(clears throat) By the way, if ever you want to ride, just let Lynch know and he'll sort it out for you. ROBERT: Drake is a good man and far too young to die, but I suppose the doctor knows his business. ISOBEL: He's treating one of your tenants, John Drake, for dropsy, but seems reluctant to embrace some of the newer treatments. ISOBEL: Indeed I have, and I thought the hospital a great credit to your father's memory.īut I'm afraid the good doctor and I did not see eye to eye. ROBERT: Have you been able to explore the village? When his lordship makes donations to charity, you understand, he doesn’t like notice to be taken of it. Well, I hope you didn't feel the need to mention it to anybody. When I was collecting that food earlier for his lordship. I would remind that you we are not talking of a cut or a graze, but the loss of a man's life and the ruin of his family.īut I beg you to see that it is not reasonable. When every villager could- could demand the latest fad in treatment for each new cut and graze. We would be setting an impossible precedent. Crawley, don't-don't force me to be uncivil. It's a while ago now, but I saw my husband do it. Injection of adrenaline is a comparatively new procedure. I've been thinking about the treatments that are available.Ĭonsiderable success has been achieved over the last few years by draining the pericardial sac of the excess fluid and administering adrenaline. When you made your offer, I thought you might be a "Great Lady Nurse" and faint at the sight of blood. She'd have rung for me and given me the button, that's all.Īnd you're not "friends" with the girls neither.ĬLARKSON: I must compliment you, Mrs. If she was a real lady she wouldn't have come down here. I don't think that's fair, not here in the Servants' Hall. If we're to be friends, you will not speak in that way again about the Crawleys or any member of Lord Grantham's family. You're sailing perilously close to the wind, O'Brien. You will therefore please accord him the respect he's entitled to. Crawley is his lordship's cousin and heir. This is the button we're missing from my new evening coat.īut I was shocked at the talk I heard as I came in. Bates, I don't see the point of it.Īnd if anyone thinks I'm going to pull my forelock and curtsey to this Mr. He keeps the wine on the table so he can pour it himself. I'll tell Thomas he's jealous enough already. I get to take the linen down to the laundry, but that's about all.Īnd I'm just stood there like a chump watching a man get dressed. He puts them out at night and hangs the ones he's worn. If I'm to live in this village, I must have an occupation. Crawley's work on the symptoms of infection in children.Įven I studied nursing during the South African War.Ī young farmer, John Drake, a tenant of Lord Grantham's.ĬLARKSON: Everything points to the heart. The Dowager Countess of Grantham and Mary's mother, Cora, make it quite clear that Mary is to try her hardest to secure cousin Matthew as a husband in order to save everything.I'm afraid it's a case of the warhorse and the drum. With both heirs now dead, the Crawley girls must find husbands of their own as the entire estate is entailed away from the female line however, perhaps there is hope after all as Matthew Crawley, a third cousin, once removed is now heir to the title and the estate. His only two heirs went down with the ship, including Patrick Crawley, who was to marry Lady Mary, the Earl's eldest daughter. With both heirs now dead, the Crawley girls must find News of the Titanic's sinking has just reached Downton Abbey, causing much chaos within the family as Lord Grantham has three daughters and no male heir. Summary: News of the Titanic's sinking has just reached Downton Abbey, causing much chaos within the family as Lord Grantham has three daughters and no male heir.
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