AN ENGLISH literature exercise book that Sir Paul McCartney used as a teenager is has sold for £46,800 - nearly 10 times its estimate.
Sir Paul, 76, used the book during his time at the Liverpool Institute High School for Boys, where Mr Alan Durband taught him English in 1959 to 1960.
A family, who have asked to remain anonymous, have owned the book "for as long as they can remember".
The exercise book - which features a doodle of a man smoking and a teacher's critical comments - sold at an auction of Beatles memorabilia in Newton-le-Willows, Merseyside.
The book contains 22 pages of essays that McCartney wrote on novels such as Thomas Hardy's The Return Of The Native and John Milton's Paradise Lost.
Inside are 22 pages of essays he wrote on novels such as Thomas Hardy's The Return Of The Native and John Milton's Paradise Lost.
It features a doodle of a man smoking on the back cover.
"I'd answer the question first before challenging its truth," Mr Durband tells him on page three of the exercise book, from the 1959/60 school year.
But the teenager, 17 or 18 at the time, showed promise, achieving marks from B- to B++ for his work.
Also sold in the auction were a pair of gold-rimmed glasses, without the lenses, worn by John Lennon after being given to the star by designer Barry Finch in 1967.
They sold for £9,600 while a suit worn by Lennon went for £4,800.
A cassette of George Harrison songs went unsold.
The tape, containing previously unheard tracks written and recorded in 1978, was estimated to fetch £3,000.
Experts at the auction house said it is not known why Harrison called the cassette - with song titles such as Spoken Intro George Legs Harry and Brazil 1, 2 & 3 - The Hitler Tapes, but it would have "most likely been tongue in cheek".
A street sign from Abbey Road, where the Beatles recorded their most famous albums, sold for £4,800 while a business card for The Quarrymen fetched £3,600.
The band, a forerunner of the Beatles, was fronted by Lennon and later included McCartney and Harrison.
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