The archive of letters from Cohen to Marianne
Ihlen chronicles their 1960s love affair and the blossoming of
Cohen's career from struggling poet to famous musician.
The top letter, in which Cohen wrote in December 1960 about
being "alone with the vast dictionaries of language," fetched
$56,250 compared to an original high estimate of $10,000.
A 1964 letter, in which Cohen wrote "I am famous but empty,"
went for $35,000, Christie's said.
Cohen and the Norwegian-born Ihlen met on the Greek island of
Hydra in 1960 and she became the inspiration for several of his
best-known songs, including "Bird on a Wire," "Hey, That's No
Way to Say Goodbye," and the 1967 track "So Long, Marianne."
Ihlen died of leukemia in Oslo in July 2016 at age 81. Cohen,
who was also suffering from leukemia, died in November 2016 at
the age of 82.
The letters were sold by Ihlen's family. The buyers were not
revealed.
The top lot in the five-day online auction was an Italian bronze
bell dating from the 15th or 16th century that hung in the Hydra
home that Cohen and Ihlen once shared. It realized $81,250
compared to a pre-sale estimate of up to $12,000.
The bell is believed to have inspired the lines, "There is a
crack, a crack in everything" in Cohen's 1992 release "Anthem."
(Reporting by Jill Serjeant; Editing by Leslie Adler)
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