Did Robert Browning expose Daniel Dunglas Home as a fraud?

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I was surprised to read this in the New York Times Magazine article about Susan Gerbic's plan to debunk fraudulent mediums:
"The poet Robert Browning once exposed the mid-19th century Scottish psychic, Daniel Home, who claimed to conjure the spirit of Browning’s infant son, who died young. Except Browning hadn’t lost a son. Worse, the poet lunged at the apparition to unmask it and found himself clutching Home’s bare foot."
https://www.nytimes.com/2019/02/26/magaz...ebook.html

This does seem to reflect received sceptical opinion, as embodied in the Wikipedia article on Daniel Dunglas Home:

After attending a séance of Home's, Browning wrote in a letter to The Times that: 'the whole display of hands, spirit utterances etc., was a cheat and imposture'.[50] ...
The poet Robert Browning and his wife Elizabeth attended a séance on 23, July 1855 in Ealing with the Rymers.[75] During the séance a "spirit face" materialized which Home claimed was the son of Browning who had died in infancy. Browning seized the "materialization" and discovered it to be the bare foot of Home. To make the deception worse, Browning had never lost a son in infancy. Browning's son Robert in a letter to the London Times, December 5, 1902 referred to the incident: "Home was detected in a vulgar fraud."[80][81] The Browning allegation of fraud was supported by the magician Harry Houdini.[80] However, Andrew Lang disputed the allegation, stating there was contradictory information about the séance from Browning and his wife.[82]
[50] Podmore, Frank (2003). Newer Spiritualism. Kessinger Publishing. p. 45. ISBN 978-0-7661-6336-2.
[75] Donald Serrell Thomas. (1989). Robert Browning: A Life Within Life. Weidenfeld and Nicolson. pp. 157-158. ISBN 978-0297796398
[80] Harry Houdini. (2011 reprint edition). Originally published in 1924. A Magician Among the Spirits. Cambridge University Press. p. 42. ISBN 978-1108027489
[81] John Casey. (2009). After Lives: A Guide to Heaven, Hell and Purgatory. Oxford. p. 373. ISBN 978-0199975037 "The poet attended one of Home's seances where a face was materialized, which, Home's spirit guide announced, was that of Browning's dead son. Browning seized the supposed materialized head, and it turned out to be the bare foot of Home. The deception was not helped by the fact that Browning never had lost a son in infancy."
[82] "The Strange Case of Daniel Dunglas Home". Andrew Lang, Chapter 8 of [Historical Mysteries] (1904).
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Daniel_Dunglas_Home

Whether the story is true or not is a different matter.

John Casey's book is available as a Google preview. The part quoted is on p. 373, and no source is cited. But it occurs in a section entitled "A Magician among the Sprits," so presumably the source was Houdini's book of that name. I don't have access to the book by Donald Serrell Thomas.

But there's a detailed discussion of the claim in the book by Andrew Lang, which is available here:
http://www.online-literature.com/andrew_...steries/8/

Lang identified two sources:

(1) The more pertinent one is, unfortunately, described only as "an eminent writer, whom I need not name," writing in a newspaper several years before:
"Mr. Browning had told him, he said, that, sitting with Home and Mrs. Browning (apparently alone, these three) in a darkened room, he saw a white object rise above the table. This Home represented as the phantasm of a child of Mr. and Mrs. Browning, which died in infancy. Mr. Browning seized the phantasm, which was Home's naked foot."

Presumably this is the source of the version in Harry Houdini's 1924 book, "A Magician among the Spirits" (pp. 41, 42). Unfortunately the great escapologist didn't believe in citing his sources either:
"On one occasion Robert Browning, the poet, attended one of Home's seances. He had become somewhat alarmed by his wife's interest in Spiritualism, and when a face was materialized and said to be that of a son who had died in infancy, Browning seized the supposed materialized head and discovered it to be the bare foot of Mr. Home. Incidentally, Browning had never lost an infant son."
http://www.gkc.org.uk/A-Magician-Among-t...rits-1.pdf

(2) Browning's son, Robert Barrett Browning, wrote to the Times Literary Supplement on 5 December 1902 (47 years after the event) after the matter was referred to in a review of Frank Podmore's book, "Modern Spiritualism," and subsequent correspondence. He wrote:

"Mr. Hume, who subsequently changed his name to Home, was detected "in a vulgar fraud," for I have heard my father repeatedly described how he caught hold of his foot under the table."

Daniel Dunglas Home's own version of these events can be found here, in his book "Incidents in my Life" (Second Series, 1872):
https://archive.org/details/incidentsinm...t/page/104
He says that eight other people apart from the Brownings were present, and that Browning had declared several times during the evening that "anything like imposture was out of the question." But of course we have only Home's word for that.

However, we do have other evidence, which makes it seem very doubtful whether Browning really caught Home out in trickery on this occasion.

First, there is the evidence of two letters, written by Mr and Mrs Browning the month after the seance, and later published in the Times Literary Supplement on 28 November 1902. Browning's letter leaves no doubt that he was convinced that Home's phenomena were "a cheat and imposture," but says nothing to suggest he had actually exposed any cheating and doesn't refer to any incident like the one later claimed. In contrast, Mrs Browning, though she was distrustful of what the "supposed spirits" might say, and was aware that imposture sometimes occurred, didn't believe that had been the case with Home's seance: "if you ask me (as you do) whether I would rank the phenomena witnessed at Ealing among the counterfeits, I sincerely answer that I may be much mistaken, of course, but for my own part, and in my own conscience, I find no reason for considering the medium in question responsible for anything seen or heard on that occasion." Obviously, it's difficult to see how that could be written by a woman who had witnessed the exposure of the medium as a fraud only a few weeks earlier.

Second, when William Barrett and Frederic Myers were seeking evidence about Home's phenomena several decades later, they communicated with Browning:
"Robert Browning has told to one of us the circumstances which mainly led to that opinion of Home which was expressed in Mr. Sludge the Medium. It appears that a lady (since dead) repeated to Mr. Browning a statement made to her by a lady and gentleman (since dead), as to their finding Home in the act of experimenting with phosphorus on the production of "spirit-lights," which (so far as Mr. Browning remembers) were to be rubbed round the walls of the room, near the ceiling, so as to appear when the room was darkened. This piece of evidence powerfully impressed Mr. Browning; but it comes to us at third-hand, without written record, and at a distance of nearly 40 years."
[Journal of the Society for Psychical Research, vol. 4, p. 102 (July 1889)]

So Browning himself, when asked why he thought Home was a fraud, said nothing about having personally exposed him as a fraud during a seance, but only mentioned an allegation which had come to him second-hand. Obviously, that's just as hard to reconcile with the claims that were made (apparently) after Browning was dead.
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Here is Robert Browning's letter about the seance in 1855:
[Image: RBrowningLetter.jpg]
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Evidently the "eminent writer, whom I need not name," who first published the story about Browning exposing Home, was a journalist called Frederick Greenwood. Early in 1895 he wrote a series of personal recollections for a periodical entitled the Realm. This doesn't seem to be online, but the anecdote about Home was quoted verbatim in a number of English provincial newspapers. Here's a version from the East Anglian Daily Times, 14 January 1895:

[Image: EADT_1895-01-14.jpg]

Later, Greenwood repeated the story in a letter to the Westminster Gazette, published 24 January 1899. Again this doesn't seem to be available online, but the spiritualist publication Light reported it on 4 March, and also reproduced a response by Frederic Myers that appeared on 27 January:

[Image: Light_1899-03-04.jpg]
http://www.iapsop.com/archive/materials/...r_1899.pdf
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As to whether the Brownings had lost a child, it's noteworthy that according to Greenwood, this came from Robert Browning himself, rather than being an error on Home's part.
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(2019-03-01, 06:11 PM)Chris Wrote: As to whether the Brownings had lost a child, it's noteworthy that according to Greenwood, this came from Robert Browning himself, rather than being an error on Home's part.

According to Wikipedia, Elizabeth Barrett Browning did have four miscarriages. I should think this is what "She had lost a little child by death" refers to. Perhaps it wasn't generally known when the story was discussed in the early 20th century, or perhaps it was wrongly assumed that this referred to a child born alive who had died in infancy.
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There's a detailed discussion of the Ealing seance in this Ph.D. thesis by Christina Bernadette Therese Hill entitled "A Study of Spiritualism in the Life and Work of Elizabeth Barrett Browning" (1977). I can't see any reference to Greenwood's story, but the author discusses the letter to the Times Literary Supplement by Browning's son, and she's in no doubt that the claim that Browning exposed Home as a fraud is false. Evidently both Mr and Mrs Browning wrote detailed accounts of the seance soon afterwards, and there's no reference in either to such an exposure. (Frustratingly, extracts from the letters were included as an appendix, but this has been omitted from the online version of the thesis.)
https://etheses.bham.ac.uk/id/eprint/731...77_PhD.pdf
(2019-03-01, 04:44 PM)Chris Wrote: "Mr. Browning had told him, he said, that, sitting with Home and Mrs. Browning (apparently alone, these three) in a darkened room, he saw a white object rise above the table. This "

"Mr. Hume, who subsequently changed his name to Home, was detected "in a vulgar fraud," for I have heard my father repeatedly described how he caught hold of his foot under the table."

I must admit I find the accounts baffling. Apparently something was seen rising above the table, Browning then grabbed a foot, underneath the table.

Is there any consistent and coherent account of what happened (I haven't read all the sources quoted), or is what we have just a muddle and confusion?
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(2019-03-02, 09:49 AM)Typoz Wrote: I must admit I find the accounts baffling. Apparently something was seen rising above the table, Browning then grabbed a foot, underneath the table.

Is there any consistent and coherent account of what happened (I haven't read all the sources quoted), or is what we have just a muddle and confusion?

It turns out that a huge amount has been written about this seance. A couple of days after it, Browning wrote a detailed description of what had happened, in a letter to a Mrs Kinney in the USA. (It has been published several times, but doesn't seem to be available online. I'll try to get a copy.)

Evidently Browning's detailed description doesn't refer to anything like the incident that was later claimed to have taken place. Nor does a description of the seance written soon afterwards by Mrs Browning. The conclusion is that the claims about Browning having caught Home playing a trick, made by Frederick Greenwood and by Browning's son after the deaths of the people concerned, are untrue.

It seems that Browning developed an intense hatred of Home after the event. It's difficult to avoid thinking the story was a malicious invention on his part, rather than an invention on the part of the people who said he'd told them about it. But Browning didn't refer to any detection of fraud when Myers asked him about it shortly before Browning's death.

I get the impression that modern sceptics tend to accept unquestioningly the criticisms of mediums made by their sceptical predecessors in the early 20th century - by Houdini in this case. Perhaps Houdini can be forgiven for not being aware in 1924 of the evidence that refutes this story. But modern writers can't really be forgiven for it, because Browning's detailed account of the seance has been available in print for at least 86 years.
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(2019-03-02, 10:18 AM)Chris Wrote: It turns out that a huge amount has been written about this seance. A couple of days after it, Browning wrote a detailed description of what had happened, in a letter to a Mrs Kinney in the USA. (It has been published several times, but doesn't seem to be available online. I'll try to get a copy.)

Evidently Browning's detailed description doesn't refer to anything like the incident that was later claimed to have taken place. Nor does a description of the seance written soon afterwards by Mrs Browning. The conclusion is that the claims about Browning having caught Home playing a trick, made by Frederick Greenwood and by Browning's son after the deaths of the people concerned, are untrue.

It seems that Browning developed an intense hatred of Home after the event. It's difficult to avoid thinking the story was a malicious invention on his part, rather than an invention on the part of the people who said he'd told them about it. But Browning didn't refer to any detection of fraud when Myers asked him about it shortly before Browning's death.

I get the impression that modern sceptics tend to accept unquestioningly the criticisms of mediums made by their sceptical predecessors in the early 20th century - by Houdini in this case. Perhaps Houdini can be forgiven for not being aware in 1924 of the evidence that refutes this story. But modern writers can't really be forgiven for it, because Browning's detailed account of the seance has been available in print for at least 86 years.

Very interesting Chris. I am always puzzled by people who will seize on one person claiming fraud and disregard the testimony of any number of credible witnesses attesting to genuine phenomena.
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Serendipitously, the SPR Facebook page has a link to a 2016 editorial in the Journal of Scientific Exploration by Stephen Braude, discussing eyewitness testimony in parapsychology, now available online at academia.edu:
https://www.academia.edu/38510084/JSE_Ed...hology.pdf
(free registration required)

Much of it deals with the reactions to Daniel Dunglas Home by Robert Browning and Sir David Brewster after they attended seances. In each case, public accusations of fraud were later contradicted by the publication of a private account of the seance written soon after it.

I haven't yet seen Browning's letter describing the seance, but it's on my list of things to do.
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