Black Narcissus (1947) Movie Script
Sita, go and tell Sister Clodagh
I wish to speak to her.
Therefore, X is equal to 5...
- or minus- - Reverend Mother wishes
to speak to you, Sister Clodagh.
Joya.
Continue the lesson.
Sister Clodagh,
we may proceed
with our plans at Mopu.
- It will be called Saint Faith.
- Saint Faith.
And you have been appointed
to take charge of St. Faith.
- I, Reverend Mother?
- You.
You will be the youngest
sister superior in our order.
Thank you, Reverend Mother.
The agent at Mopu
is an Englishman.
He seems a difficult man.
You won't get
much help from him.
Dear Madam, My name is Dean.
I am the agent
of General Toda Rai at Mopu...
and I am writing to you
in that capacity.
I understand the general has offered you
the old palace at Mopu...
to make a school and
a dispensary for the natives.
It's not the first time
he's had such ideas.
He's asked me to tell you
about the place and the people.
It's not a comfortable spot,
and it's at the back of beyond.
First you have to get
to Darjeeling,
then I have to find you ponies
and porters to take you into the hills.
Mopu is 8,000 feet up.
The peaks on the range opposite
are nearly as high as Everest.
The people call the highest peak
Nanga Dalle.
It means "the bare goddess. "
I live down in the valley,
out of the wind.
So does the general,
and so do the people.
Mopu Palace stands in the wind
on a shelf on the mountain.
It was built by the general's
father, to keep his women there.
It's called a palace, but there
may be a slight difference...
between your idea of a palace
and the general's.
Anyhow, there it is.
The people are like mountain peasants
everywhere- simple, independent.
They work because they must,
they smile when they feel like it...
and they're no respecters
of persons.
The men are men- no better,
no worse than anywhere else.
The women are women.
The children, children.
Up on the mountain above the
palace, we have our holy man...
who sits there day in
and day out in all weathers.
All the people around
are very proud of him...
and bring him food
and little offerings.
The wind up at the palace
blows seven days a week,
so if you must come,
bring some warm things with you.
Nobody has lived there for
a long time, except Angu Ayah...
who's always been there
and stays on as caretaker.
As a caretaker,
she's a bit of a failure,
but she's a faithful, dirty old
bird and goes with the place.
She lives there alone...
with the ghosts of bygone days.
Ayah! Ayah! Ayah! Ayah!
Ayah! Ayah! Ayah!
Ayah! Ayah! Ayah!
Ayah! Ayah!
Ayah!
Ayah! Ayah!
- That's Mr. Dean.
- Never mind Mr. Dean. He'll find us.
Now listen, Ayah.
I have invited some ladies...
to stay here
at the house of women.
Ladies! Oh, that will be
like old times!
It will not be in the least
like old times.
They are not
that kind of lady at all.
- Then they won't be any fun.
- They are not coming for fun.
These are nuns.
Do you know what a nun is?
They kneel and pray all day like
the monks you invited last year.
I'm going to give them this house to make
a school and a hospital for the people.
You know nobody here
wants a school...
and I'm sure they
don't want a hospital!
How do they know what they want
until they try?
The people have
all kinds of diseases.
- They have ringworm.
- They don't mind having ringworm.
Then they ought to mind.
And it will all be free.
It was free last time,
and nobody came.
They will this time.
Mr. Dean!
You will receive them for me,
and you will do everything for them
that they want doing.
You too. You will
engage servants for them,
and you will both look after them until
they care to look after themselves.
What do they eat?
How do I know what nuns eat?
I have remembered that.
Do you see that crate?
Sausages.
They will eat sausages.
Europeans eat sausages
wherever they go.
They will eat them when they come and until
they can cook what else they want to eat.
Now remember, Ayah,
if you give any trouble,
you will be sorry.
I'm sorry now!
A convent in this house.
What do you think of that?
The brothers only stayed
five months.
Perhaps the sisters
won't stay long, either.
The house is 9,000 feet up-
very cold, but good air.
General Toda Rai, who has invited us
to Mopu, has promised us every help.
He was a little afraid
when he learned...
that we are bound to our order
only by yearly vows.
- I explained this rule to him.
- Yes, Reverend Mother.
For more than a century,
to serve voluntarily...
has been one of the glories
of our order.
And our greatest strength.
Exactly.
He understands now.
- Is there anything you would like to ask?
- Who am I to take with me?
Remember, a community
is not a class of girls.
The sisters won't be easy
to manage or to impress.
Now, let me see.
I'll give you Sister Briony.
You'll need her strength.
Thank you, Reverend Mother.
Sister Philippa for the garden.
- Sister Blanche.
- Sister Blanche?
- You know what the others call her?
- Sister Honey.
Yes, Honey. I think
you'll need Sister Honey.
She's popular,
and you'll need to be popular.
- And Sister Ruth.
- But Sister Ruth is ill.
That is why I want her to go.
Forgive me for saying so,
Reverend Mother,
but do you think our
vocation is her vocation?
Yes, she's a problem.
I'm afraid she'll be
a problem for you too.
With a smaller community,
she may be better.
Give her responsibility, Sister.
She badly wants importance.
Do you think it's a good thing
to let her feel important?
Spare her some of your own
importance... if you can.
Mother, are you sorry that I have been
appointed to take charge of St. Faith?
Yes. I don't think
you're ready for it,
and I think you'll be lonely.
Never forget,
we're an order of workers.
Work them hard.
And remember...
the superior of all
is the servant of all.
I understand.
It was a good, good idea.
One thing about them,
they keep good time.
Go!
Dear! The whole garden's
so terribly overgrown,
I don't know where to begin!
Please come and help the fat
lady who has questions.
Sister Briony?
Ayah, you must learn our proper names.
Anyway, there aren't
any patients yet.
Oh, aren't there?
There are dozens waiting.
And more coming every minute.
Now tell them to go away and come
and help me with the ones that are left.
Oh, Sister Blanche, these girls
are to work in your lay school.
They were sent by the general.
Oh, don't they look nice.
But, Sister, you
ought to see the children.
The schoolroom's
full of them already.
The little ones are so sweet.
Some of them can scarcely
do more than toddle.
Joseph Anthony has come.
Ayah, you must knock
before you come in.
- Who is Joseph Anthony?
- Who is Joseph Anthony?
He's the son of the general's cook.
He's going to interpret for you.
He speaks English.
Come in.
- Has the general sent you?
- Yes, lady.
She isn't a lady.
She's a sister.
Say, "Yes, Lemani. "
Yes, Lemani. I have my books
and my bedding outside.
- I shall live here with you.
- Oh!
Would you like to see
my books and my bedding, lady?
Sister? Lemani?
- How old are you?
- Six to eleven.
What did you say?
I can remember that I'm six,
but my father married
my mother 11 years ago...
so that I may probably
be about ten.
Sister, the schoolroom
is overflowing with children.
We've nothing unpacked yet.
No one understands the language. There
are too many of them, and they smell.
- I don't know what to do.
- Why don't you tell them to come back later?
- Start with the older ones.
- They won't go away.
- Oh, why not?
- They were paid to come, so they can't go away.
Paid?
Sister, the general's clerk has orders to
pay everybody who comes to my dispensary.
- So they all want to come.
- Excuse me, Sister, may I suggest?
- Yes, Sister?
- Wouldn't it be a pity to send the children away?
- They were paid to come.
- But if they like it, they may come again.
What can you do with them?
They look very stupid to me.
Remember, they can't speak
a word of Hindustani or English.
Joseph can.
You'll help us,
won't you, Joseph?
The brothers left
a blackboard in the school.
I'll draw things on it
in colored chalk.
They can tell me their name for it,
and I'll tell them the English.
I can take their names and ages
and make a register.
You can hardly
call that a lesson.
You can call it
a very sensible idea.
Thank you, Sister Blanche.
I suppose you know who I am.
You must be Mr. Dean.
I must.
And you must be
the sister superior.
What curious feathers. Are they all
from the birds that you've shot?
I don't shoot birds.
When you've shot everything,
it appalls, doesn't it?
I'm the general's agent.
He welcomes you to Mopu.
Understood you wanted to see me.
We want to talk to you on business.
I didn't suppose you wanted
to talk to me on anything else.
Sorry.
Perhaps that wasn't fair.
Mr. Dean, you know
that General Toda Rai...
has given us this house for
a new foundation of our order.
We very much appreciate it.
It's very generous of him.
Yes. You'd like
the general, Sister.
- He also has a superior being.
- Really!
I don't know why you are being
so rude to me, Mr. Dean.
I have to talk business with you
whether I like it or not.
Well, talk it then,
and don't teach at me.
It's no place to put a nunnery,
I can tell you that.
Difficult, but not impossible.
Nothing is impossible-
Is yours a contemplative order?
I mean, do you live in meditation?
Do you keep solitude?
Our order isn't in the least like that.
We're very busy people.
We're going to open
a dispensary,
a school for children
and a class for girls.
Good. You'll be doing me a great favor
when you begin to educate the local girls.
I have already been told, Mr. Dean,
that you do not believe in solitude.
Do you know what the people
call this place?
"The House of Women. "
The general's father
used to keep his ladies here.
From now on, it will be known
as the House of St. Faith.
Sister, will you have
that picture taken down?
I give you
till the rains break.
Oh, dear, dear.
Who is it?
Sister Briony.
I can't sleep.
Anything wrong, Sister?
It's Sister Ruth.
I've just seen her.
- How is she?
- She's sick.
She has violent pains in her joints,
a boil on her finger...
and headaches.
It's this wind.
And they all seem so tired.
It's the altitude.
Our dispensary
is more crowded than ever.
This big house to look after
and all the unpacking still to be done.
And the plumbing's
broken down again.
What do you think, Sister?
Perhaps Mr. Dean-
Certainly not.
We can manage without Mr. Dean.
Yes, of course.
- Are you all right, Sister?
- Of course I'm all right.
- Show me your arm.
- I'm perfectly all right.
- So you've got them too.
- What have I got?
Spots. I've got them.
Every one of us has got them.
There must be something
in the water here that's very unhealthy.
- The natives drink it.
- They get sick themselves.
I ask as the general's heir,
the young general.
He's very ill.
Those drums
are beating for him.
The beat all night
while he's ill.
If you hear them stop,
he's dead.
You!
How do you do?
What are you doing here?
Skew's all filthy.
I have to have it taken off.
I've come to mend
a loose joint in your pipe.
- You must send a plumber.
- The nearest one's Darjeeling.
- I count plumbing among my other gifts.
- That's not the point-
I swear to you, Sister,
it's only the pipe I'm interested in.
- I must see Sister Clodagh about this.
- All right.
I forbid you to stay in there.
All right.
We have to build a workroom
and a school and, later on, a chapel.
Somebody's got to put locks on my
cupboards. I daren't unpack a thing.
And the windows don't open and the door
won't shut and the plumbing won't work.
- Come in, Mr. Dean.
- May I go now, Sister?
Please sit down, Mr. Dean.
- Would you like some coffee?
- Can you make it decently?
- Can I make coffee!
- Can she?
Full of grits.
Mr. Dean, Joseph tells us...
the people are still
being paid to come to us.
Ah, the general's a wise man.
It's only till it becomes habit.
Let it become a habit
for them to come,
and they won't remember
a time when they didn't.
Then gradually
he'll leave off paying them.
and gradually it'll become
a habit with 'em not to be paid.
- They're like children.
- He told me he was going to order them to come.
- They don't know what an order is.
- They should learn.
- Why?
- We all need discipline.
Without discipline, we should
all behave like children.
Don't you like children?
Thanks, Sister Briony.
Talking of medicine,
Sister Briony,
if you get a bad case,
one that seems as though
it might be dangerous, don't take it.
- But that would be-
- It would be wise.
If you got a bad case and
some of your people died,
you'd have all the people
up against you.
- Why?
- Well, you must remember, they're primitive people...
and like, like children.
Unreasonable children.
They've never seen medicine. They'd
think it was magic, a new kind of magic.
So remember,
I've warned you.
By the way, how are you
feeling, all of you?
Not very well.
Sister Ruth is the worst.
I think the water must be bad.
Ayah says it's the water.
On the contrary.
The water's too good.
It's Darjeeling tummy.
I'd better get that plumbing fixed.
Sister Clodagh!
What has happened, Sister?
Oh, Sister, Sister,
they brought in a woman.
Our first bad case.
She was covered in blood.
I've never seen such a sight.
She must've cut an artery.
I had such a time stopping the bleeding.
I've never seen bleeding like that before.
I didn't know what to do at first,
but at last I managed to stop it.
A minute would've fetched Sister Briony
who would've stopped it at once.
What were you doing there?
I told you to stay in bed.
I was only trying
to consider you, Sister Briony.
It might have been better to have considered
the woman who is bleeding to death.
- Shall I wait?
- We are coming in a moment.
I think you'd better
go back to your room.
Good-bye, Sister.
I hope your patient does well.
Who is she?
It sounded like "Samuel,"
but it couldn't be, could it?
Oh, Samil.
She's a good old soul.
One of my best workers.
I'm very much obliged to you.
Thank you.
Now the old place
is a proper convent.
Hello, Sister Ruth.
Going for a walk?
It's time to ring the bell.
You're slipping.
Quarter of an hour early.
Thank you.
I came to ask Mr. Dean
to wait in the blue room.
How did you know he was here?
I saw him from the schoolroom.
I've brought something for you.
Her name is Hersempul,
but we call her Kanchi.
She's 17, she's an orphan...
and it's high time
she was married.
Every evening when I come home,
I find her sitting on my veranda.
She dresses herself up,
puts flowers in her hair.
It's becoming
an absolute nuisance.
If she's cloistered for a few months,
her uncle will marry her off.
But she's been behaving
so badly that no one wants her.
I don't think we want her, either.
Why did you bring her to us?
Isn't it your business
to save souls?
You are not to speak to me
like that, Mr. Dean.
Sorry.
Can't she go into
some sort of service?
She'd set any house by the ears.
I thought no one would have patience
with her, except you.
Would you ask Sister Briony
to come here, please?
Kanchi.
Kanchi.
Are you sure there's no question
you're dying to ask me?
None.
You wanted me, Sister?
I have agreed to have this
girl with us for a while.
Can you find somewhere
for her to sleep?
- What is she to do?
- Sister Honey can take her into the lay school.
Yes.
Tell Ayah to give her
some housework, keep her busy.
Come along.
Well, thanks.
I've heard about the young general's
death. Is the general grieving?
Can never tell with these people.
- What's the new young general's name?
- Dilib Rai.
He was going to Cambridge, but now
he'll be a warrior and marry young.
It'll suit him, all right.
These Rashpits are a fighting race.
Cannon.
Cannon.
Warship.
- Bayonet.
- Bayonet.
Dagger.
- Gun.
- Gun.
You know, Nina, we may have to mix
something with it.
Here, let me have a look.
Hail Mary, full of grace,
blessed is the fruit-
Sister.
Did you hear the bell?
This morning in chapel, I suddenly
had the feeling you were not with us.
- I try hard enough.
- Try what?
I used to forget
everything in chapel.
I used to feel light
and happy and near God.
Let me help you.
What is worrying you?
I remember things
before I joined our order.
Things I wanted to forget.
I never thought of them
until now.
I've been 21 years in the order,
and now they come back to me.
I think you can see too far.
I look out there, and then
I can't see the potato I'm planting.
And after a bit, it doesn't seem
to matter whether I plant it or not.
It's this place with its strange
atmosphere and new people.
Stay with me tonight after chapel,
and we will pray together.
And work, Sister.
Work hard.
Work until you're too tired
to think of anything else.
Oh, isn't it a grand day?
Isn't it a grand day?
Mmm.
What's wrong, Con?
- Everything.
- What specially?
Oh, nothing.
You wouldn't understand.
Is it money?
Whatever else is it?
Desmond's with
a lot of it in Michigan.
I heard from him last week.
He's been made a partner.
And just because I'm the eldest son,
I have to stay here in Ireland...
and hang around
waiting for... this.
I'll have a little money
when I marry, Con.
It isn't a little money.
It's a fortune.
Then it would be a waste.
Clo, don't you sometimes
itch to get away?
No, I don't want to go away.
I want to stay here like this
for the rest of my life.
Ayah! Angu Ayah!
Ayah! Angu Ayah!
Salom, my little general.
I want to see
the reverend sisters.
Why are they called
the servants of Mary?
Is the superior sister
called Mary?
Ask her.
Here she comes.
Go now.
I will speak to her alone.
- Good morning.
- Good morning.
- I want to see the superior sister.
- I am the sister superior.
Oh. I want to be
a student here with you.
I want to study
a lot of learning.
I want to study mathematics,
history, poetry and languages.
I have a note from my uncle
to ask you to encourage me.
I'm very sorry.
We only teach children and young girls.
- Why?
- Convents don't teach men pupils.
That's not very polite to men.
We don't mean it that way.
It's the custom.
Convents are for girls.
The brotherhoods are for men.
Jesus Christ was a man.
He took the shape of a man.
But you don't need
to count me as a man.
I'm only interested
in studious things.
Please, Sister. I've written out
my timetable. May I read it to you?
"5:00 a. m. to 7:00 a. m.,
algebra with the mathematical sister.
00 a. m. to 10.:00 a. m., religion,
Christianity with the scriptural sister.
00 a. m., art.
" 1:00 p. m. to 3:00 p. m., French and Russian
with the French and Russian sisters, if any.
3:00 p. m. to 4:00 p. m.,
physics with the physical sister. "
Please wait in here, General.
Aren't you afraid with the young general
that you've let a cuckoo into your nest?
If he didn't want to offend the general,
he might turn us out?
Oh, he wouldn't do that?
You may have trouble
with Kanchi.
Kanchi? She'd never dare.
After all, he is a prince,
and she is what she is.
Still, I expect she knows the story
of the prince and the beggar maid.
We're at 40, 41, 42,
43, 44, 45, 46,
47, 48, 49-
When the general
gave us the deeds,
our boundary line was to be
500 yards around the building.
Right.
- So the holy man is living on our ground.
- He was here first.
Yes, but, Mr. Dean, I find
all these things very distracting.
- Distracting?
- Yes, disturbing.
This clear air,
and the wind always blowing.
And the mountain, and the holy man
sitting there day in, day out.
And the people
coming to see him.
They climb the path
by the house,
and they stop and sit
and stare at us.
- What do you want to do?
- Ask the general to ask the holy man to move.
- It wouldn't be polite.
- I don't suppose the general even knows he's there.
Oh, yes he does. That old man
worries him quite a bit,
particularly when he's
in the middle of his dinner...
or when he's trying on
a new coat from London.
- Why?
- I suppose he feels he ought to do likewise.
And he wouldn't turn him out?
It'd be a bit awkward for the general
to turn out his own uncle.
His uncle?
General Sir Krishna Rai,
K CVO, K CSl, CMG.
He has several
foreign decorations too.
He lent our general
the money to buy this place.
I've never heard him talk.
They say he speaks perfect English.
Several other
European languages too.
Does he never speak at all?
I've never heard him.
When does he eat or sleep?
No one knows. He's always
in his place under the tree.
People come miles to see him.
Well, I really don't know what to do.
What would Christ have done?
- Morning, General.
- Good morning, Sister Honey.
Good morning, Sister Ruth.
Do you like it, Sister Ruth?
It's called Black Narcissus.
Comes from the army/navy stores
in London.
Black Narcissus.
I don't like scent at all.
Oh, Sister, don't you think it's
rather common to smell of ourselves?
- Have you seen the young general today?
- What's the latest?
Beautiful emeralds.
The most beautiful green I've ever seen.
At that hour of the morning,
they make me bilious.
Have you seen his coats? He must have a
different one for every day of the year.
Lucky he doesn't
do his own laundry.
Yesterday he had a coat the color
of ripe corn, patterned with flowers.
His earrings were amethysts
three inches long,
and his rings were turquoise.
Today he's all jade and emeralds,
and his coat is the most wonderful
pattern of pale violet stripes,
just like my grandmother's
footstool.
Oh, Granny!
Turn around.
These emeralds are for you,
my darling, when you marry.
There.
There's Con.
Good night, everybody.
Not too late, darling.
Oh, dear, I hope they get
something settled by the winter.
Where are you, Con?
He said it was called Black Narcissus,
and he got it
at the army and navy stores.
Black Narcissus.
That's what
I'm going to call him.
It's a wonderful name for him.
He's so vain, like peacock.
Fine, black peacock.
- He's not black.
- They all look alike to me.
General, please conjugate sasoir.
Future tense?
Noel, Noel
Born is the King
Of Israel
The first Noel
The angels did say
Was to certain poor shepherds
In fields as they lay
In fields as they
Lay keeping their sheep
On a cold winter's night
That was so deep
Noel, Noel
Born is the King
Of Israel
Lullay my liking
- Something for you.
- For me?
Christmas present.
Go on, take it.
Oh, Con!
Sister Clodagh.
Sister, may I congratulate you
on the birth of Christ?
Thank you, General.
I hope you don't mind
my coming tonight.
I am very much interested
in Jesus Christ.
Have I said anything wrong?
No, but we don't usually
speak of Him so casually.
And you should.
He should be casual...
and as much a part of life
as your daily bread.
How dare you
come here like this!
How dare you come
to our service tonight!
You're-
You're unforgivable!
You're objectionable
when you're sober...
and abominable
when you're drunk!
I quite agree.
If you have a spark
of decency left in you,
you won't come near us again!
No, I won't be a nun
No, I cannot be a nun
For I am so fond of pleasure
I cannot be a nun
Happy Christmas!
I do like his voice.
It's so nice and loud.
I think it's lovely, don't you?
Good night, General.
Good night, Sister Clodagh.
Come in.
I want to talk to you.
Come and sit down.
I've been worried about you
for some time.
I feel that things
are not right with you.
In what way?
You look so ill, and
you've got so terribly thin.
I know that you're trying
to keep up for all our sakes,
but I feel that you must go in
with Sister Briony and see the doctor.
I shan't see the doctor!
I'm perfectly well and right!
You're just trying
to make out that-
I didn't mean to be rude.
I haven't been sleeping,
that's all.
If you haven't been sleeping,
there must be some reason for it.
Can't you tell me?
Is something worrying you?
Yes. Yes, that's it.
I'm worried.
Don't you think
you could tell me about it?
I'd like you to tell me,
if you can.
I can't speak of it... to anyone.
Won't you try?
You know you can trust me.
You didn't want me to come here.
None of you have ever wanted me.
Don't you think you're letting
things run away with you?
I think you have let yourself fall...
into thinking too much of Mr. Dean.
Sister, don't you realize
what you're doing,
what you're running the risk
of losing in yourself?
Sister, you must- I must make you see
before it is too late.
All the same, I've noticed you're
very pleased to see him yourself!
If that was in your mind, it's better
said I think you're out of your senses!
Listen to me. I don't know-
I can't decide now what to make of you.
I shall have to think,
and I want you to think too.
As for Mr. Dean-
In spite of his charm and kindliness,
he is not a good man.
You must take him for what he is and not
try to glorify him into something he is not.
When he came to chapel on
Christmas night, he was drunk.
Can I go?
I want you to write
to Reverend Mother.
I shan't look at the letter,
and her reply will be your own business.
Am I to write
two or three pages?
Would you rather I did it now,
or shall I finish my class work first?
You may go.
That parcel is mine.
Give it to me.
I can't, Lemani. I must give
all the mail to Sister Clodagh.
It's mine. Give it to me, you fool.
It's addressed to me.
Look, I ordered it myself
from Calcutta.
It's nothing to do
with anyone else.
Sister Briony, do you know what's
happened to the other gold chain?
No. It was there when
we had it out at Christmas.
- Well, it isn't here now.
- Ask Kanchi if she's seen it.
And that for stealing
in my house!
And that for stealing a brass chain!
That's for stealing it
in such a silly way!
And that is
for getting found out!
- What has the girl done?
- She's a thief!
She stole a brass chain
from the church room...
to put around her dirty neck!
Finish the beating,
my little general.
You're going to be
a great man.
Not like your uncle.
Oh, dear, no.
Like your grandfather!
He was a man!
Finish the beating,
and begin to be a man!
Get up.
- Forget-me-not.
- Forget-me-not.
- Sweet pea.
- Sweet pea.
- Daffodil.
- Daffodil.
Japanese peony.
Chinese lily.
Tulip.
- Honeysuckle.
- Honeysuckle.
Honeysuckle.
Delphinium.
- Sister Honey!
- Delphinium.
Will you find Sister Philippa
for me, please?
- And the cabbage patch?
- Fox gloves.
- And the runner beans?
- Honeysuckle.
- And the onions?
- Tulips.
And the potatoes?
All flowers?
No, not the little round bed.
And there's more vegetables...
down by the stables
where they won't show.
But what on earth
came over you-
Would you like to sit down?
Sister, I want
to be transferred.
Transferred?
Yes, I want you to write
and ask for my transfer at once.
If you will, at once.
But why?
I was becoming
too fond of the place.
I was too wrapped up
in my work. I-
I thought too much about it.
I'd forgotten-
Forgotten what?
What I am.
I was losing the spirit
of our order.
I've been thinking
it over, you see,
and I must go at once.
I don't see that at all.
Now that you know
and you realize the danger,
you needn't go.
Surely now is the time to stay.
I daren't stay.
I think there are only two ways
of living in this place.
Either you must live
like Mr. Dean, or-
or like the holy man.
Either ignore it,
or give yourself up to it.
Neither would do for us.
No.
Well, we are here, and I don't think
it will help matters if we run away.
You know if I ask for you to be
transferred, it'll be a bad mark against you?
That's all the better.
That's what I need.
Ayah! Ayah!
What did she say?
It's Alma's little brother.
Shall we give him magnesia?
Or some of the paraffinic mulch?
A hundred and three!
That's not much in a baby.
They go up and down easily, don't they?
It's been three days.
This morning he wouldn't
wake, so she brought him.
Let him sleep. Take him home,
and put him on your bed.
Aren't you going
to give him anything?
There's nothing I can do.
But there must be
something we can do.
At least bathe his eyes
or relieve his tummy with a little oil.
I daren't touch him, Sister.
I don't think he feels pain.
You've only got to look at him
to see how it must hurt him!
You're thinking
of what Mr. Dean said!
That's enough, Sister!
I won't have any hysteria.
I know what I'm doing.
The kindest thing you can do is to make her go
home, where she'll be amongst her own people.
Sister Ruth.
Everyone's
very late this morning.
I do hope nothing's happened.
Joseph, go down the path
and hurry them up.
- Well, go on.
- I don't want to.
- You don't want to?
- Why don't you want to?
How dare you answer me like that.
Go at once!
- No, I won't go.
- Joseph!
Now stand still.
- Tell me what's the matter.
- Don't frighten him.
- Why haven't the children come?
- Where are they?
He knows why.
Tell us.
I don't want to.
Lemani, don't make me tell!
Joseph, you must tell us.
Please, Joseph, dear.
- Tell us.
- The little baby is dead!
- Oh, no!
- Our little brother is dead!
And they said that this man
and lemani killed him.
Sister Clodagh!
- There's nobody in the dispensary.
- None of the children have come.
- No gardeners.
- Kanchi has gone.
- So has the young general.
- There isn't a servant in the place.
We're all alone.
There's no one in the house.
It was my fault.
Because I loved him.
I couldn't bare to see him die.
I did it!
I killed him!
I gave her a bottle to take, some of our
cotton wool and one of our spoons.
- I killed him!
- Ayah!
Ayah, how much
of this is true?
All true, Lemani.
The people are very angry.
We must explain. Somebody must tell
them. We must find the young general.
- No, he's run away with Kanchi.
- Will you take a message?
- Me? No.
- Well, can Joseph?
- They won't let him come back.
- I'll go.
It's not safe for any of you
to go outside the garden.
- You can't go, Sister. It's far too dangerous.
- I'm not going down.
Tova!
Tova, my pony, quickly.
Well, who was it?
You.
Mr. Dean, do you think it's serious?
Do you think they'll come back?
Sister Clodagh,
the agent before my time...
was riding down to the factory
one day on his pony.
He let it kick an umbrella
lying open in the path.
There was a child asleep
under it, and it was killed.
It was just an accident,
but they murdered him that night.
I'm not trying to frighten you, but I
want you to see that it may be serious.
I've been down to the village.
Everything seems quiet enough.
- Did they say anything?
- Nothing. They listened to me and said nothing.
I saw the woman I drank the stuff
that Sister Honey gave her.
- You drank it?
- I wanted to prove to them that I wouldn't drop down dead.
It was only castor oil.
None of you must go
out of the garden.
Try to behave as though
nothing had happened.
I'll go down now
and come back this evening.
Lemani?
Lemani?
Lemani?
- What's that for?
- For you, Lemani.
Who sent it?
Sister Clodagh?
Do you notice a change in us
since we came here?
I notice a change in you.
Am I very different?
Yes.
You're much nicer.
- Nicer?
- Mmm. You're human.
Human?
Yes, we're all human,
aren't we?
When I was a girl,
I loved a man.
We were children together
in Ireland, where I come from.
A little place
called Dennis Kelly.
I thought-
everyone thought-
we should marry.
But he was ambitious,
and I found out he was going
to America to his uncle...
and he didn't
intend to take me.
He didn't think he was
doing anything wrong.
I don't think he ever
thought of us marrying.
But in a little
place like that,
and I had shown I loved him,
I had to get away first.
And that's why
you entered the order?
And being you,
you wouldn't go back?
It was a strange way
of bringing me in,
but God works in strange ways.
I had work to do,
and I had the life.
No one outside can possibly know
what that means.
It came to be my life.
I had forgotten everything
until I came here.
The first day I came,
I thought of him...
for the first time for years.
I seem to go back to the first time
I loved him, when we were children.
The young general
reminds me of him too.
The world comes
thrusting in behind him.
I've been drifting and dreaming,
and now I seem to be living through
the struggle and the bitterness again.
Here. It's quite clean.
I washed my hair this morning.
Don't take on so. There's a good girl.
It'll all blow over.
There's nothing really wrong.
Sister Philippa is leaving,
and this morning I had a letter
from Reverend Mother.
Sister Ruth
is giving up the order.
She has not renewed her vows.
I'm sorry.
And you-
Ever since we came here,
over all our troubles,
it's been,
"Ask Mr. Dean. Ask Mr. Dean. "
There was just no one else
you could ask.
But I had to take the young general.
I couldn't turn out the holy man.
I couldn't stop
the wind from blowing...
and the air from being
as clear as crystal...
and I couldn't hide the mountain.
Look, you must get away from here,
all of you, at once.
- Run away?
- Yes, if you've got any sense.
What, leave all this work,
like the brothers?
Yes.
I told you it was no place
to put a nunnery.
There's something in the atmosphere
that makes everything seem exaggerated.
Don't you understand? You must
all get away before something happens!
And drive from it
all snares of the enemy.
May Thy holy angels dwell here
and keep us in peace.
May Thy blessing be-
Sister, are you there?
Sister, do you want me
to wake the others?
You can't order me about.
You have nothing to do with me anymore.
I know what you've done.
I know that you've left the order.
I only want to stop you from doing
something you'll be sorry for.
Sister Philippa is going back in a
few days. I want to send you with her.
That's what you would like to do,
send me back and shut me up.
That's what you would all
like to do!
You know that isn't true.
Why should we want to keep you
here against your will?
Because you're all
jealous of me, especially you!
At least wait till the morning.
Wait till the morning,
and I'll wait with you.
- Ayah, wake up!
- Oh, what is it? What is it?
It's Sister Ruth!
Stop her! She's gone mad!
- Oh, it's my fault!
- Shhh!
Can't stop her.
I think we should leave them alone.
- She may kill herself.
- If she's really mad, that won't happen.
Quick, search the house!
We must stop her! Sister Ruth.
Sister Ruth!
Sister Ruth!
We must get Lanchi.
Sister Ruth!
Sister Ruth!
Sister Ruth!
- Sister Ruth!
- Sister Ruth!
- Sister Ruth!
- Sister Ruth!
Sister Ruth!
Joseph, ask him if he's seen her!
Oh, no, Lemani,
we couldn't do that.
But, Joseph, anything may have
happened to the lemani. She may be hurt.
That would be a very little
thing to him, Lemani.
He wouldn't notice it.
Good evening.
Sister Ruth?
I can't stand it any longer.
I left the order.
I gave up my vows.
I've finished with them up there.
I see.
I can arrange for you
to stay at the rest house.
I'll send my boy over now.
In the morning, I'll get ponies
and porters to take you to Darjeeling.
- I love you.
- You-
Well, if you do,
you can forget about it.
I'm sorry, Sister Ruth.
Very sorry, but-
Look, let me take you
back to the palace.
It isn't too late. Sister Clodagh
is your friend. She wants to help you.
She hates me.
They all hate me.
- You're the only one that's ever been kind to me.
- I've hardly spoken to you.
Yes, you have. When I stopped
the old woman from bleeding to death,
- you said you were grateful.
- Did I?
And then when you stopped me
that day in the hall-
Oh, whatever I said, it didn't
mean a thing! You've all gone crazy.
Well, drive one another crazy,
but leave me out of it!
- Are you going to Darjeeling or not?
- No!
- Then you must go back to the palace.
- No.
You'll go back
if I have to carry you back.
Go and talk to Sister Clodagh. She
brought you here. She can get you back.
Sister Clodagh!
Sister Clodagh!
- Do you know what she says about you?
- Whatever she said, it was true!
- You love her!
- I don't love anyone!
Clodagh! Clodagh!
Clodagh! Clodagh!
Clodagh! Clodagh!
Feel better now?
All right, I'll go.
That's a good girl.
Try and get some sleep.
In the morning you'll wake up...
and be sorry you made
such a fool of yourself.
- Come on, I'll come with you.
- I'll go alone.
- You'll do nothing of the sort.
- I'll go alone or not at all.
Suit yourself.
It's morning, Lemani.
Oh, yes, Joseph, it's morning.
What time is it?
5:45 by Auntie's watch.
Fine day, Lemani.
People call it
the flowing of the snows.
Joseph, if Sister Briony asks
for me, I'll be in the chapel.
Hail Mary, full of grace,
blessed is the fruit
of thy womb.
What do you want, General?
Sister, you know
I have not been here lately,
and I'm deeply sorry
about Sister Ruth.
Thank you.
Is there anything else?
You're cross with me.
Please do not be cross with me.
I've done a very wrong thing,
but I didn't mean to do it.
Isn't it rather late
to tell me about that?
Yes. Yes, it is, rather.
I don't mean to do
anything wrong again.
I'm going to give up
being clever and famous.
I'm going to be
exactly like my ancestors.
They were warriors and princes.
They were modest
and brave and polite,
and they never did
anything cheating.
That is why I came to you
as soon as I thought of it...
to tell you what I have done.
Must you tell me now?
- Please, Sister.
- Well, what have you done?
Sister Clodagh, I didn't know how
to tell you, so I asked Mr. Dean.
He said to tell it was
the story of the prince...
and the beggar maid.
You said you'd give us
till the rains break.
They haven't broken yet.
What will they do
with you down there?
I shall be sent to another convent
with less responsibility.
I shall be superseded
as sister-in-charge.
Will you be able to stomach that?
Stiff-necked, obstinate
creature like you?
It's what I need.
I expect I shall have to remind
myself of it a hundred times a day.
I can't change in a minute
like the young general.
But I shall have my ghosts
to remind me.
You're leaving me
with more than one.
Will you do
one last thing for me?
I know you'd rather not do it.
Of course I'll do it.
Will you
look after the grave?
All right.
Good-bye.
Good-bye.
I wish to speak to her.
Therefore, X is equal to 5...
- or minus- - Reverend Mother wishes
to speak to you, Sister Clodagh.
Joya.
Continue the lesson.
Sister Clodagh,
we may proceed
with our plans at Mopu.
- It will be called Saint Faith.
- Saint Faith.
And you have been appointed
to take charge of St. Faith.
- I, Reverend Mother?
- You.
You will be the youngest
sister superior in our order.
Thank you, Reverend Mother.
The agent at Mopu
is an Englishman.
He seems a difficult man.
You won't get
much help from him.
Dear Madam, My name is Dean.
I am the agent
of General Toda Rai at Mopu...
and I am writing to you
in that capacity.
I understand the general has offered you
the old palace at Mopu...
to make a school and
a dispensary for the natives.
It's not the first time
he's had such ideas.
He's asked me to tell you
about the place and the people.
It's not a comfortable spot,
and it's at the back of beyond.
First you have to get
to Darjeeling,
then I have to find you ponies
and porters to take you into the hills.
Mopu is 8,000 feet up.
The peaks on the range opposite
are nearly as high as Everest.
The people call the highest peak
Nanga Dalle.
It means "the bare goddess. "
I live down in the valley,
out of the wind.
So does the general,
and so do the people.
Mopu Palace stands in the wind
on a shelf on the mountain.
It was built by the general's
father, to keep his women there.
It's called a palace, but there
may be a slight difference...
between your idea of a palace
and the general's.
Anyhow, there it is.
The people are like mountain peasants
everywhere- simple, independent.
They work because they must,
they smile when they feel like it...
and they're no respecters
of persons.
The men are men- no better,
no worse than anywhere else.
The women are women.
The children, children.
Up on the mountain above the
palace, we have our holy man...
who sits there day in
and day out in all weathers.
All the people around
are very proud of him...
and bring him food
and little offerings.
The wind up at the palace
blows seven days a week,
so if you must come,
bring some warm things with you.
Nobody has lived there for
a long time, except Angu Ayah...
who's always been there
and stays on as caretaker.
As a caretaker,
she's a bit of a failure,
but she's a faithful, dirty old
bird and goes with the place.
She lives there alone...
with the ghosts of bygone days.
Ayah! Ayah! Ayah! Ayah!
Ayah! Ayah! Ayah!
Ayah! Ayah! Ayah!
Ayah! Ayah!
Ayah!
Ayah! Ayah!
- That's Mr. Dean.
- Never mind Mr. Dean. He'll find us.
Now listen, Ayah.
I have invited some ladies...
to stay here
at the house of women.
Ladies! Oh, that will be
like old times!
It will not be in the least
like old times.
They are not
that kind of lady at all.
- Then they won't be any fun.
- They are not coming for fun.
These are nuns.
Do you know what a nun is?
They kneel and pray all day like
the monks you invited last year.
I'm going to give them this house to make
a school and a hospital for the people.
You know nobody here
wants a school...
and I'm sure they
don't want a hospital!
How do they know what they want
until they try?
The people have
all kinds of diseases.
- They have ringworm.
- They don't mind having ringworm.
Then they ought to mind.
And it will all be free.
It was free last time,
and nobody came.
They will this time.
Mr. Dean!
You will receive them for me,
and you will do everything for them
that they want doing.
You too. You will
engage servants for them,
and you will both look after them until
they care to look after themselves.
What do they eat?
How do I know what nuns eat?
I have remembered that.
Do you see that crate?
Sausages.
They will eat sausages.
Europeans eat sausages
wherever they go.
They will eat them when they come and until
they can cook what else they want to eat.
Now remember, Ayah,
if you give any trouble,
you will be sorry.
I'm sorry now!
A convent in this house.
What do you think of that?
The brothers only stayed
five months.
Perhaps the sisters
won't stay long, either.
The house is 9,000 feet up-
very cold, but good air.
General Toda Rai, who has invited us
to Mopu, has promised us every help.
He was a little afraid
when he learned...
that we are bound to our order
only by yearly vows.
- I explained this rule to him.
- Yes, Reverend Mother.
For more than a century,
to serve voluntarily...
has been one of the glories
of our order.
And our greatest strength.
Exactly.
He understands now.
- Is there anything you would like to ask?
- Who am I to take with me?
Remember, a community
is not a class of girls.
The sisters won't be easy
to manage or to impress.
Now, let me see.
I'll give you Sister Briony.
You'll need her strength.
Thank you, Reverend Mother.
Sister Philippa for the garden.
- Sister Blanche.
- Sister Blanche?
- You know what the others call her?
- Sister Honey.
Yes, Honey. I think
you'll need Sister Honey.
She's popular,
and you'll need to be popular.
- And Sister Ruth.
- But Sister Ruth is ill.
That is why I want her to go.
Forgive me for saying so,
Reverend Mother,
but do you think our
vocation is her vocation?
Yes, she's a problem.
I'm afraid she'll be
a problem for you too.
With a smaller community,
she may be better.
Give her responsibility, Sister.
She badly wants importance.
Do you think it's a good thing
to let her feel important?
Spare her some of your own
importance... if you can.
Mother, are you sorry that I have been
appointed to take charge of St. Faith?
Yes. I don't think
you're ready for it,
and I think you'll be lonely.
Never forget,
we're an order of workers.
Work them hard.
And remember...
the superior of all
is the servant of all.
I understand.
It was a good, good idea.
One thing about them,
they keep good time.
Go!
Dear! The whole garden's
so terribly overgrown,
I don't know where to begin!
Please come and help the fat
lady who has questions.
Sister Briony?
Ayah, you must learn our proper names.
Anyway, there aren't
any patients yet.
Oh, aren't there?
There are dozens waiting.
And more coming every minute.
Now tell them to go away and come
and help me with the ones that are left.
Oh, Sister Blanche, these girls
are to work in your lay school.
They were sent by the general.
Oh, don't they look nice.
But, Sister, you
ought to see the children.
The schoolroom's
full of them already.
The little ones are so sweet.
Some of them can scarcely
do more than toddle.
Joseph Anthony has come.
Ayah, you must knock
before you come in.
- Who is Joseph Anthony?
- Who is Joseph Anthony?
He's the son of the general's cook.
He's going to interpret for you.
He speaks English.
Come in.
- Has the general sent you?
- Yes, lady.
She isn't a lady.
She's a sister.
Say, "Yes, Lemani. "
Yes, Lemani. I have my books
and my bedding outside.
- I shall live here with you.
- Oh!
Would you like to see
my books and my bedding, lady?
Sister? Lemani?
- How old are you?
- Six to eleven.
What did you say?
I can remember that I'm six,
but my father married
my mother 11 years ago...
so that I may probably
be about ten.
Sister, the schoolroom
is overflowing with children.
We've nothing unpacked yet.
No one understands the language. There
are too many of them, and they smell.
- I don't know what to do.
- Why don't you tell them to come back later?
- Start with the older ones.
- They won't go away.
- Oh, why not?
- They were paid to come, so they can't go away.
Paid?
Sister, the general's clerk has orders to
pay everybody who comes to my dispensary.
- So they all want to come.
- Excuse me, Sister, may I suggest?
- Yes, Sister?
- Wouldn't it be a pity to send the children away?
- They were paid to come.
- But if they like it, they may come again.
What can you do with them?
They look very stupid to me.
Remember, they can't speak
a word of Hindustani or English.
Joseph can.
You'll help us,
won't you, Joseph?
The brothers left
a blackboard in the school.
I'll draw things on it
in colored chalk.
They can tell me their name for it,
and I'll tell them the English.
I can take their names and ages
and make a register.
You can hardly
call that a lesson.
You can call it
a very sensible idea.
Thank you, Sister Blanche.
I suppose you know who I am.
You must be Mr. Dean.
I must.
And you must be
the sister superior.
What curious feathers. Are they all
from the birds that you've shot?
I don't shoot birds.
When you've shot everything,
it appalls, doesn't it?
I'm the general's agent.
He welcomes you to Mopu.
Understood you wanted to see me.
We want to talk to you on business.
I didn't suppose you wanted
to talk to me on anything else.
Sorry.
Perhaps that wasn't fair.
Mr. Dean, you know
that General Toda Rai...
has given us this house for
a new foundation of our order.
We very much appreciate it.
It's very generous of him.
Yes. You'd like
the general, Sister.
- He also has a superior being.
- Really!
I don't know why you are being
so rude to me, Mr. Dean.
I have to talk business with you
whether I like it or not.
Well, talk it then,
and don't teach at me.
It's no place to put a nunnery,
I can tell you that.
Difficult, but not impossible.
Nothing is impossible-
Is yours a contemplative order?
I mean, do you live in meditation?
Do you keep solitude?
Our order isn't in the least like that.
We're very busy people.
We're going to open
a dispensary,
a school for children
and a class for girls.
Good. You'll be doing me a great favor
when you begin to educate the local girls.
I have already been told, Mr. Dean,
that you do not believe in solitude.
Do you know what the people
call this place?
"The House of Women. "
The general's father
used to keep his ladies here.
From now on, it will be known
as the House of St. Faith.
Sister, will you have
that picture taken down?
I give you
till the rains break.
Oh, dear, dear.
Who is it?
Sister Briony.
I can't sleep.
Anything wrong, Sister?
It's Sister Ruth.
I've just seen her.
- How is she?
- She's sick.
She has violent pains in her joints,
a boil on her finger...
and headaches.
It's this wind.
And they all seem so tired.
It's the altitude.
Our dispensary
is more crowded than ever.
This big house to look after
and all the unpacking still to be done.
And the plumbing's
broken down again.
What do you think, Sister?
Perhaps Mr. Dean-
Certainly not.
We can manage without Mr. Dean.
Yes, of course.
- Are you all right, Sister?
- Of course I'm all right.
- Show me your arm.
- I'm perfectly all right.
- So you've got them too.
- What have I got?
Spots. I've got them.
Every one of us has got them.
There must be something
in the water here that's very unhealthy.
- The natives drink it.
- They get sick themselves.
I ask as the general's heir,
the young general.
He's very ill.
Those drums
are beating for him.
The beat all night
while he's ill.
If you hear them stop,
he's dead.
You!
How do you do?
What are you doing here?
Skew's all filthy.
I have to have it taken off.
I've come to mend
a loose joint in your pipe.
- You must send a plumber.
- The nearest one's Darjeeling.
- I count plumbing among my other gifts.
- That's not the point-
I swear to you, Sister,
it's only the pipe I'm interested in.
- I must see Sister Clodagh about this.
- All right.
I forbid you to stay in there.
All right.
We have to build a workroom
and a school and, later on, a chapel.
Somebody's got to put locks on my
cupboards. I daren't unpack a thing.
And the windows don't open and the door
won't shut and the plumbing won't work.
- Come in, Mr. Dean.
- May I go now, Sister?
Please sit down, Mr. Dean.
- Would you like some coffee?
- Can you make it decently?
- Can I make coffee!
- Can she?
Full of grits.
Mr. Dean, Joseph tells us...
the people are still
being paid to come to us.
Ah, the general's a wise man.
It's only till it becomes habit.
Let it become a habit
for them to come,
and they won't remember
a time when they didn't.
Then gradually
he'll leave off paying them.
and gradually it'll become
a habit with 'em not to be paid.
- They're like children.
- He told me he was going to order them to come.
- They don't know what an order is.
- They should learn.
- Why?
- We all need discipline.
Without discipline, we should
all behave like children.
Don't you like children?
Thanks, Sister Briony.
Talking of medicine,
Sister Briony,
if you get a bad case,
one that seems as though
it might be dangerous, don't take it.
- But that would be-
- It would be wise.
If you got a bad case and
some of your people died,
you'd have all the people
up against you.
- Why?
- Well, you must remember, they're primitive people...
and like, like children.
Unreasonable children.
They've never seen medicine. They'd
think it was magic, a new kind of magic.
So remember,
I've warned you.
By the way, how are you
feeling, all of you?
Not very well.
Sister Ruth is the worst.
I think the water must be bad.
Ayah says it's the water.
On the contrary.
The water's too good.
It's Darjeeling tummy.
I'd better get that plumbing fixed.
Sister Clodagh!
What has happened, Sister?
Oh, Sister, Sister,
they brought in a woman.
Our first bad case.
She was covered in blood.
I've never seen such a sight.
She must've cut an artery.
I had such a time stopping the bleeding.
I've never seen bleeding like that before.
I didn't know what to do at first,
but at last I managed to stop it.
A minute would've fetched Sister Briony
who would've stopped it at once.
What were you doing there?
I told you to stay in bed.
I was only trying
to consider you, Sister Briony.
It might have been better to have considered
the woman who is bleeding to death.
- Shall I wait?
- We are coming in a moment.
I think you'd better
go back to your room.
Good-bye, Sister.
I hope your patient does well.
Who is she?
It sounded like "Samuel,"
but it couldn't be, could it?
Oh, Samil.
She's a good old soul.
One of my best workers.
I'm very much obliged to you.
Thank you.
Now the old place
is a proper convent.
Hello, Sister Ruth.
Going for a walk?
It's time to ring the bell.
You're slipping.
Quarter of an hour early.
Thank you.
I came to ask Mr. Dean
to wait in the blue room.
How did you know he was here?
I saw him from the schoolroom.
I've brought something for you.
Her name is Hersempul,
but we call her Kanchi.
She's 17, she's an orphan...
and it's high time
she was married.
Every evening when I come home,
I find her sitting on my veranda.
She dresses herself up,
puts flowers in her hair.
It's becoming
an absolute nuisance.
If she's cloistered for a few months,
her uncle will marry her off.
But she's been behaving
so badly that no one wants her.
I don't think we want her, either.
Why did you bring her to us?
Isn't it your business
to save souls?
You are not to speak to me
like that, Mr. Dean.
Sorry.
Can't she go into
some sort of service?
She'd set any house by the ears.
I thought no one would have patience
with her, except you.
Would you ask Sister Briony
to come here, please?
Kanchi.
Kanchi.
Are you sure there's no question
you're dying to ask me?
None.
You wanted me, Sister?
I have agreed to have this
girl with us for a while.
Can you find somewhere
for her to sleep?
- What is she to do?
- Sister Honey can take her into the lay school.
Yes.
Tell Ayah to give her
some housework, keep her busy.
Come along.
Well, thanks.
I've heard about the young general's
death. Is the general grieving?
Can never tell with these people.
- What's the new young general's name?
- Dilib Rai.
He was going to Cambridge, but now
he'll be a warrior and marry young.
It'll suit him, all right.
These Rashpits are a fighting race.
Cannon.
Cannon.
Warship.
- Bayonet.
- Bayonet.
Dagger.
- Gun.
- Gun.
You know, Nina, we may have to mix
something with it.
Here, let me have a look.
Hail Mary, full of grace,
blessed is the fruit-
Sister.
Did you hear the bell?
This morning in chapel, I suddenly
had the feeling you were not with us.
- I try hard enough.
- Try what?
I used to forget
everything in chapel.
I used to feel light
and happy and near God.
Let me help you.
What is worrying you?
I remember things
before I joined our order.
Things I wanted to forget.
I never thought of them
until now.
I've been 21 years in the order,
and now they come back to me.
I think you can see too far.
I look out there, and then
I can't see the potato I'm planting.
And after a bit, it doesn't seem
to matter whether I plant it or not.
It's this place with its strange
atmosphere and new people.
Stay with me tonight after chapel,
and we will pray together.
And work, Sister.
Work hard.
Work until you're too tired
to think of anything else.
Oh, isn't it a grand day?
Isn't it a grand day?
Mmm.
What's wrong, Con?
- Everything.
- What specially?
Oh, nothing.
You wouldn't understand.
Is it money?
Whatever else is it?
Desmond's with
a lot of it in Michigan.
I heard from him last week.
He's been made a partner.
And just because I'm the eldest son,
I have to stay here in Ireland...
and hang around
waiting for... this.
I'll have a little money
when I marry, Con.
It isn't a little money.
It's a fortune.
Then it would be a waste.
Clo, don't you sometimes
itch to get away?
No, I don't want to go away.
I want to stay here like this
for the rest of my life.
Ayah! Angu Ayah!
Ayah! Angu Ayah!
Salom, my little general.
I want to see
the reverend sisters.
Why are they called
the servants of Mary?
Is the superior sister
called Mary?
Ask her.
Here she comes.
Go now.
I will speak to her alone.
- Good morning.
- Good morning.
- I want to see the superior sister.
- I am the sister superior.
Oh. I want to be
a student here with you.
I want to study
a lot of learning.
I want to study mathematics,
history, poetry and languages.
I have a note from my uncle
to ask you to encourage me.
I'm very sorry.
We only teach children and young girls.
- Why?
- Convents don't teach men pupils.
That's not very polite to men.
We don't mean it that way.
It's the custom.
Convents are for girls.
The brotherhoods are for men.
Jesus Christ was a man.
He took the shape of a man.
But you don't need
to count me as a man.
I'm only interested
in studious things.
Please, Sister. I've written out
my timetable. May I read it to you?
"5:00 a. m. to 7:00 a. m.,
algebra with the mathematical sister.
00 a. m. to 10.:00 a. m., religion,
Christianity with the scriptural sister.
00 a. m., art.
" 1:00 p. m. to 3:00 p. m., French and Russian
with the French and Russian sisters, if any.
3:00 p. m. to 4:00 p. m.,
physics with the physical sister. "
Please wait in here, General.
Aren't you afraid with the young general
that you've let a cuckoo into your nest?
If he didn't want to offend the general,
he might turn us out?
Oh, he wouldn't do that?
You may have trouble
with Kanchi.
Kanchi? She'd never dare.
After all, he is a prince,
and she is what she is.
Still, I expect she knows the story
of the prince and the beggar maid.
We're at 40, 41, 42,
43, 44, 45, 46,
47, 48, 49-
When the general
gave us the deeds,
our boundary line was to be
500 yards around the building.
Right.
- So the holy man is living on our ground.
- He was here first.
Yes, but, Mr. Dean, I find
all these things very distracting.
- Distracting?
- Yes, disturbing.
This clear air,
and the wind always blowing.
And the mountain, and the holy man
sitting there day in, day out.
And the people
coming to see him.
They climb the path
by the house,
and they stop and sit
and stare at us.
- What do you want to do?
- Ask the general to ask the holy man to move.
- It wouldn't be polite.
- I don't suppose the general even knows he's there.
Oh, yes he does. That old man
worries him quite a bit,
particularly when he's
in the middle of his dinner...
or when he's trying on
a new coat from London.
- Why?
- I suppose he feels he ought to do likewise.
And he wouldn't turn him out?
It'd be a bit awkward for the general
to turn out his own uncle.
His uncle?
General Sir Krishna Rai,
K CVO, K CSl, CMG.
He has several
foreign decorations too.
He lent our general
the money to buy this place.
I've never heard him talk.
They say he speaks perfect English.
Several other
European languages too.
Does he never speak at all?
I've never heard him.
When does he eat or sleep?
No one knows. He's always
in his place under the tree.
People come miles to see him.
Well, I really don't know what to do.
What would Christ have done?
- Morning, General.
- Good morning, Sister Honey.
Good morning, Sister Ruth.
Do you like it, Sister Ruth?
It's called Black Narcissus.
Comes from the army/navy stores
in London.
Black Narcissus.
I don't like scent at all.
Oh, Sister, don't you think it's
rather common to smell of ourselves?
- Have you seen the young general today?
- What's the latest?
Beautiful emeralds.
The most beautiful green I've ever seen.
At that hour of the morning,
they make me bilious.
Have you seen his coats? He must have a
different one for every day of the year.
Lucky he doesn't
do his own laundry.
Yesterday he had a coat the color
of ripe corn, patterned with flowers.
His earrings were amethysts
three inches long,
and his rings were turquoise.
Today he's all jade and emeralds,
and his coat is the most wonderful
pattern of pale violet stripes,
just like my grandmother's
footstool.
Oh, Granny!
Turn around.
These emeralds are for you,
my darling, when you marry.
There.
There's Con.
Good night, everybody.
Not too late, darling.
Oh, dear, I hope they get
something settled by the winter.
Where are you, Con?
He said it was called Black Narcissus,
and he got it
at the army and navy stores.
Black Narcissus.
That's what
I'm going to call him.
It's a wonderful name for him.
He's so vain, like peacock.
Fine, black peacock.
- He's not black.
- They all look alike to me.
General, please conjugate sasoir.
Future tense?
Noel, Noel
Born is the King
Of Israel
The first Noel
The angels did say
Was to certain poor shepherds
In fields as they lay
In fields as they
Lay keeping their sheep
On a cold winter's night
That was so deep
Noel, Noel
Born is the King
Of Israel
Lullay my liking
- Something for you.
- For me?
Christmas present.
Go on, take it.
Oh, Con!
Sister Clodagh.
Sister, may I congratulate you
on the birth of Christ?
Thank you, General.
I hope you don't mind
my coming tonight.
I am very much interested
in Jesus Christ.
Have I said anything wrong?
No, but we don't usually
speak of Him so casually.
And you should.
He should be casual...
and as much a part of life
as your daily bread.
How dare you
come here like this!
How dare you come
to our service tonight!
You're-
You're unforgivable!
You're objectionable
when you're sober...
and abominable
when you're drunk!
I quite agree.
If you have a spark
of decency left in you,
you won't come near us again!
No, I won't be a nun
No, I cannot be a nun
For I am so fond of pleasure
I cannot be a nun
Happy Christmas!
I do like his voice.
It's so nice and loud.
I think it's lovely, don't you?
Good night, General.
Good night, Sister Clodagh.
Come in.
I want to talk to you.
Come and sit down.
I've been worried about you
for some time.
I feel that things
are not right with you.
In what way?
You look so ill, and
you've got so terribly thin.
I know that you're trying
to keep up for all our sakes,
but I feel that you must go in
with Sister Briony and see the doctor.
I shan't see the doctor!
I'm perfectly well and right!
You're just trying
to make out that-
I didn't mean to be rude.
I haven't been sleeping,
that's all.
If you haven't been sleeping,
there must be some reason for it.
Can't you tell me?
Is something worrying you?
Yes. Yes, that's it.
I'm worried.
Don't you think
you could tell me about it?
I'd like you to tell me,
if you can.
I can't speak of it... to anyone.
Won't you try?
You know you can trust me.
You didn't want me to come here.
None of you have ever wanted me.
Don't you think you're letting
things run away with you?
I think you have let yourself fall...
into thinking too much of Mr. Dean.
Sister, don't you realize
what you're doing,
what you're running the risk
of losing in yourself?
Sister, you must- I must make you see
before it is too late.
All the same, I've noticed you're
very pleased to see him yourself!
If that was in your mind, it's better
said I think you're out of your senses!
Listen to me. I don't know-
I can't decide now what to make of you.
I shall have to think,
and I want you to think too.
As for Mr. Dean-
In spite of his charm and kindliness,
he is not a good man.
You must take him for what he is and not
try to glorify him into something he is not.
When he came to chapel on
Christmas night, he was drunk.
Can I go?
I want you to write
to Reverend Mother.
I shan't look at the letter,
and her reply will be your own business.
Am I to write
two or three pages?
Would you rather I did it now,
or shall I finish my class work first?
You may go.
That parcel is mine.
Give it to me.
I can't, Lemani. I must give
all the mail to Sister Clodagh.
It's mine. Give it to me, you fool.
It's addressed to me.
Look, I ordered it myself
from Calcutta.
It's nothing to do
with anyone else.
Sister Briony, do you know what's
happened to the other gold chain?
No. It was there when
we had it out at Christmas.
- Well, it isn't here now.
- Ask Kanchi if she's seen it.
And that for stealing
in my house!
And that for stealing a brass chain!
That's for stealing it
in such a silly way!
And that is
for getting found out!
- What has the girl done?
- She's a thief!
She stole a brass chain
from the church room...
to put around her dirty neck!
Finish the beating,
my little general.
You're going to be
a great man.
Not like your uncle.
Oh, dear, no.
Like your grandfather!
He was a man!
Finish the beating,
and begin to be a man!
Get up.
- Forget-me-not.
- Forget-me-not.
- Sweet pea.
- Sweet pea.
- Daffodil.
- Daffodil.
Japanese peony.
Chinese lily.
Tulip.
- Honeysuckle.
- Honeysuckle.
Honeysuckle.
Delphinium.
- Sister Honey!
- Delphinium.
Will you find Sister Philippa
for me, please?
- And the cabbage patch?
- Fox gloves.
- And the runner beans?
- Honeysuckle.
- And the onions?
- Tulips.
And the potatoes?
All flowers?
No, not the little round bed.
And there's more vegetables...
down by the stables
where they won't show.
But what on earth
came over you-
Would you like to sit down?
Sister, I want
to be transferred.
Transferred?
Yes, I want you to write
and ask for my transfer at once.
If you will, at once.
But why?
I was becoming
too fond of the place.
I was too wrapped up
in my work. I-
I thought too much about it.
I'd forgotten-
Forgotten what?
What I am.
I was losing the spirit
of our order.
I've been thinking
it over, you see,
and I must go at once.
I don't see that at all.
Now that you know
and you realize the danger,
you needn't go.
Surely now is the time to stay.
I daren't stay.
I think there are only two ways
of living in this place.
Either you must live
like Mr. Dean, or-
or like the holy man.
Either ignore it,
or give yourself up to it.
Neither would do for us.
No.
Well, we are here, and I don't think
it will help matters if we run away.
You know if I ask for you to be
transferred, it'll be a bad mark against you?
That's all the better.
That's what I need.
Ayah! Ayah!
What did she say?
It's Alma's little brother.
Shall we give him magnesia?
Or some of the paraffinic mulch?
A hundred and three!
That's not much in a baby.
They go up and down easily, don't they?
It's been three days.
This morning he wouldn't
wake, so she brought him.
Let him sleep. Take him home,
and put him on your bed.
Aren't you going
to give him anything?
There's nothing I can do.
But there must be
something we can do.
At least bathe his eyes
or relieve his tummy with a little oil.
I daren't touch him, Sister.
I don't think he feels pain.
You've only got to look at him
to see how it must hurt him!
You're thinking
of what Mr. Dean said!
That's enough, Sister!
I won't have any hysteria.
I know what I'm doing.
The kindest thing you can do is to make her go
home, where she'll be amongst her own people.
Sister Ruth.
Everyone's
very late this morning.
I do hope nothing's happened.
Joseph, go down the path
and hurry them up.
- Well, go on.
- I don't want to.
- You don't want to?
- Why don't you want to?
How dare you answer me like that.
Go at once!
- No, I won't go.
- Joseph!
Now stand still.
- Tell me what's the matter.
- Don't frighten him.
- Why haven't the children come?
- Where are they?
He knows why.
Tell us.
I don't want to.
Lemani, don't make me tell!
Joseph, you must tell us.
Please, Joseph, dear.
- Tell us.
- The little baby is dead!
- Oh, no!
- Our little brother is dead!
And they said that this man
and lemani killed him.
Sister Clodagh!
- There's nobody in the dispensary.
- None of the children have come.
- No gardeners.
- Kanchi has gone.
- So has the young general.
- There isn't a servant in the place.
We're all alone.
There's no one in the house.
It was my fault.
Because I loved him.
I couldn't bare to see him die.
I did it!
I killed him!
I gave her a bottle to take, some of our
cotton wool and one of our spoons.
- I killed him!
- Ayah!
Ayah, how much
of this is true?
All true, Lemani.
The people are very angry.
We must explain. Somebody must tell
them. We must find the young general.
- No, he's run away with Kanchi.
- Will you take a message?
- Me? No.
- Well, can Joseph?
- They won't let him come back.
- I'll go.
It's not safe for any of you
to go outside the garden.
- You can't go, Sister. It's far too dangerous.
- I'm not going down.
Tova!
Tova, my pony, quickly.
Well, who was it?
You.
Mr. Dean, do you think it's serious?
Do you think they'll come back?
Sister Clodagh,
the agent before my time...
was riding down to the factory
one day on his pony.
He let it kick an umbrella
lying open in the path.
There was a child asleep
under it, and it was killed.
It was just an accident,
but they murdered him that night.
I'm not trying to frighten you, but I
want you to see that it may be serious.
I've been down to the village.
Everything seems quiet enough.
- Did they say anything?
- Nothing. They listened to me and said nothing.
I saw the woman I drank the stuff
that Sister Honey gave her.
- You drank it?
- I wanted to prove to them that I wouldn't drop down dead.
It was only castor oil.
None of you must go
out of the garden.
Try to behave as though
nothing had happened.
I'll go down now
and come back this evening.
Lemani?
Lemani?
Lemani?
- What's that for?
- For you, Lemani.
Who sent it?
Sister Clodagh?
Do you notice a change in us
since we came here?
I notice a change in you.
Am I very different?
Yes.
You're much nicer.
- Nicer?
- Mmm. You're human.
Human?
Yes, we're all human,
aren't we?
When I was a girl,
I loved a man.
We were children together
in Ireland, where I come from.
A little place
called Dennis Kelly.
I thought-
everyone thought-
we should marry.
But he was ambitious,
and I found out he was going
to America to his uncle...
and he didn't
intend to take me.
He didn't think he was
doing anything wrong.
I don't think he ever
thought of us marrying.
But in a little
place like that,
and I had shown I loved him,
I had to get away first.
And that's why
you entered the order?
And being you,
you wouldn't go back?
It was a strange way
of bringing me in,
but God works in strange ways.
I had work to do,
and I had the life.
No one outside can possibly know
what that means.
It came to be my life.
I had forgotten everything
until I came here.
The first day I came,
I thought of him...
for the first time for years.
I seem to go back to the first time
I loved him, when we were children.
The young general
reminds me of him too.
The world comes
thrusting in behind him.
I've been drifting and dreaming,
and now I seem to be living through
the struggle and the bitterness again.
Here. It's quite clean.
I washed my hair this morning.
Don't take on so. There's a good girl.
It'll all blow over.
There's nothing really wrong.
Sister Philippa is leaving,
and this morning I had a letter
from Reverend Mother.
Sister Ruth
is giving up the order.
She has not renewed her vows.
I'm sorry.
And you-
Ever since we came here,
over all our troubles,
it's been,
"Ask Mr. Dean. Ask Mr. Dean. "
There was just no one else
you could ask.
But I had to take the young general.
I couldn't turn out the holy man.
I couldn't stop
the wind from blowing...
and the air from being
as clear as crystal...
and I couldn't hide the mountain.
Look, you must get away from here,
all of you, at once.
- Run away?
- Yes, if you've got any sense.
What, leave all this work,
like the brothers?
Yes.
I told you it was no place
to put a nunnery.
There's something in the atmosphere
that makes everything seem exaggerated.
Don't you understand? You must
all get away before something happens!
And drive from it
all snares of the enemy.
May Thy holy angels dwell here
and keep us in peace.
May Thy blessing be-
Sister, are you there?
Sister, do you want me
to wake the others?
You can't order me about.
You have nothing to do with me anymore.
I know what you've done.
I know that you've left the order.
I only want to stop you from doing
something you'll be sorry for.
Sister Philippa is going back in a
few days. I want to send you with her.
That's what you would like to do,
send me back and shut me up.
That's what you would all
like to do!
You know that isn't true.
Why should we want to keep you
here against your will?
Because you're all
jealous of me, especially you!
At least wait till the morning.
Wait till the morning,
and I'll wait with you.
- Ayah, wake up!
- Oh, what is it? What is it?
It's Sister Ruth!
Stop her! She's gone mad!
- Oh, it's my fault!
- Shhh!
Can't stop her.
I think we should leave them alone.
- She may kill herself.
- If she's really mad, that won't happen.
Quick, search the house!
We must stop her! Sister Ruth.
Sister Ruth!
Sister Ruth!
We must get Lanchi.
Sister Ruth!
Sister Ruth!
Sister Ruth!
- Sister Ruth!
- Sister Ruth!
- Sister Ruth!
- Sister Ruth!
Sister Ruth!
Joseph, ask him if he's seen her!
Oh, no, Lemani,
we couldn't do that.
But, Joseph, anything may have
happened to the lemani. She may be hurt.
That would be a very little
thing to him, Lemani.
He wouldn't notice it.
Good evening.
Sister Ruth?
I can't stand it any longer.
I left the order.
I gave up my vows.
I've finished with them up there.
I see.
I can arrange for you
to stay at the rest house.
I'll send my boy over now.
In the morning, I'll get ponies
and porters to take you to Darjeeling.
- I love you.
- You-
Well, if you do,
you can forget about it.
I'm sorry, Sister Ruth.
Very sorry, but-
Look, let me take you
back to the palace.
It isn't too late. Sister Clodagh
is your friend. She wants to help you.
She hates me.
They all hate me.
- You're the only one that's ever been kind to me.
- I've hardly spoken to you.
Yes, you have. When I stopped
the old woman from bleeding to death,
- you said you were grateful.
- Did I?
And then when you stopped me
that day in the hall-
Oh, whatever I said, it didn't
mean a thing! You've all gone crazy.
Well, drive one another crazy,
but leave me out of it!
- Are you going to Darjeeling or not?
- No!
- Then you must go back to the palace.
- No.
You'll go back
if I have to carry you back.
Go and talk to Sister Clodagh. She
brought you here. She can get you back.
Sister Clodagh!
Sister Clodagh!
- Do you know what she says about you?
- Whatever she said, it was true!
- You love her!
- I don't love anyone!
Clodagh! Clodagh!
Clodagh! Clodagh!
Clodagh! Clodagh!
Feel better now?
All right, I'll go.
That's a good girl.
Try and get some sleep.
In the morning you'll wake up...
and be sorry you made
such a fool of yourself.
- Come on, I'll come with you.
- I'll go alone.
- You'll do nothing of the sort.
- I'll go alone or not at all.
Suit yourself.
It's morning, Lemani.
Oh, yes, Joseph, it's morning.
What time is it?
5:45 by Auntie's watch.
Fine day, Lemani.
People call it
the flowing of the snows.
Joseph, if Sister Briony asks
for me, I'll be in the chapel.
Hail Mary, full of grace,
blessed is the fruit
of thy womb.
What do you want, General?
Sister, you know
I have not been here lately,
and I'm deeply sorry
about Sister Ruth.
Thank you.
Is there anything else?
You're cross with me.
Please do not be cross with me.
I've done a very wrong thing,
but I didn't mean to do it.
Isn't it rather late
to tell me about that?
Yes. Yes, it is, rather.
I don't mean to do
anything wrong again.
I'm going to give up
being clever and famous.
I'm going to be
exactly like my ancestors.
They were warriors and princes.
They were modest
and brave and polite,
and they never did
anything cheating.
That is why I came to you
as soon as I thought of it...
to tell you what I have done.
Must you tell me now?
- Please, Sister.
- Well, what have you done?
Sister Clodagh, I didn't know how
to tell you, so I asked Mr. Dean.
He said to tell it was
the story of the prince...
and the beggar maid.
You said you'd give us
till the rains break.
They haven't broken yet.
What will they do
with you down there?
I shall be sent to another convent
with less responsibility.
I shall be superseded
as sister-in-charge.
Will you be able to stomach that?
Stiff-necked, obstinate
creature like you?
It's what I need.
I expect I shall have to remind
myself of it a hundred times a day.
I can't change in a minute
like the young general.
But I shall have my ghosts
to remind me.
You're leaving me
with more than one.
Will you do
one last thing for me?
I know you'd rather not do it.
Of course I'll do it.
Will you
look after the grave?
All right.
Good-bye.
Good-bye.