The content of handwritten letters that Madonna has called “intensely personal” may have already been made public, but — for the moment — they are no longer for sale.

On Tuesday night, with an array of intimate Madonna memorabilia set for an online auction Wednesday, a New York Supreme Court judge granted the singer a preliminary injunction blocking the sale of 22 items that she referred to as “extremely private and personally sensitive.” The trove included “personally worn” satin underwear and a note from her onetime boyfriend, Tupac Shakur.

In an emergency filing on Tuesday, Madonna said she learned only this month that property she believed she still possessed was part of a 128-item lot of collectibles to be auctioned by GottaHaveRockandRoll.com.

The belongings, which also included photos, a personal checkbook, a used hairbrush and cassette tapes of unreleased recordings, were listed on the auction site as having been provided for sale by Darlene Lutz, who was described as “Madonna’s art consultant” and “a longtime personal friend of Madonna’s from her innermost circle, knowing her for over 20 years.”