For three days, the child bled
profusely from the nose. She was six years old, and doctors had no idea what
was causing the bleeding. What’s more, they understood that if the bleeding
didn’t stop, her life was in grave danger.
It was 1913. The doctors knew very
little about transfusions, but they’d started to believe in the importance of
somehow getting good new blood back into the little girl’s system, so they
asked her father to give his daughter some of his. He complied, one of the
first blood transfusions in the state of Michigan.
The yellowed newspaper story is
titled, “Minister Saves the Life of Daughter By Giving Blood,” and the story it
tells ends by explaining how the father “was considerably improved and was able
to dress.” Then it adds, “The child was also considerably better and hopes are
entertained for her recovery.”
Two weeks later she was dead. Little
Agnes Gertrude, my grandparents’ child, succumbed once the hemorrhaging
returned. For a time, her father’s blood had brightened her face as well as her
possibilities, but his gift—as odd to the newspaper readers as it must have
seemed to him—would not and did not save her life.
Family lore says, at the time, the
doctors knew nothing about blood-typing. Her father, my relatives speculate,
was as good a choice as the doctors could have made, but he was not a match. Agnes
Gertrude, my great aunt, died two weeks after that strange new procedure the doctors
called “a transfusion.”
I have no newspaper accounts of
my grandparents’ grief, but I know some oral history. Agnes’s little sister
told me how her father lay face down on the rug of the living room for almost a
week after Agnes’s death, as if unable to move. She told me my grandfather was
lethargic, depressed, his whole countenance darkened by the mysterious and
horrible death of his child.
Nothing changed, she said, until he accepted a call to
another congregation, a small country church up north. She told me how she
remembered riding on a wagon up to that country church, all their possessions packed
up behind them, then being greeted by the entire church right there on the
lawn, all of them waiting for the new preacher and his family.
“And then it was over,” my aunt told me. The darkness
ended.
I can’t imagine all of the sadness was gone. If
my grandparents were still alive today, I’d love to ask them about that loss, to know if even today they could talk about it. But in the eyes of their five-year-old
daughter, the one who told me the story, the darkness ended on a summer day on
the lawn of a country church full of welcome.
I wonder how someone like my grandfather, the preacher,
read a verse like this one from Psalm 90. He probably read it a hundred times,
at a hundred funerals. I wonder what he thought of its modest petition: “Lord, give
us as many days as you do nights, as much joy as sorrow, as many smiles as
tears. That’s all we’re asking.”
Charles Spurgeon says the request is dear because it’s so
childlike. Maybe he’s right. What it is—and thank God almighty for it—is human.
It’s so understandable, so obviously wrenched from a mournful human heart.
Once in a while, just let us laugh, Lord—we’re not asking
for much.
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