CANON ALBERIC’S SCRAPBOOK

[SHORT-STORY]

The lead story fromGhost Stories of anAntiquary, M. R. James’ first collection of tales originally

spun to rapt students around a Yuletide fire.

[Richard Holmes, “Of ghosts and King’s,”

The Times, November 23, 1974] “Dons, of course, had

strange quirks of humour in those days… Montague James’s ghost stories fitted into all these

categories of cloister recreation…

“…the sudden and unexpected occasion of their advent, at an October meeting of the Chitchat

Society, in 1893, a rather prosaic institution dedicated to ‘the promotion of rational conversation’

and habituated to nothing wilder than dissertations on church portals or Breton ballads. The

minute still exists: the 601st meeting, eleven members present, and ‘Mr. James read Two Ghost

Stories.’ There were serious scholars in attendance: Walter Headlam, and Dr. Waldstein of the

Fitzwilliam Museum (where James was to follow as director); yet no explanation of this

aberration is forthcoming.

“We know only that the first story wasCanon Alberic’s Scrapbook, one of the most horribly

violent and deliberately autobiographical of them all: in it, a travelling antiquarian, clearly

identified with James, is set upon one lonely night in hisaubergebedroom by a fiend whose

picture he has just discovered in a priceless folio of medieval manuscripts.”

In addition to radio versions of the story itself, there have also been several broadcasts of

Kaikhosru Sorabji’s 1941 piano opus, St. Bertrand de Comminges “He was Laughing in the

Tower,” which was the second of two pieces inspired by James’s stories.

[Jonathan Powell] “Sorabji wrote two pieces based on ghost stories by Montague Rhodes James,

the academic and expert on early manuscripts and Christian apocrypha. The first of these

compositions — Quaere reliqua hujus materiei inter secretiora — was based on James’s story

Count Magnus and was written in 1940. A year later, Sorabji provided this piece with a

companion — St Bertrand de Comminges “He was Laughing in the Tower” — suggested by

James’s Canon Alberic’s Scrapbook. The subtitle refers to a line from the story: “A few remarks

passed between father and daughter, of which Dennistoun only caught these words, said by the

sacristan, ‘He was laughing in the church’, words which were answered only by a look of terror

from the girl”. The story is set in the Pyrenean town of St Bertrand de Comminges, and

exemplifies the most effective elements of James’s style with its ironic but generous portrait of the

English academic abroad finding himself out of his depth dealing with the supernatural. Sorabji’s

music, while not strictly programmatic, mirrors James’s depictions of the supernatural with its

strong sense of atmosphere, employment of shock tactics and the palpable sensation of climax

towards the end.”

10/06/1987 Yonty Solomon (piano)

BBC Radio 3, London, UK [B] 09/08/1992 Michael Habermann (piano) [x]

Radio Bremen, Bremen, Germany [+B]

Hauptabteilung E-Musik, Redaktion Neue Musik 15/10/1992 Yonty Solomon (piano)

BBC Radio 3, London, UK [R]

“Sacred and Profane” programme 11/09/2003 Michael Habermann (piano)

CKCU, Ottawa, Canada [+B]

[CHRONOLOGY]

TALES OF THE SUPERNATURAL (CJRC, WINNIPEG)

[Wednesday—10:30-11:00 PM}

Circa 1940Canon Alberic’s Scrapbook

THE LATE BOOK—“GHOST STORIES” (RADIO 4, LONDON)

[Monday-Friday—12:30-12:48 AM]

December 29, 1997“Canon Alberic’s Scrapbook”

[“…A collector of antiquities encounters a hideous demonic figure in his

hotel room. But did he really see it?…”]

SCRIPT:

Paul Kent (adapter).

PERSONNEL:

Paul Kent (producer), Benjamin Whitrow (narrator).

EXTANT RECORDING