Casting the Runes


"Casting the Runes" is a short story written by the English writer M.R. James. It was first published in 1911 as the fourth story in More Ghost Stories, which was James' second collection of ghost stories.

Plot summary

Mr. Edward Dunning is a researcher for the British Museum. At the beginning of the story he has recently reviewed The Truth of Alchemy by a Mr. Karswell, an alchemist and occultist. Afterwards he begins seeing the name John Harrington displayed wherever he goes. He learns that Harrington also reviewed Karswell's work and died in a freak accident not long after.
Harrington's brother helps Dunning to discover that Karswell cursed both men by slipping them a piece of paper with some runes on it. They deduce that the curse, once cast, will cause the bearer to die in three months. They track down Karswell a day before the curse is set to kill Dunning and manage to return the runes to him. Karswell dies the next day, killed by a stone that fell from scaffolding around St. Wulfram's Church in Abbeville.

Adaptations

The 1957 film Night of the Demon is an adaption of this story. In this version, the central character is called Dr John Holden. Holden is an American psychologist who plans to expose occultist Julian Karswell as a charlatan, only to discover Karswell's powers are real and that he has put a curse on Holden.
The story has been adapted twice for British television. The first was in 1968 as an episode of the anthology series Mystery and Imagination with John Fraser as Dunning and Robert Eddison as Karswell. In 1979, the story was adapted again as an episode of ITV Playhouse. In the 1979 version, the central protagonist is a woman, Prudence Dunning, the producer of an investigative television programme which is critical of an occultist named Karswell, and soon finds that Karswell has a curse put upon her. No complete copies of the 1968 version are known to exist, but the 1979 version has been released on DVD.
Casting The Runes has also been adapted several times for radio. The first was in 1947 by CBS for their radio series Escape. CBS produced a second version in 1974 for their CBS Radio Mystery Theater show. In 1981, BBC Radio 4 produced a loose adaptation called "The Hex"