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1704: Is the pain of loss a price worth paying for true love?
1704: Is the pain of loss a price worth paying for true love?
In the year 1704, dairy maid Elen Griffiths’ immunity to the smallpox plaguing England should be a blessing. But it feels more like a curse when she is selected to leave her home and nurse high-born Viscount Mordiford through the illness within the confines of Duntisbourne Hall. There, Elen finds a horribly afflicted patient but she also discovers a friend in Ned Harley, the charming valet. However, before long sinister forces threaten Elen’s life and honour. Rescued by the man she has grown to love, she flees the country with the English army, not knowing if her affections are returned.
Across the Channel, Elen finds purpose serving as a nurse during the Duke of Marlborough’s campaign. Surrounded by the horror and confusion of the brutal war against the French, Elen is reunited with her love on the eve of the Battle of Blenheim. She learns that his feelings mirror her own, but a moment of joy may be all they ever know. Even if he survives the battle, a figure from the past threatens to destroy Elen’s freedom, her happiness and her life.
This novel is fiction but it’s based on fact. The Duke of Malborough did suffer from migraines – he described his periodic headaches in his letters to his wife. This, says the athor, gave her the chance to bring Dr Argyll and Elen to his side. The ergotamine that the doctor prescribed is still used in migraine medicines today.
The Description of the Battle of Blenheim was taken from many sources which the author details in her notes. Malbourough’s achievements were always overshadowed by the Duke of Wellington 1815 victory against Napolean. The novel looks at the less well known but perhaps even more significant battle of The Battle of Blenheim in 1704.
Duntishbourne Hall is inspired and based on Blenheim Palace in Oxfordshire.
Destination/location: Oxfordshire Author/guide: L P Fergusson Departure Time: 1704
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