

Episode 5
3/19/2023 | 54m 5sVideo has Audio Description, Closed Captions
Nancy oversees a child born out of wedlock, taking a very unexpected and shocking turn.
Nancy oversees a child born out of wedlock, but things take a very unexpected and shocking turn. Dr. Turner and Sister Veronica discuss a new contraception procedure: the Vasectomy. The Board of Health delivers some unwelcome news to Sister Julienne.
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Funding for Call the Midwife is provided by Viking.

Episode 5
3/19/2023 | 54m 5sVideo has Audio Description, Closed Captions
Nancy oversees a child born out of wedlock, but things take a very unexpected and shocking turn. Dr. Turner and Sister Veronica discuss a new contraception procedure: the Vasectomy. The Board of Health delivers some unwelcome news to Sister Julienne.
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Learn Moreabout PBS online sponsorship♪ ♪ Mature Jennifer: Every mother meets her child in battle.
[Woman screaming] The pain, the struggle, the fight for separate breath.
The mother is a warrior.
She endures it all.
Ah, morning, Miss Higgins.
Excellent posters.
I have strict rules of precedence for the printed matter on that board.
You can't put that there until after the measles vaccination drive is over.
Then I shall leave it on your desk, and you can put it up when you see fit.
My duties may preclude it.
My hands are extremely full now that Master Timothy Turner has taken work elsewhere.
It is paid work.
As a Council bathing attendant.
I'm not keen on it either, Miss Higgins.
Think of the things he'll see.
And the things he'll touch.
Sister Veronica: It could be extraordinarily educational.
Sister Julienne: Jill, this is the stinging I was telling you about.
It will pass.
[Grunting] [Panting] Is it born now?
Please say that it's born.
Your baby's head is with us.
Your baby will soon be in your arms.
I can't wait.
I can't wait.
Baby's turning now, Jill.
Get ready for that last push.
[Grunting] [Baby crying] Woman: Look at him!
Look at this child!
It is my Spencer all over again.
Jill, you have to look at him.
It's a little girl, Mrs. Wray.
[Baby crying] It's stone cold.
These instruments are no better than they were when they went in.
It wasn't me who broke it this time.
Maybe the mice have been nibbling at the cables, like they did with Trixie's Ladyshave.
Ah, there's no need to bring my beauty accoutrements into this.
How am I supposed to do the district round without a fully-stocked bag?
We'll have to boil everything manually.
Sister Monica Joan can help.
Spencer.
Would you like to come and meet your daughter?
A daughter?
There's a whole lot of women in that flat.
There certainly is.
I'll just, um, look in from the doorway for now.
[Baby crying] Woman: Scabies, impetigo, fleas, and ingrained dirt.
We can request medical remedies, but there's not much hot water and carbolic soap won't cure.
I've been reading about this condition called pediculosis vestimentorum.
Uh, it's when the clothes become infested with lice and start to cause dermatitis-type lesions, particularly within folds of skin and on the axillaries.
Oh?
That sounds like what we call PBF, plain bloody filthy.
I hope you're up to the physical side.
Come on.
You follow me.
Ohh!
Trixie: Matthew.
Is there any news of your father?
They've let him out of the hospital with as clean a bill of health as he's likely to get.
After all those tests?
Yes.
Well, that's very welcome news.
It's not very welcome news.
He's coming to visit Poplar.
He's been threatening for ages, but tomorrow's the day.
Matthew, if your father wants to visit, we'll make him welcome.
I'll ask Sister Julienne to provide some hospitality.
Teddy: Genevieve won't wake up.
Oh, no, no, no.
Has your husband had a hold of the baby yet?
Sister Julienne said he was a bit shy this morning.
Shy?
Spencer?
He charmed the pants off me when we met, and I mean charmed the pants off me.
That's how I ended up on your books.
The minute I get my figure back, we're getting married.
A whirlwind romance.
My mum said I weren't to bring any colored babies home.
So, this is home now.
Me and him and this little one.
And I'm not sorry.
[Harmonica music] Teddy's practicing sad music on his mouth organ for the funeral.
Give that here.
Full disclosure-- I've already smoked two cigarettes.
Of all the things I had on my to-do list today, burying a rabbit did not feature.
Well, what was on it?
A morning at the practice with Miss Higgins, planning this month's clinics, during which time I'm first on call at the maternity home.
Then the girls need taking to Cycling Proficiency, Teddy needs new sandals, and I'm 3 days late with my batch bake.
We'll be eating Swiss rolls off the market stall again.
I quite like those.
That is not the point.
Timothy.
Need a lift?
I wouldn't mind.
What's all this, then?
I'm working for the Council, bathing the sick and needy in their own homes.
Uh.
That sounds like a good scheme.
It is if they've got their own bathrooms.
We need to take collapsible baths and cans of hot water in a van to the decrepit places like Lisbon Buildings, but the Council's got no one to drive the vehicles.
Ah.
Where are you off to today?
Uh, I've got 4 clients in the Napoleon Buildings.
There's all, uh, mod cons in the tower blocks.
All right.
No Mrs. Turner this morning?
I gave her the day off.
The summer holidays are getting on top of her.
In the meantime, may I draw your attention to today's communication from St. Cuthbert's?
No fewer than 10 of our referred patients have completely failed to keep their appointments.
No!
That is not on.
[Music playing, children shouting] [Doorbell rings] [Music playing loudly] Morning, mate.
Uh, I'm here to bath Mr. Stanley, um, Facchiaro.
Ah, wrong door.
Old Stan's last one up on the left.
Hey, you don't want to sluice this lot down, do ya, while you're about it?
Especially this one.
Proper pen and inks, she does.
[Laughs] Sorry to disturb you.
All right, never mind the breakfast discotheque, it's time for actual breakfast.
[Music stops, children groan] Come on.
Don't make me play the wicked stepmother.
Sit down, sit down.
Right, Pete, we need to get this lot back to their mum's.
It's already gone 10.
Oh, I love it when they stay the night.
I know.
Cheryl misses them, too, when they're gone.
Don't you, darling?
Right, go and get breakfast.
I just need to sit down and catch my breath.
[Children chanting "Milk!"]
Let Jill sleep a bit longer.
I'll weigh the baby and give her the once-over first.
Come on.
Hand her over.
I promise you'll get her back.
She's gorgeous.
A proper little head turner.
She's been sent to Earth for a purpose.
Next.
Um... Annette Barkley, Flat 19, Napoleon Towers.
Failed to attend her 6-monthly check at the Cardiology Clinic on the 23rd of June.
She can't afford to do that.
She has rheumatic heart disease.
Advise her to come and see me with a view to arranging another hospital appointment.
And I'd like this one delivered by hand.
[Typewriter bell dings] All right.
Hee hee hee.
It feel like a party, don't it?
Ah, shh.
Even though it's just the four of us.
[Laughs] A real family, with a baby at the heart of everything.
[Chuckles] We've been saying all along that if we had a girl, we'd make her middle name Florence, after you.
Haven't we, Spencer?
Spencer.
I'm talking about the baby's name.
Mylene Florence.
I thought we can go and get her birth certificate tomorrow.
"Fear not, for I have redeemed thee.
I have summoned thee by name, you are mine."
You're quoting the Bible now?
Hey.
Fatherhood doing you good.
Nah, it's like I can hear it.
It's loud in here.
Like I can't turn it down.
Like television, but there's no knobs.
[Muttering] It's the names.
They will tell you what it is.
They will tell you what it is.
Man on TV: Here's a house, here's a door.
I should have gone to my appointment at the heart clinic.
You know I should.
But they're going to go mad with me.
They said I should never get pregnant again.
Pete: Come here.
Ohh!
They read you the riot act last time, and everything was all right.
Sod the hospital.
Mother Nature knows what she can handle.
[Reading out loud, indistinct] [Sighs] [Scooter engine revving] Hello.
Is that nun motorized?
Yes, that's Sister Veronica.
Where'd she get the money for a scooter?
I thought they always took vows of poverty.
Ah!
Here's the girl of everybody's dreams.
Hello, Pops.
And this is the uniform, is it?
Yes.
Designed for practicality, and I did not choose the color scheme.
Looks pretty fine, all the same.
Matthew: Pops, do you want to use the, uh, facilities before we set off?
There's coffee available as well if you'd like some.
I'll just have a packet of Henley's Gold label.
There's a tobacconist's over there.
Of course.
Florence: I've never seen Spencer like this before.
Just talking and talking, but in a voice that is not in his own.
Nancy: Mrs. Wray, I've got to be honest, some of his behavior is ringing alarm bells.
But the only person that can really tell you what's going on is a doctor.
The nurse is right.
This is a spiritual disturbance.
He needs to see a minister.
And I don't even know where to look for one.
I haven't been to God's house since we leave Brixton.
There is a Pentecostal church on Wick Street.
OK.
I've written down the name for you.
But you must let me arrange a visit from the doctor.
Urgently.
I don't object.
But I don't want anybody to know.
Once upon a time, I'd come down here with your grandfather.
And the wharves were swarming with men-- stevedores, dockers, banksmen, even rat catchers.
But they kept our buildings working.
Can't make money from a place if you don't know what makes it tick.
Ah, it's not what it was.
My bladder's not what it was, either.
Stop the car.
Annette: Right, that's your 'nanas.
Now we'll go and get your hair ribbons, so you'll be all pretty for your first day at nursery.
[Indistinct chatter] Oh, don't worry, love.
I've got hold of you.
Charlie.
Give the poor woman some air.
Ooh, here you go.
Let you sit on this chair, dear.
Here you go, you go and stand with Mummy.
Shall we get this coat off you?
Ooh, bless you!
You're in the family way.
Someone run and knock on the door at Nonnatus.
Ooh, how are you feeling?
Yeah.
Better?
Are you OK?
[Seagulls crying] [Sighs] We need to get out.
The docks are finished at this end of the river.
The East End will die.
Pop, the East End isn't just the buildings.
It's the people.
Oh, don't start all that again.
You've been halfway to socialist ever since you did your National Service.
I'll take that as a compliment.
And let me tell you, the economy here is more complex than you think.
We shouldn't be getting out.
We should be investing, expanding, creating employment and apprenticeship opportunities.
Your comparative youth gifts you two luxuries-- an unhindered prostate and the license to spout idealistic bilge.
I've seen this community with my own eyes.
And you've never done a day's graft in your life.
Dr. Turner: Annette, when you had rheumatic fever as a child, it damaged the valves of your heart.
Now, that is not a situation that changes.
But sometimes things happen that can make it worse.
Pregnancy increases every woman's blood volume.
And that is putting extra pressure on your heart valves.
I should have tried to help myself.
I should have taken that pill or, I don't know, had my tubes tied.
Well, you never got on with the Pill.
And you're too young to be sterilized.
Which left us with that Dutch cap.
Pete didn't like it.
And what we both love is children.
[Door opens] Doctor, is she gonna be all right?
We are going to take the best possible care of her.
I'm moving her to St. Cuthbert's as soon as we can find a bed.
You think this could have been avoided, don't you?
Not to put too fine a point on it, this really does have to be avoided in the future.
You could do worse than come along to this talk.
Men's Health?
In my book, that means women's health, too.
So much of what we do, or can do, impacts on them.
Perhaps next time we conclude a call regarding Mrs. Barkley, I will be able to close by saying, "Thank you for your help."
Any luck at St. Cuthbert's?
The reverse.
The Cardiac Department say Maternity must take responsibility.
And Maternity won't until a meeting with the cardiac specialist is timetabled.
I'll have another go myself and see if that works.
In the meantime, the soonest I can get a psychiatric appointment for Spencer Wray is the end of next week.
Can you not simply have him admitted to the Linchmere for a mental health assessment?
I made a vow I'd never send anyone there unless they were a danger to themselves or others.
[Door opens] Shelagh?
I'd like to speak to you in private, please.
I'm pregnant again.
What?
I've missed my monthly, my breasts are tender, and my mouth tastes as if I've been sucking a penny.
[Laughs] I thought all that sort of thing was behind us.
So did I.
Well, I don't have to spell out my age to you.
Or yours.
Shelagh, let's not get ahead of ourselves.
Uh, we are going to do what we always do with everyone and arrange a pregnancy test.
I've already brought you a sample.
Cyril: You are welcome in our church whenever you choose to join us, Mrs. Wray.
And your son can come, too, for prayer and anointment if he needs it.
He is scared to leave the flat, Mrs. Wallace.
He says there is poison in the air.
All we can offer you, everything that prayer can offer you, can only sit alongside what proper medicine can do.
Once faith healing was all some people had, but now, now we know that trained doctors can do more.
Haddock and chips.
I've been keeping them warm in the oven.
Heh.
Heh.
Was your father very tired when you dropped him home?
Oh...
I think we were both as exhausted as each other.
Anyway, after I digested some of his more forthright remarks...
I came to a decision.
I went to the Council, and I secured a job... as a bathing attendant.
What?
It's only for 10 days.
But maybe my father's right.
Maybe I never have done a day's graft in my life.
I'm just holding it.
I'm not going to smoke it.
I know smoking is bad for pregnant women.
Let's wait and see what the test says.
We'll know for certain in a few days' time.
I know for certain now.
When I was having Teddy, I stored up every single sensation, every symptom, because I feared I'd never feel them.
And thought I never would again.
And here we are.
I've seen...so many women weeping in clinic... women whose bodies caught them out, women who are too old and too tired to go through it all again.
And now I'm one of them.
If you were too old, your body wouldn't allow you to conceive again.
And what if I'm too tired?
What if the house isn't big enough, the car isn't big enough?
What if we aren't big enough?
We will always be big enough.
I promise you that.
And I promise you I will love it.
I just don't want it.
6 canisters of hot water, one collapsible bath.
And one wheelchair for the less mobile patient.
Ahh.
Lead on, MacDuff.
It's like the blind leading the ruddy blind.
It was only a tiny, little wet patch.
It might have just been sweat.
When my waters broke with Cheryl, the midwife nearly drowned.
Heh!
We just need to keep an eye on it.
And you're to try to have a little nap.
In my view, a rested mother is a well mother.
Ohh.
Oh, I've gone a bit dizzy.
[Panting] Is there anything else that feels amiss?
It feels like someone's wound my heart up with a key.
It's going really fast.
I won't be a moment.
["Something's Coming Along" by The Sceptres playing] ♪ Something's coming along for ♪ ♪ Something's coming along for you ♪ ♪ You don't have to knock, life is like a clock ♪ ♪ So wind it, wind it, wind it ♪ ♪ There's so much to do, so it's up to you ♪ ♪ To find it, find it, find it ♪ ♪ You don't have far to go ♪ ♪ You don't have far to go ♪ [Knock on door] ♪ Don't let your sadness show... ♪ Council Bathing Service for Mr. E. Perrins?
It's Mrs. ♪ Something's coming along for you ♪ Sorry.
There must be a mistake, then.
We only do men.
I don't mind.
♪ Something's coming along for you ♪ Afternoon, Sister.
Any objections to me having a go at that autoclave?
If you can repair it, you will be wreathed in laurels.
Annette: I don't want to go.
No.
I'd prefer to have it here.
St. Cuthbert's really is the best place for you, Annette.
And at least these signs of early labor mean they've suddenly found you a bed.
It's these heart palpitations that are bothering us all.
It's stopped now.
She says she feels all right.
Yeah, and I haven't leaked any more of my waters.
You heard Dr. Turner, Annette.
This baby needs to be born in hospital.
[Groans] They're going to have a go at me at St. Cuthbert's.
They were like that the last time.
They made me feel stupid, like I was some great big problem.
Mrs. Barkley is ready for transfer.
Nurse Crane will travel with her in the ambulance.
Woman on TV: Well, John... [Doorbell rings] Peter, and I are driving into the studio in the most fantastic car I think I've ever seen.
It's called FAB1... [Rings doorbell] [TV playing faintly] Oh, greetings, guvnor.
May I be of assistance?
My name is Threapwood.
I am Chairman of the Board of Health.
I don't suppose you've got any contacts in the world of autoclave parts?
Are you a medical equipment specialist?
Fred: No, jack of all trades.
I turn my hand to most things if it helps the Sisters out.
Yeah, same down the maternity home.
There's always a bed that wants fixing, gas and air that needs looking at.
I help him.
Clearly.
Nothing wrong with a little bit of make-do-and-mend, eh?
Even if the friendly millionaire does cough up for most of the extras, it's a miracle how those Sisters make ends meet.
Are you able to specify what the extras are?
Rent.
Furniture.
Even the midwives' wages, not to mention this malarkey.
And I am not going to give up.
Even millionaires don't have money to burn.
Upon Sister Julienne's return, would you be so kind as to give her my card and tell her I called on a visit of inspection?
Oh, thank you for waiting.
And, of course, for traveling with Mrs. Barkley.
It's a very delicate situation.
I'm just glad she derived some comfort from my presence.
And as her cardiologist, I'm not going to be the one who takes that comfort away.
Her labor seems to have slowed to a stop, but the obstetrician is going to augment it by artificially rupturing her forewaters in the morning.
It's been decided, has it?
From his point of view, the birth itself should be relatively normal, as long as they use forceps or the ventouse machine in second stage.
I suppose the concern is she mustn't strain too much when pushing.
Exactly so.
It's going to be a very busy delivery room.
Dr. Turner: So often, what's happening in a woman's body drives a marriage, uh, a household, even a family.
Most men have no idea how much their wives have to put up with.
Sister Veronica: Menstruation springs to mind.
Painful, debilitating, and inconvenient.
But it's a brave woman who'd use it as an excuse for not having your tea on the table.
[Laughter] Nevertheless, the most unwelcome event in a home is almost certainly an unplanned pregnancy.
And this day and age, there's no excuse for it, is there, Doctor?
No.
[Door closes] Sorry, Sister, Dr. Turner.
There was nobody to mind my youngest, but I didn't want to miss the talk.
Oh, that's all right.
Just take a seat.
So, contraception has come on in leaps and bounds in recent years.
And while the Pill may not be suitable for every woman, there are alternatives.
Alternatives that we, as men, can take responsibility for.
Condom, sheath, Durex, Johnny, French letter, all different ways of saying the same thing.
If we could have the next page please, Sister Veronica.
Now, this is the first really viable alternative to the sheath, which I hope will be licensed very soon.
It's basically a simple operation in which the tubes that carry the man's sperm, or seed, from the testicles are severed.
[Men groan] Believe me, it is a minor procedure, and perfect for a couple who've decided that their family is complete.
Bit late for some of us.
[Laughter] ♪ ♪ You've got to sleep, Spencer.
Nobody's mind works properly when they've been up for 24 hours straight.
I've been finding that out ever since I had Madam.
She don't need sleep.
It's all part of her power.
They told me.
No.
No.
No, listen to me, Spencer.
Not them.
She sleeps like... like an angel, like a baby.
I can always get her off.
It's how I know I'm going to be a good mum.
I bet I can get you off, too, if you'll let me.
At least I got through to the man himself.
He's been on holiday.
Mild interest, especially as new research suggests high rates of mental illness amongst young West Indian men.
But has Dr. Billinge given Spencer an appointment?
I have his mother in reception in a state of acute distress.
He can make a domiciliary visit next week.
It's a start.
I'll speak to Mrs. Wray, and I'll arrange for more sedatives.
[Grunting] [Panting] Ohh.
Doctor: So, how's our patient ticking over?
Contractions every 5 minutes.
No analgesia required thus far.
Very well.
Prepare for transfer to the delivery room.
Pastor Robinson, please!
Um, I need you to come to my home.
I need you to pray over my son.
Please.
He's getting worse.
And the psychiatrist will not see him until next week.
I have an hour between meetings later on.
I will go then.
Yes.
Are you sure we need two cans of hot water for just one client?
This one hasn't had a bath since 1965.
Mrs. Terrence said we might need Brillo pads.
Is it gonna be like forceps?
I had forceps with Cheryl.
The ventouse is gentler on baby.
The little one's head is in just the right position.
I don't even think I can breathe anymore.
Yes, you can.
My old dad used to work in a tanner's yard.
He used to smell better than I do now.
He'd scrub himself all over when he got home, in that sink over there.
Oh, he was always clean.
I think he wanted me to be like him.
But I could never manage it.
I'm not much like my father, either.
Cyril: Spencer, I came here at your mother's invitation, and I think my presence is making her feel better.
I'd like to stay if you will allow me to.
[Mylene crying] Sometimes people speak with forked tongues.
And sometimes they don't.
Spencer: It sounds different.
It hisses.
Like--like poison.
Like instruction.
[Mylene cries] Like that.
Only I know what to do with her.
I'll get a certificate.
I--I know what the poison is.
Spencer, the baby is in her own home with her family, with people who love her.
She is safe.
No.
No.
We're the ones who are in danger.
The baby's the demon.
[Crying] [Groaning] I can't go on anymore.
Doing well.
Don't I have to push?
No need, lass.
The whole point is that you strain yourself as little as possible.
[Ventouse machine pumping] [Annette groans] One more.
Annette: Ahh!
[Annette grunting] [Baby crying] Hey, presto.
[Baby crying] A son.
Ha ha ha!
[Crying] Spencer, you've got to let me pick the baby up!
Spencer: No!
I'll stand in the way.
I'll stand guard.
I'm the lifeguard!
I'm the only one who knows!
Spencer, if the baby is a demon, I have the Bible in my hand.
Spencer: No!
Is something wrong?
It's like ruddy bedlam.
[Spencer screams, Florence shouting] No, no!
Oh, no!
[Crying] Spencer: Get out!
Florence: He's got the baby!
Matthew: Right, go.
Go!
Telephone the police.
Spencer!
[Banging on door] Not everything is as it seems, huh?
I'm not asking you to believe me, just to trust me.
Don't ask me.
Don't ask me!
Don't ask!
You can't ask anything!
They command me!
[Cries] She's a demon.
And God sent you.
Maybe that's a good thing.
Maybe you need protection.
Maybe there are words I can say that can drown out the voices that are telling you to do these things?
Only water can drown.
Water could drown her.
When thou passest through waters, I will be with thee.
And through rivers, they shall not-- [Spencer yells] Here.
Here.
[Door closes] Get out!
Don't let him out.
Timothy!
[Indistinct shouting] Sorry, Pastor.
Sorry, sorry.
Spencer: Get out!
Get out!
Give me the scissors.
Ahh!
[Shouting] Ohh.
[Groaning] Hey, it's all right, Cyril.
It's all right.
He missed all the major blood vessels.
It doesn't look like it.
My jacket's ruined.
If he'd hit an artery, the walls would be ruined.
Timothy: Through there.
There's a mentally disturbed man.
I think he might have a knife.
Cyril: Don't hurt him.
Don't hurt him, you hear?
He's a sick man.
Spencer: Let go of me!
Let go of me!
Crane: A short, persuasive exchange with the nursery Sister, and here we have one Master Barkley.
All present and correct.
Also... one husband.
I'm sorry.
I'm all right.
They said I got away with it.
I might not next time.
Love, there will be no next time.
[Thunder] [Muttering] Amen.
Dr. Turner!
Mrs. Wray?
You have to help him.
You have to tell them.
Tell who?
Them.
What?
Spencer.
[Spencer screams] Stop!
Stop!
No!
No!
He needs to be restrained so that I can sedate him.
And I don't care what his offense was-- assault, wounding, or murder-- he is not fit to go before the magistrate.
He's screaming at people we can't see.
Hearing voices?
Yes, Doc.
Spencer: Help me!
[Sighs] I think I know what this is.
Help me!
[Thunder] Florence!
Don't make me go home.
Don't let me abandon him!
We're not going to abandon him.
Here.
[Sobbing] Keep seeing the blood... and...knowing that there's gonna be more blood, he gets the scissors again.
I can't bear to think about it.
I never could bear to think of you being in trouble.
Or danger.
Did you think it would get easier when I grew up?
Yes.
Maybe children never grow up to their mothers.
No matter how big she or he is.
[Door closes] [Thunder] [Exhales] I've had to sign committal papers for Spencer Wray.
He's being moved in the morning, probably to the Linchmere.
The duty psychiatrist said it's probably schizophrenia.
I'm not going to tell you what I said to him.
You might feel better if you did, Dad.
I said, the next time I spend 3 days begging for a psychiatric appointment for a patient, I hope I don't end up pinning him to the floor of a cell in my capacity as police surgeon.
Your father's here, Mr. Aylward.
I was hoping to see the little fella, but Nanny says he's gone to nursery school.
He goes 3 mornings a week now.
And I thought you might like to take me to work with you again.
There's a possibility of shedding some of those tenement blocks, Azores Gardens and that other one that you're so inexplicably fond of.
Lisbon Buildings?
I'm not fond of it, so much as appalled by it.
And if I spent money on it, it's because I was ashamed.
I'm gonna sell the whole bally hovel from under them.
What sense does that make?
Financial.
[Chuckles weakly] And what are you doing in a grocer's overcoat?
It's not a grocer's overcoat.
It is a Council overall, because I am working for the Council.
What?
I'm doing hard graft... in the course of which I am learning humility, endurance, and what it is like to be completely dependent upon the kindness of others.
Sometimes life means more than investing just money.
[Train whistle blows] [Telephone rings] Nonnatus House, midwife speaking.
Sir Brigham: May I speak to Nurse Franklin, please?
Sir Brigham?
Is something wrong?
Me, probably.
As usual.
Oh, welcome home, Cyril.
I'm so glad they discharged you so quickly.
I don't think anyone gets properly better in a hospital.
Anyway, I found you a hot water bottle and two extra pillows.
Thank you, Violet.
I think I just need to sit down for a minute, get my bearings back.
I wish Lucille was here.
Pops?
Sir Brigham: Ah!
Oh, dear!
You do look dismal.
I feel dismal.
Rotten indigestion.
I think some Milk of Magnesia is in order.
And then we're going to sit down and have a chat.
You're as bad as bloody Lavinia.
She's always trying to play nurse.
I don't play nurse, Pops.
I am nurse.
And I expect you to do as I say.
[Knock on door] Ah, Sister.
Sorry to have kept you waiting.
Take a seat.
Thank you.
Thank you for sparing me the time.
I called you in today because I thought it was time to refresh our understanding of the Order's position.
Our position in Poplar?
We encourage the name "Tower Hamlets" since the inception of the GLC.
Of course, but we cover much the same area as we always have.
And with a great deal of autonomy.
Possibly too much.
I hate having words with Matthew.
He hates having words with you.
So why do we do it?
Because he wants you to be proud of him.
And you want him to respect you.
And somehow, neither of you are able to do either of those things.
Or, at least, you can do them, but you can't show them.
I've never been one for a lot of demonstration.
Habit I got into in the trenches.
Men got into a lot of habits in the trenches, my own father included.
It's all better not discussed.
But, Pops, when did not discussing war turn into not discussing love?
When we realized there are better things to talk about, I think.
Such as?
Business?
That never gets boring.
Actually, it does.
Moving money around, juggling properties and investments has never interested Matthew for a moment.
He gave up his career as a barrister simply because he wanted to support you.
And I'm grateful.
It means a lot to me.
And to his mother.
Tell him.
You tell him.
He won't believe me.
Oh!
Pops, have you still got that pain in your chest?
I'm off to the little boy's room.
Tell him he's a good chap.
I would have been more-- more like him if I hadn't had to make money.
If I'd had more time.
Nonnatus House is financially inefficient and too dependent on the resources of the Turner practice, which we also have in our sights.
You both use dangerous, unskilled labor for maintenance.
Finally, and I shudder to think how things have come to such a pass in the modern age, you are currently only operational because of private charity.
Charity is another word for love.
All too often, I have had to trust in God and say, "Let us see what love can do--" It is 1968!
Love is no longer a legitimate currency.
Now, I disagree-- Hear me out.
At a time to be decided by the Board of Health, Nonnatus House will lose its agency status and its autonomy.
Every member of your staff, including you, will be in the direct employment of the Health Service, who can close you down as and when it deems appropriate.
Sir Brigham: Uhh!
[Thud] Trixie: No.
No.
[Banging on door] Pops!
Pops!
Ohh.
Pops!
Sir Brigham!
Say something!
[Sobbing] [Telephone rings] Good afternoon, Operator.
Yes, of course.
Cyril!
The international operator is about to connect a call for you.
No.
How has this happened?
It's a surprise.
We booked a line to Jamaica.
To Lucille, to cheer you up.
Come on.
Hurry.
It's ringing.
[Laughs] Hello!
Hello, Celine?
It's Cyril calling from England.
I'm good, yes.
Please may I speak with Lucille?
She's at work?
How can she be at work?
Possibly an embolism.
I would have moved heaven and Earth to save him if I could.
So would I.
Thank you for loving him.
You made it look so easy.
And thank you for finding me and telling me.
That must have been so hard.
Thank you for calling my mother.
You need to go home.
You need to be with her, Matthew.
There's so much to do.
The funeral.
The business.
That bloody business.
Just let me stay a few minutes more.
Cyril: Her sister said she took a job at the town hospital so she could pay her way at her parents' home.
Then she was offered a Sister's position on the maternity ward.
And she--she never told you?
She never mentioned it in any of her letters?
And now her sister says she's agreed to stay on for 6 months.
Maybe there was more wrong than I knew.
In the marriage.
In us.
You've only been married for 18 months.
And what if Lucille was unhappy for all that time?
She was happy on her wedding day.
Violet made her dress.
Reggie, don't interrupt.
Cyril, lots of couples endure quite long separations for all sorts of reasons.
And sometimes love is strengthened by absence.
And sometimes, the opposite happens.
I couldn't sleep.
The result of the test will come in today.
It's going to be negative.
Or if it was positive when I did the sample, it would be negative today.
My monthly has arrived.
Very late and a little heavy.
It might even mean that the menopause is starting.
But no baby?
No baby.
Am I allowed to be happy?
Of course.
Am I allowed to be sad?
Everything is just as it ought to be because we have everything a family could want.
Someone said to me that schizophrenia means a split personality.
Like he's two people.
Spencer's never been like two people.
He's him.
He's sick, but he's still him.
Sister Veronica: Of course he is.
The best way to describe the illness is a state where all thoughts, feelings, and understanding are broken into pieces and cannot be made to connect in the usual way.
How much is he suffering?
Florence, he's in agony.
That's why he's in hospital.
Sister Veronica: The most important thing to remember, Jill, is that the Welfare State will be with you every step of the way.
What are the Welfare Office gonna do for Spencer?
It may be some considerable time before he's discharged.
In the meantime, you may need to prepare yourself for a life alone with Mylene.
Nancy: Excuse me, Sister.
I'm sorry to butt in, but why are you pushing Jill towards a life on her own as a single mother?
Because we can support her.
Florence supports me.
And I support her.
My mum dumped me for going with someone with a different color skin.
And Florence could have done the same with Spencer, but she didn't.
We are sticking together... no matter what the future brings.
Good for you.
You mean it, Jill?
Even though our road is going to be hard?
Of course I mean it.
Mature Jennifer, voice-over: The mother endures because a mother loves.
The cord that binds her to her child is never fully severed, even when it is torn and bleeds.
The battle is not chosen, but it must be embraced as a baby is embraced.
The mother fights on in the hope of peace to come.
There will always be presents to open and blessings to count.
A mother's heart is strong.
There will always be a place where love can find a voice even in silence.
Everybody has a mother somewhere, it is no matter if they can't be touched or seen, because we are all bound to each other.
Our stories interweave.
Our sorrows unite us.
Our joys flower hand in hand.
Past, present, and future.
We cherish, we share, we survive.
Trixie: How many weeks' pregnant are you, sweetie?
I don't know.
We ain't told no one.
I don't want to marry Nigel.
He was my first boyfriend, he better not be my last.
Jesus, you're disgusting.
Mrs. O'Dwyer.
Dr. Turner and the Health Visitor are running a clinic.
It's a Council thing for kids that work.
This is a most promising start.
Please enter.
Shelagh's Doubts About Another Baby
Video has Closed Captions
Shelagh and Patrick discuss the possible expansion of the family - and Shelagh's doubts. (1m 14s)
Vasectomy, Contraceptives and Giggles in Men's Health Talk
Video has Closed Captions
Dr. Turner and Sister Veronica host a talk on men's health. (1m 55s)
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