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Montague Summers

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Montague Summers
Montague Summers ca. 1925[1]
Montague Summers ca. 1925[1]
BornAugustus Montague Summers
(1880-04-10)10 April 1880
Clifton, Bristol, England
Died10 August 1948(1948-08-10) (aged 68)
Richmond, Surrey, England
Resting placeRichmond Cemetery
Pen nameReverend Alphonsus Joseph-Mary Augustus Montague Summers
OccupationAuthor and clergyman
NationalityBritish
Alma materTrinity College, Oxford
SubjectRestoration comedy, Gothic fiction, the occult
Notable worksThe History of Witchcraft and Demonology (1926); translation of the Malleus Maleficarum (1928); The Vampire: His Kith and Kin (1928); The Werewolf (1933)

Augustus Montague Summers (10 April 1880 – 10 August 1948) was an English author, clergyman, and teacher. As an independent scholar, he published many works on the English drama of the Stuart Restoration (1660–1688) and helped to organise and to promote the performance of plays from that period. He also wrote extensively on the occult and has been characterized as "arguably the most seminal twentieth century purveyor of pop culture occultism."[2]

Summers initially prepared for a career in the Church of England at Oxford and Lichfield, and was ordained as an Anglican deacon in 1908. He then converted to Roman Catholicism and began styling himself as a Catholic priest. He was, however, never under the authority of any Catholic diocese or religious order in England, and it is doubtful that he was ever actually ordained to the priesthood.[2][3] While employed as a teacher of English and Latin, he pursued scholarly work on the English theatre of the 17th century. For his contributions to that field he was elected to the Royal Society of Literature in 1916.[2]

Noted for his eccentric personality and interests, Summers became a popular figure in London high society first for his theatrical work and later for his History of Witchcraft and Demonology, published in 1926. That work was followed by other studies on witchcraft, vampires, and werewolves, in all of which he professed to believe. In 1928 he published his translation of the 15th-century witch hunter's manual, the Malleus Maleficarum, and for decades this remained the only full English translation of that historical document. Summers also produced scholarly work on Gothic fiction and published several anthologies of horror stories. He wrote some original works of fiction, none of which were published in his lifetime.

Early life

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Montague Summers was the youngest of the seven children of Augustus William Summers, a wealthy businessman and justice of the peace in Clifton, Bristol, and his wife Ellen née Bush.[1]: 1  Augustus was a director of Lloyds Bank, chairman of Bristol United Breweries, and the head of a firm of mineral water manufacturers. Ellen was the daughter of a manager of the Warminster Savings Bank.[1]: 1  Montague grew up in a luxurious home located next to Clifton Down and called "Tellisford House", which today is a listed building.[1]: 1 [4] He was educated at Clifton College.[5] Early on, he rebelled against his father's evangelical, low church religiosity, embracing instead a ritualistic Anglo-Catholicism.[2] According to his biographer Brocard Sewell, there was a strain of mental illness in his mother's side of the family.[1]: 5 

Tellisford House, Summers's childhood home, and the adjacent Trinmore, located in Clifton Down, Bristol

In 1899, Summers matriculated at Trinity College, Oxford. Although an avid reader and linguist, Summers neglected his official studies. In 1904 he received a fourth-class Bachelor of Arts (BA) degree in theology, promoted in 1906 to a Master of Arts (MA) degree, as per the custom of the University of Oxford.[2] Summers continued his religious training at Lichfield Theological College with the intention of becoming a priest in the Church of England.[2]

Summers self-published his first book, Antinous and Other Poems, in 1907. Its contents reflected the influence of the literary Decadent movement while showcasing Summers's own preoccupations with pederasty, medievalism, Catholic liturgy, and the occult.[6] Summers dedicated that book to the writer Jacques d'Adelswärd-Fersen, who was notorious for having been convicted years earlier by a court in Paris of "inciting minors to debauchery".[1]: 6 

Summers was ordained as deacon in 1908 by George Forrest Browne, the Bishop of Bristol. He was then appointed as curate in Bitton, near Bristol.[1]: 10  The vicar of Bitton was the elderly Canon Ellacombe, who could provide Summers with little supervision or guidance. When a friend from Oxford, the poet J. Redwood Anderson, visited Summers at the Bitton vicarage, he found Summers "in a thoroughly neurotic state and exhibiting a morbid fascination with evil".[1]: 10  Summers's brief curacy ended under a cloud and he never proceeded to higher orders in the Anglican Church, apparently because of rumours of his interest in Satanism and allegations of sexual impropriety with young boys.[3]

Summers's interest in Satanism probably derived in part from his reading of the works of the French writer Joris-Karl Huysmans, particularly the novel Là-bas (1891), which includes an account of a Black Mass.[2] Summers himself later claimed in private conversation to have attended Black Masses in Bruges, Brighton, and London.[7] Some of his former associates, including Redwood Anderson, claim that in his early years Summers conducted such ceremonies himself.[2]

According to the testimonies quoted by Gerard P. O'Sullivan, Summers and another clergyman, the Rev. Austin Nelson, were accused in 1908 of attempting to seduce a choirboy in Bath. Fearing that the police might question him, Summers fled to Antwerp, in Belgium. Summers was not prosecuted and he returned to England soon thereafter.[8]

Conversion to Catholicism

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Photograph of Montague Summers in clerical dress, ca. 1920s, from the collection of the Georgetown University Library (GTM110501)

In 1909, Summers converted to Catholicism and began studying for the Catholic priesthood at St John's Seminary, Wonersh,[2] receiving the clerical tonsure on 28 December 1910.[3] After 1913 he styled himself as the "Reverend Alphonsus Joseph-Mary Augustus Montague Summers" and acted as a Catholic priest, even though he was never a member of any Catholic order or diocese in England. After this time, he also consistently appeared in public in what Brocard Sewell described as "clerical attire reminiscent of some exotic abbé of the time of Louis Quatorze".[9] Whether he was actually ordained as a priest is disputed.[3]

According to some testimonies, Summers had transferred from the seminary in Wornesh to the Diocese of Nottingham, but the local bishop refused to ordain him after receiving incriminating reports of Summers's prior conduct.[2] Some sources claim that Summers then travelled to Continental Europe and was ordained by Cardinal Mercier in Belgium or by Archbishop Guido Maria Conforti in Italy.[2] It is also claimed that Summers was ordained as a priest by Ulric Vernon Herford, the self-styled "Bishop of Mercia and Middlesex" in the "Evangelical Catholic Communion", one of several episcopi vagantes ("wandering bishops") operating in Britain at the time.[2]

Brocard Sewell argued that "there is a strong probability, if not a moral certainty" that Summers had been validly but perhaps illicitly ordained as a priest.[1]: 15  Sewell gave as evidence the facts that Summers was allowed to say mass publicly when he travelled in the Continent and that Monsignor Ronald Knox, although wholly unsympathetic and opposed to Summers, regarded him as actually being a Catholic priest.[1]: 20 

Work as a teacher

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From 1911 to 1926 Summers found employment as a teacher of English and Latin. He was an assistant master at Hertford Grammar School in 1911–1912, and then at the Junior School of the Central School of Arts and Crafts in Holborn in 1912–1922.[1]: 24–25  In 1922, he became senior English and Classics master at Brockley County School in south-east London.[1]: 25  Despite his eccentric appearance and habits, he was apparently a successful and well-regarded teacher.[1]: 26–29 [10] Summers gave up teaching in 1926, after the success of his first book on witchcraft allowed him to adopt writing as his full-time occupation.[2]

Literary scholarship

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Cartoon of the Rev. Montague Summers, drawn by "Matt" (Matthew Austin Sandford) for the London Evening Standard, ca. 1925[1]: xviii 

While employed as a schoolmaster and with the encouragement of Arthur Henry Bullen of the Shakespeare Head Press, Summers established himself as an independent scholar specializing on the dramatic literature of the Stuart Restoration.[3] Summers's first effort in this area appeared in 1914 and was a critical edition of George Villiers's The Rehearsal. He then edited the plays of Aphra Behn, which appeared in 1915 in six volumes.[11] That work was well received by other scholars and earned him election as fellow of the Royal Society of Literature in 1916.[2]

Restoration drama

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Summers helped to create a new society called "The Phoenix" that performed "old plays", including long neglected Restoration comedies, and which operated from 1919 to 1925 under the patronage of Lady Cunard and with the support of Sir Edmund Gosse.[1]: 37  It was succeeded by the "Renaissance Theatre", which gave occasional performances until 1928. Summers wrote extensive programme notes for those productions and offered his scholarly advice during rehearsals. That work made Summers a well known and popular figure in theatrical circles.[3] Among Summers's associates in the London theater were actor Lewis Casson and his wife Sybil Thorndike.[1]: ix 

With the Nonesuch Press, Summers published critical editions of the collected plays of William Congreve (1923), William Wycherley (1924), and Thomas Otway (1926). With Reginald Caton's Fortune Press, Summers edited the works of Thomas Shadwell (1927). In 1931-32 there appeared his edition of the works of John Dryden, published by Nonesuch, which attracted considerable criticism from other scholars for what they identified as faulty editing of the texts and unacknowledged borrowing from other scholars in the notes.[12] After that, Summers published no other critical editions of dramatists.[1]: 85 

Several decades after his death, literary critic and historian Robert D. Hume characterized Montague Summers's scholarship on Restoration drama as pioneering and useful, but also as marred by sloppiness, eccentricity, uncritical deference to Edmund Gosse and other similar gentlemen-amateurs, and even occasional dishonesty.[11] Hume judged Summers's studies on The Restoration Theatre (1934) and The Playhouse of Pepys (1935) to be particularly fruitful sources.[11] In his own day, Summers's credibility among university-based scholars was adversely impacted by the acrimonious public disputes in which he engaged with others working in the same field, such as Frederick S. Boas and Allardyce Nicoll.[11]

Gothic fiction

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The other major focus of Summers's literary scholarship was Gothic fiction. In 1938 he published a history of the Gothic novel titled The Gothic Quest, which was later praised by the French scholar André Parreaux as "a unique and valuable book, indispensable to the student of the period".[1]: 63  A second volume of that history, to be titled The Gothic Achievement, had not been completed when Summers died in 1948.[1]: 63  Summers's Gothic Bibliography, published in 1940, has been characterized as "flawed but useful."[11]

Summers's research was instrumental in the rediscovery of some of the seven obscure Gothic novels, known as the "Northanger Horrid Novels" that Jane Austen mentioned in her Gothic parody novel Northanger Abbey, and which many readers had later come to suppose were inventions of Austen herself. He produced partial editions of two of those novels and wrote biographies of Austen and of the pioneering Gothic novelist Ann Radcliffe. He also compiled three anthologies of supernatural stories, The Supernatural Omnibus, The Grimoire and other Supernatural Stories, and Victorian Ghost Stories. He has been described as "the major anthologist of supernatural and Gothic fiction" in the 1930s.[13]

Poetry

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Summers also edited the poetry of Richard Barnfield, a contemporary of Shakespeare. Summers' introduction to his 1936 edition of Barnfield's poems stressed the homosexual theme of some of those works, particularly The Affectionate Shepherd.[14] Brocard Sewell states that Summers's introduction to The Poems of Richard Barnfield is one of the two works that Summers published on the "psychology of sex", the other being his 1920 essay on the Marquis de Sade.[1]: 76 

The occult

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Title page of The History of Witchcraft and Demonology by Montague Summers, published in 1926 by Kegan Paul as part of the series "History of Civilization", edited by C. K. Ogden

From 1916 onwards, Summers regularly published articles in popular occult periodicals, including The Occult Review and the Spiritualist periodical Light.[2] In 1926 his work on The History of Witchcraft and Demonology appeared as part of the series on "History of Civilization" published by Kegan Paul and edited by Charles Kay Ogden.[2] In the introduction to that book, Summers wrote:

In the following pages I have endeavoured to show the witch as she really was – an evil liver: a social pest and parasite: the devotee of a loathly and obscene creed: an adept at poisoning, blackmail, and other creeping crimes: a member of a powerful secret organisation inimical to Church and State: a blasphemer in word and deed, swaying the villagers by terror and superstition: a charlatan and a quack sometimes: a bawd: an abortionist: the dark counsellor of lewd court ladies and adulterous gallants: a minister to vice and inconceivable corruption, battening upon the filth and foulest passions of the age.

The book sold well and attracted considerable attention in the press. That success made Summers "something of a social celebrity" and allowed him to give up teaching and write full time.[2] In 1927 a companion volume, The Geography of Witchcraft, also appeared in Ogden's "History of Civilization" series.

In 1928, Summers published the first full English translation of the Malleus Maleficarum ("The Hammer of Witches"), a Latin manual on the detection and prosecution of witches written in the 15th century by the Dominican inquisitors Heinrich Kramer and Jacob Sprenger. In his introduction, Summers insists that the reality of witchcraft is an essential part of Catholic doctrine and declares the Malleus an admirable and correct account of witchcraft and of the methods necessary to combat it. In fact, however, the Catholic authorities of the 15th century had condemned the Malleus on both ethical and legal grounds.[15] Other Catholic scholars contemporary with Summers were also highly critical of the Malleus. For instance, the Rev. Herbert Thurston's article on "Witchcraft" for the Catholic Encyclopedia of 1912, refers to the publication of the Malleus as a "disastrous episode."[16]

After his first works on witchcraft were published, Summers turned his attention to vampires, producing The Vampire: His Kith and Kin (1928) and The Vampire in Europe (1929), and later to werewolves with The Werewolf (1933). In 1933, copies of Summers's translations of The Confessions of Madeleine Bavent and of Ludovico Maria Sinistrari's Demoniality were seized by the police due to their explicit accounts of sexual intercourse between humans and demons. At the ensuing trial of the publisher for obscene libel, anthropologist E. E. Evans-Pritchard testified in defence of the scholarly value of the works in question. The publisher, Reginald Caton, was convicted and the unsold copies destroyed.[2]

Influence

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Frontispiece (depicting Pope Innocent VIII) and title page of Summers's English translation of the Malleus Maleficarum, published in 1928 by John Rodker

Summers's work on the occult is notorious for his old-fashioned and eccentric writing style, his display of erudition, and his purported belief in the reality of the supernatural subjects he treats. Presented from the perspective of a highly traditionalist Catholicism, Summers's occult scholarship has actually had its greatest influence within modern popular culture.[17] According to historian Juliette Wood, Summers's

concern with the macabre aspects of the supernatural has a very modern feel, and the links between vampires and satanic masses, so beloved of horror films and popular exorcisms, owe much to his particular body of work. Perhaps his real legacy is that he combined all the elements of the gothic novel into an allegedly real satanism that creates a tension between reality and fiction that appeals so strongly to postmodern imagination.[17]

According to horror genre scholar John Edgar Browning, "it is because of Summers that the modern serious study of the vampire figure exists today". On the other hand, Browning also finds that, for all their erudition, Summers's research on the occult exhibits "a curious absence of any real depth", which may explain why "a stigma has been attached to Summers's writings for almost as long as they have been in print."[18] After Christopher S. MacKay published a full translation of the Malleus Maleficarum in 2006, historian Jonathan Seitz welcomed that new work, noting that, until then, the Malleus had "been readily available in English only in the atrocious 1928 'translation' authored by Montague Summers". Seitz added that "to dub Summers an eccentric would be to understate substantially his outsized personality, and his edition reflects his idiosyncrasies."[19]

The prominent Catholic historian Jeffrey Burton Russell, a specialist in the religion of the European Middle Ages, wrote in 1972 that

Summers' own works and his many editions and translations of classical witchcraft handbooks are marred by frequent liberties in translation, inaccurate references, and wild surmises; they are almost totally lacking in historical sense, for Summers saw witchcraft as a manifestation of the eternal and unchanging warfare between God and Satan. Yet Summers was well steeped in the sources, and his insight that European witchcraft was basically a perversion of Christianity and related to heresy, rather than the survival of a pagan religion as the Murrayites claimed, was correct. Summers' work was erratic and unreliable but not without value.[20]

According to Brian Doherty, Summers's later writings on witchcraft, published in the 1930s and 1940s, "adopted a far more paranoid and conspiracy-driven worldview" than his earlier works on the subject.[2] These later writings draw extensively from earlier conspiracy theorists such as the French counter-revolutionary Abbé Augustin Barruel and the English Fascist Nesta Helen Webster. As such, Summers's work may have influenced the "Satanic Panic" of the 1980s and 1990s.[2]

Antisemitism

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Summers's History of Witchcraft and Demonology (1926) gives credence to various historical accusations that European Jews kidnapped and sacrificed Christian children.[21] Summers wrote that "the evidence is quite conclusive that the body, and especially the blood of the victim, was used for magical purposes", and concluded that it was for this "practice of the dark and hideous traditions of Hebrew magic"—and not for the Biblical Jewish faith—that Jews had been persecuted by Christians in the Middle Ages and in the early modern period.[21] The great majority of historians now reject the view that this "blood libel" against the Jews had any basis in fact. According to historian Norman Cohn, Summers's writings on witchcraft helped to promote antisemitic tropes well after Summers's death.[21]

Other pursuits

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Summers cultivated his reputation for eccentricity. The Times wrote he was "in every way a 'character' and in some sort a throwback to the Middle Ages." His biographer, Father Brocard Sewell, paints the following portrait:

During the year 1927, the striking and somber figure of the Reverend Montague Sommers in black soutane and cloak, with buckled shoes—a la Louis Quatorze—and shovel hat could often have been seen entering or leaving the reading room of the British Museum, carrying a large black portfolio bearing on its side a white label, showing in blood-red capitals, the legend 'VAMPIRES'.[22]

Summers wrote works of hagiography on Catherine of Siena, Anthony Maria Zaccaria, and others, but his primary religious interest was always in the occult. While Aleister Crowley, with whom he was acquainted,[2] adopted the persona of a modern-day sorcerer, Summers played the part of the learned Catholic witch-hunter. Despite his conservative religiosity, Summers was an active member of the British Society for the Study of Sex Psychology, to which he contributed an essay on the Marquis de Sade in 1920.[1]: 76, 94 [23]

In 1926, Summers advertised in the London Times for a secretary to assist him with his literary work. A young Cyril Connolly responded, but found Summers uncongenial and turned down the position. Connolly privately mocked Summers in blank verse as "a sorcerer / a fruity unfrocked cleric of the Nineties / Like an old toad that carries in his head / The jewel of literature, a puffy satyr / That blends his Romish ritual with the filth / Scrawled on Pompeian pavement."[24]

The posthumously published personal diaries of socialite and later Conservative politician Sir Henry Channon relate how Channon first met Summers at a dinner party in Summers's honour given by Lady Cunard in January 1928. Channon's diaries then describe a series of visits to Summers's home in Richmond. Channon recounts that, on more than one occasion and at Channon's suggestion, Summers took Channon upstairs to his private chapel after dinner and beat him over the altar. Channon characterized Summers as a "lecherous priest", "a madman", and "as dangerous as he is brilliant", cutting off contact with him after a couple of months.[7]

Summers lived in Oxford from 1929 to 1934, where he often worked at the Bodleian Library and attended high mass at Blackfriars. He collaborated with a number of student dramatic productions and became the object of much attention and gossip among Oxford University undergraduates, who regarded him as "a kind of clerical Doctor Faustus".[1]: 58 

The popular novelist Dennis Wheatley relates that he was introduced to Summers by the journalist and politician Tom Driberg while Wheatley was researching occultism for his novel The Devil Rides Out (1934). A weekend visit by Wheatley and his wife to Summers's home in Alresford was cut short by the Wheatleys, who determined "never to see the, perhaps not so Reverend, gentleman again". Summers and Wheatley continued to correspond on friendly terms, but Wheatley reportedly based the character of the evil Canon Copely-Syle, in his novel To the Devil – a Daughter (1953), on Montague Summers.[2]

Montague Summers wrote several original works of fiction, but none of these were published during his lifetime. The unpublished manuscripts include two plays: William Henry: A Play in Four Acts and Piers Gaveston (whose text is now lost and whose title is sometimes listed as Edward II).[25] A number of ghost stories and a short novel, The Bride of Christ, were found among Summers's papers and published long after his death.

Relations with the Catholic Church

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Although he presented himself as an uncompromising defender of Catholic orthodoxy, the great majority of Summers's books on religious subjects were not published with the approval of Catholic authorities (see nihil obstat and imprimatur).[2] The exception to this was his translation of Saint Alphonsus Liguori's The Glories of Mary, which appeared in 1938 with the imprimatur of the Archdiocese of Paris.[1]: 64–65  In particular, Summers's work on witchcraft was not sanctioned by any church authority and it attracted very negative public comment from an important Catholic scholar, the English Jesuit Herbert Thurston, who wrote in 1927 that

Nothing could serve Satan’s purpose better than that the Catholic Church, his most uncompromising opponent, should be identified once more with all the extravagant beliefs and superstitions of the witch mania [...] It really plays into his hands; first, because it makes the Church ridiculous by attributing to her a teaching flagrantly in conflict with sanity and common sense; and, secondly, because it is associated with stories of all sorts of nastiness which feed a prurient curiosity under cloak of supplying scientific information.[26]

Father Thurston also called attention to the fact that Summers did not figure in any English register as either an Anglican or a Catholic priest, but was instead a literary figure with distinctly Decadent tastes.[26] According to Bernard Doherty, Thurston may have been concerned that Summers's writings on witchcraft could have been a "mystification" akin to the Taxil hoax of the 1890s, intended to bring ridicule upon the Catholic Church.[2] Thurston challenged Summers to show to the public that he was really an ordained priest, which Summers failed to do.[2] In 1938 another prominent English Catholic, Mons. Ronald Knox, angrily objected to having his own essay on G. K. Chesterton published in a collection on Great Catholics edited by Fr. Claude Williamson, after Knox learned that the book would also include an essay on John Dryden by Montague Summers.[8][25]

In the early 1930s, Summers acted as a private chaplain to Mrs. Ermengarde Greville-Nugent, the widow of Patrick Greville-Nugent,son of Anglo-Irish aristocrat and politician Lord Greville. Mrs. Greville-Nugent was a prominent neo-Jacobite and founder of the Anglican Society of King Charles the Martyr before her conversion to Roman Catholicism. Both her only daughter and her husband had died insane, and she was convicted of fraud in 1934 for obtaining money to keep up her elegant lifestyle by writing deceptive begging letters to people whose names had appeared in the newspapers as recent beneficiaries of wills.[27] The Catholic Bishop of Southwark, Peter Amigo, excommunicated Mrs. Greville-Nugent for allowing Summers to celebrate mass in the private oratory at Kingsley Dene, her home in Dulwich.[27]

Shortly after Summers's death in 1948, the Catholic Herald published a statement by the Diocese of Southwark to the effect that Summers had, many years earlier, been a student for the priesthood but that, as far as was known, he had not been ordained.[1]: 75  Father Brocard Sewell, although convinced that Summers had been a priest, declared that his "clerical life seems to have had more in common with the strange semi-fantasy world of the episcopi vagantes than with that of a normal priest."[1]: 88–89 

Death

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Montague Summers died suddenly at his home in Richmond, Surrey in August 1948. The Catholic rector of St Elizabeth of Portugal Church refused a public requiem mass, but conducted instead a private graveside ceremony.[1]: 74  Summers's grave in Richmond Cemetery was unmarked until the late 1980s, when Sandy Robertson and Edwin Pouncey organised the Summers Project to garner donations for a gravestone. It now bears his favoured phrase "tell me strange things".[28]

Summers bequeathed his estate and papers to his long-time personal secretary and companion Hector Stuart-Forbes. This legacy was valued at £10,000 (the equivalent of about £300,000 in 2024), but Stuart-Forbes was already seriously ill and died in 1950, aged 45, and was buried in the same unmarked plot as Summers. An autobiography of Summers was published posthumously in 1980 as The Galanty Show, though it left much unrevealed about the author's life and dealt only with the literary side of his career. In the 2000s, many of Summers's personal papers were re-discovered in Canada, where they had been kept by members of Stuart-Forbes's family. A collection of Summers's papers is now at the Georgetown University library.[2]

Works

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Books on the occult

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  • The History of Witchcraft and Demonology, 1926 (reprinted ISBN 9780415568746)
  • The Geography of Witchcraft, 1927 (reprinted ISBN 0-7100-7617-7)
  • The Vampire, His Kith and Kin, 1928 (reprinted by Senate in 1993 as simply The Vampire)
  • The Vampire in Europe: A Critical Edition, 1929 [2011] (reprinted ISBN 0-517-14989-3) (reprinted with alternate title: The Vampire in Lore and Legend ISBN 0-486-41942-8), edited by John Edgar Browning
  • The Werewolf, 1933 (reprinted with alternate title: The Werewolf in Lore and Legend ISBN 0-486-43090-1)
  • A Popular History of Witchcraft, 1937
  • Witchcraft and Black Magic, 1946 (reprinted ISBN 1-55888-840-3, ISBN 0-486-41125-7)
  • The Physical Phenomena of Mysticism, 1947

Poetry and drama

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  • Antinous and Other Poems, 1907
  • William Henry (play), 1939, unpublished
  • Piers Gaveston (play), 1940, unpublished

Fiction anthologies edited by Summers

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  • The Grimoire and Other Supernatural Stories, 1936
  • The Supernatural Omnibus, 1947

Other books

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  • St. Catherine of Siena, 1903
  • Lourdes, 1904
  • A Great Mistress of Romance: Ann Radcliffe, 1917
  • Jane Austen, 1919
  • St. Antonio-Maria Zaccaria, 1919
  • Essays in Petto, 1928
  • Architecture and the Gothic Novel, 1931
  • The Restoration Theatre, 1934
  • The Playhouse of Pepys, 1935
  • The Gothic Quest: a History of the Gothic Novel 1938
  • A Gothic Bibliography 1941 (copyright 1940)
  • Six Ghost Stories (1938, not published until October 2019)
  • The Bride of Christ and other fictions (posthumous, 2019)

As editor or translator

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References

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  1. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t u v w x y z Jerome, Joseph (1965). Montague Summers: A memoir. Cecil & Amelia Woolf.
  2. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t u v w x y z Doherty, Bernard (2020). "From Decadent Diabolist to Roman Catholic Demonologist: Some Biographical Curiosities from Montague Summers' Black Folio". Literature & Aesthetics. 30 (2): 1–37.
  3. ^ a b c d e f Davies, Robertson (2004). "Summers, (Augustus) Montague (1880–1948)". Oxford Dictionary of National Biography (online ed.). Oxford University Press. doi:10.1093/ref:odnb/39387. Retrieved 8 January 2023. (Subscription or UK public library membership required.)
  4. ^ "Tellisford House and attached front garden walls, piers and gates, Trinmore and attached front garden walls, piers and gates". Historic England. National Heritage List for England. 30 December 1994. Retrieved 21 November 2024.
  5. ^ Oakeley, E. M. (1897). Clifton College Annals and Register, 1860–1897. J. W. Arrowsmith. p. 192.
  6. ^ Hanson, Ellis (1997). Decadence and Catholicism. Cambridge, MA: Harvard University Press. pp. 345–354. ISBN 978-0674194465.
  7. ^ a b Channon, Henry (2021). Henry 'Chips' Channon: The Diaries (Volume 1): 1918-38. London: Hutchinson. pp. 300, 310, 314, 321. ISBN 978-1786331816.
  8. ^ a b Gerard P. O'Sullivan, "Prologue: The Continuing Quest for Montague Summers," in Montague Summers, The Vampire: His Kith and King – A Critical Edition, ed. John Edgar Browning (Berkeley, CA: Apocryphile Press, 2011), pp. xxviii- lxxii
  9. ^ Summers, Montague (1980). "Introduction by Father Brocard Sewell". The Galanty Show: An Autobiography. London: Cecil Woolf. p. 6. ISBN 9780900821387.
  10. ^ Wilson, A. N. (1989). "Montague Summers". Penfriends from Porlock. London and New York: W. W. Norton & Company. pp. 218–224. ISBN 0-393-02647-7.
  11. ^ a b c d e Hume, Robert D. (1979). "The Uses of Montague Summers: A Pioneer Reconsidered". Restoration: Studies in English Literary Culture, 1660-1700. 3 (2): 59–65. JSTOR 43291376.
  12. ^ de Beer, E. S. (October 1932). "Mr. Montague Summers and Dryden's Essay of Dramatic Poesy". The Review of English Studies. 8 (32): 453–456. JSTOR 508177.
  13. ^ Ashley, Mike (1997). "Anthologies". In Clute, John; Grant, John (eds.). The Encyclopedia of Fantasy. London: Orbit. p. 42. ISBN 1857233689.
  14. ^ Theodore, David (2001). "'Gay is the right word': Montague Summers and the replevin of Richard Barnfield". In Borris, Kenneth; Klawitter, George (eds.). Affectionate Shepherd: Celebrating Richard Barnfield. Selinsgrove: Susquehanna University Press. pp. 265–280. ISBN 978-1575910499.
  15. ^ Jolly, Raudvere, & Peters(eds.), "Witchcraft and magic in Europe: the Middle Ages", page 241 (2002).
  16. ^ H. Thurston (1913). "Witchcraft" . In Herbermann, Charles (ed.). Catholic Encyclopedia. New York: Robert Appleton Company.
  17. ^ a b Wood, Juliette (2007). "The Reality of Witch Cults Reasserted: Fertility and Satanism". In Barry, Jonathan; Davies, Owen (eds.). Palgrave Advances in Witchcraft Historiography. London: Palgrave Macmillan. pp. 69–89. ISBN 1-4039-3512-2.
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