Cyd charisse dies aged 86; mother, daughter, brother & sister living and married to the same man, whom she never married in her lifetime.
The woman whose name escapes us but which is not named in her death certificate, aged in her late 40s, has been living in the house. As for the woman who died, the inquest recorded that, in the early hours of Thursday, 30 July 1989 at 6.50, the patient was'removing a small portion of the lining of her wound from under the duvet' and that she 'was lying down and had begun to scream and cried.' Her sister Mary died, aged 84, having been married to her husband at 49, a couple from the village of Delyn, who she had three children with. Mary had died on 15 December 1981.
'An inquiry into the circumstances of the death of Jane Doe was conducted as soon as she died,' a report on the inquest reads.
'She died due to infection with influenza and pneumonia as a consequence of a long-standing respiratory infection she suffered which was aggravated by a lack of adequate sleep.'
Norman Foster-Smith, the director of medical practice at Westmead Hospital in Cambridge, said: 'She did not have any history of complications with her health but her life was ended in one of the worst circumstances imaginable.'
The coroner said there was a history of problems with medication including alcohol, tobacco and sedatives.
Jane Doe was the eldest of two children of a doctor. She worked as a nurse in a nursing home in Bristol at the age of 22. After she had two children, she began working at a hospital in Bristol as a full-time nursing assistant. On the evening of 14 April 1980, she died from a pneumonia caused by the flu.
Her husband, a dentist, said: 'It's very unfortunate that she had to die. She worked very hard at what she did. I can't believe she was sick but you can't expect anyone to die on a drug and alcohol problem.'
Jane Doe had had a period of flu-like symptoms but was released from hospital at the end of the month. She had three children with her husband, who worked for a local hospital in Bristol.
After Jane Doe's death, her brother David gave the details of her life, including who she had known before she died and why she went on holiday for only 30 days.
David told the BBC that the couple lived in Devon together and that she had never taken her own life but had given birth to a daughter.
David said her final wishes were that she might have made 'a happy wife' or even been a 'good mother'.
When she had given birth she had made sure sh
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Horsewoman saves wild horses over her journey back roads
On a long trail up a steep hill.
She stands on the hill next to me looking out her window.
I'm on the hill next to her in some other saddle.
She takes one look at me and stops, stops.
Her eyes look at me, her eyes, look me in the eye, stare at the road.
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