This scene comes from Season 3 Episode 5 This is the most heartbreaking, tear-jerking scene for me in all 6 seasons of Downton Abbey, the movie included. 😭
The shocking thing was not just the fact that she was dying but also how brutal the entire scene was. Often in film, you have characters gasp and then kind of peacefully fall asleep to their death. Here we saw Sybil in pain, fighting to breathe before eventually not getting enough air. And of course, Tom and Cora are absolutely heartbreaking.
I think mercifully, apart from the agonizing headache at the start, she wouldn't have been aware. She would have been completely unconscious during the seizures. Even so, it is horrific to watch, and you are totally right how it shows that death, even by natural causes, often isn't this peaceful slip off into sleep thing. The family certainly wouldn't recall her death as 'peaceful.' Incredibly tragic.
Sybil had Eclampsia, a pregnancy related condition causing kidney failure, seizures and total body shutdown and death if not treated. Women often died of this before modern times and you can be treated for it now if caught early enough.s@puspita282
What really hit hard for me was at 1:52 lady Mary taking that step back and just the look on her face realizing that this is actually happening and there is nothing they can do for her. Incredible powerful
I didn't cry during the actual scene. I think I was in too much shock at the time. Cora finished me off when it was just her talking to Sybil though. "You'll always be my baby" 😢
It's horrible to watch even because i have had the same illnes while having my baby but In our modern time it Can be handled if only noticed In time. Or actually only cure is that baby must be born or both Will die.
Definitely the hardest and one of most devastating scenes of Downton Abbey. 1:20 Matthew’s line of ‘not now not these days’ really hits hard because we still ask that question today. Sybil truly touched the hearts of many 💖.
La mort presqu'identique de la fiancée de Mattew de la grippe espagnole est aussi très difficile à supporter car elle meurt le cœur brisé en laissant son futur mari à une autre ; cela m'a touché davantage....
It hit me hard because I had Pre eclampsia ( was called Toxaemia) with all my 3 children in Melbourne in the 80s.Pregnancy was difficult. Thank God I didn't live in those times.
@@renatewest6366So did my mother. I had to be delivered prematurely by emergency caesarean, and there was true risk at one stage, so glad we are both here to say we lived through it.
Before the doctor even took her pulse, Matthew knew and he was already sad. Seen so much death he knew when Tom turned to him for help he could only look away in sadness.
I was really late to Downtown, so I already knew all the major plot points before I started watching. But Jesus this scene was heartbreaking and shocking nonetheless... I can only imagine how much worse it would've been if I'd had no idea.
I had no idea what was going to happen. I was only 13 when I watched this scene and it still disturbs me to this day. Sybil was my favourite character and I didn't think she'd die and certainly not like this. It's so heart breaking to think this happened to so many women back then and still sometimes happens to women today 😥
When all background music stops when they show the servants' reactions, you can just feel the emptiness that sweeps through the house. The strings tell of tension, but the silence is much louder 😭
When people like Thomas Barrow and Miss O'Brien break down like this for a person's death, then there is no need to ask how wonderful a soul that person must be...💔🙏🏻 PS: Not to mention the phenomenal acting of every actor in this scene. When I first watched it, I swear I almost stopped breathing.
The shock of this scene never dies away (no pun intended) for me. The fact that this was going to be the last of Sybil! The manner in which she died! It was surreal to watch.
This is so heartbreaking I did not think any author and/or director would be capable of such realistic devastation. I have to remind myself "the actress just wants out" to regain my sanity.
Even with his daughter having seizures and suffocating to death, Robert continued ignoring Dr.Clarkson's diagnosis of eclampsia, desperate to believe the fancy doctor's one. I never liked Robert, but his behavior during Sybil's delivery and afterwards made me hate him even more. I think he should had been punished even more further by Cora, she was in her right to despise him.
He believed the fancy doctor because he came from a better medical school and believed qualifications over experience. At the end he was desperate, Clarkson had said nothing more could be done, so like any father not prepared to let their child die, he turned to another professional who for once, agreed with Clarkson's diagnosis but offered pain medication
Agreed! He was legit the worst character in the show. He had nothing. He sucked at managing their buisness, money. He could was full of himself and often saw their kichten staff as under intelligent ect. There is so much to him that if he wasent shown from this perspektive he would deffinetly be just as bad as Larry😂
@@user-ho7mg9ol7w i see your point and i agree with the fact that it was a desperate situation, so Robert would want to cling over the last chance of saving his daughter. But on the other hand, he did not want to send her to the hospital. I know there was little to be done either way, but his refusal, even with Sybil allucinating things and in obvious need of medical help, definetly made things even worse, at least in a psycological way, i believe. That is just my opinion. And also, english is not my first language so i apologize if i was rude in any way😳
Clarkson ignored Sybils symptoms early on as well. She mentioned swollen ankles and having headaches at the start of the episode. The baby would have felt small for weeks This isn't a condition that comes on suddenly. I saw them as all failing Sybil
Come on, you guys forgetting something, it's in somewhere between 1900-1930 era 😌, no body really familiar with pregnancy and delivery risk at the moment
This Scene in Downton Abbey of Sybil,s Death has made me see how much life is Precious, and for the pain our loved ones go through, 2022 keep safe people
Understandable, but I hated Sir Philip even more: he should have known better in the first place, being a professional. At least Dr. Clarkson was wise enough not to make false guarantees.
It's not that rare sadly . Especially in under developed countries Even with modern medicine when it reaches this stage its got a high mortality rate That's why antenatal is so dam important
@@hannahdyson7129 In the UK, preeclampsia deaths are literally non-existent. Nowadays it would be due to cardiovascular conditions, but that can always be prevented if you look after yourself. Most maternal deaths now are very preventable. There's a reason why the death rates are so incredibly low in most developed countries. Preeclampsia was a major killer 100 years ago, and so was puerperal fever.
@@hannahdyson7129 true. But in a developed country they will often be pretty sure before the birth and will collect quantitative data along the way. Medicine was much more guess work then
Sadly, this is depicted as early 1920s, and, as much as Sir Phillip mentions pain management, they would have been limited on what could be done. It doesn't come on suddenly, and it's often a combination of protein and blood pressure, but things weren't as advanced as they are now. The main drug that is used to ease it, Magnesium sulfate, wasn't distributed until at least a decade later, and even then, there have been many risks. My own mother had pre-eclampsia (toxiemia). Due to risk in pregnancy, I had to be delivered prematurely by emergency caesarean as there was a risk of losing us both, (and that was the mid 90s) but safe to say, thanks to such advancement, we are both here to say we survived.
Hi. I was diagnosed with pre-eclampsia at 35 weeks with my first baby in the 90s. I was so blown up with fluid and my wee samples were nearly solid protein. The only treatment I received was going into hospital for bed rest, constant testing and wait for baby to come to put an end to it. He arrived at 37 wks soon after a rather rough internal exam from my obstetrician dislodged him 😂
@@trishstyles6514, well I'm glad to hear you're a survival story darling. I was considerably earlier. My mother got diagnosed much earlier but had very high blood pressure as a result. I was delivered at 28 weeks gestation, and as one of the NICU premmies, I can say that I am a strong, 29 year old.
Sadly, 100 years ago childbirth was a dangerous thing with mortality of either mother or baby was quite common. This scene is shocking because we're used to childbirth being a natural, straight forward occurrence. Its a good reminder not to take the things we take for granted as a given normality
I remember this scene it was so sad poor woman that wouldve been so awful,i know that its just a show but im sure that in real life there are probably lots of women who have been through the same kind of horror
This tragic storyline was very well kept from the viewer and so came as a complete shock. Unlike the soaps which tell you what's gooing to happen every week on the front of all the tv magazines. It ruins the stories completely. Wish they'd go back to not saying what was going to happen.
Still scary and so heartbreaking… even Snow White never got to know her own mother, nor was the fact ever mentioned in the story that her mum died of eclampsia… 💔
How is it her parents were the last to know something was wrong with Sybil? Mathew, Mary, Edith and the two doctors were already in the room and it looked like this had been going on for a while
Thhe thing that vets me is those 2 doctors. The very knowledgeable GP who is 100% right in his diagnosis and the consultant gynaecologist, who true to the the type of THAT, era , thinks he's God Almighty, and has fouled up big time. If only the family had listened to Dr Clarkson, Lady sybil would have survived it.
How? They didn't have modern anesthesia, antibiotics, blood pressure meds etc. Sure there is a tiny chance she would have survived a rudimentary caeserian but the odds were not in her favour, alas.
I'm so glad someone spoiled this to me so that I didn't have to continue watching just to see my favorite character die. They didn't have to kill her just because the actress couldn't play her anymore, they could have gone away together or something.
Yeah. Even though what they could have done would have been very limited, they would certainly have been trying as hard as possible to keep her airway open.
@chronically ella It's extremely rare to die of preeclampsia these days. It's very treatable. In the early 1900s, there was no understanding of why it happened, so they couldn't find a cure for it. I can't speak for all countries but here in the UK, preeclampsia deaths are literally non-existent.
@@MsJubjubbirdIt wasn't a dispute, she had planned it from the first season. It was because she didn't want to be typecast early. So Julian Fallows knew, it was the fact that, being part of the main characters, she was going to have to be written out, either by way of leaving permanently or death.
Yes, injections of magnesium are a simple treatment that saves many lives these days, mother and child. It is used in western medicine and in many parts of the world, because it is cheap and effective. It allows time to deliver the baby and placenta, which cures the condition. Not all women and babies can be saved, but most can.
All i can remember is branson saying thomas had it coming when he was mocking the death of cora’s unborn child. I dont really thinks he respects branson as he once did mocking him for thinking highly of himself to visit downstairs.
@Marijn Leegstra, this was sometime in the night after she had given birth. She was suffering from eclampsia a condition many women suffer and die from during and after childbirth.
@Maasoomah Abdul, she was suffering from eclampsia - according to google, it is a condition of unknown cause that used to be called “toxemia of pregnancy.” It is the world's number one killer of mothers and babies in childbirth
@@maasoomahabdul8872 You are most welcome. I also learned about the condition from watching this show. I don't have kids but it is still a very scary thing to think about, happening.
@@downtonabbey1786 It's not now. The number one cause of maternal deaths are cardiovascular conditions. Also back then childbed fever was a nasty killer aswell. You don't ever hear anyone dying of that now. Not in Western countries anyway.
She had preeclampsia. It's when something goes wrong with the placenta. It causes you to have seizures and fits. If not treated, it can cause severe damage to your organs and even death. It's not a major killer now thanks to advances in diagnosis and medicine but back then, it was a really horrible way to go.
high blood pressure caused by abnormalities in the placenta (it's complex but basically the placenta needs to send signals to the mother's spinal arteries to widen in order to accommodate adequate blood flow to the foetus. In pre eclampsia they think the signaling is inadequate and so the blood vessels don't change enough and are too narrow for the amount of extra blood flowing through- hence high blood pressure) These days they monitor a pregnant lady's blood pressure regularly and will take action if it gets too high. In those days they didn't know until the birth and she started having problems and it was likely way too late then
I want to point out that none of the people except Sybil's bf/husband are wailing. Where's the crying? Does nobody really care about her? Mary is like a robot, no real emotions at all
They were processing it at their own levels, not everyone immediately breaks down. Her husband and mother were crying immediately, but the others were in shock, her father was in denial. All these reactions are normal.
The day my father died, I didn't cry, but I felt like I'd been sucker-punched. Worst feeling in the world. I never thought he'd really die. Just that morning he'd been fine. He was looking forward to seeing his twin grandsons turn eight the next week but he wasn't so keen on having to go to hospital for a hernia operation. After his last birthday he didn't think he'd live to see another one. I thought: "Sure, Dad, how long have you been saying that now?" Why did I automatically think about that after he died? Because I never believed it would happen.
The shocking thing was not just the fact that she was dying but also how brutal the entire scene was. Often in film, you have characters gasp and then kind of peacefully fall asleep to their death. Here we saw Sybil in pain, fighting to breathe before eventually not getting enough air. And of course, Tom and Cora are absolutely heartbreaking.
What disease did she have?
@@puspita282eclampsia
I think mercifully, apart from the agonizing headache at the start, she wouldn't have been aware. She would have been completely unconscious during the seizures. Even so, it is horrific to watch, and you are totally right how it shows that death, even by natural causes, often isn't this peaceful slip off into sleep thing. The family certainly wouldn't recall her death as 'peaceful.' Incredibly tragic.
Sybil had Eclampsia, a pregnancy related condition causing kidney failure, seizures and total body shutdown and death if not treated. Women often died of this before modern times and you can be treated for it now if caught early enough.s@puspita282
@@puspita282 eclampsia, brought on by complications in her pregnancy.
What really hit hard for me was at 1:52 lady Mary taking that step back and just the look on her face realizing that this is actually happening and there is nothing they can do for her. Incredible powerful
Toms “Please don’t leave me, please don’t leave me love” rips my soul out every time
Thomas, the living rock since season 1, sneaks out crying over Sybil and we all know that means something 😓
It was out of knowing that he just lost the one person who had shown him the slightest bit of kindness and how alone he felt.
The Actors didn't know about the baby cry, that reaction from them all is REAL
It’s been years, but watching this clip still makes me cry 😭
Oh god - crying buckets….
Saddest death in Downton. She was one of my favourites. Everybody's acting was outstanding.
I actually love the moment between Thomas and Anna. Often at logger heads over Mr Bates but have this vulnerable tender moment 😭😭😭
The part that hit me hardest is when the baby started crying. Remembering that the baby is now without a mother and has no idea.
I didn't cry during the actual scene. I think I was in too much shock at the time. Cora finished me off when it was just her talking to Sybil though. "You'll always be my baby" 😢
Aly Class, those final words by Cora still fill my mind from time to time, "...my beauty and my baby." 😭
i legitimately had a panic attack watching this
It's horrible to watch even because i have had the same illnes while having my baby but In our modern time it Can be handled if only noticed In time. Or actually only cure is that baby must be born or both Will die.
Definitely the hardest and one of most devastating scenes of Downton Abbey. 1:20 Matthew’s line of ‘not now not these days’ really hits hard because we still ask that question today. Sybil truly touched the hearts of many 💖.
@Lady vintage, I echo your every syllable 😔
La mort presqu'identique de la fiancée de Mattew de la grippe espagnole est aussi très difficile à supporter car elle meurt le cœur brisé en laissant son futur mari à une autre ; cela m'a touché davantage....
Matthew had a medical miracle. Of course he thinks medicine can fix everything
It hit me hard because I had Pre eclampsia ( was called Toxaemia) with all my 3 children in Melbourne in the 80s.Pregnancy was difficult. Thank God I didn't live in those times.
@@renatewest6366So did my mother. I had to be delivered prematurely by emergency caesarean, and there was true risk at one stage, so glad we are both here to say we lived through it.
One of the best parts about this scene is how it captures the absolute stillness that is felt after someone you love dies. Your world stops.
Before the doctor even took her pulse, Matthew knew and he was already sad. Seen so much death he knew when Tom turned to him for help he could only look away in sadness.
She acted this so well. Tom Branson as well 😭😭👏🏾👏🏾👏🏾👏🏾
@Miss Madeline, they certainly did. I'd include Cora too.
Thomas crying over Lady Sybills death is so touching.
I hate how good everyone's acting is in this scene 😭
@wabbitwabbit, absolutely brilliant!
Me too😭😭😭
It’s not
I was really late to Downtown, so I already knew all the major plot points before I started watching. But Jesus this scene was heartbreaking and shocking nonetheless... I can only imagine how much worse it would've been if I'd had no idea.
I had no idea what was going to happen. I was only 13 when I watched this scene and it still disturbs me to this day. Sybil was my favourite character and I didn't think she'd die and certainly not like this. It's so heart breaking to think this happened to so many women back then and still sometimes happens to women today 😥
I remember when this first aired on TV, I WAS NOT PREPARED! I have never cried so hard for a TV show.
When all background music stops when they show the servants' reactions, you can just feel the emptiness that sweeps through the house. The strings tell of tension, but the silence is much louder 😭
The most powerful scene in the whole series.
@Raza Alee, it was devastating.
Amazing acting all round especially from Jessica and Allen. Still gets me 😢even now
When people like Thomas Barrow and Miss O'Brien break down like this for a person's death, then there is no need to ask how wonderful a soul that person must be...💔🙏🏻
PS: Not to mention the phenomenal acting of every actor in this scene. When I first watched it, I swear I almost stopped breathing.
The shock of this scene never dies away (no pun intended) for me. The fact that this was going to be the last of Sybil! The manner in which she died! It was surreal to watch.
I always cry when Thomas cried and during Cora is alone with Sybil.
Cora held unto to promise she made till the end.
This is so heartbreaking I did not think any author and/or director would be capable of such realistic devastation. I have to remind myself "the actress just wants out" to regain my sanity.
That's true that's the same thing I thought while watching it ,that the actress wants out.
I'm still broken because of this. One part of my heart will always cry for her
You are not alone in that.
she honestly was my fav person on the show
@Zoe K🖤 me too
@@downtonabbey1786like Tom is my favourite. It's upsetting seeing your favourite character like that
I loved her too
The voice of the baby at the end! 🥺
Even with his daughter having seizures and suffocating to death, Robert continued ignoring Dr.Clarkson's diagnosis of eclampsia, desperate to believe the fancy doctor's one. I never liked Robert, but his behavior during Sybil's delivery and afterwards made me hate him even more. I think he should had been punished even more further by Cora, she was in her right to despise him.
He believed the fancy doctor because he came from a better medical school and believed qualifications over experience. At the end he was desperate, Clarkson had said nothing more could be done, so like any father not prepared to let their child die, he turned to another professional who for once, agreed with Clarkson's diagnosis but offered pain medication
Agreed! He was legit the worst character in the show. He had nothing. He sucked at managing their buisness, money. He could was full of himself and often saw their kichten staff as under intelligent ect. There is so much to him that if he wasent shown from this perspektive he would deffinetly be just as bad as Larry😂
@@user-ho7mg9ol7w i see your point and i agree with the fact that it was a desperate situation, so Robert would want to cling over the last chance of saving his daughter. But on the other hand, he did not want to send her to the hospital. I know there was little to be done either way, but his refusal, even with Sybil allucinating things and in obvious need of medical help, definetly made things even worse, at least in a psycological way, i believe. That is just my opinion. And also, english is not my first language so i apologize if i was rude in any way😳
Clarkson ignored Sybils symptoms early on as well. She mentioned swollen ankles and having headaches at the start of the episode.
The baby would have felt small for weeks
This isn't a condition that comes on suddenly.
I saw them as all failing Sybil
Come on, you guys forgetting something, it's in somewhere between 1900-1930 era 😌, no body really familiar with pregnancy and delivery risk at the moment
This Scene in Downton Abbey of Sybil,s Death has made me see how much life is Precious, and for the pain our loved ones go through,
2022 keep safe people
I can't imagine the pain of the loss of a family member. Unbearable is the word I'd use 😖
Still haunts me this scene
It was so hard to watch.
Me too along with the nurse who died in call the midwife
۴فففف
I hated Robert in this episode
PS: Laura Carmichael's acting is amazing
Understandable, but I hated Sir Philip even more: he should have known better in the first place, being a professional. At least Dr. Clarkson was wise enough not to make false guarantees.
Philip (and Robert to some extent) killed Sybil. I will never forgive him.
Les acteurs ont été vraiment tous plus meilleurs les uns que les autres, une performance réussie pour toute la troupe, vraiment excellent...
Una belleza impactante la de la actriz que interpretaba a Sybil. La mas hermosa de sus hermanas
we are so lucky to be born in era which is medical advance that women die with this condition is rare😔😔😔
So true.
It's not that rare sadly . Especially in under developed countries
Even with modern medicine when it reaches this stage its got a high mortality rate
That's why antenatal is so dam important
@@hannahdyson7129 In the UK, preeclampsia deaths are literally non-existent. Nowadays it would be due to cardiovascular conditions, but that can always be prevented if you look after yourself. Most maternal deaths now are very preventable. There's a reason why the death rates are so incredibly low in most developed countries. Preeclampsia was a major killer 100 years ago, and so was puerperal fever.
@@hannahdyson7129 true. But in a developed country they will often be pretty sure before the birth and will collect quantitative data along the way. Medicine was much more guess work then
This was so heart ranching you forget their acting
Sadly, this is depicted as early 1920s, and, as much as Sir Phillip mentions pain management, they would have been limited on what could be done.
It doesn't come on suddenly, and it's often a combination of protein and blood pressure, but things weren't as advanced as they are now.
The main drug that is used to ease it, Magnesium sulfate, wasn't distributed until at least a decade later, and even then, there have been many risks.
My own mother had pre-eclampsia (toxiemia). Due to risk in pregnancy, I had to be delivered prematurely by emergency caesarean as there was a risk of losing us both, (and that was the mid 90s) but safe to say, thanks to such advancement, we are both here to say we survived.
Hi. I was diagnosed with pre-eclampsia at 35 weeks with my first baby in the 90s. I was so blown up with fluid and my wee samples were nearly solid protein. The only treatment I received was going into hospital for bed rest, constant testing and wait for baby to come to put an end to it. He arrived at 37 wks soon after a rather rough internal exam from my obstetrician dislodged him 😂
@@trishstyles6514, well I'm glad to hear you're a survival story darling. I was considerably earlier. My mother got diagnosed much earlier but had very high blood pressure as a result. I was delivered at 28 weeks gestation, and as one of the NICU premmies, I can say that I am a strong, 29 year old.
Not me rewatching this scene at 2 a.m and crying my eyes out while I have class tomorrow 😭😭😭😭😭😭
Omigod I’m doing the exact same thing
I watched the whole ep in midnight, & was sobbing so hard (didn't have any class in the morning though).
I still feel like sybil should have never come back and delivered in Ireland somewhere and she would have still lived 😭😭. I cannot 😭😭
L une des scènes les plus terribles et les plus émouvantes de la série.
@Juju C: Je suis totalement d'accord avec vous 🥺
Indeed😢❤💔
Sadly, 100 years ago childbirth was a dangerous thing with mortality of either mother or baby was quite common. This scene is shocking because we're used to childbirth being a natural, straight forward occurrence. Its a good reminder not to take the things we take for granted as a given normality
I remember this scene it was so sad poor woman that wouldve been so awful,i know that its just a show but im sure that in real life there are probably lots of women who have been through the same kind of horror
The medical profession has used and abused women for years.
It really was a devastating scene indeed never forget that scene
This tragic storyline was very well kept from the viewer and so came as a complete shock. Unlike the soaps which tell you what's gooing to happen every week on the front of all the tv magazines. It ruins the stories completely. Wish they'd go back to not saying what was going to happen.
Still makes me cry 😢
@Lettie Tongue, me too. Everytime, I watch it.
😢❤
I was genuinely sobbing my heart out in this scene
i just watched this episode and it HURTS SO BAS😢, i can’t.
Still scary and so heartbreaking… even Snow White never got to know her own mother, nor was the fact ever mentioned in the story that her mum died of eclampsia… 💔
How is it her parents were the last to know something was wrong with Sybil?
Mathew, Mary, Edith and the two doctors were already in the room and it looked like this had been going on for a while
Hmmm...good question @Blast From The Past - The Good Old Days
They probably didn't want them to worry until they realised
The most harrowing scenes in cinema
@El, you can say that again!
Thhe thing that vets me is those 2 doctors. The very knowledgeable GP who is 100% right in his diagnosis and the consultant gynaecologist, who true to the the type of THAT, era , thinks he's God Almighty, and has fouled up big time.
If only the family had listened to Dr Clarkson, Lady sybil would have survived it.
They still think they're Gods, despite being in bed with Big Pharma.
How? They didn't have modern anesthesia, antibiotics, blood pressure meds etc. Sure there is a tiny chance she would have survived a rudimentary caeserian but the odds were not in her favour, alas.
Breaks my heart everytime~
This was horrible to watch, I couldn't believe she was gone cried for the first time for a character
Death can be Cruel, and HeartBreaking 💔
But life is so very Precious, we all have to be strong,
Life is a test, Human Life is Unpredictable
2022 ♥️
This scene will always have tears going down my face
Heartbreaking...
Incredibly so 😔
❤
So heartbreaking, especially that in the past this thing happened before people knew about CPR 😢
I'm so glad someone spoiled this to me so that I didn't have to continue watching just to see my favorite character die. They didn't have to kill her just because the actress couldn't play her anymore, they could have gone away together or something.
The truth is, Lord Robert C. did HIS LEVEL BEST (!!!) to reach *this* result.
Poor tom he's pail in feer for that his wife sharnt ever see they baby again
I just watched this scene today!! Bawling! 😢😢
Still not over it
@
icansleepallday, I still cry when I replay it.
She do this part so well
J'ai versé ma petite larme là !
It was a nurse there and two doctors they could have done something instead of just standing there
Yeah. Even though what they could have done would have been very limited, they would certainly have been trying as hard as possible to keep her airway open.
@@vulpesaustralis1452 indeed they could have tried something. Or Robert could have listened to dr Clarkson.
That gets me as well
People still die of it today, that’s what is so so sad😞
@chronically ella It's extremely rare to die of preeclampsia these days. It's very treatable. In the early 1900s, there was no understanding of why it happened, so they couldn't find a cure for it. I can't speak for all countries but here in the UK, preeclampsia deaths are literally non-existent.
@@bunchberry9957 unfortunately I think it may still happen in some countries apart from the UK
@@gillyweedniharry It still happens in some countries but in most western countries, it doesn't..
I know its not real but even so how heartbreaking would that be for the family the poor souls how horrible poor things
Bet they wished they’d listened to Dr Clarkson.
That’s what Cora said
This is so heartbreaking 😢 ah why they did this to the best character in this show
because the actor had a dispute with the production company
@@MsJubjubbirdIt wasn't a dispute, she had planned it from the first season. It was because she didn't want to be typecast early. So Julian Fallows knew, it was the fact that, being part of the main characters, she was going to have to be written out, either by way of leaving permanently or death.
This destroyed me 😢
If Downton Abbey was set in modern times, was there a chance to save Sybil?
Yes, injections of magnesium are a simple treatment that saves many lives these days, mother and child. It is used in western medicine and in many parts of the world, because it is cheap and effective. It allows time to deliver the baby and placenta, which cures the condition. Not all women and babies can be saved, but most can.
Yes
They know how to treat preeclampsia these days
😭😭😭😭😭😭😭😭😭😭
Why did she die ? I’m so confused
Was there ever an exchange between Tom and Thomas Barrow?
All i can remember is branson saying thomas had it coming when he was mocking the death of cora’s unborn child. I dont really thinks he respects branson as he once did mocking him for thinking highly of himself to visit downstairs.
When they won tug of war and Tom and Barrow hugged
ua-cam.com/video/oVxb72049ic/v-deo.html
was she giving birth
She just had
@Marijn Leegstra, this was sometime in the night after she had given birth. She was suffering from eclampsia a condition many women suffer and die from during and after childbirth.
@@agathecourpied8798 It was the night after.
@@downtonabbey1786and during pregnancy
😭😭😭😭😭⚘
😢❤
the actress wanted out of the series, so...
Gak bisa bahasa enggres
It was so terrible!
condoglianze
it was terribly awful
Whats her disease?
Eclampsia
Preeclampsia
What happened to her?
eclampsia
@Maasoomah Abdul, she was suffering from eclampsia - according to google, it is a condition of unknown cause that used to be called “toxemia of pregnancy.” It is the world's number one killer of mothers and babies in childbirth
@@downtonabbey1786 Oh. Thanks for the reply. I really didn't know that. Although I am a mother of one child.
Sounds scary
@@maasoomahabdul8872 You are most welcome. I also learned about the condition from watching this show. I don't have kids but it is still a very scary thing to think about, happening.
@@downtonabbey1786 It's not now. The number one cause of maternal deaths are cardiovascular conditions. Also back then childbed fever was a nasty killer aswell. You don't ever hear anyone dying of that now. Not in Western countries anyway.
I don't approve of the editing.
فف
Whats wrong with her???
She had eclampsia
@@zoec8151 did the baby survive?
@@kuroyuri04 yes the baby survived
She had preeclampsia. It's when something goes wrong with the placenta. It causes you to have seizures and fits. If not treated, it can cause severe damage to your organs and even death. It's not a major killer now thanks to advances in diagnosis and medicine but back then, it was a really horrible way to go.
high blood pressure caused by abnormalities in the placenta (it's complex but basically the placenta needs to send signals to the mother's spinal arteries to widen in order to accommodate adequate blood flow to the foetus. In pre eclampsia they think the signaling is inadequate and so the blood vessels don't change enough and are too narrow for the amount of extra blood flowing through- hence high blood pressure) These days they monitor a pregnant lady's blood pressure regularly and will take action if it gets too high. In those days they didn't know until the birth and she started having problems and it was likely way too late then
Joseph and today TV has
I want to point out that none of the people except Sybil's bf/husband are wailing. Where's the crying? Does nobody really care about her? Mary is like a robot, no real emotions at all
They were processing it at their own levels, not everyone immediately breaks down. Her husband and mother were crying immediately, but the others were in shock, her father was in denial. All these reactions are normal.
The day my father died, I didn't cry, but I felt like I'd been sucker-punched. Worst feeling in the world. I never thought he'd really die. Just that morning he'd been fine. He was looking forward to seeing his twin grandsons turn eight the next week but he wasn't so keen on having to go to hospital for a hernia operation. After his last birthday he didn't think he'd live to see another one. I thought: "Sure, Dad, how long have you been saying that now?" Why did I automatically think about that after he died? Because I never believed it would happen.
Not these days 😂😂😂 areet Matthew, all ya got was a wash cloth..
What a load of stuff and nonsense!!! It's not real
Of COURSE it's not real - IT'S A TELEVISION FILM MADE BY ACTORS!
thanks for the spoiler
The show is old..so u can get spoilers of course
This particular SEASON (3) is 12 years old (2010).
Grow up
@@charlottemunday7311 That's a nicer way to say. Have respect✨