The mediumship of Elizabeth Hope (1855-1919), who
worked under the pseudonym of Mme. d'Esperance, is not only an
example of the quality evidence available through physical
mediumship, but also, the problems that occurred in respect of
female mediums in Victorian England. Spending her early childhood
in London, she claimed to see 'shadow people' that no one
else could see, and consequently, she was viewed as mentally ill.
Her problems were made worse by having an absent father and a mother
who scolded her for the stories that she told about those whom she
saw. After consulting a physician and being told of similar
people who had been imprisoned in asylums, Elizabeth related how:
'I shivered with fear, and prayed almost frantically that I might be
kept from going mad'.
Her encounter with the 'shadow people' continued, only
bringing about more doubt about her sanity and the increasing
possibility of being taken to 'the mad house'. By the
age of fourteen, she had suffered a complete nervous
breakdown. After a period of having little encounter with
the 'shadow people', this was interrupted when she was at
school; one morning she awoke to find that an essay to be
submitted, had been produced in her own handwriting during the night
while she had been asleep. Due to its excellence, she was
interrogated at school regarding its source, and after further
questioning by the rector, it was accepted as being her work, despite
it apparently originating through another source. She married
when aged nineteen, and resided in Newcastle, and the 'shadow
people' then reasserted themselves in her life. It was
about this time that Elizabeth heard of Spiritualism from a
friend, although she was initially unable to accept the phenomena
claimed for it.
Despite her apprehension, she joined a circle in the early 1870s, and
attempted table-tipping and, 'there seemed to be a tremendous
vibrating movement in the wood of the table-top... which
gradually spread itself to all parts of it'. When the
others removed their hold of the table, 'still it
moved'. Elizabeth then experimented with this activity and
discovered that a basic communication could take place with the unseen
table-mover. Following this, she was able to also demonstrate an
ability in clairvoyance. Having had her interest motivated, she
began to read about the subject that she found 'all very
bewildering'.
At this point, she believed it appropriate to mention the 'shadow
people' to her friends; receiving understanding and
co-operation, she began to feel less anxious. The next stage in
Elizabeth's development were the attempts at obtaining automatic
writing; this again was successful and she recalled that:
'These unseen correspondents of ours soon became familiar to
us'. One was a Walter Tracy, an American who had been at Yale,
involved in the American Civil War, and drowned when aged only
twenty-two. Elizabeth noted how he: 'very soon made
himself a favourite with our circle; he seemed to bring
with him a veritable atmosphere of fun, good humour and
liveliness'. It is interesting to note how years later, Elizabeth
met a man who had been at Yale, and the details that he gave about life
in Walter's time, e.g. places, customs, etc, 'were identical with
Walter's'. Walter was joined by Humnur Stafford, a philosopher,
and Ninia, a young girl, as Elizabeth's controls.
Further progress was made when Elizabeth was able to draw refined
pictures of communicators in the darkness; one of which was
completed in about thirty seconds. When others heard of her
ability, she found herself besieged by requests to witness her
mediumship. In time, she travelled to other countries, e.g.
France, Norway, Belgium, Sweden and Germany, due to the demand for her
mediumship.
Continuing the attempt to develop, on first trying to produce
materializations, she said that she sensed how, 'the air around
me seemed agitated as though a bird was fluttering about'.
Nonetheless, she felt a hand upon her that she recorded as having 'the
effect of soothing my fear and excitement'. The first
materialized form was partial and both Elizabeth and the sitters, saw a
man's face smiling at them in the light of the gas lamp;
Elizabeth suddenly realized that it was Walter. After this
experience, more people were selected to join the circle and witness
the events that took place; in the day, they were conducted with
some light allowed through the upper window, and in the evening, there
was light from gas jets. These seances, with guests, were
successful, and Elizabeth recorded how the cost of the seance
room, etc, was met through a fund contributed to by the members, with
any surplus being given to the poor and sick, about whom she felt very
distressed.
There was clear progress in the production of
materializations; Walter, a frequent visitor, 'seemed to
make himself rapidly familiar with all the company'. At the
conclusion of this particular series of seances, one
next-visitor who began to make an appearance was Yolande, a young Arab
girl, and Elizabeth pointed out that she, 'soon became, as it were, the
leading feature of our seances'. Elizabeth also related how
on one occasion, Yolande 'gradually dissolved into mist under the
scrutiny of twenty pairs of eyes, [her] shawl was
left lying on the floor... the shawl would itself gradually vanish in
the same manner as its wearer'. During these occasions, Elizabeth
did not fall into the usual trance-state and also became aware of
the link between herself and the materialized person, and stated:
'There seemed to exist a strange link between us... I seemed to lose,
not my individuality, but my strength and power of exertion, and
though I did not then know it, a great portion of my material
substance'.
Elizabeth's mediumship also fulfilled the purpose of
Spiritualism, i.e. to reunite the bereaved with those who had died, and
demonstrate their continuing existence. She recorded how on one
occasion, a young sailor materialized and 'I heard cries and
exclamations of joy'. The boy had walked towards one
of the sitters and 'flung his arms around her'. The
sitter told the circle: 'It is my son... my only child, whom I
never thought to meet again. He is not altered... He is just my
boy'. Another instance cited was when a Mrs Bitcliffe came to one
of Elizabeth's seances, shortly after her husband had died;
the seance was almost at an end when her husband materialized. A
statement was drawn up by one of the sitters, and signed by
others present, saying 'Not only did I recognise him, but his
wife, my wife, and another lady present, all knew him immediately he
appeared'. Additionally, there were two more sitters who
acknowledged him. At a later seance, Mrs Bitcliffe brought her
two young daughters, and their father materialized for them. The
girls embraced him and and asked questions, e.g. from where had he
obtained his 'white clothes'? Elizabeth also narrated how a woman
materialized only days after her funeral and 'was instantly recognised
by several' who had known her.
Requests to attend her seances continued to be made by various
persons. One was William Oxley, and in the seance that he
attended on 4 August 1880, a magnificent plant of nearly two feet
in height was brought to him; it was later found to be an Ixora
Crocata, native to India. The production of magnificent
flowers into the seance room was a common occurrence. The
greatest accomplishment in this respect was on 28 June 1890, when
Yolande apported a seven-foot high Golden Lily. She explained
that she had only borrowed it, and it had to be returned; not
having the power to dematerialize the plant, it was kept in the
property in the meantime, but 'then vanished in an instant,
filling the room with an overpowering perfume'.
During the tests conducted by Oxley, he decided to place plaster casts
on the wrists and legs of the materialized figure of
Yolande: this would demonstrate that Yolande was indeed a genuine
materialization as she would have to dematerialize to exit from the
casts. This was, as Inglis noted, 'a test which
"Yolande" passed'. Oxley wrote a number of books concerning
materializations and these included his observations regarding those
produced by Elizabeth.
One of the more curious features of Elizabeth's mediumship
were the occurrences when she was found to be missing at the time
of a materialization: the immediate response was naturally
that the medium was a fraud, but the situation appeared to have been
far more complex than this. This was demonstrated when, during
one seance, Yolande was seized by a sitter who asserted the figure was
the medium herself. But matters were not quite as simple as that,
i.e., Yolande's clothing could not be found; moreover, as Inglis
remarked, 'nobody who knew her could conceive of her being
involve in a deliberate fraud'.
In fact, others had remarked on how a medium would vanish from sight
during materializations: for example, in Light (1882),
Stainton Moses detailed how, in one seance, materialized forms joined
the circle and were recognized by the sitters, being followed by the
male form of the one of the medium's controls, and yet the
medium could not be seen. Curnow refers to similar occasions,
e.g. when Colonel Olcott secured Mrs Compton, the medium, to prevent
movement; when materialized forms appeared, Olcott found no trace
of the medium. The situation became even more bewildering
when he weighed a materialized girl and on request, she even made
herself considerably lighter. Following this, Mrs Compton was
weighed and found to be nearly twice the weight of the
materialized being. The question of the relationship
between the medium and those who materialize is obviously an important
one that remains unexplored, and it is regrettable that despite so
much 'investigation' of physical mediums for so many
years, so much remains unexplained.
Despite the problem that arose from the occasions when she was no
longer visible during materializations, Elizabeth was able to
demonstrate her separateness from the next-world visitors; in
1893, Nepenthes, a Egyptian, materialized and joined the circle, and
both she and the medium were seen at the same time. Another
feature noticed was that of partial-dematerialization by
Elizabeth. One researcher, Aksakov, believed there was a distinct
link of association between the appearance of the
materialization and the medium. He investigated the matter, the
results of which were detailed in his A Case of Partial
Dematerialization; subsequently, he 'had an experience which
strongly suggested that, in some cases at least, the body of the medium
is entirely absorbed for the production of apparitions outside
the cabinet'. Elizabeth's psychic abilities were not limited to
mediumship; she described an occasion when she became separated from
her physical body, and of this state, i.e., the same that
communicators enjoy, said: 'How wonderfully light and strong I
felt! For the first time I knew what it means to live...'.
Elizabeth was acutely aware of the duality of her role as a
medium and the unresolved conflict brought her to despair at certain
times; eventually, she developed ideas not in mainstream
Spiritualist thinking at the time. Her book Shadow Land reveals
her melancholic nature, and the distress with which she so often found
herself confronted. In addition to her own problems, she also
highlighted the outrages to which young female mediums in Victorian
England were subjected, invariably by middle-aged, middle-class male
academics, saying: 'My blood boils within me when I hear of
sensitive mediums... being subjected to the indignities and insults
of these "investigators"'. Owen notes how Elizabeth
'spoke, too, of spy holes and surprise strippings; in
addition to the usual ropes, bolts, and screws, as "the
investigator of this class" sought to catch out the unsuspecting
medium'.
Boddington commented on how Elizabeth, 'placed herself without
fee or reward at the disposal of scientific investigators';
furthermore, how unacceptable behaviour by sitters 'resulted in a
broken blood vessel and an illness of a month's duration.
At other times, prostration and nervous weakness followed'. Fodor
also refers to the occasion when after an incident involving a sitter,
Elizabeth fell into ill health for two years and her hair turned grey.
Although Elizabeth had worked with some light present, she decided not
to sit in a cabinet so that she could see, as well as hear, what
occurred during the seance; she described this as being 'rather
uphill work', but was successful. She narrated one incident
that she witnessed when a young boy was reunited with his parents,
brother and sister. Going to his mother, the materialized
child 'stroked her face with his tiny hands and drew
himself back to... beside his brother and sister'.
Elizabeth continued to demonstrate her mediumship, going as far as
allowing the materializations to be photographed in March 1890, the
report and photographs being included in Mediums and Daybreak
(March 28 and April 18, 1890).
Further progress was made when it was discovered that in photographic
practice sessions, faces were seen behind Elizabeth, just as the
photograph was to be taken, and these duly appeared on the plates when
developed. A number are included in Shadow Land; after this
book, Elizabeth wrote Northern Lights. Unfortunately, at the
outbreak of war in 1914, she was in Germany and was no longer
able to travel; moreover, her notes and records for further writings
were confiscated and not returned.
The life of Mme. d'Esperance is an adequate example of some
of the problems faced by gifted mediums, particularly female
mediums, in Victorian Britain. It was through their trials and
tribulations that modern Spiritualism came into being; the price
that they paid was considerable, and surely one that twentieth century
Spiritualism should never forget.