“Oh sad was her fate! In sportive jest,
She hid from her Lord, in an old oak chest.
It closed with a spring and her Bridal bloom,
Lay withering there in that living tomb.”
--Samuel Rogers
Bramshill |
Fourteen distinct ghosts
haunt Bramshill near Hook in Hampshire. One of them is a White Lady who
always announces her presence with a strong floral scent. This scent is Lilly
-of -the-Valley.
Bramshill is an
imposing Jacobean mansion that sits on 300 acres with magnificent views. Young
Henry, son of James l, had Bramshill built to be used as a royal palace. But he
died of typhoid before it was completed in 1625.
The mansion then was owned
privately until 1953 when the Home Office for housing acquired it for Britain’s
premier Police College. In 1913, the Home Office put the mansion up for sale for £25million.
A Tragic Game
A fifteen-year-old bride,
Ginevre Orsini married on Christmas Eve in 1727. But during her wedding
reception, she suffered a ghastly fate.
She was playing a game of
hide and seek with her husband and guests when she hid somewhere. The party searched and
searched, but she was not found.
Fifty years later her
skeletal remains were discovered in a large wooden chest. She was clothed in
her bridal gown, and she still held a sprig of mistletoe in her hand.
She had apparently climbed in
the chest to hide and the spring lock had snapped shut, entombing her for 50
years.
This chest is Italian and was
brought to England and then Bramshill by the fifth Baronet Cope--his
family-owned Branshill mansion from 1699 until 1935.
When the chest was imported
so was Genevre's ghost. Today this mistletoe-bough chest is displayed in the
Bramshill reception hall.
Sightings
Ginevra's ghost has been seen
wandering the mansion for several hundred years. She is described as
“sad-faced.” She is often seen in the Long Gallery, the Fleur de Lys room, and
the area near the chest.
In the 1930s young Joan
Penelope Cope and her brother often woke to find the White Lady by their
bedside.
The family of King Michael of
Romania, which stayed at Bramshill from 1950-52, felt the presence of the White
Lady. The King’s wife saw Gen sitting in the King’s room. They had an exorcism
performed but it had no effect--for the White Lady is still present.
In the fall of 1986 a police
officer from India, undergoing training at Bramshill was passing through the
large chapel drawing-room when he encountered something he found odd.
In one specific area of the
room, he smelled a pleasing soft fragrance. When he stepped out of this area, the
fragrance disappeared. When he entered
the same area by two cushioned chairs, he smelled the floral scent once more.
Curious he walked around the
room to see if he could smell the scent in other parts of the room--he couldn’t.
He was amazed that the strong
scent was in only one small area of the room. When he passed by the
cushioned chairs in the following days, the smell seemed to follow him out of
the room.
When he questioned the Chief
Superintendent of the college this man told him the story of the White Lady. As
he listened the hair on the back of his neck stood up--he realized that he had
encountered a ghost.
The Chief joked that Ginvera’s ghost must like him because in recent years she had rarely made appearances.
I share more information about this classic ghost story--told in films and a famous poem--known as The Mistletoe Bride. In my post entitled A Deadly Game of Hide and Seek.
The Chief joked that Ginvera’s ghost must like him because in recent years she had rarely made appearances.
I share more information about this classic ghost story--told in films and a famous poem--known as The Mistletoe Bride. In my post entitled A Deadly Game of Hide and Seek.
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