On PBS’s Downton Abbey
On PBS’s Downton Abbey in 1919 just after World War I
ended Her Ladyship contracted Spanish Influenza.
Lavinia, Mr. Crowley’s fiancée took a sudden
turn for the worse. The physician stated, “Strange
disease with sudden, savage changes.”
Her Ladyship, after severe bleeding from the nose,
and vomiting blood lay in a pool of sweat.
The physician said that if she made it through the night
she would be alright. Her Ladyship made it; Lavinia didn’t.
In 1918, my motherless, thirteen-year-old father sat all alone
watching his father, who had been a captain in the Swedish military but who had
contracted Spanish Influenza from American
soldiers returning home, writhe and sweat and bleed out and not
make it through the night,
leaving my father a thirteen-year-old orphan in a strange land.
I never knew what he went through until I, a 67 year-old,
watched Downton Abbey on PBS on a lovely, balmy, winter’s Sunday
night in Phoenix, Arizona. The thirteen-year-old
never told me.
What we don’t know about our parents – many sorrows and secrets. Thanks for writing this.