According to Aileen Ward, Samuel Brawne died in 1828, which makes it unlikely, I think, that his TB was caught from Keats. I read somewhere that roughly 25% of people in England and Europe died of TB two hundred years ago. So it was very common.
I think I read on a TB website that it can be in the body for 8 years before it comes out- depending upon the immune system.
I'd have to check on that though- though I'm certainly not "blaming" John for passing on TB to Samuel. Samuel probably didn't catch it from John, though it isn't impossible.Interesting ( and of course good) that none of his friends caught it from him. I wonder if that is because John was aware enough to cough into a hankerchief?
When I read the collection of Keats's letters, I was surprised by how often his friends and acquaintances were ill with varying diseases, and by how people constantly commented in their letters on health and illness. We take health so much for granted now, but they seemed to see it as something more difficult to achieve.
Yes- I noticed that too- he writes so much about health and enquiring about his friends' health. I think it was difficult then because of lack of sanitation, no waterproof clothing and cold houses. But many people did live to a grand old age- some of his friends did- notably Joseph Severn.
Fevers seemed to be very common then- I suspect that is the term for influenza-I've only had that twice in my life- once as a child and when I was about 22. I don't remember much about it when I had it as a child, but I remember it as an adult- I felt very ill- could hardly get out of bed to get a drink of water, I was that weak.Luckily I was in the right place- I was a student nurse and lived in the nurses home and a doctor was in the room next to me so he came to see me every evening when he got back and brought me fruit and water etc. I think I was in bed for about 5 days.