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The Shadow and the Light: A Defence of Daniel Dunglas Home, the Medium

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The material for this life of Daniel Dunglas Home was taken chiefly from Home's two works, Incidents in My Life, series I and II, and from the two books by his widow, D.D. Home, His Life and Mission and The Gift of D.D. Home. Thus, it is primarily a sympathetic retelling of the story of Home's life. The author says that her book contains two features that she believes have not appeared in print a thorough following-out of the story of Robert Browning's conduct to Home and a full account of the behavior, surroundings, and past history of Mrs. Jane Lyon, the plaintiff in the Lyon vs. Home case.

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First published January 1, 1982

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About the author

Elizabeth Jenkins

56 books58 followers
From Elizabeth Jenkins' obituary in The New York Times:

As a novelist, Ms. Jenkins was best known for “The Tortoise and the Hare” (1954), the story of a disintegrating marriage between a barrister and his desperate wife that Hilary Mantel, writing in The Sunday Times of London in 1993, called “as smooth and seductive as a bowl of cream.” Its author, Ms. Mantel wrote, “seems to know a good deal about how women think and how their lives are arranged; what women collude in, what they fear.”

To a wider public Ms. Jenkins was known as the author of psychologically acute, stylishly written, accessible biographies. Most dealt with important literary or historical figures, but in “Joseph Lister” (1960) she told the life of the English surgeon who pioneered the concept of sterilization in medicine, and in “Dr. Gully’s Story” (1972) she reconstructed a Victorian murder and love triangle.

Margaret Elizabeth Jenkins was born on Oct. 31, 1905, in Hitchin, Hertfordshire, where a year earlier her father had founded Caldicott, a prep school.

She studied English and history at Newnham College, Cambridge, where at the time women could take exams but not receive degrees. The principal of the college was Pernel Strachey, sister of the biographer and Bloomsbury figure Lytton Strachey, and through her Ms. Jenkins met Edith Sitwell and Leonard and Virginia Woolf.

She found the company intellectually distinguished but rude and unpleasant. Woolf’s description of Ms. Jenkins’s first novel, “Virginia Water” (1929), as “a sweet white grape of a book” did not erase the impression.

Despite good reviews for her first novel and a three-book deal with the publisher Victor Gollancz, Ms. Jenkins began teaching English at King Alfred’s School in Hampstead, where she remained until the outbreak of World War II.

In this period she wrote two of her most admired biographies, “Lady Caroline Lamb” (1932) and “Jane Austen” (1938), as well as the chilling “Harriet” (1934), a novel about the sufferings of a mentally disabled woman whose husband, a scheming clerk, marries for her money.

During the war Ms. Jenkins worked for the Assistance Board, helping Jewish refugees and victims of the German air raids on London. She later worked for the Board of Trade and the Ministry of Information.

“Elizabeth the Great” (1958) showed her biographical talents at their most effective. Although she relied on the standard historical sources, Ms. Jenkins added a psychological dimension to her portrait that other historians had scanted.

The historian Garrett Mattingly, in a review, wrote that Ms. Jenkins “is really not much interested in war and diplomacy, politics and finance.” Her specialty, he argued, was the human heart. “We believe Elizabeth Jenkins,” he added, “because, by imaginative insight and instinctive sympathy, she can make the figures of a remote historical pageant as real, as living, as three-dimensional as characters in a novel.”

Ms. Jenkins returned to the Elizabethan period in “Elizabeth and Leicester” (1961) and roamed further afield in “The Mystery of King Arthur” (1975) and “The Princes in the Tower” (1978). In “Six Criminal Women” (1949), she presented short studies of two murderers, a pickpocket, a blackmailer and a con artist living between the 14th and 19th centuries. A more wholesome gallery of characters was put on view in “Ten Fascinating Women” (1955).

In 1940 she helped found the Jane Austen Society and took part in its campaign to buy Austen’s house at Chawton, where Austen spent the last eight years of her life. It is now a museum.

Her novels included “Doubtful Joy” (1935), “The Phoenix’ Nest” (1936), “Robert and Helen” (1944), “Brightness” (1963) and “Honey” (1968).

In 2004 Ms. Jenkins published a memoir, “The View From Downshire Hill.” Its title refers to the Hampstead neighborhood whe

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Profile Image for David Ross.
414 reviews1 follower
October 19, 2020
Wow! What a story. Quite astonished that Home hasn't remained as a person of fame into the current age. As the title suggests, Jenkins is very much on his side but this does not mean her critical thinking has been completely put aside. The sheer volume of incidents and the many witnesses of all walks makes his claims very believable. Extraordinary claims of clairvoyancy, communications with the dead, levitation and other paranormal phenomenon which many critics and men of science strove to disprove but all were eventually unable to find fraud or even explain what they had witnessed. Many famed persons are dotted through his life from authors like Arthur Conan Doyle and Alexandre Dumas to nobility like Napoleon III. All the while his honesty and integrity are never doubted by anyone he meets, only those who know of him through the court of public opinion. An amazing story that now implores me to read the books that act as the sources for this one.
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