A Podcast to the Curious - The M.R. James Podcast

A Podcast to the Curious - The M.R. James Podcast

Dedicated to the Ghost Stories of M.R. James

  • 1 hour 7 minutes
    Episode 98 – The Nature of the Evidence by May Sinclair

    M.R. James said that sex had no place in a ghost story. But was he right? This episode we attempt to answer this question and more, as we cover The Nature of the Evidence by May Sinclair, a tale from 1923 about a couple who just want to enjoy their wedding night. Is that too much to ask? Apparently, yes.

    Thanks to Debbie Wedge for providing the readings for this episode, and don’t forget to check out Ghostly Encounters, the haunting free interactive event that Debbie is helping organise in Oxford on the 20th April 2024.

    Show notes:

    27 March 2024, 7:25 pm
  • 59 minutes 34 seconds
    Episode 97 – Mark Gatiss’s Lot 249

    Stylised image of Mark Gatiss with a mummy looming behind himHold on to your mummy! This episode Mike and Will discuss Mark Gatiss’s recent Ghost Story for Christmas TV adaptation Lot 249, as well as the Arthur Conan Doyle short story it is based on.

    Show notes:

    15 January 2024, 5:18 pm
  • 47 minutes 20 seconds
    Episode 96 – The Real and the Counterfeit by Louisa Baldwin

    A group of Victorian children tobogganingThis episode, Mike and Will grab their literary toboggans and gallop joyously out into the snow, only to be hit in the face by a terrifying fictional snowball in the form of Louisa Baldwin’s The Real and the Counterfeit!

    Big thanks as ever to Debbie Wedge for providing the readings for this episode. Looking for a last-minute Christmas gift to please the M.R. James fan in your life? Why not head over to Debbie’s Redbubble store and pick up an awesome Jamesian Wallop, Barchestering, or No Diggin’ ‘Ere t-shirt?

    Show notes:

    1. More on Louisa Baldwin in our last episode
      We covered The Weird of the Walfords back in the summer, and included a lot more biographical details about Louisa Baldwin.
    2. Long Galleries (wikipedia)
      A lot of the action in this story takes place in a long gallery, a popular architectural feature of many stately homes in England.
    3. George’s banjo (authorama.com)
      Like Lawley in this story, George in Jerome K. Jerome’s Three Men in a Boat was also a keen banjo player, much to the displeasure of his friends. Similarly, in Thank You, Jeeves by P.G. Wodehouse, Bertie’s insistence on playing the banjolele is what finally drives Jeeves to leave Bertie’s service (albeit temporarily).
    4. Other haunted abbeys (nearlyknowledgeablehistory.blogspot.com)
      In this episode, Mike mentions a number of old houses in England that are, like Stonecroft, said to be haunted by ghostly monks.
    5. Tobogganing at Funchal (carreirosdomonte.com)
      The city of Funchal in Madeira is famous for providing toboggan-like basket rides from the Mount Church on the hill, down into the town.
    21 December 2023, 4:14 pm
  • 1 hour 48 seconds
    Episode 95 – The Weird of the Walfords by Louisa Baldwin

    Illustration of humphrey Walford destroying the bed, from the original editions of Louisa Baldwin's 'The Shadow on the Blind'Who would win in a fight between a man and a bed? Find the answer to this question and more in our new episode on The Weird of the Walfords by Louisa Baldwin! Also, if you like emotionally-repressed Victorian husbands, you will not leave disappointed.

    Show notes:

    Thanks to Debbie Wedge for providing the readings for this episode. Don’t forget to check out Debbie’s new Jamesian Wallop t-shirt and others inspired by M.R. James on Redbubble.com.

    Jamesian Wallop T-shirt

    2 July 2023, 7:27 pm
  • 43 minutes 9 seconds
    Episode 94 – Exploring Eleanor Scott with Vicky Margree and Dan Orrells

    This episode we speak with two experts to better understand Eleanor Scott and her story Randall’s Round, Dr Vicky Margree and Prof Dan Orrells. We discuss what’s known about Eleanor Scott, her time at Oxford University in the early 1900s and the role of gender, folklore and imperialism in her writing.

    Vicky is a specialist in literary fiction and feminist theory. Her book British Women’s Short Supernatural Fiction, 1860-1930: Our Own Ghostliness looks at stories by Margaret Oliphant, Charlotte Riddell, Mary Elizabeth Braddon, Edith Nesbit, Alice Perrin, Eleanor Scott and Violet Hunt.

    Dan focuses on the history of the interpretation of classical literature. He’s interested in the Greeks and Romans in the Victorian imagination, including how these inspired Gothic and ghostly tales at the turn of the 20th century.  He co-edited with Vicky a study of Richard Marsh, a fascinating late-Victorian author who wrote about “shape-shifting monsters, morally dubious heroes, lip-reading female detectives and objects that come to life.”

    In our conversation we learn more about the folklore revival, Edward B Tylor’s ideas about primitive cultures and notions of “survivals” amd the experience of women at Oxford and Cambridge (Dan recommends the Dorothy L Sayers novel Gaudy Night!).

    Massive thank you to Vicky and Dan for being such engaging and insightful guests and sharing their expertise with us!  If you want to read ahead, we’ll be back next time with The Weird of the Walfords by Louisa Baldwin.

    21 May 2023, 10:18 am
  • 48 minutes 56 seconds
    Episode 93 – Count Magnus Awakens

    Mr Wraxhall - BBC
    A BBC Ghost Story for Christmas is thankfully as traditional as quaffing eggnog and leaving out a carrot for Rudolph. And what a treat, as this year Count Magnus made the Black Pilgrimage onto our screens.  But has Mark Gatiss been naughty or nice? We give you our verdict.

    Show notes

     

    8 January 2023, 5:16 pm
  • 1 hour 7 minutes
    Episode 92 – Randalls Round by Eleanor Scott
    A black and white woodcut of some people dancing around a tree

    This episode Mike and Will explore freaky folk-dance, village-based villainy and Cotswold chicanery in Eleanor Scott’s awesome Jamesian folk-horror tale Randalls Round!

    Big thanks to Kirsty Woodfield for providing the readings for this episode.

    Show notes:

    • Eleanor Scott (The Haunted Library) This article contains some biographical information as well as plot summaries of the stories that appears in Randalls Round, her only collection of ghost stories. You can also see a photo of her here.
    • The War Among the Ladies by Eleanor Scott (shinynewbooks.co.uk)  Helen Leys started using the Eleanor Scott pseudonym  when she published this controversial novel that exposed the dire experiences of teachers and girls within the English high school system.
    • Somerville College, Oxford (www.some.ox.ac.uk)  Eleanor Scott was a student at this ladies college in the days before women were allowed to take degrees. The Somerville website contains some charming photos that give you a sense of what life was like for students at the time.
    • ‘Merrie England Once More’? The Morris Revival c.1886-1951 (morrisfed.org.uk )  At the start of Randalls Round, Heyling and Mortlake discuss the folk dance revival that was then in full swing. This article describes that revival. Note the reference to the Headington Morris dancers who get a special mention in this story!
    • The Witch-cult in Western Europe by Margaret Murray (Wikipedia) This 1921 book popularise Murray’s witch-cult hypothesis, the idea that the people persecuted as ‘witches’ in Europe may in fact have been involved in a survival of a pre-Christian pagan religion. Although her ideas were widely dismissed by historians, the ideas of ‘hidden’ folk/religious practices enduring in England, hidden away from the eyes of religious authorities, captured the public imagination and sparked the sort of debate that Heyling and Mortlake are having at the start of this story.
    • The Golden Bough by Sir James George Frazer (Wikipedia) Aaron Worth suggests that the ‘volume of a very famous book on folk-lore’ that Heyling reads in this story would be The Golden Bough, Frazer’s influential multi-volume study on comparative religion, first published in 1890.
    • Morris Dance as Ritual Dance, or, English Folk Dance and the Doctrine of Survivals (open.ac.uk)
      This article by Chloe Middleton-Metcalfe explores the origins of the idea that folk dance originates in a survival of pre-Christian belief.
    • The Broad (Wikipedia)  In this episode Mike mentions the Broad, a Cotswold folk custom that bears some similarity to the activities that Heyling witnesses on the village green.
    • The Wicker Man (Wikipedia) We found it hard to discuss Randalls Round without repeatedly returning to this iconic 1973 British horror film!
    • Randwick (Wikipedia) The village of Randwick in Gloucestershire is at the top of Will’s list of possible real-world locations that may have inspired the fictional village of Randalls. As well as having a similar name and large mound to the north west, it even has its own curious folk celebration known as the Randwick Wap!
    • @EndlessMummer (Instagram) This Instagram account celebrates the weirdest (or should that be wyrdest?) elements of folk customs and traditions. This group of Morris men parading a strange, monstrous effigy seems particularly reminiscent of the events of Randalls Round!
    12 December 2022, 10:35 pm
  • 1 hour 14 minutes
    Episode 91 – Let Loose by Mary Cholmondeley

    A woodcut of a hand looming over a sleeping man.In the first episode of Season 4 tm, Mike and Will are delighted by Let Loose by Mary Cholmondeley, a tale of crypts, clergymen and crikey, what is that in the dog’s mouth?

    Big thanks to Jim Moon for allowing us to use extracts from his excellent reading of the story. You can listen to the whole thing over on the Hypnogoria podcast feed.

    Show notes:

    5 November 2022, 5:46 pm
  • 1 hour 2 minutes
    Episode 90 – Right Through My Hair by Noel Boston

    Norwich Cathedral

    Join Will and Mike for haunted cathedrals, lecherous minor canons and hair-based horrors in Noel Boston’s ‘Right Through My Hair’!

    Big thanks to Debbie Wedge for providing the readings for this episode.

    Show notes

    17 September 2022, 5:00 pm
  • 43 minutes 51 seconds
    Episode 89 – Cushi

    Open your hymn books to episode 89, as we’re back in church for Christopher Woodforde’s “Cushi”: a tale of capering cats, sabotaged surplices and vengeful vergers. Don’t lose your head!

    Show notes:

    • Christopher Woodforde studied at Peterhouse, Cambridge before becoming an Anglican priest. He was later Fellow and Chaplain at New College, Oxford, and Dean of Wells (as was Richard Maldon of ‘The Sundial’ fame – Episode 80). He was an antiquarian with a love for stained glass, rather like MR James!
    • ‘A Pad in the Straw’ was his only book of stories. It is currently out of print, but previously available from Sundial Press.
    • Richard Dalby wrote that Woodforde based some of his clerical and antiquarian characters on himself, and many of the locations on the parishes in which he served.
    • In his introduction to ‘A Pad in the Straw’, Lord David Cecil said that “A waft of the uncanny blows through these tales, just enough to make the spine agreeably tingle… The general atmosphere is at once eerie and friendly… The intimate apprehension of landscape and the past gives his tales an unexpected weight and depth. Slight and fanciful though their action is, they are the expression of an imagination soaked through and through in the English scene and in English history.”
    • Hymn number 386 ‘The Sower Went Forth Sowing’ was written by William Bourne, a pastor, for a harvest festival in 1874. And very jolly it is, to: “And then the fan of judgment/Shall winnow from His floor/The chaff into the furnace/That flameth evermore.”

     

     

     

    18 June 2022, 9:24 am
  • 1 hour 30 minutes
    Episode 88 – Canon Alberic’s Scrap-Book Revisited

    Illustration from the Codex GigasJoin Mike and Will for a special 10th anniversary (give or take a few months) special in which your now-aged hosts look back over a decade of M.R. James podcasting and return to the story that started it all, Canon Alberic’s Scrapbook! You can listen to when we originally covered this story all the way back in episode one. Will the quality of our story commentary have improved? Listen and find out!

    Big thanks to Debbie Wedge who returns once again as the reader for this episode.

    Notes:

    • Saint-Bertrand-de-Comminges (Google Maps)
      Some lovely 360 degree photography of this story’s real-world locations have been added to Google Maps since the last time we covered this story. You can now explore the town, the cathedral interior and even spot the famous stuffed crocodile!  st’s name f   ro
    • Read about the turbulent life of the read Saint Bertrand. No mention of the crocodile incident sadly.
    • Christopher Plantin (wikipedia)
      In the story, Dennistoun was singularly unimpressed by the prospect of discovering a book published by this 16th-century Belgian printer and publisher.
    • William Harrison Ainsworth’s Old Saint Paul’s. (Getty Images)
      Dennistoun compares the scrapbooks illustration of King Solomon and the demon to this scene from the popular novel ‘Old Saint Paul’s’ by William Harrison Ainsworth. You can read the scene in question by going here and searching for ‘THE MOSAICAL RODS 95′.
    • Arthur Shipley (wikipedia)
      The ‘lecturer on morphology’ mentioned in this story is a reference to M.R. James’s friend Arthur Shipley, who published a textbook called Zoology of the Invertabrata, which mentions ‘gigantic’ South African spiders that live in holes and prey on small birds.
    • Key of Solomon (wikipedia)
      In the episode, we mention this famous grimoire, which purports to be written by the demon-summoning old testament monarch King Solomon.
    • Codex Gigas (wikipedia)
      Patrick Murphy suggests that the illustrations in the titular scrapbook could have been inspired in part by this gigantic illuminated manuscript, also known as the ‘devil’s bible’. Check out this huge demon in a furry red loincloth!
    22 March 2022, 8:40 pm
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