An Easter egg that has not been touched for decades is going up for sale - and a love story lies behind it. The Little Miss Muffet Chocolate Easter egg remains in its wrapper after 85 years - and now a Warwickshire seller is selling it for possibly hundreds of pounds.

The egg was left untouched by a bride-to-be after her fiance gave it to her as an engagement present. The egg, made by Pascalls, still has its original rose gold paper and blue bow.

It was given by Jack Carter to his sweetheart Joyce Angell, then 17, when they got engaged on April 16, 1938, a little under a year before Britain was plunged into the Second World War.

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Joyce couldn't ever bear to eat the egg and kept it in mint condition until her death in 2004 at 84. Her devoted husband Jack then kept it until he passed away in 2012 at 95.

Together, the couple who were married for 66 years, had the egg for 76 years. Later, the couple’s 79-year-old son inherited it.

He is now selling it in the hope it will be displayed in a museum. It is being auctioned with a guide price of £200-£300 but is expected to fetch far more when it goes under the hammer at Hansons Auctioneers.

The seller, who lives in Warwickshire, said: “I was born in 1944 and for as long as I can remember the egg had been in a bedroom cupboard in its original packaging, after which we kept it in the coolest cupboard in our home. After 85 years in my family’s care, I feel the time has come to offer it at auction in the hope a collector or museum will preserve it for future generations.”

The chocolate Easter egg from 1938, saved for a lifetime by Joyce Carter (nee Angell)

Jack gave Joyce the egg when he proposed to her on her big sister Iris’s wedding day. The following year on November 4, 1939, months after war had broken out, Joyce and Jack tied the knot in Trowbridge, Wiltshire.

Jack served in the Navy during the Second World War. Joyce worked at a cloth factory.

They couple had one son and two grandchildren. Bargain’s Hunt Charles Hanson, who is selling the egg for the family, said: “This gift demonstrates true romance.

"A present bought to mark a magical moment a lifetime ago treasured forever. Times were hard in the 1930s and yet Jack splashed out on this Pascalls chocolate because he loved Joyce so much.

Charles Hanson
Charles Hanson

“Pascalls was founded by James Pascall in 1866. He set up a small shop off Oxford Street in London having worked for Cadbury's.

“Bear in mind they married just after the start of World War Two. They lived though times when people had little and took nothing for granted. And yet, despite years of rationing, Joyce never ate a morsel.

“That’s because this chocolate, with its beautiful decorative wrapping, marked one of the happiest days of her life. It survives as a testament to their love.”

The chocolate Easter egg is going under the hammer on September 26.