STORIES IN STONE - The Mummy's Curse and Singing Bones A salon in the cemetery with Marina Warner and Roger Luckhurst Sunday 1st November from 1 to 2:30 pm In his poem "All Souls' Night" W. B. Yeats summons up the ghosts of dead friends on the night of the year when the boundary between this world and the next is said to be at its thinnest. The refrain of the poem "As mummies in the mummy-cloth are wound" evokes Yeats's close friend Thomas Douglas Murray. In 1889 Murray, a horse breeder and amateur archaeologist, visited Egypt where he purchased a mummy case, supposedly that of a high priestess named Amen-Ra. Within a few days of the case being shipped back to London, death and misfortune began to plague anyone who came into contact with it (Murray himself had to have his arm amputated after a shooting accident). According to some stories, the mummy was even responsible for the sinking of the Titanic. Was Murray a sensation-seeker or is the "unlucky mummy", which today resides in the British Museum, really cursed? All Souls' Night seems the perfect occasion for ROGER LUCKHURST to give his verdict on this ghoulish episode from the Edwardian era. |
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