- 1 day ago
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00:00And we've had a card from Sister Veronica in Hong Kong.
00:04The post on a sterile surface.
00:10Christopher doing nicely. New hibiscus clinic thriving.
00:14Sister Hilda in her element. Element underlined.
00:19We may now turn our attention to the particularly trying day we have ahead.
00:23Do we really have to move clinic to the annex at St Cuthbert's?
00:27Of course. The Board of Health have given us no notice.
00:30Dr Turner has tried his utmost, but there's been no reprieve.
00:33I know that, Annex. The screens and equipment are totally inadequate.
00:37We'll be taking our own accoutrements, don't you worry.
00:40Meanwhile, we do have both Nurse Sailwood and Nurse Clifford coming back today.
00:46Will you get a chance to go to bed this morning and catch up on some sleep?
00:49No. I'm going to meet Miss Higgins and try and lick these new arrangements into shape.
00:55You do have to wonder what it all bodes.
01:03I keep thinking about how we counted every step all the way to the top of York Minster.
01:08And now I'm counting every step all the way back to your front door in Lunata's house.
01:13Because there are hardly any left before it's over.
01:16It was a beautiful view from the top of York Minster. And nothing is over.
01:24It felt like another beginning, didn't it?
01:26Yes, it did.
01:27Let's go and make another cup of coffee before we go back to the ordinary one.
01:33You think it's rats, Mr Buckley?
01:36Nasty greedy things. Niner things with their incisors.
01:40This lead pipe. If they know that, they'd get poisoned.
01:43I want them poisoned. I use this flat for prayer meeting.
01:46It's not rats. It's just, the soldiers perished. It's not tissue paper, this Fred.
01:53Oh, oh, oh!
01:57Hang on.
01:58Look.
01:59I reckon you need to pull all these out.
02:02Re-fit it with proper plastic.
02:05I'll just put something on the house.
02:06Did you hear?
02:07We're moving back to Poplar.
02:09Moss Street.
02:10Oh, Walthamstow didn't rain long then.
02:12No!
02:13Never mind your geographical teacher.
02:15This young man is wheezing like a creaking gate.
02:18Hey, use your inhaler.
02:19Son, it's alright.
02:20He just gets like this every time we pull up floorboards.
02:23He's alright.
02:24Hello, Mrs. Wallace.
02:30Fred.
02:31What's all this?
02:33Greetings, Pastor Robinson.
02:35And greetings, Rosalie.
02:37You didn't see the plumber's van outside?
02:40Perhaps your mind was on other matters.
02:49Good afternoon, Miss Figgins.
02:51I've been sent to hold the fort while you're at clinic.
02:54Master Timothy Turner.
02:56Or should that be doctor?
02:59A little bird informed me that a certain set of examinations
03:03have not only been passed, but passed with flying colours.
03:07Yes.
03:08That pen you gave me stood me in very good stead.
03:12Of course, I won't be writing any prescriptions out with it
03:15until I'm formally qualified.
03:16All good things will happen in time.
03:19Mrs. Hennessy, we discussed the merits and demerits of peanut butter chars last week.
03:34Leave your sample with me.
03:36And if you cannot find a seat, you make you against the wall.
03:40I'd be extra alert for signs of protein in that one.
03:44And diabetes in the rose hip syrup bottle.
03:50Honestly, Aisha, I'm still a bit full from our lunch.
03:54Feed mother, feed baby.
03:57Maybe I'll just nibble on one while I'm waiting.
04:00Ruth can?
04:01Oh, hello, Ruth, dear.
04:03I'm sorry we're still finding our feet in our new location.
04:06Sister Julienne will see you behind the screens in the far corner.
04:10I can't.
04:11I have to go in on my own.
04:14You know the drill.
04:15Is there somewhere I can put this?
04:25Um, a paper towel, perhaps?
04:28I was thinking more like the bin.
04:29I love this sort of food, but my mum-in-law keeps trying to feed me and I'm not that hungry.
04:36We do advise small, frequent meals at this stage of the pregnancy.
04:43Nurse Crane said that in mother craft class.
04:46I had to translate it for my mother-in-law and I think she only heard frequent.
04:50I don't think it will be too long before baby puts in an appearance.
04:55Have we delivered the home birth pack to you yet?
04:58No.
04:59I'm so glad I'm having it in my own bed.
05:01Babies are born at home in my husband's tradition and I was born at home with Nunata's nuns,
05:06so it's something that sort of makes us the same.
05:09I'll put by tomorrow with the pack and then we'll be all prepared.
05:13Kindly desist forthwith.
05:28Those cards contain confidential medical information.
05:31I work for the National Health Service.
05:34In which case I should not need to point out the proprieties.
05:38I'm starting to think we were moved here for a reason.
05:41Now we're on national health premises, can't they just breeze in at will?
05:45It's the thin end of the wedge.
05:47If they want information about our district cases then they should put in a formal request.
05:51The administrator claims they can demand access without notice.
05:55But as we have previously discussed, we are under no obligation to do everything they ask.
06:06I'm not sure she's any nearer to deciding.
06:09Whether to accept the new rules or close Nunata's house.
06:12Sheila, if she delays any longer, it won't be up to her.
06:16And what happens after that will happen to us all.
06:19Are you not partaking in pudding, sister?
06:25Can it be preserved?
06:27I find my appetite does not keep the hours that once it did.
06:32I will put some foil on it.
06:35Standard of cakes has gone right down while Sister Veronica's been away.
06:41This is the second time this week I've made a sponge so bad we've had to pour custard on it.
06:46You pour away.
06:47Custard's one of the things I miss most when I'm in America.
06:50Is there anything else you yearn for whilst you are overseas?
06:53I could be flippant and say lemon curd and electric kettles.
06:57But above all else, I miss the respect for midwifery we're so used to over here.
07:02May I suggest we turn our attention to the matter of St. Raymond's Feast Day.
07:09There will be the usual Eucharist in the chapel in the morning.
07:13And then I thought, as the holiday falls on a bank holiday Monday, a strawberry tea might be appropriate.
07:24Good evening, Mrs. Barrowman.
07:27Now, you look like a woman on a mission.
07:29I'm a woman in search of comestibles.
07:32My Ivan and his family, they're moving out tomorrow, so I'm going to christen the kitchen by making their tea.
07:40Ivan did me a favour and a half this morning, sorting the burst pipe inside an hour.
07:45Good.
07:46Have you got me luncheon meat?
07:49At the bottom left, dear, next to the soap powder.
07:52Oh.
07:55I'm going to take three tins.
07:57Oh, I hope you're planning fritters.
08:00There's nothing like the smell of frying to make a house a home.
08:03Yeah, well, all I can smell at the moment is wet paint and plaster dust.
08:07Still, it's on a better bus route.
08:10Now, Suzanne's got into the grammar school.
08:13Gran, they've got rulers and protractors.
08:15Grammar school.
08:16Well, let's hope this is the beginning of great things for you.
08:19Pick yourself out a rubber. I'll let you have it half price.
08:22Oh!
08:24Last orders for Ovaltine.
08:31I can't drink anything. My face is lathered in complexion food.
08:44Why didn't you come down and join us in the parlour?
08:47I can't seem to settle, Phyllis.
08:50I knew this constant to-ing and fro-ing would have you all frayed around the edges.
08:55I wish I was the only thing that was frayed.
08:57My marriage isn't exactly thriving under the current conditions.
09:04Are you spending too much time apart?
09:07We're certainly not doing enough together.
09:10He has his business interests and I have...
09:14this.
09:16You say that as though this weren't enough.
09:19Won't be enough for anybody, if it all comes to an end.
09:22If you know more than you're cracking on, Trixie, then that's your business
09:27and I'm not going to press you.
09:29But there's been a sword of Damocles hanging over Ninata's house
09:33for almost as long as I've been here.
09:36And we've always lived to fight another day
09:39and deliver another baby.
09:41Things have been changing all the time, haven't they?
09:47Yes.
09:49And we're still here.
09:52Though I can't answer for your epidermis
09:56if you leave that face back on much longer.
10:04Midwife calling?
10:06Midwife calling?
10:09You're welcome.
10:17You've certainly got everything...
10:19and everyone organised, Ruth.
10:21Dilwa's well on his way up the ladder at the factory,
10:24but yet to start out as a government presser.
10:26A good manager must have experience of every department.
10:29This not management. This woman's work.
10:32It is all right, isn't it? The flat?
10:37The flat is spotlessly clean.
10:39And this is clearly a home full of love.
10:42I inspect for that too.
10:44It's much more important.
10:46You wouldn't have found that in the house I grew up in.
10:49My mum ran off and left us when I was eight.
10:53And my dad hardly knew what to do with us.
10:57Please?
11:06We...
11:07wanted to ask you something, sister.
11:11Can Dilwa stay with me when the baby's born?
11:15But of course.
11:19I want it because I do not want Ruth to be afraid.
11:21And I won't be if Dilwa's with me.
11:27Madge!
11:28I found the tomato sauce!
11:29What was it?
11:30It was in the tea chest for the bedding!
11:32Andrea!
11:35Susie, you'll have to go on the camp bed
11:36until that new mattress is delivered.
11:38You know what I mean for us?
11:40Oh, she'd be like lunch and meat, apparently.
11:43It means you don't like your cooking.
11:45Hey!
11:50Give us some more sauce!
11:55Thank you for wanting to be with me.
11:59I don't want to be outside the door,
12:01waiting for my mother to come out and tell me how you're doing.
12:03At least that's not going to happen now.
12:05The mother is always in the room with the mother.
12:08I do everything I can to respect your customs, Dilwa.
12:13But if we don't do some things our way,
12:16we aren't going to know who we are.
12:19Please, don't let her in the room.
12:33Oh, Suzanne, love.
12:34I need you to go to the phone box and ring the doctor.
12:38It's dark.
12:40The phone hasn't been connected
12:41and nobody else is well enough to go.
12:43Paul's still in the outside lab and his asthma's bad.
12:46The operator will help you find the number.
12:48Put your coat and shoes on.
12:52Ivan!
12:55Can you let me in?
12:57Why? Why me?
12:58Just keep puffing on it as often as you feel you need to.
13:10The stress of the vomiting has aggravated your asthma.
13:13I'm hoping that's very enough.
13:15You know, I haven't worn the old porcelain turban like that in years.
13:19I know it's tough, but if it is something you've all eaten,
13:22then the best thing is to let your body clear itself of the poison.
13:26I know my mum's cooking a glitters in here.
13:29You're shivering, Ivan.
13:31I can see your goosebumps from here.
13:34You can take paracetamol for fever.
13:38Only.
13:39Then go to bed and keep yourselves warm.
13:41The tea's up and Suzanne's busy putting water beside your beds.
13:46You're a bit overqualified to be a waiter, aren't you?
13:49Chip off the old bloke, eh?
13:52Nothing like a lad following in his father's footsteps.
13:55Paul's working with Ivan now.
13:57They did half the renovations to this house.
13:59All my cons.
14:01Sent you eating, if you please.
14:03Put it on, if need be.
14:05This is going to seem like a bad dream by tomorrow tea time.
14:08Dua!
14:14Shh!
14:15They must keep him.
14:19You, you sit, you sit.
14:25I need him to go to the telephone box
14:27and ring the Nartis house Aisha.
14:31I telephone, you sit, you rest.
14:34Are you heading out already?
14:38Angela and I are practising our bus route for the grammar school.
14:41She's a bit worried about the change at the top of the commercial road.
14:45It'll soon become second nature.
14:47Aren't you wearing your blazer to get you in the mood?
14:50It's a rehearsal, not a dress rehearsal.
14:53They should put you two on the television.
14:59It's like watching a dance routine.
15:01London Palladium, here we come.
15:03Let's get you into the bed, honey.
15:05Hello.
15:13Hello.
15:15Are you the lady who's about to become a grandma?
15:17Yes.
15:19Tell.
15:20Her.
15:22Go!
15:24Mother, go!
15:25Mama!
15:26Have you been to the hospital?
15:27Mama!
15:28Have you been to the hospital?
15:29Mama!
15:30Is it because of Paul's asthma that you're making a return visit?
15:50He was the one that worried me.
15:53But everyone in the house is affected apart from Suzanne.
15:57Which makes them vulnerable.
16:05The bedroom curtains are still drawn.
16:23Doctor calling.
16:25Hello.
16:38Stop being sick.
16:40I've used up nearly all my inhaler.
16:42My head's splitting.
16:44You're dehydrated, which won't help.
16:46Are your parents upstairs?
16:48I haven't come down yet.
16:52No.
16:54I'm stuck.
16:55I'm stuck.
16:56I can't get out.
16:57Ruth, you're really there.
17:00It's just all happened so fast.
17:01You've hardly had a chance to catch your breath.
17:04Listen to the message, Ruth.
17:06Do you know what you'll be doing?
17:09Well, you obviously do.
17:12That's it, Ruth.
17:13Keep pushing.
17:14Just like that.
17:16Your wife's a quick learner.
17:17Mr. Barrowman?
17:18Mrs. Barrowman?
17:19Dr. Turner's going to come up and see you in a minute.
17:22Mr. Barrowman?
17:26Mrs. Barrowman?
17:28Dr. Turner's going to come up and see you in a minute.
17:29I'll see you in a minute.
17:30I'll see you in a minute.
18:00I'll see you in a minute.
18:01I'm leaving a minute.
18:02I'm leaving, your friends.
18:03I'll see you in a minute.
18:04I don't know.
18:05I'm leaving.
18:06It's a good boy.
18:08It's a good boy.
18:20It's a good boy.
18:21I'm leaving.
18:22I wanna see you in a minute.
18:23It's a good boy.
18:24It's here, Daniel. You did it.
18:26It's a boy.
18:54You've given me a son.
19:10No pulse.
19:12No pupil reflexes.
19:17You poor little love.
19:25I think Mr. Barrowman has gone too.
19:32First, we need an ambulance for Paul.
19:35He's in respiratory distress.
19:37And then we need to call the police.
19:43I've gone a bit faint.
19:52Good breaths.
19:55Then we need to get you outside.
19:58I think I know what this is.
20:02Why can't I go back inside?
20:04You're to sit on the pavement and wait for the ambulance to arrive.
20:07I'll wait with you.
20:08Where's my mum and my dad?
20:10I can't go to hospital without them knowing.
20:13Dr. Turner's in charge of everything that's happening inside.
20:18It's not an ambulance.
20:20It's a police car.
20:21Is this bad?
20:22Not necessarily.
20:23But the placenta should have come away by now.
20:24We don't want you to go to hospital, honey.
20:25I don't either.
20:26I think you may have a full bladder.
20:27And sometimes that gets in the way.
20:28If you can pass water, that may help.
20:29I'll get you a bedpan.
20:30Can we have it ladies only for that bit?
20:31I think you've seen enough for one day.
20:32I hear your wife cry and I cry.
20:33I hear the pain of the baby.
20:34You're the best.
20:35I hear your wife cry and I cry.
20:36I hear the pain of the baby.
20:37You're the best.
20:38I don't want you to go to hospital, honey.
20:39I don't want you to go to hospital, honey.
20:40I don't either.
20:41I think you may have a full bladder.
20:42And sometimes that gets in the way.
20:43If you can pass water, that may help.
20:44I'll get you a bedpan.
20:45Can we have it ladies only for that bit?
20:47I think you've seen enough for one day.
20:50I hear your wife cry and I cry.
21:02Hear the baby cry and I cry.
21:06Why are you speaking in English?
21:08Think like an Englishman.
21:10You understand like an Englishman.
21:13Ruth has just given birth.
21:15It was not easy.
21:18It's not easy now.
21:19Not easy.
21:21Because she'd need mother.
21:25A mother has known her pain.
21:29A mother gives ease.
21:31A mother gives peace.
21:33A husband can't give that.
21:36She wanted me there.
21:39All's well then ends well.
21:41Ruth passed water and then the afterbirth.
21:47It's not for you to even hear such things.
21:52We have a young man.
21:54Asthmatic.
21:55Dehydrated from food poisoning
21:57and suspected exposure to carbon monoxide.
22:00Where's my mum and dad and my sister?
22:02Stay with him.
22:03Keep them on an even queue.
22:08No.
22:10I tell you, there is nothing like a cream horn after a successful delivery.
22:16I'm more of a custard tart girl, really.
22:18Honey, what are you fretting about?
22:23Mrs. Wallace phoned Cyril last night and she wants to speak to him about his conduct and also his conscience.
22:30Are you surprised?
22:31He's a pastor.
22:32He's a pastor who walks into his flat, which is also his church, with a woman who is not his wife carrying bags from a weekend away.
22:42And bumps into the principal elder.
22:44I had hoped you'd tell me not to worry.
22:46That's not what friends are for.
22:48Hmm.
22:53Where's my grandson?
22:56It's through there.
22:57He's resting and receiving oxygen.
22:59I could come in with you if you'd like that.
23:01What I'd like is to have my son and my daughter-in-law and my granddaughter still alive.
23:09I'd like them to have seen a competent doctor who hadn't tucked them into their deathbeds with kind words and no action.
23:20Oh no.
23:31Three deaths in one family.
23:37Miss Higgins says if the statements are signed she'll deal with them immediately.
23:43I don't think I've ever had to do harder paperwork than this.
23:48Oh, age 11.
23:52She might have been in Angela's class.
23:56I told them to go to bed and keep warm.
24:02And when we found them,
24:05her little hand was hardly cold at all.
24:18You're a good man, Pastor Robinson.
24:21And you're doing a good job navigating this church through some very choppy waters.
24:26But you haven't come here to tell me what I'm doing well, have you, Mrs. Wallace?
24:31No, I have not.
24:34I have come here to tell you that you're compromising your position.
24:38And you're compromising that young girl.
24:41Nobody at church knows you went away together.
24:44Nobody at church?
24:46You don't think the Almighty go to church?
24:49The Almighty see everything.
24:52And what's more, he knows his way to York Minster.
24:55I'm sorry, Mrs. Wallace.
24:58We are modern people.
25:02Living in a modern world.
25:05Wrestling with some very modern problems.
25:07But sometimes, Pastor Robinson, the best way of protecting ourselves and those we love is by being a little bit old fashioned.
25:20You understand?
25:22Because I require you to understand.
25:31How? I mean, how?
25:34Was it the food my Nan cooked?
25:35Paul, everything is going to have to be reviewed by the coroner.
25:40Ultimately, they will pronounce a verdict.
25:43I don't need a verdict. I just need to know.
25:46Because if I don't know, I can't believe they're dead.
25:49Paul, from what the lab tests tell us, the food your Nan cooked probably made you all ill.
26:01But that's a simple case of bacteria with the tinned meat.
26:06Not her fault at all.
26:09Suzanne never had any anyway.
26:11Yesterday, I suspected that the problem was carbon monoxide poisoning.
26:23And now the post-mortem have said exactly the same thing.
26:28The signs are clear and unmistakable.
26:32It's in the air, isn't it? Carbon monoxide?
26:35Only in very small amounts.
26:36When there's too much, it becomes very dangerous.
26:42Why would there be too much?
26:45If a heating system develops problems.
26:48It was a brand new boiler.
26:50My dad fitted it himself.
27:00Oh.
27:04I helped him, Dr. Turner.
27:06Timothy said everything Daddy did when he went out to that family was appropriate.
27:20Why is he so upset?
27:24Angela, every so often when you work in medicine, we say a case gets under her skin.
27:32This case has got under Daddy's skin.
27:34Hello?
27:36Oh, Mrs. Turner.
27:38I rang the surgery but Dr. Turner wasn't there.
27:41We've just had the public health inspectors at the shop.
27:45Public health inspectors?
27:47We're under investigation for selling contaminated meats.
27:50And they've taken I don't know how many tins off the shelf.
27:51Well, I only picked them up from the cash and carry two days ago.
28:02I knew Match Barrowman.
28:03I knew Match Barrowman.
28:05She was on the Play Street subcommittee and now they've gone.
28:11Possibly because of something that we sold.
28:15I think we all have to remain calm.
28:21Nobody really knows who or what is to blame for this.
28:30How did you get on with Mrs. Wallace?
28:31We're going to have to go for a walk.
28:34The gas inspectors nearly finished.
28:37Well, once the boilers stripped out, I'd have no objection to Paul moving back in.
28:41I don't know where you get your flaming nerve.
28:44You should be locked up for what you said to my grandson telling him he killed his family by fitting a dodgy boiler.
28:51Mrs. Barrowman, only the coroner can say what happened.
28:54I hope he finds you guilty of criminal negligence and strikes you off.
29:01If you sent them all to hospital, they'd still be alive.
29:05We can't turn the clock back, Cyril.
29:16Not in terms of morals.
29:18And not in terms of what having sex has done to me and my body and for us and our relationship.
29:24That's great.
29:26Stopping sleeping together isn't going to turn me into a virgin again.
29:29And I wouldn't want it to.
29:30I wouldn't want it to either.
29:32Because I feel just the same as you.
29:33But I am not yet divorced.
29:37And I am still a pastor.
29:39And I don't like putting you in harm's way.
29:41I'm not in harm's way.
29:43I'm on the pill.
29:45There is more than one type of harm, Nazareth.
29:48Maybe we should wait now.
29:51Until I'm in a position to put a ring on your finger and do things decently.
29:56I have two things to say in response to that.
30:00A, I'm sure Mrs. Wallace would be delighted.
30:03B, if that's a proposal of marriage, it's very poorly thought through and you can keep it.
30:08Thank goodness you went in so early.
30:14Under no circumstances must any patients be allowed to see it.
30:17I'll route out some turps.
30:18Thank goodness you went in so early.
30:19Under no circumstances must any patients be allowed to see it.
30:20I'll route out some turps.
30:21I'll route out some turps.
30:22Thank goodness you went in so early.
30:27Under no circumstances must any patients be allowed to see it.
30:30I'll route out some turps.
30:31I'll route out some turps.
30:41Phyllis!
30:43Whatever is this?
30:45No one is to contact the police.
30:48Patrick, this is a clear case of criminal damage and probably slander.
30:53That family have suffered and are suffering enough.
31:00There's no proof at all that that vandalism is anything to do with them.
31:06I meanwhile have had to give short shrift to a reporter from the Gazette.
31:11He asked questions about potential malpractice.
31:14In front of patients?
31:16What did you see?
31:17Well I mainly reminded him that it is against the law to print, publish or speculate on
31:23any details of a medical case whilst an inquest is pending.
31:27Miss Higgins, that isn't true.
31:30The Mam's very junior and you know better.
31:33No further rebuff was required.
31:36I don't think anyone knows anything right now.
31:39Until we hear from the coroner, I'm not seeing any more patients.
31:44This feeling inside me could never deny me
32:00The right to be wrong if I choose
32:04And this pleasure I get from saying
32:07Winning a better list of girls
32:14Nothing good, nothing bad
32:17Nothing ventured
32:19Nothing gained
32:21Nothing still born or lost
32:23Nothing further than proof
32:25Nothing wilder than you
32:27Nothing older than time
32:29Nothing sweeter than white
32:31Nothing physically, recklessly, hopelessly blind
32:35Nothing I couldn't say
32:37Nothing why I cost today
32:39Nothing right
32:41You know, Cyril called again this morning, don't you?
32:45Before you came down to breakfast
32:47Perhaps he had a sleepless night too
32:49I don't know what we're supposed to say to each other
32:54The matter of my ablutions
33:03Generally falls to Sister Catherine
33:06Sister Catherine is standing in for Sister Veronica
33:09At the Head Lice conference this morning
33:12And set off looking as though nothing could make her happier
33:15Nothing could make her happier
33:20Do you recollect what it was like to be at the beginning of all this?
33:26Yes, I do
33:28If only barely sometimes
33:30I've watched so much water flow underneath the bridge
33:34The question is Sister
33:39Do we watch the water?
33:42Or are we the water?
33:44Because if it is the latter
33:46You speak not of change
33:49But of we ourselves being changed
33:54Or changing
33:56It is a rhythm
33:59Is it not?
34:00Is it not?
34:03It is indeed
34:12Sister
34:14How long have your feet been as swollen as this?
34:17It is a recent development
34:22Let us not speak of it
34:23Dad
34:33What good is shutting yourself away going to do?
34:36It will do less harm than trying to treat patients when they are not trusted
34:41And I can use the time to study the latest statistics on the rising epidurals
34:47Trust is essential, isn't it?
34:49It is like clean hands
34:52Or a steady hand with a lancet
34:55Like antibiotics
34:57Black coffee on the night shift
35:00Can't be a GP without it, son
35:03You going back to factory and maybe not named?
35:08We can't decide on the name yet, Aisha
35:10When we decide, we'll do it then
35:12She might face
35:14She's sick?
35:16Are you sick?
35:18Sick of being cooped up
35:20I just need some fresh air
35:22Miss Higgins?
35:24Can I ask Dr. Turner to make a house call on the Sister Monica Joan?
35:27She seems to have developed some new symptoms
35:44I'm afraid that until the Barrowman family situation resolves, he doesn't feel able to see any patients
35:49I understand
35:51In the scheme of things, I suspect this is not urgent
35:56Hi
35:58You stay home
36:00The baby needs fresh air, Aisha
36:01And I need to get into a routine
36:02Please don't go home
36:03I'm only popping out for an hour
36:05I'm just not
36:07I just want to
36:09Hi
36:11Hi
36:12Hi
36:14You stay home
36:16The baby needs fresh air, Aisha
36:18And I need to get into a routine
36:20Please don't go home
36:26I'm only popping out for an hour
36:31POPPING UP
36:36PAIRLE
36:38NELSIUS
36:43C predictными
36:46PARL KNOCKING
36:50C notre missus
36:54Dia 4
36:56hello
36:57일�安
36:58I changed the sheets, I've cleaned everything, but he will not let me do anything with that pillowcase.
37:07Oh lad, do you really think this is the best place for you to be lying while you come to terms with everything that's happened?
37:15How can I come to terms with it? I helped my dad put that boiler in. It's my fault and I'm the one that's still here.
37:22It's not your fault. There are plenty of others you could blame.
37:26Now you, eh, and you're cooking. Come on.
37:30You're both going through something that no one should ever have to endure, alone or separately.
37:37You'll face it better together.
37:45I can smell my dad's hair on this pillowcase.
37:48Oh.
37:50Oh.
37:51Oh.
37:52Oh.
37:53Oh.
37:54Oh.
37:55Oh.
37:57Oh.
37:58Ruth?
38:01Ruth?
38:02I think I need the doctor. I could walk there. I go for doctor.
38:19You walk. I walk. I walk with you.
38:38No.
38:39Oh.
38:40Oh.
38:41Oh.
38:42Oh.
38:43Oh.
38:44Oh.
38:45Oh.
38:46Oh.
38:47Oh.
38:48Oh.
38:49Every single person touched by this case is in torment.
38:52Can we not do something to at least get a preview of the details?
38:57Dr. Turner's on the police surgeon roster.
39:00He feels he can't ask for early access to the documents.
39:04Because he's perceived to have a vested interest.
39:08The baby's mother lying in street by fire stairs.
39:12I think she'd die.
39:13Oh no.
39:14No.
39:16Dr. Turner!
39:18It's Ruth Cannes. She delivered a few days ago.
39:28She just opened her eyes. Said something about seeing lights.
39:32Her ankles are swollen.
39:34Looks like postnatal preeclampsia.
39:36Ambulance?
39:37She's on the brink of fitting.
39:41We need Bromathol now.
39:43Can you fetch some?
39:44It's too late for 999. I'll drive her there myself.
39:47Now run.
39:52It's all right, Ruth.
39:54I'm not going to leave you.
39:57You need a hand with those?
40:01Yes.
40:02And we wouldn't mind a bit of fridge space if you've got any to spare in your flat.
40:08I'm sorry I lost my temper.
40:11It was certainly a spectacle.
40:13If you hadn't been shouting at me, I would have quite enjoyed it.
40:17And you were right.
40:18It was a terrible marriage proposal.
40:23Was it a marriage proposal?
40:26Yes.
40:30Will you give me the chance to do a better one?
40:32This is better already.
40:33But why don't you take me away for the weekend discreetly and ask me then?
40:46You know your own mind, don't you?
40:47I'm a grown woman and a feminist and they're a cathedral town for length and breadth of England.
40:54Mr. Parry is still with Ruth.
40:55He says she stopped her from tipping over into full blown acclampsia.
41:08She hasn't had any seizures?
41:11None.
41:13That would have been a very different story.
41:18We don't always get to write the endings we choose in this profession.
41:23But sometimes we do.
41:24And sometimes there isn't an ending.
41:28And those stories are the best.
41:33I'm sorry for pushing you away Aisha.
41:36A mother cannot be pushed away.
41:38Ever.
41:40A mother always at your shoulder.
41:43And it is good.
41:45I never knew that before.
41:48I didn't know what to do with that kind of love.
41:52But I do now.
42:03For showing me.
42:06For showing me.
42:11It's all written down there in good plain English.
42:15It's as thorough as it comes, Mrs. Barrowman.
42:18And it states very clearly that it was the boiler that was faulty.
42:23Not the way it was fitted.
42:25It had a defective valve.
42:28What happened was nothing to do with anyone who was there that night.
42:33Or anyone here today.
42:35Meanwhile, all the tins of meat have been recalled.
42:41And the cash and carry will be prosecuted.
42:44I'm sorry if I acted out of turn.
42:49That's all right.
42:51But I think if you did want to sue the boiler manufacturer,
42:56there would be a case to answer.
42:58Yeah.
43:00We've got a family to say goodbye to.
43:02And a life to build.
43:05Haven't we led?
43:13It's Mrs. Russell, isn't it?
43:15What can I do for you?
43:17It's not for me, sister.
43:19It's for one of my neighbours.
43:21Well, a sort of neighbour.
43:23I reckon there's a baby on the way.
43:29I can remember you sisters coming out at all glowers.
43:33And in all weathers.
43:34What's this?
43:37We still do.
43:40Midwife calling.
43:42I don't need a midwife.
43:44My dear.
43:46I'm afraid it seems very likely that you did.
43:48I don't need a ruddy midwife.
43:49What we'll do is take a gentle look at you, and then we'll decide what to do.
44:03Oh, I don't know why you're saying we this or we that like we're friends or something.
44:09Because we ain't friends.
44:11Don't you talk to the sister like that.
44:13And we ain't friends neither.
44:15Mrs. Russell, I don't see any means of heating water in here.
44:23Would you return to your flat and boil a kettle for me?
44:28It's such a shame Sister Veronica missed the Eucharist.
44:34But her plane from Hong Kong must have still been in the air.
44:37And it's also a shame that your brother can't join us, Trixie.
44:40He's become quite a fixture on high days and holidays.
44:44Oh, I know.
44:45But he's gone to Lido de Jeslo with a friend from his National Service days.
44:49At least I get to rearrange some flowers in his absence.
44:56This is assault, this is.
44:58Lana, the sense of pressure that you're feeling is because your baby's head is descending through your pelvis.
45:04It's almost ready to be born.
45:06Send for a bloody ambulance!
45:08Lana, it's too late.
45:11How's things?
45:17Sorting through my dad's tools.
45:21Seems a first step towards what he would have wanted.
45:26Following in his footsteps and all that.
45:31Me too.
45:34Delivering insulin to a self-injecting diabetic.
45:37This is a lead dressing tool.
45:42Yeah, there's so many years it's been worn to his grip.
45:48It's old fashioned but...
45:50I'm gonna keep it.
45:51I'm gonna keep it.
45:52That sort of thing that is, doesn't it?
46:05Could you organise a urine sample?
46:08Next time she feels like getting up.
46:10She has been needing a lot of rest lately.
46:13I do not require repose.
46:16It is almost invariably forced upon me.
46:20If you feel like it, I can bring you a strawberry scone to nibble on later.
46:26She's a pretty little thing.
46:37I'm paying particular attention to her eyes as I bathe her, in case there's any infection.
46:47Are you saying I'm dirty?
46:50We take the same approach with every newborn.
46:55I wanna hold her.
46:58When you've, um, finished your cigarette perhaps.
47:01I want...
47:03to hold her.
47:04Get your hands off my baby!
47:19I didn't ask you to come here.
47:22Get your hands off me!
47:25Who asked you to come here in the first place?
47:34The mother was angry, and she was distressed.
47:53She wasn't unusual in that.
47:57And she needed...
47:59every ounce of love I could show her.
48:01She spat at you.
48:03And she assaulted you.
48:06And the only thing that stopped me...
48:09turning my back on her and running out of that squalid room...
48:14was the fact that I was there as an act of...
48:19Christian witness.
48:23Did that give you courage?
48:26It gave me purpose.
48:28And it gave me strength.
48:29And it reminded me that we are missionaries...
48:33here in the East End.
48:36And I'd rather go and be a missionary elsewhere...
48:40than be forced to pretend to be something we are not.
48:50Sister?
48:52Have you made your decision?
48:54Sister Julianne, Sister Veronica has arrived back from Hong Kong.
48:59She's waiting in your office.
49:01And insists she'll see no one but you.
49:05I came back to Poplar via the Mother House.
49:08I needed to confer with Mother Mildred...
49:11because I have been feeling increasingly...
49:15unhappy.
49:17I wasn't unaware of it.
49:21But our work is not about our happiness.
49:26It is about seeking no reward...
49:30other than knowing that we do his will.
49:34If you are quoting St Ignatius of Loyola...
49:38then you are omitting the bit about giving...
49:41and not counting the cost.
49:43And I...
49:44can't...
49:45keep on giving...
49:47and not counting the cost any longer.
49:49But you must.
49:51We must, Sister.
49:53It is what we do.
49:55It is what I have done.
49:57And done for too long.
49:59I have...
50:01loved...
50:03and served...
50:05and I have saved...
50:07other women's children for decades.
50:10If anyone were mine...
50:12or...
50:14felt like mine...
50:16for a day or even an hour...
50:18I had to hand it back...
50:23and stand there...
50:25trying not to scream...
50:28because...
50:29my arms were empty.
50:33Why didn't you tell me this before?
50:35Because I hoped...
50:37I could bear it...
50:38and I can't!
50:48I've...
50:49been given permission to go away...
51:05for six weeks...
51:08while I...
51:10decide...
51:12if I want to give up my vows...
51:13and leave the order.
51:14more then!
51:15Alright, I'm pulling...
51:16I'm pulling you guys!
51:18Let's get a...
51:19push!
51:20Come on!
51:21Yeah, that one!
51:23Come on!
51:24Yeah, that one!
51:26Go back!
51:28Go back!
51:30Go back!
51:32Go back!
51:34Go back!
51:36Go back!
51:38Go back!
51:40Go back!
51:41Go back!
51:46Come in!
51:48Go back!
51:50Go back!
51:56I...
51:58couldn't let you go...
52:00without coming to see you...
52:01coming to see you I've stood exactly where you're standing now well I hope
52:09you were standing in better shoes than these there are no lace-ups in the
52:14charity cupboard and I can only walk in lace-ups there is a knack to court shoes
52:21please don't put your arms around me I'm scared I might break apart
52:34Beryl do you have somewhere to go I've been offered a room in a Christian retreat
52:43house near Gravesend there are no other religious there and I'm assured no
52:49questions will be asked let me find you a pair of tights you'll feel more pulled
52:56together in a proper outfit
53:10you were right about sister Monica Jones edema it points to kidney failure but
53:18tests will tell us more this was always going to come wasn't it in one form or
53:28other and when it does it's going to feel like the Ravens leaving the Tower of
53:35London the end of the new world
53:39one could say that about so many things
53:44I'm telling the board that if the order are not permitted to work in a missionary capacity we are
53:57leaving popular at the end of the year and that is final
54:04going to go for the next week
54:07do you know what you want sister apart from her baby to call my own
54:25No.
54:27Sometimes I don't think anyone knows anything, really.
54:38I'll walk with you as far as the post office.
54:42This must go with the first post in the morning.
54:54Some things bring joy year after year, summer after summer.
55:08They have delighted us before and they will again.
55:12We trust the tides and the rhythm of the seasons,
55:18the tilt of the sunflower's face towards the sky.
55:24When the wind blows a little colder, do we even notice it?
55:30Or if we do, do we think it will not be for long?
55:34Because one day it may blow cold forever, but not yet.
55:41Not now.
55:43While miracles are ordinary and still within our reach.
55:51She's about to have the baby.
55:52We think, I just keep getting this.
55:55Oh, here it comes again.
55:56Hello Harmony, I'm a nurse.
55:58I'm sorry you've been hurt.
56:00There is no reason to treat me as an invalid.
56:03Best ice cream in Poplar, guarantee.
56:05And if I win, you'll get that bike.
56:07One would hope they were above such pettiness, when there is so much at stake.
56:11No adults, no rules.
56:12On a tropical island, a group of boys must fend for themselves in Lord of the Flies next.
56:22And to another island, equally dangerous, there is another mysterious murder.
56:26Brand new Death in Paradise on BBC iPlayer.
56:29All I have been back to Jerusalem.
56:31komme, ter I know.
56:32One Bunny for campus de la��í.
56:34Altix Laum, la concirencia de de laEEE.
56:35No Singing in glory.
56:38Are you?
56:40Tip like,urger midwests.
56:41All I am feeling.
56:42New God who's feeling mến.
56:44I think they'll keep losing.
56:45I think they'll keep losing.
56:47To be weep.
56:48The eastern island has fallen on a loving night.
56:50So they will keep losing theirs on their way too.
56:52To be like today.
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