
Episode 7
Season 15 Episode 7 | 53m 20sVideo has Audio Description
Despite the impending closure notice, a new cohort of junior doctors joins the midwives.
Despite the closure notice, a new cohort of junior doctors joins the midwives, including Timothy, who observes the contrast between clinical medicine and compassionate care at Nonnatus House. Violet announces her plan to shadow the midwives.
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Funding for Call the Midwife is provided by Viking.

Episode 7
Season 15 Episode 7 | 53m 20sVideo has Audio Description
Despite the closure notice, a new cohort of junior doctors joins the midwives, including Timothy, who observes the contrast between clinical medicine and compassionate care at Nonnatus House. Violet announces her plan to shadow the midwives.
See all videos with Audio DescriptionADProblems playing video? | Closed Captioning Feedback
How to Watch Call the Midwife
Call the Midwife is available to stream on pbs.org and the free PBS App, available on iPhone, Apple TV, Android TV, Android smartphones, Amazon Fire TV, Amazon Fire Tablet, Roku, Samsung Smart TV, and Vizio.

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Learn Moreabout PBS online sponsorship♪ ♪ ♪ ♪ ♪ ♪ Mature Jennifer: There are challenges that are eternal.
How do we stand and face our fears?
And how do we let go?
We forge on because we must, with weapons as fragile as courage, as simple as work, or as precious as compassion for our fellow human beings.
[Baby crying] Mature Jennifer: These are the threads that bind the very warp and weft of days.
The things we think we will remember, then move on from and forget.
[Coughing and toilet flushing] Oh, you poor child.
I'm pretty sure that's it for now.
Go and get ready.
I'll cover for you.
Nurse Crane's been held up at the maternity home.
She's asked me to give out morning orders.
Sister Catherine, are you happy to be on first call this afternoon?
Of course.
I was top of the call board myself, but I now have a meeting halfway across London.
Good morning, all.
Rosalind laddered her tights.
She's just sorting out a fresh pair.
Well, I hope she's eaten a hearty breakfast.
She's going to be cycling all over Poplar today.
♪ See you later!
6 o'clock!
And don't be late!
♪ [Knock at door] Come in.
[Door opens] Oh!
And it is wakey-wakey, rise and shine, for my favourite slugabed!
I bring grapefruit, tea, and French toast chaser.
Have I overslept again?
You're keeping not dissimilar hours to Princess Margaret.
Although I am told her cooling tray has nothing on it but black coffee and an orange juice.
She probably wakes up with a hangover.
I've never had a hangover.
Mm!
Are you getting a bad back sleeping on the sofa?
I did think of sending for an osteopath.
Then I remembered I am one.
Well, I've slept like a log every night since I came here.
It's like I'm getting over an illness.
You look to me as though you are recuperating nicely.
Apart from the faintest suggestion of a few split ends.
Dare I make you a little appointment-ette at the salon on the corner?
The hairdressers?
Oh, no, I really don't think I can go to the hairdressers.
Not with my hair in this state.
[Chuckles] In a moment, we'll be inviting the ladies and gentlemen of the press inside, to view the magnificent ground floor extension funded by the Bathroom Grant Scheme.
But first, I'd like to ask Mrs.
Rhoda Mullucks, who's here today with her daughter Susan and son Paddy, to say a few words about how she and her family have benefited from this council initiative.
My grandma was actually born in this house, and the addition of the bathroom has brought us bang into the middle of the 20th century.
Reporter: And what do you have to say, Susan?
It's fantastic!
[Crowd chuckling] Woman: That's great!
Violet: In you go, members of the press!
Straight through to the back of the house.
Oh, and Mrs.
Mullucks' sanitaryware is in a new colour called Pampas Beige, so you might want to caption your photographs accordingly.
[Laughs] Come on, love.
Let's bump you up.
Oh... [Sighs] I can't believe we're under notice of closure, yet we've still got a cohort of junior doctors coming in for district obstetrics.
And all the more unsettling because my own son's one of the doctors.
Oh, he was such a little boy when he came into my life.
You were younger than he is now when your path first crossed with mine.
And look at us now.
Shutting up shop, to all intents and purposes.
Where do you think we'll be this time next year?
Possibly in a... a better place than this.
Possibly in a worse one.
But not here?
Shelagh... the council are not going to give Nonnatus House any more money.
We'll have to see what God thinks... and what the Order proposes.
Violet: I'm sorry, Dr.
Turner, but I have begged for an extraordinary meeting of the Board of Health, and Dr.
Threapwood says we have to wait until the next one scheduled on Friday.
They might announce more closures at that one.
There are half a dozen other maternity homes just waiting for the axe to fall.
Which doesn't give the board the right to treat you or Nonnatus House like a canary down the mine.
Meanwhile, I fear the fact that our GP practise is remaining open has confused matters.
And I'd expected some degree of local uproar, but no one has so much as started a petition.
Dr.
Turner: The system we're heading into is going to be so big, it dwarfs people's comprehension.
Then, by the time they realise what's afoot, their voices will seem too tiny to be heard.
Well, my voice isn't too tiny to be heard.
[Screaming] Now, Mother, let's concentrate on the task in hand.
Less noise equals more effective bearing down.
I'd do better without a ruddy audience!
Come, come.
Just keep reminding yourself you're making very satisfactory progress.
[Woman screaming] Mr.
Parry: Now, once this contraction ends and Mother has ceased her exertions, would one of the gentlemen present like to step up and describe what he can see?
Ah, Dr.
Turner Jr.
Oh!
Rule one of obstetrics, there is often something liquid on the floor.
[Woman panting] The foetal scalp is not visible at the introitus during the pause between contractions, sir.
The presenting part is the vertex in a cephalic presentation.
The head is beginning to distend the perineum, but the crowning has not yet occurred.
And...?
Boy or girl?
It's reassuring to know your expertise knows its limits.
[Chuckles] [Woman panting] [Woman groaning] Mr.
Scarisbrick: Now, Lady Aylward... "Matron of the Lady Emily Clinic for Women and Babies" does have rather a ring to it.
Yes, it does.
And I'd like to accept, with caveats.
You know I'll grant you any caveat you desire.
I can't commence until the new year.
I have to give in my notice to Nonnatus House.
They're not in the best shape at the present time.
[Bell ringing] Had I to peal this bell much longer, I would have been in need of embrocation for my elbow as well as assistance to the lavatory.
This means the diuretics are working... [Gasps] And helping to cleanse your body of all the excess fluid.
I-- I am not in want of a biology lesson.
Merely your aid.
It might be more convenient if you set up a commode for you.
I have always prized dignity above convenience.
Trixie: I've spent the whole of my career in the East End, which equates to almost all of my adult life.
You would have served less time for murder.
I don't see it that way, Mr.
Scarisbrick.
It wasn't a sentence.
It was, and still is, a privilege.
And now our maternity home is closing down, and the domestic delivery of babies could end up virtually outlawed.
Thank you, Peel Report.
I don't want to work in hospitals.
I want to get to know the women I'm caring for.
I want them to feel safe, as though birth is a miraculous but normal part of life.
Soon I won't be able to provide that, and... in my view, that's a... terrible loss.
I'm simply grateful we're able to offer an alternative.
To those who can afford to pay.
Nevertheless, we have new adventures to look forward to.
In due course, I'll have something else to put to you, but not today.
We have quite enough to celebrate.
Perhaps you'll allow me to take you out to dinner?
Perhaps.
In a week or two.
Oh, good evening.
Is that the Gazette?
Oh, Ms.
Leverett!
Glad I caught you.
Could you put me through to Mr.
Reynolds on Features?
Paddy, what noise does a sheep make?
[Bleating] [Bleating] I'm gonna have to take Susan to the surgery tomorrow, Bernie.
That blister looks like it's become infected.
We can't have that, can we, eh?
What's the matter, my beautiful, eh?
It hurts when I put the legs on.
Bernie: Does it?
Rhoda: If I take her first thing, can you drop Paddy at nursery?
Bernie: Well, no, I can't.
I've got a funeral at 10 o'clock, out in East Ham.
Mr.
Albion wants us lined up at the hearse by 9:00.
I sometimes rue the day you took that undertaking job.
Oh, it's a steady line of work.
You're drinking more of that milk of magnesia than you ever did when you were pregnant.
You're not trying to tell me we got some news, are ya?
Chance'd be a fine thing!
♪ Oh, gosh... It is beautiful, isn't it?
I've always loved pearls, the idea that, inside all that sheen, there's a tiny speck of sand.
♪ The heart of a pearl is so much stronger than we think.
[Both chuckle excitedly] I didn't even know we kept sherry on the premises.
When a house is a home to a lot of young women, it's always wise to be prepared for a celebration.
Joyce: I managed to grab some Twiglets and smoky bacon crisps.
Fred sends his congratulations.
Nurse Crane: This is turning into quite the shindig!
[All chuckling] Have you given any consideration to a date yet?
I went to the register office this morning and filled in all the forms.
It's going to be in three weeks' time.
Three weeks?
And what of your parents?
Are they as delighted as we?
They don't know yet.
Um... They've been away on the school trip to Bruges, so... I'm going to call them tomorrow night.
They are educated, and they are inhabitants of the modern world.
Congratulations.
All: Congratulations.
[Glasses clink] ♪ Whilst I'm out, manipulating the vertebrae of London's jet set, I want you to make a list of every single thing you wish to do before you tell the sisters whether you're going to leave or stay.
To what end, Geoffrey?
It may help you decide which sacrifice is bearable.
What do you mean, "Mayor turns midwife"?
You can't deliver babies, Mrs.
Buckle!
You're not qualified.
I'm not intending to deliver them.
The idea is that I follow you and the other ladies round Poplar as you go about your work, lending a hand, you know, as and when appropriate.
And getting photographed by the Gazette?
The Gazette feels that it will draw attention to the destruction of midwifery services as we know it.
That I can't deny.
But so far, we've left the news to seep out slowly so we don't cause alarm.
Nurse Crane, in my opinion, we need to cause alarm to save the maternity home.
If people protest, it might make a difference.
[Winces] How often do you wear the artificial legs?
Rhoda: Every day.
They make them wear them at school.
There's three other thalidomide kids, and the teacher says they all have to set an example to each other.
What do you think about it all, Susan?
I don't really like them very much.
The other kids?
The legs.
They're heavy and they hurt and they don't look like proper legs.
You're probably ready for a bigger set.
She's growing like a weed!
And while I'm here, Dr.
Turner, I wouldn't mind some more milk of magnesia.
Rhoda, you really need to get that gall bladder removed.
You've been at the top of the waiting list twice and cancelled the operation both times.
I'm too busy, Doctor.
Belinda's away at university, and I'm busier than ever with Paddy and Susan to look after.
I can look after myself.
Susan, you know that's not true.
And the campaign for compensation's had so many ups and downs.
I'll write you a prescription.
It's cheaper than buying it over the counter.
But promise me, the next time your name comes up, you'll get the operation done.
[Babies crying] They don't complain like this in male surgical.
[Baby crying] He's hungry.
Oh, sorry, mate, we don't run to bar snacks.
[Baby quiets] The infant stomach is a small fusiform organ situated in the upper abdomen... with a capacity of approximately 30 millilitres.
Anatomically, it's comprised of the cardia, the fundus, the body, and the pylorus.
And the gastric mucosa is capable of secreting hydrochloric acid... What do you think you are doing with that infant?!
I was comforting him.
His cry was quite high-pitched, as though he might have colic.
[She sighs] And he stopped the moment you picked him up?
Yes, Sister.
He just didn't seem very happy.
A well-managed baby is a contented baby.
Doctors do not care for babies.
They diagnose them and they treat them.
And junior doctors are on this ward to learn.
[Baby fussing] Sorry, Sister.
Now, you don't get a belt or badges, because you're not a nurse.
Your hair must be off your collar.
There's to be no coloured eye shadow, and I shall be inspecting your fingernails.
Not that we'd let you too near the business end.
[Chuckles] [Both laughing] Looks like the Sunday Times has come out on our side again about the manufacturer's latest compensation offer.
Them manufacturers, they want the book throwing at 'em.
Three million quid for 400 children?
Arms missing, legs missing, some deaf, blind.
I've heard the campaign leaders say the kids deserve 20.
Million.
I'd never seen numbers that big until we started this campaign.
And they'll never be big enough.
Money can't buy what that girl will never have.
[Susan screams] Susan, what's the matter?!
She's screaming at David Cassidy!
Oh!
He's a pop star.
You have to scream when you see his picture!
[Screams] [Bernie laughing] David Cassidy... I wanna scream every time I see his haircut.
It's better than that T. Rex fella Belinda likes.
[Susan screams] [Both laughing] Our Susan's gonna grow up soon.
In't she?
Well, I think it's happening already.
♪ Nurse Crane: Right, Nurse Clifford, I'm assigning you to juice and milk tokens.
That way you can show off your engagement ring.
Thank you, Nurse Crane!
Are you ready with the petitions, Miss Higgins?
I have personally typed up four copies to be presented to the board, and they will be circulated while clinic is in progress.
Oh, I'll... Mrs.
Buckle!
And a gentleman of the press, unless I'm mistaken.
You are most welcome.
Oh!
[Shelagh laughs] I've drawn up a list of suitable poses, but first, you'll need to help me with the hat.
I'm telling you now, you'll not last long in a slingback court shoe.
[Knock at door] You may enter.
I brought you some chrysanths, Sister.
They're still coming up lovely on the allotment.
There was an earwig in the last bouquet.
I watched him climb from petal to petal for an hour.
It was so like being out in nature that I almost fancied I... felt sunlight on my face.
Would you like us to get you into the garden, Sister?
I could light the brazier.
You could have a blanket on your knees.
I think you mistake me for one... elderly and frail.
Never.
I'm sorry to confess it... but I do not think my feet will carry me.
♪ Sit with me for a while?
[Baby fussing] Photographer: That's right.
Give me the joy.
Give me the excitement.
[Camera clicking] Trouble with this is... we do our most important work when people aren't smiling.
[Baby fussing] [Camera clicks] [Footsteps approaching] Um... Do you reckon Sister Monica Joan's fading, Sister?
She's certainly weakening.
And the worst thing is... she knows it.
She must be getting scared.
Not of death, but... letting go of life.
And life means so much more than breath and a heartbeat.
It's... independence and company... and joy.
Even nuns take pleasure in things.
And with every day that passes, she's... denied a little more.
[Sighs] Maybe it's time to move the telly to her bedroom.
That said, I don't even think the TV will perk her up.
It's only the test card half the time.
We need to get her outside.
Joyce: Why aren't you and Cyril making this call together?
'Cause, in case you've forgotten, my parents haven't spoken to him since the day I introduced them, which was also the day they said he wasn't the man for me.
I think I need to break the ice.
Honey, you're going to need a pickaxe.
My mother and father aren't bad people, Joyce.
They're just very... blinkered.
And my marriage is their chance to see things a different way.
You're a good child, child.
♪ [Sighs] ♪ My name's Bernie.
I'm an alcoholic.
I used to be a warehouseman... before they closed the docks.
I was good at it.
Things... on shelves, things in boxes.
Lists to tick.
I was in control.
And then I lost my job.
And I have to have a reason to get up every morning, to get dressed, go out, or else the drink comes creeping in.
So, when Mr.
Albion offered me a job... I thought, "Yeah, things in boxes.
"That feels familiar."
I didn't know that I would find my calling.
That it would make me more human.
That it could make me feel so much.
And you don't feel much of anything at all, apart from safe, in a warehouse.
♪ [Rosalind crying] Rosalind!
♪ A little while back... we had to take care of a family who'd come to grief in their own home.
Carbon monoxide.
It took a mum, it took a dad, it took a little girl.
And the little girl was the same age as my youngest daughter.
Even their names were nearly the same.
Suzanne instead of Susan.
And her hair... I had to wash and brush... her hair.
♪ But it was when I was washing her feet that I thought, "These... "perfect little feet... "will never go dancing."
We all found that one hard.
It was a hard job.
But I can't put... [Clears throat] ...those feelings on the shelf... that keeps things safe... because my Susan's feet... they'll never go dancing either.
Her hands... never wear a wedding ring, never hold a child.
♪ And I love her so much.
Every imperfection she has is beautiful to me.
There are days I think I just live to see her laughing.
And sometimes... sometimes, when... when I stop to look at her... my heart stops.
♪ ♪ But I know I am not at ease... with... with what was done to her.
Because sometimes... I... Sometimes I compare her to the dead.
[Rosalind crying] Rosalind... A telephone call we could have made together, telling news we couldn't deliver in person was never going to end in happiness for anyone involved.
I suppose I just thought that... the niceness I'd always seen in them, the general decency they've always shown, would somehow come out on top.
But it didn't.
What did they say about the baby?
Nothing.
Because I didn't tell them.
Rosalind... the baby is more important than the wedding.
I know that!
I just... It's agony enough having them reject the man I love.
I'm not going to give them the chance to reject our child.
One... "Buy a new dress."
Oh, Beryl!
Oh, that's a bit basic.
I have put "not in navy blue" in brackets.
I'll add, "Mustn't go with a wimple and lace-ups."
I could see you in tiger-print chiffon.
No, I don't think animal print ever really works if you're bigger than the actual animal.
The only member of the feline species you outrank in the size department is tabby cat.
The door is wide open for tiger print, and, indeed... leopard!
No.
Two... "Drink wine... "while making crepes fruits de mer "like the Galloping Gourmet."
Well, I can put a line through that one after tonight!
We'll get the scorch marks off the frying pan eventually.
Three... Oh... "Earn some money."
How am I going to earn money?
Sing hymns in the street and put a hat down?
Hmm.
I need a secretary.
You could be the Miss Higgins of Harley Street.
I don't have a felt hat or a petrifying manner.
No, no, no, it makes perfect sense.
I hire space in three sets of consulting rooms, and I'm always missing calls.
Do say yes.
Only if you forgive me for the frying pan.
I'll do more than forgive you.
I will buy you a felt hat.
And an ocelot two-piece.
[Laughs] [Vomiting] [Groaning] [Crying in pain] Oh, Hell's bells!
Rhoda?
What... what...?
[Crying] -What's the matter?
-The pain!
-What?
-The pain!
I can't stop being sick!
-[Paddy crying] -Oh, you've woken up Paddy now!
He's got nursery in the morning!
I'm gonna call 999.
[Groaning] [Crying] This practice was established in 1947 under the auspices of the then new National Health Service.
And the maternity home was opened in 1958.
Is it true that it's due to close down?
Yes, in a word.
Do you have any questions relating to your training?
Do we have to ride bikes?
Proficiency in cycling is considered an advantage.
Nurse Crane: Evolution gave you two hands, Dr.
Drinkwater!
Can we see one on each handlebar, please?
Now, gentlemen, if you would all oblige me by signalling as if you were turning left.
[Blows whistle] That's the other left, Dr.
Turner Jr.
Oh... sorry.
He was like that as a little lad.
I had him in Cubs.
[Blows whistle] Any oil left in that can, Fred?
They're gonna operate tomorrow, take the whole thing out.
Bernie: I know.
And the nurse says that it's worse because it's an emergency.
Dr.
Turner's not getting on at you for the good of his health; it's for yours.
And you ignored him.
I've got too much to do.
Now you've got too much to do.
I'll cope.
Pff!
Your sister's gonna come and pick up Paddy.
Mavis?
Oh, I'll have to give her a list.
What about Susan?
It's not the most luxurious mode of transport but, with a couple of cushions, it'll be just the job for taking you out in the fresh air.
By fresh air, do you mean in public?
Sister, you need stimulation, and you're capable of embracing it.
Why, then, did you bring that infernal television into my chamber?!
It is the equivalent of putting straw down in the street so a moribund patient will not be disturbed by the carriage wheels!
You make all these gestures because you think I am not long for this world!
Can you not see that all of these gestures are because we love you?!
I have neither the time or the temper to engage in violent sentiment!
Love is not violent, Sister.
Love is patient and love is kind.
And sometimes love pushes us to places where we do not wish to go!
I thereby refer you to my feelings regarding that conveyance!
She was as mulish as I have ever seen her, and I came as close to losing patience as I ever have.
When I was in formation, Mother Albert used to say that our greatest trials would always come from within our family circle.
I've had flesh and blood sisters as well as sisters in Christ.
The thing is, you don't have to forgive the flesh and blood ones.
You can just roll around on the floor and smack each other and forget.
[Chuckles] That sounds quite appealing.
[Bell ringing] Er, Sister Catherine, I'm afraid I have to increase your nursing duties.
Mother Mildred has asked me to go to the Mother House to discuss plans for our missionary work.
You've always said we are missionaries here.
And there's a whole world in need of healing.
Let us see what is proposed.
♪ ♪ Belinda?
Hello, love.
Yeah, we need you to come home, er, help look after Susan.
Did Mum say that's what she wants?
Bernie: Er, no.
She wants you to prioritise your studies.
It's me.
I'm asking you.
Then I'm doing what Mum wants.
I... I wouldn't be at university if she hadn't worked so hard to help me.
I owe it to her to work hard and make the most of the opportunity.
But what about Susan?
Belinda: I can't, Dad.
I just can't.
You don't have to stay here for this, Rosalind.
From now on, we share all the hard things.
-[Knock at door] -[Door opens] So, Pastor Robinson, Rosalind.
What's all this?
We wanted to talk to you about the engagement and the wedding.
This is the wedding that's taking place in three weeks' time?
Less than three weeks now.
And you think I don't have eyes in my head?
There's a look to young mothers even before their bodies tell the tale.
Have you guessed, Mrs.
Wallace?
I have.
I must have said some terrifying things in your imagination.
Yes.
Then let that be your punishment.
Now make me a cup of tea.
♪ ♪ ♪ I beg your pardon ♪ ♪ I never promised you a rose garden ♪ ♪ Along with the sunshine ♪ ♪ There's gotta be a little rain sometimes ♪ ♪ When you take, you gotta give... ♪ Timothy: This newspaper story certainly made a splash.
Will it make any difference, do you suppose?
My dad went along with it, but I don't think he's very optimistic.
I keep feeling as though I should be helping you.
You're a junior doctor now, not a student.
No donkey work allowed.
[Doorbell ringing] I feel for the pair of them, Mrs.
Wallace.
Nothing takes the shine off a wedding like parental disapproval.
It was always going to be under a shadow because of Pastor Robinson's divorce.
But he deserves as much happiness as any other man now his mistakes are behind him.
I don't think his marriage to Lucille was a mistake, Mrs.
Wallace.
It was never a union without love.
What it was was a union without luck.
Perhaps matters would have turned out differently if they'd been able to have a child.
A baby is always a blessing.
And now we must look to the future.
Let us say nothing further.
Meanwhile, hastily arranged though it may be, this is Rosalind's first wedding.
How do we make it special for them?
How do we make up for the fact that her parents have treated them so coldly?
It's simple enough, Nurse Crane.
We show them love.
Nurse... Nurse!
My wife is on the second floor.
I will take you to her.
-That's okay, honey.
Let us park these bicycles and we'll head straight up.
This is young Dr.
Turner, by the way.
A... doctor?
Yes?
Joyce: He'll be working under my supervision.
♪ ♪ [Clattering sounds] [Woman coughing] Do you have running water, Mr.
Das?
We have only one room.
We use this tap.
[Woman coughing] ♪ Oh, Nurse Highland?
-It's Mrs.
O'Dey, isn't it?
-Yeah.
I remember you from the clinic.
You couldn't come and look at my little Barry, could ya?
He don't seem right.
I'm on my way to a lady in labour.
What's the matter with him?
It's like a cold and a bit of a cough.
-Mr.
Das: Please.
-[Groaning from upstairs] I can hear her crying out.
Have you taken him to the surgery?
I haven't got the bus fare.
I don't get my money till tomorrow.
Please... I'll pop down later, honey, when I get the chance.
[Groaning from upstairs] I'll have to run or the chippy will be closed.
Do you want cod or haddock?
Cod, and get haddock for Dad.
He's hungry when he comes in from picking up dead bodies.
I'll be back in ten.
-[Door closes] -Perry!
My Jackie magazine's still in the bedroom!
[Sighs] ♪ [Whimpering] ♪ [Door closes] ♪ ♪ ♪ Thank you.
My husband cannot touch me now, even though he wishes to.
Are you Hindu, Mrs.
Das?
Yes.
And we are Bengali.
We could not stay in our own country anymore.
Don't worry about where you've come from.
The only thing that matters tonight is what's going to happen in this room.
I should not be here.
No man should be here unless he is a doctor.
But I have nowhere else to go.
And I do not want to leave her.
We could rig up a screen.
I can go out onto the landing and requisition a bit of washing line.
You get cracking, but I need you back quickly, or this won't count towards your rotation.
[Door opens and closes] [Breathing heavily] ♪ ♪ ♪ [Stair creaks] ♪ ♪ [Screams] -[Praying] -[Ranjini groaning] [Groaning] [Groaning] ♪ Now, with this next pain, I'm going to need a really long, strong push from you, Ranjini.
I am too tired.
You're stronger than you know.
And you've come further than you think already.
Mm-hm!
This one talks a good talk.
Let's see if we can prove him right.
♪ Help!
Help!
Dr.
Turner: That's excellent, Ranjini.
That's excellent.
Check for descent of the head.
[Groaning] It's crowning.
[Crying out] Baby's head has been born, Ranjini.
It's resting right here in my hand.
[Knock at door] Woman: Help!
We need the nurse!
[Banging on door] Do you mind?
A lady is having a baby in here!
Her kid's stopped breathing!
[Ranjini breathing heavily] ♪ Mrs.
O'Dey: Help!
♪ Just rest, Ranjini.
Just rest.
And I'll talk you through the next bit.
Help!
Help!
Barry!
What's all this, young man?
You okay?
What happened?
Did he choke on something?
It was just like he was just choking on the air and then he just stopped!
[Sobbing] Why has he gone blue?!
Joyce: Somebody call an ambulance!
♪ ♪ Timothy: This is just your baby turning, Ranjini.
-[Baby making noises] -Everything's okay.
♪ Barry, baby... [Crying] Is he breathing?
Is he breathing?!
♪ ♪ Oh, it's not working!
He's going all blue!
He's going all blue!
Joyce: Did somebody call an ambulance?
[Mrs.
O'Dey sobbing] -[Ranjini groaning] -Almost there.
This is it, Ranjini.
[Baby crying] [Cries out] [Baby crying] And you have a little girl.
[Baby crying] ♪ ♪ [Mrs.
O'Dey sobbing] I'm not going to stop until the ambulance gets here.
[Blowing air] [Baby crying] ♪ ♪ Where is the midwife?
♪ ♪ ♪ Ranjini... I'm going to have to give you an injection.
♪ ♪ ♪ [Whimpering] [Baby gurgling] ♪ Oh!
Is... is he okay?
[Baby crying] Joyce: He'll need to go to the hospital and be checked.
[Baby crying] ♪ ♪ [Sighs] ♪ Thank you.
[Baby crying] Timothy: Don't suppose many house calls end up with two ambulances arriving.
Well, that baby seems to have had croup, and they do bounce back from that.
And Ranjini will be all right after a blood transfusion.
I froze for a moment.
But then it was like my heart rate shot up and my brain kicked in.
That would be the adrenaline.
I wonder if anyone's ever done blood tests on doctors immediately after a crisis situation.
That might make an interesting research paper.
Yes.
Belinda, I can't show you the bruises your sister has all down her back, but I'm telling you, you have to come home!
You said I was to throw everything I've got at university.
You said it was something you never had.
Rhoda: This isn't about you.
And it isn't about me.
This is about Susan!
Bernie: Rhoda, is all this shouting really necessary?
Belinda: Everything is always about Susan!
Rhoda: And I know you love her as much as us.
There are essentially two ways of approaching make-up.
One can purely use it to disguise nature's shortcomings, or push things a little further and deploy it as a sort of costume.
You mean like a disguise?
No.
People hide behind disguises.
Bold lips and defined eyes can bring out our inner confidence.
Try putting this on, by yourself this time.
And then I'll show you how to blot.
♪ ♪ Do you ever have to bring out your inner confidence?
More frequently than you might imagine.
[Exhales] It's jolly hot in here.
Bear with me a moment.
It's the excitement of seeing yourself transformed, perhaps.
No, no.
I suspect it's something else.
It's passed now.
Let's get on with your nails.
[Filing nails] Dr.
Threapwood: And before we turn our attention to the riveting recent investigation into unlicensed butchery operations, we have item five on the agenda, the closure of Kenilworth Row Maternity Home.
Which counts as unlicensed butchery all on its own.
Others: Hear, hear!
Thank you, Turner.
Any comments from the wider committee?
Yes, from me, Dr.
Threapwood.
This is what midwifery looks like in your district.
And this is what local people think about your proposal.
The women of Poplar know how vital and how valuable the sisters are.
And you're closing them down, too.
This is the direction of travel dictated by the National Health.
Meanwhile, Turner, rest assured that even as you progress to this next phase, we continue to learn from you.
Will you be watching to see what goes wrong?
Because there'll be plenty.
May we move on now to item six?
♪ ♪ I will pray for you when I say the Offices.
You will not be as alone in the chapel as you imagine.
Oh... Keep the home fires burning and all of that.
I will telephone from the Mother House if there is anything to report.
[Children playing outside] ♪ ♪ Boy: Come on, shoot!
[Children laughing] Are you happy to take your diuretics with just water, or would you like me to make some hot blackcurrant?
I require no beverages for I will take no pills.
But the treatment is working.
It is not treatment.
It is merely postponing all that is to come.
You would have me out in nature... but I would sooner admit nature into this room... and let it take its course.
Sister, I'm speaking to you nurse to nurse now.
If you refuse your medication, you will progress from chronic kidney disease to end-stage renal failure very rapidly.
And what if that is what the Lord intends?
♪ ♪ [Crying quietly] ♪ Shelagh: Sister Catherine?
What's this?
I chose this life because I wanted certainty.
There was work and a rule of life, and there was faith to knit it all together.
But now nobody is where they ought to be, and... we don't know what's coming next.
Sister... are you doubting your vocation?
No!
I have made my vows.
And those vows are indivisible from my soul.
But if I felt I could leave... I would leave... because right now it would be easier.
It would not.
I can promise you that.
I'm sorry... But... just now, just today... I feel so alone.
I'm almost at the end of Harry's new jumper.
I suppose I'll be casting on for Rosalind's baby after this.
There is going to be a baby, isn't there?
Of course there is.
Oh!
The girl's been locked in the bathroom every morning.
[Sighs] There's so much change afoot.
♪ Phyllis... I often find people speak of change as if they're speaking about rats, as if change is something hiding underneath the house, attempting to get in and gnaw at all that we hold precious.
Perhaps we would be better to compare change... to the birds.
Enlighten me.
Well... birds do what birds will.
They carry twigs in their beaks, and seeds.
So, they build nests and sow flowers, however accidentally.
Maybe you should put that in a poem.
[Doorbell ringing] Good things can come from birds.
And it's the same with change.
-[Doorbell ringing] -[Door opens] Oh, it's Mrs.
Turner.
[Football results on radio] [Door opens] Is that Belinda?
Don't know, darling.
Hello?
Hi, welcome home, love.
That what I think it is?
I'm eight months gone.
I managed to hide it over the summer holidays.
And then once I went back, I thought I'd be safe.
I thought I wouldn't have to tell you.
And then I had to come home because of Susan!
[Belinda sobbing] ♪ ♪ It's all right.
[Sobbing] ♪ ♪ ♪ Mature Jennifer (V.O.
): Often, a fear faced up to is a fear outgunned, and love expressed becomes love doubled and ignited, whether we light the fire through words or deeds.
There is always a way ahead, a route through the woods, a path that leads us to the place we need to be.
♪ Mature Jennifer (V.O.
): We listen always for the voice that calls us.
But sometimes the love speaks loudest as we let it go.
I have news to impart.
Would you consider entering into partnership with me?
I'll never finish with God.
Thank you for your patience, ladies.
May I present the bride?
Sister Monica Joan: I would like you to summon someone from this establishment.
Nurse Crane: Albion & Sons is an undertaker's.
And every bed, kidney bowl, and set of clamps is staying on these premises until the last mother and baby go out of those doors.
Phyllis and Miss Higgins Talk About The Future
Video has Closed Captions
Clip: S15 Ep7 | 1m 27s | Miss Higgins offers a positive outlook on the changes they're about to face. (1m 27s)
Sister Catherine and Fred Discuss Sister Monica Joan
Video has Closed Captions
Clip: S15 Ep7 | 1m 5s | Fred expresses his concerns about Sister Monica Joan declining health. (1m 5s)
Video has Closed Captions
Clip: S15 Ep7 | 1m 13s | Trixie shares her passions for midwifery as the maternity home gets ready to close its doors. (1m 13s)
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