's most notorious KGB spies and one of its
    greatest heroes. It is part of an extraordinary cache of Churchilliana
    amassed over 30 years by Steve Forbes, the US publishing magnate and
    politician, which is to be broken up and sold by Christie's in three
    separate sales in London and New York over the next year.

    Mr Forbes said that Churchill had been his hero "from the beginning
    of my consciousness". Christie's described it as "the most important
    and comprehensive private collection of letters and books related to
    Winston Churchill ever assembled".

    The three sales are expected to attract between £3 million and
    £5 million.

    The first-edition volume of speeches dedicated to Burgess after an
    afternoon interview has an estimate of between £12,000 and £18,000
    at the first sale in London next month.

    It will be one of around 150 lots, ranging from a baby photo from 1875
    to an unsmoked Cuban cigar given to a guest at the Hotel Bristol in
    Monte Carlo in 1963.

    Thomas Venning, director of books and manuscripts at Christie's London,
    said: "Sometimes you work on a collection like this and by the time
    you are finished with the catalogue you are sick of the sight of it,"
    he said. "With this it got more and more fun. You get to see Churchill
    as the extraordinary, eccentric, wildly enthusiastic, brilliant person
    he was."

    Mr Venning's favourites are a letter from India in 1896 -- where
    Churchill responds to Turkish massacres of Armenians by suggesting
    that the Russians take over Constantinople -- and photographs from
    the war showing him wearing "zip-up shoes".

    "It is a reminder he was a very, very unusual person. British
    20th-century politicians on the whole didn't wear bow ties, they
    didn't smoke Cuban cigars all the time, they didn't take a daily
    siesta and they did not wear zip-up clothes," he said.

    Other lots include a minute where Churchill refers to North Palestine
    as "this worthless country", and a letter to a cousin in 1902 that
    could imply a visit to a brothel. "I cannot remember the address of
    Sunny's friend, & I shall feel inclined to pay her a visit, so will
    you write without fail a discreet letter . . . with the necessary
    information."

    The biggest draw is likely to be Churchill's engagement diary for the
    Second World War, priced at between £80,000 and £120,000. Thirty
    engagement cards written by private secretaries give details of his
    appointments from September 1939 to June 1945.

    The catalogue said that they were "probably the most important
    surviving source for Churchill's daily activities during World War II".

    The diary shows how Churchill established Tuesday lunch meetings
    with the king and details his occasional moments of relaxation:
    "Football match -- Wembley Stadium 3.0pm" on October 4, 1941. A trip
    to see Arsenic and Old Lace at the theatre and weekends at Chequers
    with the heads of governments in exile.

    The card for January 1943 includes the Casablanca conference with
    President Roosevelt and Charles de Gaulle. The US President and his
    wartime emissary Harry Hopkins are referred to under the codenames
    "Don Q[uixote]" and "S[ancho] P[anza]".

    After late-night meetings and long lunches Churchill and Don Quixote
    leave for Marrakesh, stopping for a "picnic on way".
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