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#berkeleysquare #bbc https://www.youtube.com/channel/UC5domZkB-eRa6BuFOO8OXaQ
Pretty Maids All in a Row: A girl from the farm lands a job as a nanny at a London estate, where a power struggle erupts between her and the head nanny.
Starring:
Clare Wilkie
Victoria Smurfit
Tabitha Wady
Pretty Maids All in a Row: A girl from the farm lands a job as a nanny at a London estate, where a power struggle erupts between her and the head nanny.
Starring:
Clare Wilkie
Victoria Smurfit
Tabitha Wady
Category
🎥
Short filmTranscript
01:50When can I take my day off, please?
01:53First Sunday in the month may be convenient.
01:55I usually visit my family every Sunday, madam.
01:58You may have the first Sunday in the month and every Sunday afternoon.
02:04New nanny's just arrived.
02:05You better get upstairs.
02:06You'll be in trouble even quicker than you was with the last one.
02:08It's not fair.
02:10I thought I was going to be head nurse.
02:11I thought I was going to be Empress of China.
02:14Funny old life, isn't it?
02:20I think you could ask Cook to let me have the week's menu by this afternoon.
02:23What?
02:25Only the nursery meals, of course.
02:26Nurse Bailey never wanted menus.
02:28Well, then perhaps we can discuss the idea later.
02:31Children generally like to know.
02:34Hello.
02:36Now, you must be...
02:39Let me see.
02:40You must be Thomas?
02:43No.
02:43That's Miss Harriet.
02:45Thank you, Pringle.
02:46Well, in that case, I'd very much like to meet Thomas.
02:49Would you run and fetch him for me?
02:54I'll come down to discuss nurse arrangements at four o'clock.
02:57Just as you'd like.
03:01Ah.
03:02Now, you must be Thomas.
03:04How do you do?
03:05You smell like a tart.
03:14Graciously donated.
03:15By his lordship, the Earl of Armondsworth,
03:18a pig worth three guineas
03:21to the winner of the May Day hog ride.
03:24To sell or slaughter as he pleases.
03:28I'm instructed to say
03:29that if Lord William
03:31wins the pig again this year,
03:34he will donate the pig
03:36to be roasted for the delight of you all this evening.
03:41The winner will be the first man
03:44to snatch the garland from the maypole
03:47and reward it to the lady of his choice.
03:54You're the most beautiful woman here.
03:56And I'll be the angriest
03:58if you dare present me with that pose in front of all these golfers.
04:01We're not disgraced as it is.
04:03Then I'll keep it.
04:04I'll present it to you later.
04:08Did you see that?
04:10I'll be spare of you both.
04:12You'll win.
04:13To your places, gentlemen!
04:15Good one.
04:17Good one.
04:17On the first!
04:21On the second!
04:24And!
04:42I suppose I'm the reason
04:45his lordship's sitting over there.
04:47Are you sure you want to be seen talking to me?
04:49You could lose your job as well.
04:51His lordship feels
04:52your presence here with a little one
04:54is an embarrassment.
04:55It's his grandson, for goodness sake.
04:58And the family will never forgive you for it.
05:01Well, they may have dismissed me from the service,
05:03but they'll not dismiss me from the village.
05:05Not while William wants me here.
05:21Beep!
05:25Come on, come on!
05:26Come on!
05:29Come on, sir!
05:34Come on!
05:36Come on!
06:03Get back!
06:04Move, William!
06:32Oh, William!
06:33William!
06:35William!erae!
06:50Hi-h
06:52-h-h!
07:06So, which sort of tart do you think I smell like then, Tom?
07:10Apple or jam?
07:11I don't know.
07:13It's funny, that.
07:14I always thought I smelled of good soap and water.
07:17Not treacle pudding.
07:20I don't mind. It's quite a nice smell.
07:22He didn't mean anything bad.
07:24I'm sure he didn't.
07:27I'm just curious to know what he did mean.
07:30I don't know.
07:31It's just something Father said.
07:36Really?
07:37Well, all I know is that people who listen at doors grow big ears.
07:40We weren't listening at doors. We couldn't help it. He was shouting loud.
07:45Shut up. She's a servant.
07:47She is the cat's mother.
07:49I am Nanny.
07:51And you will stand in the corner for five minutes until you learn to be a gentleman who does not
07:57hit his sister.
08:00Well, go on.
08:08No, I don't care. I was made to care.
08:10And that is enough from you, young lady.
08:11I'll change the baby now, shall I?
08:14What's he done now?
08:15Oh, nothing that can't be mended.
08:17That'll make a change.
08:18Nice little bratty is, and she's a right little cat.
08:20Pringle?
08:21What?
08:25Come with me.
08:32What's the matter? What have I done?
08:34Have I ever heard you speak like that in front of the children again?
08:36You should do what they say to me sometimes, hoity-toity little Pringle.
08:41One more word out of you, and you'll hear what I can say sometimes.
08:45And I was brought up down the commercial road.
08:59I can manage.
09:18Fowler, I thought I asked you to make sure that Nanny Collins was given help with the baby coach.
09:23Yes, Your Ladyship.
09:24Then why have I just seen her struggling by herself?
09:27The offer of assistance was made, Your Ladyship, more than once.
09:33I see.
09:35Very well.
09:37Thank you, Fowler.
09:53George, you must talk to her.
09:55Who?
09:57Nanny Collins.
09:59You must tell her she's not to try to do all these things by herself anymore.
10:03Good Lord, I wouldn't dare.
10:05Besides, if she won't listen to Fowler, she certainly won't listen to me.
10:08For heaven's sake.
10:10She'd tell Cook not to let me have kippers for a year for impertinence.
10:15There you are.
10:16You see?
10:16The perfect opportunity to kill two birds with one stone.
10:20What?
10:21Reverend Wilkes from the Devon estate asking if we can find wholesome employment for the
10:25deserving daughter of one of your tenants.
10:35Good morning, Lydia.
10:36Good morning, Lydia.
10:39Good morning, Lydia.
10:39Cheerio.
10:40Bye.
10:41Ruben?
10:42Stop chasing that bird and get her by us inside and cleaned out before and mum has a
10:46fit!
10:50I'm sorry, Lydia. The letters only went off a few days ago.
10:55You mustn't be too disappointed. We'll hear something soon.
10:59It don't have to be a grand job. Just something that would...
11:02Well, I know old Mr. Turgoran is looking for help with his sheep now that his son's gone.
11:06Yeah, except I wouldn't be any better off than I am here, would I?
11:09And you should hear what Sally Tucker has to say about old Mr...
11:13Begging pardon, Vic.
11:16Something will turn up. I'm sure of it.
11:27What was all that about?
11:29Just passing the time of day.
11:31Replace Nanny with a bumpkin?
11:33No, George. Encourage a nice young girl to advance herself whilst giving Nanny some assistance.
11:40Out of the question.
11:41Nanny's been bringing up babies for 50 years. Good grief, she brought me up.
11:45Yes, and a very good job she did too, dear, but...
11:47Connie, when Nanny needs help, she'll ask for it.
12:01You shouldn't have come, Mr Hackford. They'll throw you out as well if they knew.
12:05Lord Harmon retired early, and the doctor's with her grace.
12:10I needed to make sure you were all right.
12:26They wouldn't let me have a part of his life, and they couldn't let me have just a little part
12:31of his death.
12:33You have more of his life than anyone else.
12:38Oh, my God, they're giving me my music.
12:42Stop now!
12:44I said stop!
12:48We've got no arguing with thee, Butler Hackford.
12:51And you have none with Miss Randall.
12:53She's a whore.
12:55And we've played music every night for as long as we choose.
12:59Until she takes her wrongdoing back where she came from.
13:02She has a young baby.
13:04Aye.
13:06She has.
13:17Get your things together.
13:19You'd better come back with me to Harmon's Worth Hall.
13:30You'll be all right there.
13:32I've nodded off in that chair myself before now.
13:36I've lived here since I was 14, Mr Hackford.
13:40Can't go back home to Ireland.
13:41No, I know.
13:42First time in my life, I don't know what to do.
13:45Get yourself away from me as fast as you can.
13:48Get another job and start again.
13:49Another job with no references.
13:52Mill girls don't need letters.
13:54They need to eat, though.
13:56I've not but a florin left in the world.
13:58Nothing you can sell?
14:00Only my mum's locket.
14:02Not even real gold.
14:03Who'd buy that, eh?
14:07Would you take three cillings for it?
14:11I'd be grateful.
14:24I could take a few more.
14:24I'm sorry.
14:26It's fine.
14:32You, sir.
14:32You don't need to get to get one of those.
14:33Missed in the room.
14:35It's me?
14:37I'm sorry.
14:48It's fine.
14:51He's taken his knives to the canal.
14:54Where does the canal go?
14:57All the way to London.
15:12I do find it most peculiar.
15:14You know, some people in this country think it's not quite the done thing
15:17for a well-bred woman to feed her own baby. Can you imagine?
15:22The First Lady Lambson the Scribner brought in a wet nurse for Master Hugh.
15:26Did she? What a shame.
15:30And I gave him the bottle after that.
15:33Really?
15:34Still, I seem to have plenty of milk,
15:36so I don't think you'll be troubled on that account more than occasionally.
15:49Will your lady should bring up his wind, or shall I be permitted?
15:53Thank you, Mrs. Collins.
15:55I'm gonna go to Nanny. Go on.
15:57You, you, lovely...
16:09George, I have nothing against the woman.
16:11Well, then.
16:12But she is gonna become a danger to herself, and more to the point to Ivo.
16:16But you just told me she didn't boil the kettle.
16:19Because she was afraid to, George.
16:22She doesn't trust herself to handle boiling water.
16:25Well, if she doesn't mind cold tea.
16:27It's not the point. What if there were an accident?
16:30What about when Ivo starts crawling?
16:32If she can't look after herself, how is she gonna look after him?
16:35Confound it, Connie. Send up one of the housemaids or something.
16:38No.
16:39I want her.
16:41She's of honest and kindly disposition,
16:44robust constitution,
16:46experienced in looking after children,
16:48having largely brought up eleven brothers and sisters.
16:50Eleven.
16:52Good Lord.
16:54She is one of your own tenants,
16:56who is desperate to better herself,
16:59and comes highly recommended by one of your own parish priests.
17:03He's a vicar, not a priest.
17:04I don't care if he's the Pope.
17:06Do I or do I not have your agreement
17:09to send for this Lydia Weston?
17:12No.
17:13She ain't going.
17:15I do wish you were considerate, Mr Weston.
17:18Lydia is being offered an excellent position
17:20in one of the finest houses in London.
17:22She's needed here.
17:24Turn by, I finish her school this summer.
17:26And Susanna's home from Tivetton soon.
17:28We could...
17:28Go and get your ends fed.
17:41It wouldn't be forever, Dad.
17:43Oh, yes it would.
17:44Cos I say so.
17:46You leave this house and you're no child of mine.
18:03It's all right, Ma.
18:07I won't go.
18:10It would be different if Jeremiah weren't such a lazy beggar.
18:17Daft idea, really.
18:26I'm sorry.
18:30It was just an idea I didn't mean to upset you.
18:33How old am I, Lydia?
18:37I don't know.
18:38I never really thought about it.
18:39I'm 39.
18:41I had Joe when I was 17.
18:43I've dropped near one brat a year since.
18:4639, Lydia.
18:47And I'm like a worn-out horse that's good for nothing
18:49but the knackers yard.
18:51You stay here and...
18:53First you'll be in the aloft with Johnny Watson
18:54and then you'll wed him
18:55and before you know it you'll be a rag like me.
19:00You can go to London, my girl.
19:03You go with your fancy ladyship.
19:06You wear the pretty clothes
19:08and you wash your face in warm water
19:10and you learn nice manners and be with nice people.
19:15And then you put on one of them pretty frocks
19:19and you get one of them photographs took
19:21and you send it to me.
19:24And I'll put it over the mouthpiece and there.
19:28And when people ask I'll say that's my Lydia
19:31who got herself out of this muck
19:33and made something of herself
19:35and just once in my life I'll have someone to be proud of.
19:41Now you go back and pack your bags this minute.
19:49Please, Nanny, don't cry.
19:51I am not crying.
20:02I thought I'd given you good service, Master George.
20:05You have, Nanny.
20:06Best in all the world.
20:10I suppose I could go and live with my niece in Bournemouth.
20:13I don't want you to go anywhere.
20:15We merely want to get someone to help you.
20:17I don't need help.
20:18We don't want you working so hard at your age.
20:21You think I can't manage anymore?
20:24But you'll come in here ordering me about
20:27with silly new ideas.
20:29No one's going to order you about.
20:31She's a village girl.
20:32She knows absolutely nothing.
20:34You're going to have to tell her everything.
20:36You're still Nanny.
20:37And now you'll be head nanny.
20:39That's all.
20:42Truth?
20:45Cross my heart and hope to die.
20:50That's all three.
20:51Thank you, man.
20:52You're sitting back there.
20:54It's all back.
20:55I want to make you all the truth.
20:59Great noise.
21:01Come in, Bournemouth.
21:11Miss Weston.
21:12I'm Gibbons.
21:14I've got a carriage outside.
21:15I'll take you to Folkney Square.
21:16Thank you very much, sir.
21:18Need a hand with those?
21:19No, thanks.
21:19I can manage.
21:22And did you know it to me?
21:25Just a guess.
21:39Good night.
21:40Yeah!
21:41Yeah!
22:16I've got to take these myself.
22:24I'll take you up to the nursery first.
22:26Miss Lydia Weston, sir.
22:28How do you do, Miss Weston?
22:30Your lordship.
22:32My mum, Mrs Weston, begs to be remembered
22:36and sends these to your wife with kind thanks for giving me this position.
22:42It's a dozen new-laid eggs and a quarter-clotted cream
22:44because she thinks she might not have them here in London.
22:47Lydia, this is Mr Fowler, the butler.
22:49Her ladyship is particularly fond of clotted cream, Lydia.
22:53I will convey your mother's gift and good wishes to her at the earliest opportunity.
22:56Thank you, sir.
23:39You're playing fine, Ned.
23:40Only way to keep warm, mate.
23:42Trust me.
23:57Oh, we're making a proper circus of it, are we?
24:00Why not?
24:01A lot of people coming tonight.
24:02So I hear.
24:04Word is you're out to make a bit of a monkey out of that.
24:07No, no, no.
24:08You heard it wrong.
24:09See, we're out to make a bit of money out of you.
24:11Let you know what it feels like.
24:13Snop, nose, little...
24:14Save it for tonight, Mr. Flynn.
24:17Yeah.
24:17I will.
24:23Is that the day's menu, Pringle?
24:24Yeah, and, um, you've got a little.
24:29Mutton pie with creamed potatoes, steamed lemon pudding.
24:33A little sounds most satisfactory.
24:34Who's it from?
24:36Well, I cook, of course.
24:38Tom, Harriet?
24:41Run along.
24:42Let Pringle help you get washed while I get imaging up.
24:51Ow!
24:52Well, stand still, then, you little...
24:55Should you get our letters from them, Tom?
24:57I don't know.
24:58You're hurting.
24:59Stop being a baby.
25:01You'll have to read it, then, won't you?
25:02Like you do all the others.
25:03I don't.
25:04Of course you do.
25:05Saying you know what Nanny Bailey was up to behind our backs.
25:07Ow!
25:08Look, stop it, Pringle.
25:09You're hurting her.
25:10Oh, go on, then.
25:10Off her out of it.
25:13I want to use lavatory.
25:15Hurry up, then.
25:17Go away first.
25:18Why?
25:19What have you got worth hiding?
25:20Go away!
25:21Get on with it.
25:22I'll tell Nanny.
25:23What do you think she'll do about it, eh?
25:24She don't care about you.
25:26She'll be off with a young man as soon as she can.
25:28She won't.
25:29Of course she will.
25:29What would she want staying with a nice little brat like you for?
25:32Are you going to get on with it,
25:33or do I have to do it for you?
25:54You should be paying two shillings a week,
25:56but the bed is big and the baby is little.
25:59One shilling a week.
26:01You should be paying me just to end this middle.
26:04What did you say?
26:05I don't understand.
26:07Oh, nothing.
26:08Are you foreign?
26:10I'll take it, Mrs, er...
26:11Bronowski.
26:13And you pay in advance.
26:17I'm very glad you have nice children to look after.
26:20I've made up a poem for your young gentleman.
26:23There was a young fellow called Tom
26:26who learned how to play on a drum.
26:28The noise of his toy annoyed all the big boys,
26:30so they sent him back where he came from.
26:32That's you.
26:35We'll write again soon.
26:37Your loving brother, Jack.
26:39Has she made a poem for me?
26:40I'm sure he will next time.
26:44And, Tom,
26:46if you want to read my letters,
26:48then do wash your hands first.
26:50You've left modelling glue all over this one.
26:57Afternoon.
26:58Afternoon, Nanny.
27:01I don't know her.
27:03We don't talk common people.
27:06We don't talk to strangers.
27:07She's right.
27:08You'd very well to remember.
27:09She has absolutely no idea.
27:12When did you last eat?
27:14Yesterday.
27:16Skin and bone is no good for a fat baby.
27:18What are you doing in Limehouse, London, anyway, if you please?
27:22Looking for work?
27:23Blacknell's high-quality ladies' garment manufacturers
27:26round the corner, they're looking for stitchers.
27:28Put a notice up this morning if you're fast.
27:31Maybe there's a job left.
27:34I'll see them this afternoon.
27:35And what do you do with the baby, huh?
27:38Strap him to your back.
27:41I really don't know, Mrs, um...
27:43Bronowski.
27:44You're so stupid.
27:47Look, tuppence a week,
27:48and I look after Billy till you get work.
27:50Then sixpence a week.
27:52Really?
27:54And this afternoon,
27:56for nothing.
27:59He's, how do you say,
28:00a rare fighting boy.
28:05I'll take good care of him.
28:10We'll all take
28:12good care of each other.
28:13Hmm?
28:49To whom it may concern,
28:50Hannah Randall has been employed in my household
28:52as my personal maid for two years,
28:54and is of upright, decent, and moral character.
28:58She's precise and tidy in her habits
29:00and faithful and hardworking in her duties.
29:03Signed,
29:04the Countess
29:07of Harman's worth.
29:17Are you mad?
29:18It's the only way, Dan.
29:19I had to tell him it was a gang of us clubbing together.
29:22He'd never have offered ten to one
29:23if he'd known it was just my money.
29:25Where did you get ten guineas?
29:26Sold the market, bitch.
29:28Sold everything I own.
29:31I'll make an hundred guineas.
29:32I can start a proper business with that.
29:35Got a lot of faith in yourself, in you?
29:38I could give rest.
29:38It's the angel gamer.
29:53We're not done yet, Littlin.
29:55You're owed something by that family,
29:57and I swear I'll get it for you.
30:25I swear I'll get it for you.
30:30I'll get it for you.
30:32Yeah!
30:36Yeah!
30:37Yeah!
30:38Yeah!
30:39Yeah!
30:41Yeah!
30:41Yeah!
30:43I'll make that one hundred guineas, Mr Flint.
30:45All bets are off.
30:46What?
30:47You what?
30:48You heard.
30:49That'll teach you to fight dirty.
30:52That was a fair fight, and you know it.
30:55Play what's out, Flint.
30:57Get your hands off me.
31:17All surrender.
31:24All surrender.
31:44you're quick off the mark i'll give you that advertisement's only been in a couple of hours
31:48i'm very anxious to find employment mum well it's lighting fires and scrubbing below stairs
31:53six till two three shillings a week and a hot dinner thank you not so fast let's have a look
32:00at your
32:00character what are you doing going for a daily woman says he was a lady's maid family commitments
32:17mum can't live in with an aging mother to care for you've brought your mother over from ireland have
32:21you what well you're not from around here are you no i could hardly leave her there and take care
32:29of
32:29her from here could i how did you leave your last position good job good family you're not a papist
32:37are you no no i am i'd rather not say personal reasons oh yes well it's easy found out if
32:45i
32:45tell you look i'm after a job as a skivvy that's all i think i better show this to mrs
32:49delancey
32:50don't you she's old friends with lady harman no i find this constant procession of nursemaids
33:00quite intolerable as do the children no doubt good day if you hear of a girl who would make a
33:05reliable
33:05maid for number five i will tell her to get in touch with you good day good day
33:10lydia yes nanny are we plowing the ten acre meadow no nanny well then shoulders back
33:22that's it there we are all clean and tight what have i told you too much movement causes weakness of
33:29the brain you were probably moved about a great deal i dare say now then oh look it's chewed right
33:38through his ribbon oh you're to tap his fingers if you see him doing that but i don't like to
33:44he's
33:45only tiny doing what we like is not always doing what is right yes nanny so you can put your
33:52hat and
33:52coat on again and go and fetch half a yard of sateen fancy from the haberdashers put it on the
34:00account sky blue three-eighths wide yes nanny go straight then and back across the park and do not
34:08speak to strangers no nanny
34:38come on come on it's all over now no no no it's not hey i've got 15 more notices to
34:49go to and
34:49they'll all be gone before i get there and then i'll be miserable old bastards who just don't mind
34:57they're all bitches and i gotta get in my house and i've got no money and my feet are killing
35:02me
35:05and i am that fed up at london i could kill it
35:18there's a maid's job going over in barkley square number five i don't know their names but
35:25they're all good assholes around here i'm at number 17 lord and lady lambs and scrivener
35:32just a thought thank you don't like me hope you get it it'd be nice to have someone under 90
35:40nearby
35:43anyway best get on before i get shouted at
35:48bye bye
35:50i see
36:05hannah randall madam she appears neat and well spoken and there's excellent references from
36:10harmonsworth hall where
36:15oh what are you doing in london miss randall lady harman closed up the house and went abroad after a
36:21personal tragedy ma'am there are a few other houses of quality in the area true may i ask how
36:27you heard
36:27of this position it has not been advertised as yet a member of the lamps and scrivener has
36:32holding for me ma'am i see as you please mrs simmons
36:3918 pound per annum all found including uniform and sunday best one half day off per week a
36:45servant's trip to ramsgate in july present bags to start first thing monday
36:51i don't know what it's like in yorkshire but you won't find better wages or conditions in london
36:56i wasn't expecting to live in well you know use as a nursemaid if you don't
37:01do you want the job or not for what we are about to receive may the lord make us truly
37:06grateful
37:08you may begin
37:12finish after the first mouthful by the look of it nanny bailey said small nursery folk must learn
37:17not to be greedy really well nanny wickham says that small nursery folk will learn nothing at all if
37:23they're dead from starvation pringle would you go down the kitchen please ask cook if she would be so
37:30kind as to cut some sandwiches for us me cold meat if there is some or otherwise cheese will do
37:36nicely
37:53i don't know
38:18ed
38:24I've been looking for you all day.
38:26The rest of Lenny's boys.
38:27And a good reason, too. Lenny Flynn's dead.
38:32What?
38:33He didn't get up after you walloped him.
38:35I'm telling you, Ned, if you are on speak in terms of the angel Gabriel,
38:38now's the time to start talking.
38:42Right.
38:43Would somebody like to tell me what's going on?
38:46I sent you down for sandwiches a good 30 minutes.
38:50Where are they?
38:52I went up to get the meat and got talking.
38:54I haven't asked yet. I'm sorry.
38:56I haven't got time to cut sandwiches, dear.
38:58You can see what it's like.
39:01Mrs McCluskey,
39:03Mrs St. John gave me to understand that Pringle is exclusively my nursery maid.
39:08I would be grateful if we could all remember that.
39:10You might have been exclusive in your last house, Nanny.
39:13But here, when Madam orders a big dinner party at the drop of that,
39:16we all try to muck in.
39:17I see.
39:19Well, in that case,
39:21I'm sure you won't mind Pringle taking up a corner of the table
39:24to make our sandwiches.
39:26But if the nursery lunch had been less miserly,
39:28it wouldn't be necessary.
39:33Of course, Nanny.
39:39Then make sure you make them sandwiches nice and exclusive.
39:43No!
39:45It's my turn!
39:46You're in a dog's...
39:48It's...
39:48my...
39:49dog!
39:50Well, it may be, but it's...
39:52my turn to do with it.
39:58Oh, hell.
40:09Ah!
40:10Good afternoon, Captain Tom.
40:12Princess Harriet.
40:16Honey?
40:31The chap in the mess just came back from Paris last week.
40:34Oh, yes.
40:35Oh.
40:36He says it's magnificent at this time of year.
40:40only place in the world for people like us.
40:43Like us, Captain Nason?
40:45People of culture, Mrs St. John.
40:48Oh.
40:53Harry, you are wicked.
40:56Not as wicked as I'd like to be.
41:14Arnold.
41:16That'll do it.
41:16Oh.
41:24I'd rather you didn't.
41:25Sarah spent ages untangling it.
41:27All right.
41:34Arnold.
41:35I have to get ready to go out.
41:43Get your boots off the table.
41:45Sorry.
41:46Before the devil sees.
41:48The only time you put your boots on the table,
41:52there's been in my heart a dead man wearing them.
41:57Put your feet in that.
41:59Stop spoils.
42:02So, did you get the job?
42:04Yes, I did.
42:06That's good.
42:06And I can't take it.
42:08Why not?
42:09I just can't.
42:10The job is not good enough for you.
42:12Oh, Mrs Brunowski, there is so much you don't know.
42:15Don't count on it.
42:18You think I'm stupid.
42:20You think I take a girl alone with a baby in my house
42:25and not know there is trouble somewhere?
42:27You think I don't go through your things?
42:30You think there's nothing worse in the world than forging a stupid letter.
42:42I nearly got found out today.
42:45One of the houses knew my last employer threatened to telegraph them.
42:48Did they call the police?
42:49No, no.
42:50I grabbed the letter round as fast as I could.
42:52So, what story?
42:56But you said you did get the job.
42:59Eighteen pounds a year, looking after someone else's kids as a nursemaid.
43:04The Queen of Sheba cannot look after a couple of kids?
43:07It's living in, Mrs B. I can't, not with Billy.
43:10The Queen of Sheba is too mean to pay sixpence a week for his keep here.
43:14I won't leave him.
43:16I've not come all this way to abandon him now.
43:18Then get out of my house.
43:20Both of you.
43:21What?
43:22You know why I took you in for a stupid shilling a week?
43:27Because I look at you and I see me.
43:32I see a woman who don't give up.
43:35For that you got respect.
43:37For that you got a fresh egg to keep you walking for jobs.
43:41Keep you lucky.
43:46I had a baby once.
43:49What?
43:53In famine.
43:58Every day I would walk from Gdansk,
44:01ten miles to dig potatoes left in fields.
44:06Eat some, sell some.
44:10Steal a little milk.
44:12Steal an egg.
44:17Every day, hide my baby in the woods.
44:25Every night come back for him.
44:29What happened?
44:38Cossacks found him.
44:44I didn't have no Mrs. Branowski to look after me.
45:12Shall I order a supper tray to Madam's room later, sir?
45:16No, thank you.
45:18Mrs. St. John will probably go on to dine after the theatre.
45:21Very good, sir.
45:25Very good, sir.
45:36Very good, sir.
45:45Very good, sir.
45:48Very good, sir.
46:03Philip's room.
46:13to damson
46:18what the
46:22god almighty
46:31Mrs. McCluskey
46:34sorry to bother you so late
46:36could I have a word
46:38what about
46:40about the way we work together
46:43look I really don't like the idea
46:45of the household and the nursery being at odds
46:47with each other
46:48neither do I
46:50I realise that you may have had problems with other nannies
46:53in the past but
46:54I'm in the house now
46:56and let me assure you I'm going to stay
46:58and do the best job I possibly can
47:01right
47:01I mean all it requires is that you and I
47:03are straightforward and honest about what we want
47:05and expect from each other
47:07can do that can't we
47:09of course we can nanny
47:12I appreciate you coming down to say it
47:14I do
47:16really
47:16thank you
47:18well I'll say goodnight then
47:20goodnight
47:37hello mama
47:40let's go
47:40well I see you
47:41I know
47:41that I know
47:43you
47:43I know
47:56I know
47:56you
47:56I know
47:57I know
47:57you
47:57you
48:02I know