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Part 1
Ralph; Happy Christmas, Mrs. Carson.
Mary; How many times do I have to tell you my name is Mary?
Ralph; And yet you never call me Ralph.
Mary; All right, Ralph. Happy Christmas. It's very kind of you to spend it with a lonely old woman.
Ralph; Hardly that. On the contrary, it is very kind of you to invite a lonely priest and fellow Irishman. That's right. This is your first Christmas in exile, isn't it?
Ralph; Exile? It's my first year in Australia.
Mary; That's not what I mean, and you know it. Six months now, and I still haven't figured out why the Church banished you out here to the land of Never-Never. What sin did you commit? What priestly vow did you break? Poverty? Obedience? Perhaps chastity?
Ralph; You're quite sure I have been banished?
Mary; Of course. Look at you. You're aristocratic, witty, ambitious despite that facade of humility. And God knows you have a subtle mind. You're the stuff cardinals are made of. And you would look magnificent in red.
So you've said before, so you say each time I visit here.
Ralph; And you're going to say,"But my dear Mrs. Carson, I am a priest. "Surely I can do God's work here "as well as in the seats of ecclesiastical power." Sometimes, I think you know me better than I know myself.
Mary; I'm certain of that, too.
Spectators; All right, now. Ready. Go! Come on! Come on! You can do it. Ralph won! Good on you, Father Ralph. Bravo.
Mary; Well done, Father de Bricassart. How do you like him?
Ralph; He's beautiful.
Mary; Good! He's yours. Happy Christmas.
Ralph; Thank you. I'll take pleasure in riding him whenever I'm here. but I can't accept him as a gift.
Mary; Why not? You accepted the car I gave you.
Ralph; Because it allows me to get around and see my parishioners more often.
Mary; A fine distinction. The vow you broke that got you banished. It must have been chastity, yes?
Ralph; All right, my Christmas gift to you. I insulted a bishop. A matter of local church policy.
Mary; You broke your vow of obedience. That was ambitious of you.
Ralph; There's some comfort in the fact that the Pope himself later came out in favor of my views in the matter.
Mary; Has he, now? And he hasn't rescued you?
Ralph; My dear Mrs. Carson, priests are expendable, bishops aren't. And it's not so terrible a banishment. I have you to remind me of the existence of civilization and I have Drogheda.
Mary; Yes. You would like that, wouldn't you? You'd like to have my Drogheda.
Ralph; Would I?
Mary; Yes, you would. If you could charm me into leaving Drogheda to the Church. His Holiness would have to rescue you, reward you maybe even give you that beautiful red cardinal's robe some day.
Ralph; A masterful plan. But my dear Mrs. Carson I'm a priest. Surely I can serve God as well here as in the seats of ecclesiastical power.
Mary; And how you'd hate it. Still, I have to give Drogheda to someone someday, don't I? That's worth thinking about.
Ralph; Mrs. Smith, I must go. Please give my thanks to Mrs. Carson for a delightful day.
Mary; That will be all, thank you. You're not leaving so soon.
Ralph; It's late and a long way back to the parish.
Mary; I hope I didn't say anything this afternoon to upset you. I mean, all that talk about inheriting Drogheda.
Ralph; You didn't upset me in the least.
Mary; Good. Have you thought about it?
Ralph; About what, Mrs. Carson?
Mary; About charming me out of Drogheda because I didn't say I couldn't be charmed, did I?
Ralph; Mrs. Carson? What is it you want from me?
Mary; Why, only your spiritual guidance of course, Father. You see, I have a decision to make and you're the only one that can help me with it.
Ralph; I'll do what I can.
Mary; It's about my brother.
Ralph; Your brothe? I thought you once said you had no family left.
Mary; I have a brother. I haven't seen him in years. He lives in New Zealand. We both left Ireland to make our fortunes but Paddy hasn't fared too well. He's an experienced man with the land, however and he has a house full of sons. I'm thinking of bringing him here and making him my head stockman.
Ralph; I wonder you didn't think of it sooner.
Mary; I did. I've just been waiting, shall we say to see what might develop. It would be a comfort to know I would be helping Paddy to know I'm not all alone in this world not quite reduced to leaving all my pretty pennies to the Church.
Ralph; It's a most generous gift, Mary.
Mary; No. Never a gift. No, whoever inherits Drogheda earns it. Thank you, Father.
Ralph; Good night, Mrs. Carson.
Mrs. Smith; Father, it's time you were off.
Ralph; All right, Annie. I'll be right there.
Mrs. Smith; It'll be nice for Mrs. Carson, having her brother's family.
Nun; I must see you about the chalk supply.
Ralph; Chalk?
Nun; Three boxes are missing.
Ralph; I'll look into it.
Nun; In Father Wattey's time, Father, we took a much closer account of such things.
Ralph; Hello, I'm Father de Bricassart.
Paggy; Sorry I'm late.
Ralph; You'd be Mary Carson's brother?
Paggy; That's right, Father. Paddy Cleary. This is my wife Fiona.
Ralph; Mrs. Cleary. I'll be taking you on to Drogheda. I know you've had a very difficult journey.
Paggy; You're very kind. These are my boys, Father. This is Bob.
Ralph; Hello, Bob.
Paggy; Jack, and Stuie here. Take off your hat, son. And Frank.
Ralph; And who are you?
Meggie; I'm Meggie.
Meggie; Are we going to live here?
Ralph; Not exactly. I'll show you your house later, Meggie.
Meggie; Meggie?
Ralph; Yes, this is Meggie.
Paggy; Mary, we have no words to thank you for your kindness in bringing us here.
Mary; When you're as old as I am, and as rich the vultures start to circle. You're my only flesh and blood, Paddy. I don't have any sons, and Michael's been dead for over 30 years.
Fiona; A long time to be alone. I wonder you've never married again.
Mary; Marry again? And give some man control over me and all I have? No, that's not what I call living. No. As long as I am alive, Drogheda is mine and only mine. It's well to remember that.
Paggy; Of course, Mary.
Mary; Let's have Mass right away, and then I'm sure we'd all enjoy a nice, hot meal at your table.
Paggy; Sounds very nice indeed, Father.
Ralph; Meggy?
Mary; 125,000 sheep. 1,000 head of cattle and more fence than you can ride in a month. The round of work is endless
but Drogheda is the biggest in all of New South Wales, and the best.
Paggy; I've seen to that. All I can say is, it looks like heaven to me.
Paggy; If your idea of heaven is hard work, you're right. But we Clearys know about hard work, don't we, sister?
Mary; Not that it got us very far back in Ireland. I don't want you just to lead the men. I want you to work with them and to keep on working long after they've quit. When things go wrong, you take the blame. When they go right, don't expect any credit. And I'll give you a free hand with the land just as long as you keep Drogheda the biggest and the best.
Mary; Well, Mr. Gough the gold is holding well and I think the investment looks sound. But you're my lawyer.
The steel is still down since the war but nothing to worry about.
Gough; As we discussed, Carson Limited is doing well with your expansion plans.
Mary; Meaning I'm still one of the richest women in Australia. If not the richest.
Gough; Has your brother any idea of all this?
Mary; No. No one has. And that's the way I want it kept until the day I die. Do you understand?
Gough; Of course.
Mary; It would be amusing to know what people would say if they knew Drogheda was only a hobby with me.
Fiona; Hello, Father.
Ralph; Fee. You're fighting a losing battle. There are three things you can't defeat in the outback: The dust, the heat, and the flies.
Fiona; You're certainly not like New Zealand priests. They keep very much to themselves.
Ralph; You're not a Catholic, are you?
Fiona; When I lost faith in my own church, I saw no reason to espouse a creed equally meaningless to me. But Paddy's a Catholic and we are rearing the children Catholic,
Ralph; if it's worrying you. It isn't. And I won't try to convert you. But I would like to be your friend.
Fiona; You're very kind to us.
Ralph; I like to know my parishioners, so I make the rounds of all stations but I must confess to a special weakness for Drogheda. Perhaps it's my Irish blood.
Fiona; Irish? I thought you were French background.
Ralph; No, de Bricassart is an old Norman name, but I'm Irish all right. And the last of the de Bricassart line. I was born in County Meath just a stone's throw from the town of Drogheda. Call it fate.
Stuie; Bye, Meggie. Wish you could go.
Meggie; Have fun, Stuie!
Ralph; Poor little Meggie. It must be hard being the only girl.
Fiona; But I've been blessed with sons, these and two I've buried. It's her sons a mother thinks of, isn't it?
Meggie, don't dawdle. You've got the chickens to feed.
Meggie; Father Ralph!
Ralph; Hello, Meghann Cleary. Let's feed those chookies.
Meggie; Yes, but there's something I must show you first. Come on.
Ralph; What is it?
Meggie; Isn't it beautiful, Father?
Ralph; Yes, I suppose it is.
Meggie; Do you suppose that God is really all around us all the time?
Ralph; What makes you ask me that, my little girl?
Because if he is, I think he must be here, don't you?
God is in his wool room.
All is right with the world.
And why not? He did choose a stable once.
Come on, Ralph. That's a bit precious.
Except why not make this
the epicenter of the papal map
and then you could be cardinal after all.
What would that make you?
Surely not the Pope?
No, that's too dull. Satan, perhaps.
- That's more interesting.
- And more powerful.
Every heaven needs one,
just to stay in business.
You argue like a Jesuit.
Isn't it true?
Without Satan, there's no struggle.
And it's the struggle that keeps us alive.
No. What keeps us alive
is the point of that struggle:
The hope of attaining perfection.
If by perfection, you mean heaven
But you have to die
to get there, don't you?
Sometimes, I think you're after my soul.
I am
unless it's already been taken.
- Meggie, fetch the milk, will you?
- Yes, Mom.
Fiona, you are hopelessly old-fashioned.
If you don't raise your hemlines
and stop wearing all those petticoats
you're going to die in this heat.
Where did you get this furniture
and this spinet?
The furniture was my grandmother's.
She taught me how to play.
What was your maiden name?
My father's name
was Roderick Armstrong.
My dear Fiona
the Armstrongs are practically
New Zealand's first family.
You have come down
in the world, haven't you?
I don't think so.
You're better born than we Clearys,
if I do say so.
The only thing I had going for me
when I came to Australia
was a face, figure, more brains
than any woman's supposed to have.
But it got me Michael Carson.
You've done very well, Mary.
He doted on me till the day he died.
You ought to know what it is
to have the love of a good man.
Michael was rich,
but he was a bit of a fool.
- Paddy's not a fool.
- No, but he's penniless.
Can you really have loved him enough
to give up your place in society?
My reasons for what I do are my own.
I do not discuss them.
Can I help, Frank?
Not likely. These beasts
would gobble you up
right along with this kangaroo meat.
Stop it, you bloody beasts!
Stop it!
- Shoot them, Frank!
- Shoot them?
Don't worry.
What's the trouble here?
Daddy, Aunt Mary says the dogs
have got to be shot.
All right, darling.
- You go on about your work.
- Yes, Daddy.
Get the gun.
I am not going to shoot those dogs.
They were just fighting a little.
Just fighting?
Today, those two fight.
Tomorrow, they all turn wild.
We'll have a paddock full of sheep
with their throats torn out.
There's no room here
for anything wild, Frank.
Those dogs are here to work and to obey.
Just like me, right?
That's all I do around here, work and obey.
That's right.
And as long as I'm your father,
that's what you will do.
Now get the gun.
Yes, Daddy.
Hello, Meggie.
Now don't you go telling her majesty
I fired up this engine.
It's only to be used at shearing time.
Pete!
I thought you boys
wanted to learn shearing.
If you're not a fine pair of jackaroos!
Never saw a machine shears
and here you'll be cockies
of the whole place one day.
That steam engine runs it?
It runs the shears,
turns the grinding wheel
works the wool dumper,
and it'll boil the billy for your tea.
I bet I could even beat Daddy with these.
Nobody can beat Daddy.
He was the fastest man with the
hand shears in all Wahine, New Zealand.
Aren't you to be fetching the milk?
I never was a gun shearer myself
but I can teach you right enough.
I brought a few sheep in to practice on.
Get out here, you brainless dummy!
You're about to be made an example of!
Bob, get yourself a sheep.
The fastest bladesman I ever saw
was old Hee Sing, a Chinaman.
He could ring any shed in the country,
could old Hee Sing.
Get in there.
Finished.
What do you think, Pete?
Bob, I'd say you're a champion shearer
Thanks, Pete!
in the making.
All right, Stuie.
Now just walk right straight toward him.
Slowly.
That's it.
Look him right straight in the eye.
That's No, don't look at me.
Look at him.
Why do you think I sent you in there?
That's it.
Lay off, will you? The poor kid's only 11.
Go on, Stu.
- God
- You stay out of this.
No son of mine is gonna be scared
of any animal in this place.
That's it, Stu. Go ahead.
- You think that's funny?
- Stop it! Frank!
Get back to work, all of you.
You pull a trick like that again,
and I'll take a stock whip to you.
Will you, now? Come on, then.
Come on then, now's your chance.
You've fought and scrapped
and acted like a savage your whole life.
I'll not have it anymore, not here.
Now get back to work.
Hello, Meggie. I've been looking for you.
- What's wrong?
- Nothing.
I never get to do anything.
The boys got to ride all the way out
to the far paddock with Pete.
They won't even let me on a horse.
Maybe your mom doesn't think
it's safe for you.
She doesn't even know I'm alive.
She doesn't care about
anyone except Frank.
But I'll tell you one thing, Father.
When I'm grown up, I'm never gonna love
one of my children more than the others.
Here, let me help you.
What are you doing, anyway?
Cleaning out this drain
so we can get water to the sheep.
You really ought to be in a school.
Wouldn't you like that?
Yes. But they need me to help.
Anyway, I guess I don't need school
just to live here on Drogheda.
But you do.
When your family inherits Drogheda,
you'll be a proper young lady.
You need to be prepared for that.
Who knows. You might not even want
to spend your life here.
Because big as Drogheda is,
it's only a tiny corner of the world.
There's so much else out there
so many other lives you might choose
so many opportunities for you.
Do you ever wish that you could go out
and see the world?
I'm a priest, wee Meggie.
I must go where the Church sends me.
Let's see if this works.
We did it.
Come on.
I'll take you back to the house.
There are some things
I want to talk to your Aunt Mary about.
I sometimes wonder that we trouble
building and mending fences.
The rabbits tunnel under them
the kangas jump over them,
the wild pigs charge right through them.
Look at this hellish wasteland.
A man would wonder anything could live.
It's not like home.
Home was just as green as anything.
You'll see a bit of green
when the rains come
if they come.
No, it's sheep
that have turned this land into desert
and man.
I'd say that rabbit's as safe
as houses at this rate.
- This is life.
- Good God, boy!
I'll tell you what life is.
Life is what you just
poured into the ground.
- Sorry, Pete.
- You'll learn.
You must know, no matter
how much you love the outback
she'll find a dozen ways
to kill you before sundown.
What is it, boy?
What are you smelling now?
- What is that thing?
- Jack, hold that dog.
It's a wild pig, a boar.
- Let's get him.
- No.
Stuart, get down from there!
- I want to shoot at him.
- No.
He's too far away.
If you shoot at a wild boar, believe me,
you'd better kill him
or he'll kill you.
Damn!
- Come on, lads.
- But
Stuie, no!
Thanks, twerp.
- What's my best girl been up to today?
- It was so nice, Frank.
Father Ralph came to see me.
Meggie, he came to see everyone.
Set the table.
Yes, Mom.
- Here, Mom, let me.
- It's all right, son.
You know how Daddy feels
about you boys doing women's work.
I want you to get along with Paddy
a little better.
Hello, Paddy. Boys not with you?
They're out with Pete.
Should've been in by now.
That smells good, Mother.
Frank, I'm about finished
classing the ewes.
Tomorrow you're to start
for the far paddocks
and begin mustering
the rams for breeding.
All right. If you think I can handle it.
I don't know if you can handle it or not.
But the man you were skincracking
to fight today has quit!
So you can do his work for him.
Best put him up plenty.
Tuck her in a good bedroll,
he'll be out a while.
Never mind, Mom, I'll do it.
You've got enough to do already.
- What's that supposed to mean?
- Look at her.
She's so tired,
now she can't even see straight.
You may think you can treat us
like slaves, but not her!
She's not some ignorant
clodhopping yokel.
Like me? Go on, say it.
Your mother might as well see
how much respect you've got for me.
I'm sorry, Daddy.
Daddy, wait till you hear
- Stuie shot a boar!
- A boar?
He was huge, the ugliest devil
you ever saw. He killed the dog.
Stuie just stepped up
as nice as you please and
- Bob, let Stuie tell it.
- I can't believe it.
We were farmers, you know,
back in Galway.
One day, my dad told me to fetch
a breeding bull from the next farm up.
We were too poor to have one of our own.
I tried, but that old bull was a killer.
I had to come back without him.
My dad called me
a good-for-nothing coward.
He said he'd show me how to fetch a bull.
I felt so bad, I sat down and cried.
After a while, I looked up
and here come my dad down the lane.
He had a rope in his hand all right,
but there was no bull at the end of it.
He just walked right on by me.
Never said a word at all.
But he never called me
a coward again after that.
For thy bounty
which we are about to receive
for the beauty of earth and sky
and for the blessings
of the children thou hast given us, Lord
let us be truly grateful.
Amen.
You're a beautiful woman, Fee.
Paddy, I
Mary thought I might be more comfortable
in lighter clothes.
- You told her about the baby, then?
- No.
Isn't Stuie something, though?
Whatever you said to him
made him so happy.
Well, that's one, anyway.
I'm sorry I lost my temper again
with Frank.
No, he was very wrong.
There's just something about him
I don't understand. Something
wild.
But what he said
about how hard you have to work
it's true.
I know this is still not the life
you should have, but
- someday.
- Don't talk someday, Paddy.
You've given me as much
as any woman could possibly hope for.
What are we going
to name this baby, anyway?
- It smells like eggs again.
- It's the brimstone.
Father Ralph says hell must be like this.
Twerp.
What are you doing out of bed?
You shouldn't be.
You'll be leaving early in the morning.
It's too hot to sleep.
What is it?
You've been moping around all week.
I don't want to go away to school
and leave you.
Silly goose.
Gillanbone's only 40 miles away.
- Father Ralph will be there.
- Yes, that's so.
I'll miss you.
And Mom really needs me here to help.
Sit up for a minute and listen to me.
They always preached to us
to work together for the good of us all.
How we must never think
of ourselves first.
You've got to think of yourself
because they never will.
Yes, they do.
It was Daddy who said
I could go to school.
Because Father Ralph insisted.
He fixed it so Aunt Mary would pay
for you, the tight-fisted old witch.
I want you to go
do you hear?
I want you to go.
Run along, boys.
Poor Meggie. Such a hard time fitting in.
- How's our little project coming?
- Almost finished. Excuse me.
Hold your hands out, please.
Your hands, Meghann Cleary.
We're still biting them, are we?
Yes, Sister.
All right.
Turn them over.
That will do, Sister. Thank you.
Come along, Meggie.
I'm sorry, Father.
Are you going to send me
back to Drogheda?
That's up to you.
- Do you want to go back?
- No. I love school
and being here with you.
But Sister Agatha
I think she understands
a little better now, don't you?
The convent isn't really
a very homey place for you.
In fact
Annie and I have been thinking that
what you need
is your very own, special place
here, with us.
- Would you like that?
- Could I? Honest?
Come on.
Why do you tug so at my heart?
Why do you fill that space God can't fill?
Frank.
I thought you could use some company.
Your mother says
you've been alone out here for weeks.
Not long enough.
How's Meggie?
She's doing beautifully in school.
She sends her love.
We've got to get this lot in.
The monsoons are coming.
Why did you become a priest?
Because I love God.
And I want to help others feel his love.
Why do you ask me?
Because you don't act
much like a priest to me.
Being out here gives me
an escape from my priestly duties
at the parish.
I need that, I'm afraid.
I can understand that, right enough.
Stuck out here in this
hellish place.
- No picnic, is it?
- No, it's not.
The Church has such power, Frank.
Or rather, God has,
working through the Church.
The power to shape
the lives of millions of people
to change the whole course of history.
And I want to be a part of that.
I try to hold the thought
that even out here
I do share in that power
but sometimes I find it very difficult.
Then why don't you escape?
Why do you put up with it, a man like you?
You could be anything
that you wanted to be.
Yet I'd give up every ambition
every desire in me,
to be the perfect priest.
- "The perfect priest."
- How can I explain?
I'm a vessel
and sometimes I'm filled with God.
If I were a better priest
there would be no periods of emptiness,
no need to escape.
I would always be filled with God.
That, to me, would be perfection.
Nobody can be that perfect
- not even you.
- Perhaps me least of all.
I haven't found it easy, anyway,
to keep my vows
to forgo the love
of a woman or of money
or to be obedient.
That's been the hardest for me, obedience.
But I've learned to obey.
This place has taught me that.
Maybe I should become a priest.
I'd qualify all right.
No woman, no money, and
oh, do I obey.
"Yes, Daddy. No, Daddy.
Quite all right, Daddy."
Why do you put up with it?
Because I can't get away from him.
But you're 22 now.
He can't hold you anymore.
He'll hold me till I die.
No, Frank. You're a man
and past the age
when another man can hold you.
If you're held, it's by something else
or someone else.
Mom.
It's so beautiful.
I've been so worried about you.
Out there for weeks in this storm.
God.
He's got you pregnant again.
He just can't leave you alone, can he?
This is no different from the way
you came into the world.
- It deserves the same respect.
- Respect?
When he paws at you
like a dirty old goat that he is?
He is my husband!
When you insult him, you insult me.
I'm not the Blessed Virgin.
I'm not pure, untainted, and holy.
- I'll end up killing him.
- Then you'll kill me as well.
No!
I'll free you!
I can never be free.
I don't want to be free.
God.
Mother.
Look at yourself!
Look at your life. The waste!
You don't belong with him!
Son, you're a man now.
You've got to stop
thinking about me so much.
You need a wife.
It's time.
- Father, you're a sight!
- I should've come around back.
It's quite all right. Leave your things here.
I'll collect them later.
Thank you, Mrs. Smith.
You are the most beautiful man
I have ever seen, Ralph de Bricassart.
But, of course, you already know that.
Curious how you view us mortals
with contempt
for admiring that beauty.
And yet you would use it
without compunction
to get whatever you wanted,
wouldn't you?
- I thought it was my soul you were after.
- It is.
Because at my age, officially
I'm supposed to be beyond
the drives of my body.
And one mustn't expect miracles
even from you.
How many women have loved you?
Besides your mother?
Did she love me?
I don't know.
She ended up hating me.
Because you didn't need her.
Because I needed God more.
Interesting.
And now
Now you can't need any woman
can you, Cardinal de Bricassart?
Father, I'm so glad you're back.
Father, what's wrong?
I'll never have what I want!
Never be what I want!
And I don't know how to stop
wanting!
It's all right, Meggie.
It's all right.
It's just that sometimes,
God's lessons are very hard for me.
Like Sister Ag and her ruler.
Yes.
Come on.
It's cold in here.
Good day.
You'll spoil your dinner.
No, thank you. Not for me.
Let's see if we can find your family.
Come over here.
And now, ladies and gents,
it's my pleasure to present
the Queen of the 1921 Gillanbone show:
Miss Judy Sutton.
Good on you, Judy.
Bless my beads, it's the good Father.
- Congratulations, Judy.
- How about a kiss for Miss Gilly?
Come on, give me something
to confess on Sunday.
I mustn't make my best girl jealous,
now, must I?
Around and around she goes
the Wheel of Fortune. Step right up.
Make way. Coming through.
All right. Have yourselves a good time
but stay out of the pub.
Thanks, Daddy.
Let's go find Pete and unload the rams.
Here, son.
- Daddy! Frank!
- Meggie, me love!
Hello. Look at you in your uniform.
Where's Stuie? Where's Mom?
With the baby due so soon,
we thought Mom best not travel.
Stuie stayed home with her.
Come here.
Stuie's been aching to see you.
Never mind. We'll buy him
something nice with this money, all right?
Hello, Aunt Mary.
- Father.
- Mary, you're looking splendid.
Will you be staying over?
I'd rather hoped you'd invite me
to stay at the rectory.
- You could stay in my room.
- Your room?
- I thought you were at the convent.
- No.
Father Ralph gave me my very own room
right next to his.
You're very welcome to stay.
My housekeeper will be happy
to share her room with Meggie tonight.
No, thank you.
I wouldn't want to disturb all your little
arrangements.
Next Episode
Part 2
Nice bit of riding, Alastair.
- Congratulations, that's a fine horse.
- Thank you, Mary.
Angus, this is my brother, Paddy Cleary.
- Angus MacQueen and his son Alastair.
- How do you do, sir?
This is my aunt, Sarah MacQueen.
- Mr. Cleary, ma'am.
- Hello.
Sarah, how is Melbourne these days?
I hardly know
I've been in Palm Beach
most of the season.
And then, Hawaii.
Of course, one longs for the Continent
but it's still impossibly depressing
since the War.
Paddy, would you get me
some more champagne, please.
Excuse me, ma'am.
Sorry, ma'am.
As it turned out, they were all six of them.
You look as though
you could use a real drink.
- Hello, Mr. Gough.
- None of that "Mr. Gough" stuff.
- Harry to you.
- Well, Harry then.
I'm feeling a proper fool
and that's the truth.
If Fee was here, she could hold her own
with this lot, but I'm
Our squatters like to lay it on, don't they?
Hoity-toity.
Helps them forget their grandfathers
were burned in the hand
and sent here in prisoner ships.
But you should get used to them.
You'll be leader of the whole flock one day.
Don't tell me.
Let's get cracking while the pub's
still open. We close early these days.
- I'd like to, but Mary wanted some
- Champagne for Mrs. Carson.
Be grateful we don't have Prohibition
like the Yanks.
Here it is, gents,
Jimmy Sharman's famous boxing troupe.
The world's greatest fighters.
Plus a purse to be had by any chap
brave enough to have a go.
Look, they're in their drawers.
Come on, step right up.
Five minutes before fight time!
Come on lads. Who'll take it for a fiver?
Last chance.
Here we go!
Five minutes left before the fight.
Come on lads. Who wants to win a five?
Look at their size, you can do it.
- I will.
- You will? Come right up!
Frank, no.
We have a taker. A brave lad.
Come on, step up here, sir.
Here's a pair of gloves for you.
What are you laughing at?
It's not the size of the dog in the fight
- Come along, Meggie.
- No. I wanna stay.
I can't let you. Your father would flay me
alive, and rightly. Come along.
I wanna stay with Frank!
Buy your lady some fish and chips
and a glass of ale.
What do you have to lose?
You work harder on the farm.
Come on, let's go.
This brave young lad is Frank Cleary.
Break!
Look, I won.
I fought four fights, and I won.
It was too scary.
You didn't let her see it, did you?
Short of binding and gagging the child,
I couldn't see how to keep her away.
Don't be angry.
She's been upset enough already.
You mustn't ever let Daddy know
you were there
you understand me?
You really won?
Frank, didn't you hear me
shouting after you?
You were supposed to meet
Dear God, look at him, will you.
I'm searching all over for you,
and you're off picking fights again.
Not fighting. Boxing.
I beat four
of Jimmy Sharman's champions.
Champions. A bunch of
punch-drunk old has-beens
from a country show.
I made myself £20. That's more
than Aunt Mary pays you in a month.
£20 and the respect of every man present.
Respect!
Why don't you grow up?
For your mother's sake if nothing else.
For her sake? You stinking old he-goat.
After what you've done to her.
You couldn't leave her alone.
- Couldn't keep your hands off her.
- Don't you speak to me like that.
I'm her husband.
You're nothing better than
a ram in rut is what you are.
You're no better than the bastard
who fathered you, whoever he was.
God. I didn't mean that, Frank.
Frank, I didn't mean that.
You meant it.
Let me go, Father.
I won't touch him, so help me God.
So help you God.
God rot your souls, both of you.
If you've ruined that child, I'll kill you.
I should've let you kill each other,
you miserable self-centered cretins.
Son
what I said, it's not true.
No.
I've always felt it.
I've always known that you came
after me
that she was mine first.
I've always blamed you for dragging
her down all these years.
It was me.
No, Frank.
It's not your fault.
Sometimes, God's ways
are hard for us to understand.
Your preaching makes me want to puke!
Never mind.
Never mind. I'm going.
And I won't be back.
You can't go away.
What'll I tell your mother?
You mean more to her
than all the rest of us put together.
She'd never forgive me.
God in heaven, Paddy.
What possessed you to tell him?
God. Why aren't you older
so that I could explain this to you.
Meggie.
Twerp.
That argument that Daddy and I had
is just a kind of a sign that it's time
for me to be going on my own.
But you mustn't tell Mom about it,
do you hear?
Aren't you going to tell Mom goodbye?
I'll write to her. She'll understand.
Where are you going, Frank?
You know the money I won for boxing.
The man who owns the whole troupe,
Jimmy Sharman
he wants me to be
one of his regular fighters.
- Really?
- Think of that.
I'll travel around the whole country
and see things you've never dreamed of.
I wish you'd take me with you.
Will you, Frank?
No. What kind of life
would that be for you?
You must stay here
and learn to be a great lady.
Because you know something?
You're going to be all grown up
sooner than you know.
Why don't you love me anymore?
- I do love you, Meggie.
- No, you don't.
- You wouldn't leave me if you did.
- My darling Meggie.
No one will ever love you more than I.
Frank!
I was the dairy hand.
I used to see Fee in the distance
walking with Frank.
He was only a baby then.
Then one day, old Roderick Armstrong
came to see me.
He said his daughter
had disgraced the family.
They wanted to send her away
but the grandmother wouldn't hear of it.
Now the old lady was dying,
there was nothing to stop them.
He said
if I'd marry Fee, take her away
they'd pay me enough money to set us up.
So you married a lady far above you?
But it wasn't the money, Father.
She was so beautiful.
I wanted to see her safe and not abused.
To me she's beautiful still.
She is indeed.
And in Meggie, I can see
what she must've been like then.
Yeah.
I was frightened to death of her at first.
It took me two years
to get up enough courage
to be a proper husband to her.
I love her so much, Father.
I know she's never had that feeling for me.
Not even in the most private moments
of our lives together.
But never once in all these years
has she ever
complained or cried
or laughed.
How's Meggie?
Father, what in heaven's name
happened here today?
Father, promise you won't ever leave me.
Darling Meggie.
- Meggie, Frank had to leave.
- Why?
Because it hurt him too much to stay.
It'll hurt more without Mom and me
because we're the ones who love him.
For each of us, there comes a time
when he must search for the thing
he thinks he needs above all else.
No matter what it costs.
You mean the thing
that'll make him happy?
Happy.
There's a story
a legend
about a bird that sings just once in its life.
From the moment it leaves its nest,
it searches for a thorn tree
and never rests until it's found one.
And then it sings
more sweetly than any other creature
on the face of the earth.
And singing
it impales itself
on the longest, sharpest thorn.
But as it dies
it rises above its own agony
to out-sing the lark and the nightingale.
The thorn bird pays its life
for just one song
but the whole world stills to listen.
And God in his heaven smiles.
What does it mean, Father?
That the best
is bought only at the cost of great
pain.
Thank you, Meggie. What a pleasure
having you do that for me.
I think from now on I'll call you
"Our Lady of the Gates."
How many wretched gates are there
between Gillanbone and Drogheda?
- Twenty-seven, Father.
- Twenty-seven.
And that means
one has to stop and get out
how many times?
- Fifty-four, Father.
- Well done.
Fifty-four times coming
and fifty-four times going.
Now, if a priest were to travel
between Gilly and Drogheda
to see his favorite person,
say, once each month
how many times would he have to stop
and get out during one year's time?
It's all right, Father.
With the baby to take care of,
I'll be too busy to miss school.
Sometimes I long to throw open
all those gates
and race down the road and never stop.
Just leave all 27 of them gaping open
like astonished mouths behind me.
Goodbye, Father.
Hello, Mom.
Hello, Meggie.
Mom, Hal's beautiful.
Father de Bricassart,
how very nice to see you again.
Why did you do it, Mary?
When the dress on your back could pay
her tuition for the rest of the year!
Ralph, I don't believe
I've ever seen you so
impassioned.
I thought it best to take Meghann
out of school.
Fee is not well. She needs the help.
Why do you dislike Meggie so much?
She's a beautiful, intelligent little girl
and yet no one
seems to give a rap about her!
Which means you can be sure of her love.
And it's all so innocent and so safe
for you, isn't it?
No danger to your reputation
no threat to those
not-so-holy ambitions of yours.
Mary, this is unworthy even of you.
I am, after all, a priest.
You are a man first, Ralph de Bricassart.
No, Mary. A priest.
First, last
and always.
Coming along beautifully, Meggie.
This time next year, you'll be ready
for the horse trials at the Gilly fair.
But then, Father, by this time next year,
you could be in Rome.
Poor little Hal.
I think he's a mite feverish, Meggie.
Mrs. Smith, please take the children
in the kitchen for tea.
You have heard the news?
The Pope has decided that Australia
should have its very own cardinal.
I didn't know
you stay current with church politics.
But it's so intriguing, don't you think?
His Holiness is sending a papal legate
to search the length and breadth
of this land
to find a man worthy enough
to wear the biretta.
Now, that's like Cinderella.
Mary, much as I love sparring with you,
it's time we made a truce.
A truce?
The priest confesses.
It's true I once had ambitions.
Great ambitions
which I thwarted by my own
stupid lack of humility.
Then I was sent here.
Here you were. A good Catholic,
with Drogheda and no heirs
or so I thought.
And you thought,
"My ticket to the Vatican."
Put with typical cruelty
but perhaps not undeserved.
The point is, I've changed
and it's largely you I have to thank for it.
Me?
When you made the Clearys your heirs,
you dashed all my hopes, as you intended.
But it freed me, too,
from all my old desires.
Mary, I'm a priest. Only that.
- And content.
- Bravo, Ralph.
I can't remember
when I've enjoyed a performance more.
"All my old desires." That is wonderful.
I'll let you stew a while longer
but your day of reckoning is coming.
Don't you ever doubt it.
How you do love
the illusion of your own power.
- Don't make me pity you.
- Pity me?
Do you doubt I can't make you writhe yet?
Do you think I can't make you sell yourself
like a painted whore
before I'm finished with you?
I don't doubt you'll try, but take care.
In trying so hard to destroy my soul,
you may lose your own.
- If there's still one there to lose.
- Or still one there to destroy!
In a Christian country,
all this commotion would mean rain.
Those grazing lands are dry as chips.
Not a mouthful of grass anywhere.
I reckon we'll be lucky lads if this lightning
doesn't set the range aflame.
Did I ever really say
Drogheda was heaven? Good night.
Daddy, come on. Little Hal is very sick.
- It's very bad, Paddy.
- For God's sake, someone get a doctor!
I phoned from Aunt Mary's.
He's all the way out to Dibben-Dibben.
Bob, get some more sulfur
from the storehouse, will you?
"May Christ receive thee
who hath called thee
"and may the angels bear thee
unto Abraham's bosom."
Meggie, what is it?
I'm all right.
But you're not. Just talk to me.
There's nothing wrong. Leave me alone!
She's doing it again, Father.
She's been like this
ever since little Hal died.
I know. She won't talk to me, either.
We can't let this go on.
Meggie.
Meggie, listen to me.
You've got to stop this.
I know how much you loved Hal,
but you can't go on grieving this way.
Meggie, please.
You're wasting away before my very eyes.
I can't bear it!
Father, you make me so ashamed.
It's not Hal.
- I mean, I do miss him, but
- What, then? Are you sick?
- I can't tell you.
- You can tell me anything.
That's what I'm here for.
I'm a priest and I love you
just the way God loves you, wee Meggie.
Father
I'm dying.
- Dying?
- Just like Hal.
Only it's some kind of tumor
or something, Father.
How do you know this, dear heart?
I get the most awful pains, Father.
And then, there's a lot of blood.
But it's not all the time.
- Just every month or so?
- Yes.
How did you know that?
My precious girl
you're not dying. You're growing up.
Sorry your mom
didn't explain all this to you.
- She should have, you know.
- You mean Mom does it, too?
All healthy women do, Meggie.
Except when they're expecting a baby
and then it's needed to nourish the baby
inside their womb.
- You understand?
- Sort of.
Like when it says,
"Blessed be the fruit of thy womb, Jesus"?
That's right.
Do you know
- what makes babies?
- Of course, Father.
It comes from mating,
like the rams and the ewes.
I've tried to watch them,
but Daddy said I mustn't.
But I've heard the boys talking.
- Isn't that right, Father?
- Yes, but
See, Meggie,
it's very different with people.
Or it should be.
Because God intended, I think
that when a man and a woman mate,
they do it
as a way of showing their love
for each other.
So it's a mating not just of bodies
but of souls.
- It must be so wonderful.
- So I understand.
- Will it be that way for you and me?
- What?
When I grow up and we get married.
Meggie, you know priests can't marry.
- You can always stop being a priest.
- No.
No, Meggie darling.
I can never stop being a priest.
Not ever.
- What about those tarts you promised me?
- Yes, come on.
Father, I'm so glad I'm not dying.
- What would I ever do without you?
- Silly, you'll never be without me.
What would her majesty
be wanting with me at this late day?
Heaven knows. Still a thousand things
to do, and the guests are almost upon us.
I'll take that, Judy. I'm going up anyway.
Come in.
Happy birthday, ma'am.
And if we aren't a picture today.
Thank you, Pete.
But birthdays at our ages
are rather a mixed blessing, aren't they?
What is that?
I was just taking it along to Meggie.
I thought you wouldn't mind
if the Clearys dressed here
so as they wouldn't be dust to the waist
from walking.
Good.
That's a pretty color for Meghann.
What do you call it?
Ashes of Roses, ma'am.
It's quite the thing just now.
You will help her dress this evening.
We want her
to look absolutely irresistible.
Has Father de Bricassart arrived yet?
No, not yet.
But your lawyer, Mr. Gough, is here.
Good.
Now, I want you both to watch me sign
this paper
and then I want you to put your names
beneath mine.
- You can write, can't you, Pete?
- I can manage a little bit.
Fine.
It's just that you are a witness
that this is indeed my signature
in case there's ever a question.
Good.
- And please send Harry Gough to me.
- Yes, ma'am.
I'll fetch Mr. Gough.
Why, Mrs. Cleary, you look stunning.
Thank you.
For once, Mary's opened her wallet
wide enough to let the moths fly out.
She doesn't want her poor relations
shaming her on her 75th birthday.
I best get this to Meggie or she'll be late.
Fee.
Why, Paddy
you look like a diplomat.
Do I?
I feel like an undertaker.
But you
You look just grand.
Harry, doesn't she look grand?
My dear Fee, you look
like the lady of the manor.
Is that a legal opinion, Mr. Gough?
- Help me with these, will you?
- Yes.
I think they'll do,
even if they're not quite real.
Never you mind.
Some day I'm going to buy you
the finest strand of pearls in all Australia.
Really, it's astonishing how few
interesting men there are since the War.
And that's been 10 years.
I mean, virtually one's whole life.
They're either doddering
or else they're mere children.
Where on earth has Meggie got to?
Mrs. Smith says she's about got her ready.
- That's Stuart Cleary.
- Little Stuie Cleary?
Honestly, Lucy.
Not bad looking, I suppose
but such a rube like all those Clearys.
Still, he might do for you.
And of course, they'll be frightfully rich
when she goes.
- Father.
- Happy birthday, Mary.
How delightful you look, like a young girl.
You've outdone yourself. This must be
the finest party in the district in 50 years.
Easily. I hope you're staying over
because I've planned
some real festivities for tomorrow.
I'd be delighted.
- Harry.
- Hello, Father.
- Father, what a delight to see you.
- Good evening, Miss Carmichael.
But you've been dreadfully neglectful,
you know.
Mother was just saying the other day
that you haven't been
to Beel-Beel for the longest time.
Thank you.
- Hello, Alastair.
- How are you fellows this evening?
Paddy, you remember my sister, Sarah.
Yes, of course. But I don't know
if you've met my wife, Fiona.
Heavens, I would never have dreamed
you were Paddy's wife.
Sarah just returned from the States.
My dears, you can't imagine
what the Crash has done.
Wall Street is a shambles.
People throwing themselves
out of windows.
That can't happen here.
Not with the wool market we've got.
Do you realize how much
this country exported last year?
Good Lord. Who is that?
Excuse me.
- Meggie, you're so beautiful.
- Thanks, Stuie.
I give you Mary Carson.
A dear and generous sister, a great lady
and queen of this beautiful land
of Drogheda.
May she reign forever.
Thank you all. And thank you, Paddy,
for your words and wishes.
But no one reigns forever.
The time is coming when I must pass
the reign of Drogheda on to someone else.
As we all know,
those of us who have lived here
and fought the drought and the floods,
and the heat and the cold, and yet
have managed to prosper
and become masters of all we survey.
This land can be a heaven
or a hell.
My fondest wishes
for those who come after me
is that it be far more one
than the other.
- Dance with me, Mary.
- No, Father. I'm too decrepit.
Nonsense. I insist.
That was a beautiful speech, Mary.
You made Paddy very happy.
I truly wonder if she isn't getting
a bit senile.
I mean, tricked out exactly like a bride.
So grossly unsuitable.
Someone should've told her
she looks like death in white.
Beauty and the Beast.
He's grinning at her like he didn't care
she left that lot to those Clearys.
Of course, he's too holy for filthy lucre
and suchlike anyhow, isn't he?
Of course, it does make those Cleary boys
more interesting.
- She's a grand old girl, Paddy.
- Aye, that she is.
By the by, I've been meaning to ask
Mary usually chairs the race committee
for the Gilly show
but I wonder if you might be interested
in doing the honors this year
as she's declined.
Thank you, Angus.
- What's the matter? Are you all right?
- Yes, I'm all right.
Let's let others have a chance.
- Of course.
- Please dance.
Cynthia.
I never supposed
we could still dance together, Fee.
How long has it been, do you think?
It's been 30 years in January.
- Now, how can you remember that?
- I remember it very well.
We went to the Century Ball in Wahine
on New Year's Eve.
Frank was just a baby.
Good evening, Meggie.
Will you dance with me?
Thank you, Alastair.
I don't know how to dance.
It's awfully hot for dancing, anyway.
- Perhaps you'd care for some punch?
- Yes, thank you.
Look at the boys, will you.
Standing around shy as kangas.
It's my fault. I should've taught them
a few of the social graces:
How to dance, what to say to a girl.
There's been little time
for anything but hard work all these years.
We're just beginning to realize how many
changes there will be in our lives.
Will it make you happy, Paddy, being rich?
I could never be a rich man, Fee.
Not if I was to have a million pounds.
I wouldn't know how to be.
It's knowing that you'll be living
the way you always should have
that you'll take your place again.
That's what makes me happy.
Father Ralph, about the bingo.
Patricia wants to put in
I must take exception to it.
If we could have a little talk
Father?
- Are you enjoying the party?
- Meggie, yes.
Are you?
Yes, it's a lovely party.
Excuse me, Meggie.
She is lovely, isn't she?
There's not a man in this room
who wouldn't give up everything
just to have her, is there?
Now, Mary, you're baiting me again.
Not one man, except perhaps you.
Once, a long time ago, I offered you
a chance at the cardinal's robe
and you turned me down.
But I wonder, if you had to choose
between Meggie
and the cardinal's robe
which would you choose?
Mary, what would I have done
without you these past years?
Your wit, perception
your malice.
Father, why don't you
want to be with me?
Talk to me.
Is there something wrong?
You look lovely, Meggie.
So grown up.
I have to speak to the MacQueens.
Meggie.
What a sweet dress.
Thank you, Miss Carmichael.
Mrs. Smith made it for me.
I helped a little.
Did you?
I'm sure I haven't seen anything like it
in the fashion pages.
You know, I keep expecting to see you
at the horse trials.
Ralph tells me you might become
quite an able rider one day.
Some people are saying
that it isn't quite the thing for him
to be spending so much time in Drogheda.
It's splendid of Ralph
to take such an interest in you Clearys.
Ralph, you haven't danced with me
all evening.
You must do the black bottom with me.
You always do it so well.
Look, everyone,
Father's going to do the Black Bottom.
Father, it's time for me to go up.
Please, everybody. It's almost dawn,
but please stay and enjoy yourselves.
Good night, Mary.
- Will you see me up the stairs?
- Of course.
Good night.
It's been a wonderful party, Mary.
Yes, hasn't it?
It was a wonderful party, Mary.
And I hope, a wonderful birthday for you.
My last. I'm tired of living.
I'm going to stop.
Fiddlesticks. You're planning
something special for tomorrow.
- You told me so yourself.
- Yes, I remember.
But I won't see you.
Kiss me goodbye, Ralph.
Mary, good night. Sleep well.
No! On my mouth.
Kiss me on my mouth
as if we were lovers!
- Mary, I am a priest.
- A priest! You're not a man nor a priest.
You're some impotent, useless thing
that doesn't know how to be either!
You're wrong, Mary.
I know how to be a man.
But to be a man on your terms
is to be no priest.
And I have chosen to be a priest.
With the free will God has given us
and with that same free will,
I have chosen to destroy you, Priest.
I'll go to hell for it, of course
but it'll be nothing to the hell
I'm planning for you.
It's yourself you'll destroy
with this everlasting hatred of yours.
When Satan tempted Christ
with the whole world
is it because he hated him
or because he loved him?
- You don't love me.
- I have always loved you!
So much so, I would've killed you
for not wanting me!
But I found a better method.
No, not love.
I'm the goad of your old age, that's all.
A reminder of what you can no longer be.
Let me tell you something,
Cardinal de Bricassart
about old age and about that God of yours.
That vengeful God who ruins our bodies
and leaves us
with only enough wit for regret.
Inside this stupid body, I am still young!
I still feel! I still want!
I still dream!
And I still love you!
Oh, God, how much!
Meggie!
Meggie.
Meggie darling, don't cry.
Here.
Here now, dry your eyes like a good girl.
I don't want it! I'm not a child anymore.
Why don't you just go back
to your dancing?
I know you're not a child.
Anyone can see you've grown
into a beautiful young woman.
You were by far the loveliest girl
at the party tonight.
But that's just the problem.
They all know I come to Drogheda
more often than I need.
If I'd paid you a skerrick
of attention tonight
it would've been all over the district
in record time.
Don't you see?
- No, I don't see.
- I think you do.
Come here.
Come on.
Now, Meggie.
We've been over this before.
What you mustn't do
is get in the habit of dreaming about me
in some sort of romantic fashion.
When you're a woman, you'll meet
the man destined to be your husband.
Then you'll be far too busy getting on
with your life to think about me
except as an old friend
who helped you through some
of the bad times of growing up.
All right, my Meggie?
Yes, Father.
I understand.
Come on.
- What are you thinking, Father?
- Just about the land.
That it's so beautiful, so pure
and so indifferent to the fates
of the creatures who presume to rule it.
And what are you thinking,
my dearest Meggie?
Just that I wish
the sun would never come up.
We could stay like this forever.
- Father!
- What is it, Mrs. Smith?
It's Mrs. Carson, Father. She's dead.
Mrs. Smith, we'll have to hold
the funeral right away, with this heat.
Yes, Father.
I've sent Pete down for Paddy
and I've telephoned to the others.
Many of them haven't even
reached home yet from the party, though.
- Father.
- Harry, you've heard?
It's terrible. Terrible.
Father, I must speak to you.
- Can it wait? I have some arrangements
- Mary's orders. Please.
Fancy the old monster
popping off like that to spite God and all?
She probably did herself in.
Unless it was the devil doing us all a favor.
Crying shame all the ice
got used up last night.
I have here Mary's will.
As you've probably guessed
she left everything to Paddy
and his family.
She did leave a bit to the Church
and some to you.
Shouldn't the Clearys be here?
Yes, we'll have the reading later,
after the funeral.
Mary gave this to me last night
before the party.
I was to read it to you
the moment I learnt of her death.
Of course, I had no idea then
Good Lord. It's a new will
dated yesterday.
But why would she make it without me?
"I, Mary Elizabeth Carson et cetera
"bequeath all my worldly goods
to the Holy Catholic Church of Rome
"on the condition
that she show appreciation
"of the worth and ability of her servant
"Father Ralph de Bricassart
"and that said Father Ralph de Bricassart
"serve as the chief authority
in charge of my estate."
Congratulations, Father.
You got the lot after all.
All £13 million of it.
£13 million? I
But what about the Clearys?
They get to stay on as managers.
Decent of her
not to throw them out entirely.
And there's £10,000 a year
for your personal use
and a note to you.
"My dear Ralph,
how do you like my new will?
"Of course, you can destroy it if you wish.
"It's the only copy,
and my lawyer will never tell.
"No one will be the wiser,
and Meggie will be
"the richer, won't she?
"But I know what you'll do.
"I know it as surely
as if I could be there watching
"when they give you
that red robe and miter."
Father, listen.
There's no denying
it was Mary's property
to dispose of in any manner she wished,
and I'm not a Catholic, so forgive me.
But we both know the Church
has no right to the estate.
Please, let's just destroy this.
Let poor old Paddy and his family
have what's rightfully theirs.
- It's so awful.
- Paddy, I'm so sorry.
My poor sister. I can't believe it.
What are we going to do?
I don't know what we're going to do.
We gather here
shocked and saddened by the
sudden death of our friend Mary Carson.
Yet we take comfort in the knowledge
that in her last hour she was not alone.
Not the greatest nor
humblest living being dies alone
for in the hour of our death,
our Lord Jesus Christ is with us
within us, and death is sweet.
We all know what Mary was.
A pillar of the community.
A pillar of the Church.
And it was the Church she loved
more than any living being
for she understood so well
the words of St. Matthew:
"Where your treasure is
"there will be your heart also."
Let us pray for her immortal soul
that she, whom we loved in life
will enjoy her just and eternal reward.
And as we pray, let us remember
that our Lord is rich in mercy.
And let us not forget
that we are dust
and unto dust we shall return.
"By my hand, this 24th day of November
"in the Year of our Lord, 1929
"Mary Elizabeth Carson, née Cleary."
Yesterday.
I won't deny it's a bit of a disappointment.
- Paddy, I want you to contest.
- That wouldn't be right.
It was her money, wasn't it?
If she wanted to leave it to the Church
And then, 13 million quid
I wouldn't know how to look after
that kind of money.
You don't understand, Paddy.
There are already hundreds of people
employed to look after it for you.
Please contest.
I'll get you the best KCs in the country.
We'll fight it all the way
to the Privy Council, if necessary.
What do you think?
But we can live on Drogheda anyway
and have this house.
Isn't that what the will says?
No one can turn you off Drogheda so long
as one of your father's grandchildren lives.
What more do we want?
Damn.
I hate to see you cheated.
Fee, I don't know what to do.
All the things I wanted for you.
I don't want
Mary's 13 million pieces of silver.
Well, that settles it.
No, thank you.
- I think it's time we were going.
- They're reading the will.
You don't think I'm going to leave
until I've seen their faces, do you?
Sometimes, I think
you lack human feeling.
Paddy is very grieved about Mary's death.
Still, what is the harm
in congratulating him?
Here they come.
My condolences.
Father.
Please don't think there are
any hard feelings on our side.
Mary was never swayed
by another human being in all her life
brother or priest.
If she left it to the Church, it was
because you were mighty good to her.
You've been mighty good to us, as well
and we'll never forget that.
Thank you, Paddy.
Poor Paddy.
The old bitch.
Father?
Father, what is it?
She's won, Meggie.
I've betrayed you.
- Betrayed me?
- She knew me so well.
She knew if she stripped you
of everything, I'd have no choice. But no.
She made sure you'd neither want
for anything nor have anything, either.
All your life, you'll have to look to me.
I don't understand.
You'll be respectable,
even socially admissible
but you'll never quite be "Miss Cleary."
Never quite be one of them.
I don't want to be one of them.
Be stupid and vicious and cruel
like Miss Carmichael.
- How could you even think of that, Father?
- Meggie, don't call me Father.
I'll be going away, Meggie, soon.
Why?
Don't you see?
It's part of her plan.
I brought in £13 million.
And a holy priest
who's brought in £13 million
will not be left to languish here
in the back of beyond.
The Church knows how to reward its own.
No.
My Meggie
it's better this way.
How can it be better
to take away what I love most
in the world?
Then better for me.
Better than someday having to marry you
to somebody else.
Better than staying here to watch you
change into something I can never have.
Maggie, when I saw you last night,
I almost hated you.
Hated me?
- For growing up?
- Yes.
When you were a little girl,
you were like my own child to me.
You were the rose of my life.
- I could have you then.
- You can have me now.
You can marry me. You love me.
But I love God more.
I do love you, Meggie. I always will.
But I can't be a husband to you.
If only I could make you understand
what being a priest means to me.
How God fills a need in me
no human being ever could.
Not even me?
I can't!
Goodbye, my Meggie.
Father!
Go on, then.
Go on to that God of yours.
But you'll come back to me
because I'm the one who loves you.
The saga continues
as a way of life is threatened.
And forbidden love is given
You've come back.
then taken away.
My life belongs to God.
And new desires are ignited
He was a fool to let you go.
while ambition lights the road to Rome.
The Thorn Birds continues.
Part 3
From the raw Australia of the 1900s
comes a turbulent saga
that spans the decades
in Colleen McCullough's best-selling novel:
The Thorn Birds.
I'll never have what I want.
The story of a priest driven by ambition.
Never be what I want!
Tormented by desire.
And I don't know how to stop
wanting.
And a beautiful young girl obsessed
with a man she could never have.
You can marry me. You love me.
But I love God more.
It's Mrs. Carson, Father. She's dead.
Probably did herself in.
Unless it was the devil doing us all a favor.
"Father Ralph de Bricassart
serve as the chief authority
in charge of my estate."
F13 million of it.
Go on to that God of yours.
You'll come back to me
because I'm the one who loves you.
And tonight, the story continues.
Fire. Fire on Drogheda.
You've come back.
What have you done to me?
All right, lads!
God, you are beautiful.
Help me get free of this.
Starring Richard Kiley, Jean Simmons,
Ken Howard, Mare Winningham
Philip Anglim, Christopher Plummer,
Bryan Brown
Rachel Ward, and Richard Chamberlain.
A love unattainable
forbidden forever: The Thorn Birds.
Vittorio Scarbanza di Contini-Verchese.
Excellent. I'm very happy.
So few outside the Vatican
can pronounce my name:
Will you take tea, Father?
Will you take tea, Father?
I confess I have adopted the custom.
I believe you've been in Sydney
for some time, Archbishop?
Yes, as a papal legate
A rich country, Australia.
She supports the Church well
despite the Depression.
One day
the Holy Father will have to reward her
by selecting an Australian cardinal.
No doubt that will be many years away.
Still, it is a very important part of my job
to study likely men
of your age.
Oh, Sheba, must you be so selfish.
You make my legs numb.
De Bricassart
I'm descended from Ranulf de Bricassart
who came to England
with William the Conqueror.
Since Henry VIII's time,
the family has fallen into obscurity.
In fact, I'm the last of the de Bricassarts.
But you yourself
appear to have found ways
of dealing with obscurity.
- Your Grace?
- I refer to your penchant
for attracting
the notice of the Holy Father.
The Carson bequest.
Rather an achievement.
Mrs. Carson was also faithful
to the Church.
Quite.
Sheba, must you always dig in your claws
when you're happy?
How do you do that?
A cat will never go to anyone,
especially Sheba.
Yet she goes to you
as if you gave her caviar!
So, you will administer the Carson estate.
Given the current economic conditions
I suppose we must expect some losses.
No. I've just been over everything
with the auditors
and I think the investments will hold firm.
I'm sure the Clearys
will continue to manage Drogheda
as if it were their own.
- You're fond of these Clearys.
- Yes, very.
Do you love them all equally
or do you love some more than others?
I feel closest to the girl, Meggie.
I've watched her grow up
and I've always felt
that she was my special responsibility.
She's the only daughter and the parents
sometimes tend to forget she exists.
I see.
Meggie!
- What on earth are you doing?
- Managing the stock horses.
Are you now?
And who decided that, may I ask?
I did, since nobody else
seemed to have plans for me.
I see.
I don't know if I can think
of anything wrong with that.
If you're going to manage stock horses
I don't believe
I'd use a thoroughbred to do it.
He needs the exercise, Daddy.
You wouldn't want Father Ralph
to come back and find his horse
fat and out of shape.
Father Ralph?
I don't think you'll be seeing him again.
No, Drogheda's part of his past now.
Meggie, you've kept
your secret pretty well.
I doubt if anyone else knows
how you feel about Father Ralph.
But it's no good
for you to keep dreaming about him.
You know he's a priest.
He can stop being a priest, Stuie.
And he will someday, Stuie.
I just know he will.
He can never stop being a priest.
Why can't you understand that?
The vows he took are sacred.
They can't be broken, ever.
And he never will break them, Meggie.
Not even for you.
You have been disobedient.
Your promise of celibacy
was neither made, nor broken lightly
but it was broken.
And, most unfortunately, that fact
has now become public knowledge.
We have no choice but to act.
The Archbishop has left instructions
for you to be sent to Darwin
in the Northern Territory.
There's a small frontier parish there.
You'll be leaving immediately.
Father John is waiting now
to accompany you on your journey.
And, of course, the young woman
must never know where you've gone.
Yes, Father.
Goodbye.
Father
I think I know
something of the pain you're feeling.
You know, many in your situation
might have given up the Church.
But you have chosen to remain.
That takes a great deal of courage.
May God bless you for it.
Such incidents are regrettable,
my dear Ralph
but I'm afraid even we priests
are weak, and all too human.
Still, one has to pity him.
And Gillanbone is a paradise
in comparison to the place he's being sent.
But the best of us find strength
in such adversity
as you know.
Yes, Your Grace.
Now, what on earth can this be?
Happy Christmas, Fee.
They're beautiful, simply beautiful.
They may not be
"the" finest in all of Australia
but they're the real thing, all right.
There we go.
They are lovely.
I must say, it's a nice surprise
to find you all so brave and cheerful
in spite of everything.
- Isn't it, Angus?
- Indeed, it is.
Paddy, I want you to know
I look on you as friends.
And if there's ever anything
I can do for you
- I hope you'll let me.
- Thank you, Angus.
We're just pleased
that you could be with us today.
We should've got around
to pay some calls before this
but it's been a busy time,
as you can imagine.
I suppose it's as dry out your way
as it is here, Mr. MacQueen.
Terrible.
I've never seen such mobs of kangas
in so close.
They were practically at the house,
trying to get at the water.
And you said you saw several grassfires
on the way up from Melbourne
- Didn't you, Aunt Sarah?
- Yes.
I hate to start in slaughtering
but the sheep
are starving so bad already
I'm afraid the wool will be too weak
to bring any kind of price.
Pete tells a good one on Aunty Mary.
She was in Sydney once in a drought,
and Pete sends a wire:
Half the sheep are starved.
Please advise."
And Aunty Mary sends a wire right back:
"Shoot the rest."
That's all you care about, isn't it,
the profit?
The price of the wool.
Never mind that the poor sheep
are suffering unspeakably.
Well, ma'am
out here, it's got to be the wool
a man cares about, isn't it?
It's not as if the sheep were people,
you know.
Quite right.
I've seen city people dote on animals
and yet, completely ignore a cry of help
from a human being.
Perhaps it's natural to have contempt
for whatever there's too many of.
How dare you?
How dare you,
when we come here in friendship?
- Sarah!
- No!
You lecture me
on the value of human life
when your own son
sits in the Melbourne prison for murder?
Damn, Sarah!
Paddy, I'm so sorry.
I thought you knew.
It was months ago.
My son?
Frank?
He was in a fight
in a pub there, in Melbourne.
The other fellow died later.
They called it murder
because Frank is a professional boxer.
- They gave him a life sentence.
- Oh, my God.
Oh, God.
- Fee.
- My Frank
Fee, dear, pack your things,
we'll go to him.
No. I can't.
It would kill him to see me.
I'm going to Frank.
Stuie is taking me.
But you mustn't.
Your mom doesn't want you to.
If we could only take back
the things we say and do.
Daddy, I know about Frank.
I came to understand it a long time ago.
And you're not to blame for anything.
I tried so hard
to treat him like one of my own.
But he was a thorn in my side
from the first.
He always stood between us. Always.
And he will now until the day I die.
I know she can't help
the way she loves him
no more than I can help my love for her.
But we are to blame.
We've let it take our hearts away
from our own children.
Meggie, I think
I think of how much
we've both held back from you.
From you, most of all.
It's all right, Daddy.
- Meggie
- No, don't.
Hello, Frank.
You've grown up.
You're beautiful.
What have they done to you?
It's all been my own doing.
All of it. From the first.
Listen, Frank
I want to try and help you.
I've talked to Harry Gough.
He knows how
to get an appeal started for you.
No.
Listen to me.
I want to get you out of here.
I want you to come home.
Frank, darling, if there's any way
No.
When I was growing up
there was only one thing
that I really wanted in the whole world:
To see Mom happy.
Then I realized
that no matter how hard I tried
that I couldn't make her happy.
And that it was me
all along. I ruined her life
just by being born.
- I've never found a way to pay for that.
- No, Frank.
If Mom's life is ruined,
it's because she let it.
Meggie, listen to me.
You want to help me?
Then you must forget about me.
Promise me
that you'll never come here again.
Promise me
that you'll never let her come either.
Don't worry.
She wouldn't come, Frank.
She wouldn't come, Frank.
I don't understand you
either of you.
I don't understand that kind of love.
Poor little Meggie.
You still think love can save us?
It's more killing than hate.
Hate is so clean, so simple.
Like being in the ring.
With hate, you just keep hitting.
You hit until they stop hitting back.
With love
they never stop.
And you planned all this?
- Excellent.
- Thank you, Your Grace.
We can now feed almost 300 people a day.
But it seems little enough,
given the times.
Every day, more and more people
thrown out of work.
Still, you have done very well
in bringing this about.
In fact
I have been very pleased with you
in the year you have been here, Ralph.
And I gather the Vatican
shares my assessment.
They have appointed you
to be my secretary.
Which means
they are considering you very seriously
for further advancement
in time, if you do well.
And, I think you will.
I'm very grateful, Your Grace.
It's an honor I never thought to attain.
You are too humble, Father de Bricassart.
But humility can be most useful to you,
because as you advance
you will increasingly find yourself
in the position
of having to use the enormous power
of the Church.
And while you will be tested
in many ways
the greatest test will be
in how you use that power.
No, it is humility
that will help you to use it
well.
Fire, Stuie! Look, Stuie, fire!
Quick, let's get back to the house!
Oh, God.
All right, you silly animal, I'll get you out.
There you go. Come on.
Whoa, boy. Come on.
Fire. Fire on Drogheda.
Yes. What? All you can spare.
Don't stand there. Get to the cookhouse
to get some stew going, can't you?
Make it enough for 100.
They're coming, ma'am,
from all the stations, Gilly as well.
I'll fetch the other women.
- Mom?
- Meggie, go get changed.
Help with the horses.
Stuie, come with me.
There you go. Come on!
Keep them together. Watch! Hurry.
Come on, get up.
- It's terrible.
- Here you go. Yeah, go on!
Come on, get in.
God, Mom, it's getting away from us.
- Mom?
- Keep working, Meggie.
Will you look at that?
Charlie, loose those dogs!
Get the hose and bring it down here!
And you, you come with me!
- Meggie, you all right?
- I'm okay.
- Did Paddy come in with you?
- No, I haven't seen him.
- Daddy? Where's Daddy?
- He's out on the range, Meggie.
We should telephone around,
see if he came in anywhere.
No, the lines are down.
Maybe the boys know where he is.
Over here!
No, God, please!
The east water tower's run dry.
Mrs. Cleary, take some rest.
We're losing it!
Judas Priest, we're losing it!
Off you go, lad.
How is it out there?
- Nothing will stop it.
- Watch out!
- It's going to go!
- Watch out!
Oh, Meggie, our old place.
Mom, look.
- It's up to the house!
- Oh, Meggie.
- Boys, wet down the veranda!
- There's no water!
Rain. Stuie!
It's raining!
We're saved!
Let him sleep. Poor old dear.
I know he'd want to help you
look for Mr. Cleary.
Good luck.
Here's where we fan out.
And, remember, whoever finds Daddy,
fire three shots.
Daddy!
I had no idea the fire was out this far.
Daddy?
Stu, where are you?
Must have been Stuie that signaled.
He rode in this direction.
Don't go in, Mom.
Paddy?
And Stu.
Stu? What do you mean?
- No, not both of them!
- You don't want to see it.
Not Stu!
You've come back.
Darling Meggie, don't cry.
The world hasn't come to an end
because of a fire
no matter how terrible it was.
You're safe. That's all that matters.
I was so worried.
Harry Gough called me
and I flew right out. Imagine
Then you don't know.
Father, Daddy and Stuie
they're dead.
No.
Daddy died in the fire,
and Stuie found him.
And then, there was a wild boar
and it killed my Stuie.
What is it?
The plane bogged in the mud when
we landed. I must have bruised my side.
Let me see it.
- You rode all the way from Gilly like this?
- I hardly noticed it.
I was worried about the horse
making it through all that mud.
I borrowed him in Gilly.
Oh, God.
Don't.
Meggie, don't.
No!
What have you done to me?
What might you do to me if I let you?
It was good of you to be here, Father.
It would have meant the world to Paddy
and to Stuie.
It's curious, you know.
When it looked as though
the fire might take everything
I kept thinking of the most peculiar things.
I didn't think of dying or the children
or this beautiful house in ruins.
All I could think about were my accounts
the socks I was knitting for Paddy
the heart-shaped cake tins
Frank made me years ago.
How could I survive without them?
All the little things.
Things which can't be replaced.
It's too late, like all my life.
Too late for him, too late for me.
I can never take my Paddy
in my arms now.
I can never say to him
the only thing he ever wanted me to say,
that I loved him.
I do love him, Father.
Part 4
You'll never see me weep again.
I'm finished with tears forever.
You do have two sons left you, Fee
and you have Meggie.
It's not too late for Meggie.
- Meggie?
- Will you promise me something?
If you like.
Look after Meggie. Don't forget her.
Make her go to the local dances,
meet the young men.
Help her look around her world
and find some good, kind man to marry
who'll give her children
and a home of her own. It's time.
- Whatever you say, Father.
- Fee, she's your daughter.
It's as if you never remember that.
Does any woman?
What's a daughter?
Just a reminder of the pain
a younger version of oneself
who will do all the same things,
cry the same tears.
No, Father.
I try to forget I have a daughter.
It survived.
Meggie, I need no reminder of you.
Not now, not ever.
I carry you within me. You know that.
I must go.
Yes.
Everything's all right now.
All in order.
The dead are buried and blessed
and you and Mom
have my life planned out.
Meggie, we must make an end to this.
My life belongs to God.
You've always known that.
That dear and gentle God
who has taken from me
everyone that I've loved most in the world.
One by one.
Frank, and Hal
and Stuie
and my father.
And you, of course. Always you.
God is merciful.
There'll be no one else to grieve.
He is merciful.
He sent the rain.
Who sent the fire?
Good, they've come.
Nice to see them after two years
of not even enough sheep to need them.
All new lads, I think.
Not a bad-looking lot, for shearing men.
- That one's quite a dandy.
- Which?
The one in the white, you mean.
I suppose he's all right.
Bet he spends all his time washing
and ironing, just to keep up appearances.
I'll bet a man with his looks
doesn't have to do his own washing.
Mrs. Smith.
Get this wool!
All right, lads! There's your day!
You know, you owe me one.
You're a regular dreadnought, aren't you?
What about you?
Never saw a boss cocky
who could shear like that.
I like to keep a hand in.
You're O'Neill, aren't you?
Yes, sir, Luke O'Neill.
Look at this, Bob.
O'Neill shore 200.
Just a couple ahead of you.
The lads have been talking about
getting up a contest between you two.
- Are they, now?
- Well, you know
they always are eager
to win a few quid wagering.
Why not? What do you think, O'Neill?
The fact is, I'm not much on contests
but thank you all the same, Mr. Cleary.
- Good day, miss.
- Good day.
Fresh as a daisy, are we?
Nothing like shearing
a ton or two of sheep to set a man up.
I'm Luke O'Neill.
- I take it you're the famous Meggie Cleary.
- Do you?
How did you come by that information?
I saw you cooling yourself
on your nice, big veranda.
- And they said you were a beauty.
- Really?
What else did they tell you?
You'd be surprised what a bloke can learn
if he's interested.
Judy
Mrs. Smith was looking for you.
Something about the washing up.
Yes, Mr. Cleary.
Judy?
That wasn't nice.
Still interested?
Listen, man, you ought to give
that contest a bit more thought.
You're a good match for Bob.
I could out-shear Bob Cleary any day
if I was cruel enough
to show him up in front of these men.
Bob's not like that.
And what do you care, anyway?
You'll be going down the track
in a couple of weeks.
Pete, who's that girl?
That's just Meggie. Now, listen
there's good money in this contest,
I'm telling you.
Shouldn't swim alone, you know.
Too dangerous.
And what are you doing here?
Seeing you don't drown.
I don't know why you'd swim
in that thing, anyway. It smells like hell.
It's the sulfur.
I'm Luke O'Neill.
Meggie Cleary.
Meggie?
That doesn't suit you a bit.
Not enough dignity.
I'm going to call you Meghann.
I detest the name Meghann.
Good night, Meghann.
I often wonder
what can account for such sadness
in a face with so much spiritual beauty.
I should be sorry to think
that I look sad when I pray, Your Grace.
No, but it's true.
And at other times
when you think no one is watching.
And the passage of time
seems only to deepen it, my Ralph.
Perhaps it's the Irish strain in me.
We're a tragic lot, you know.
You received a wire
from the Vatican this morning.
The Athens Conference is all arranged.
I'll soon have our travel plans in order.
Splendid. The Church is long overdue
for some discussions
with our Greek Orthodox brethren.
I'm delighted you want me
to accompany you.
It will be excellent training for you.
A good opportunity to nourish your career
as a church diplomat.
And besides, you know very well
that you have become indispensable
to me, my dear Ralph.
If you're not with me,
how could I possibly continue
my interesting little game
of working out
precisely what makes you tick?
It's too early to tell, but we could have
one of the biggest clips ever.
It's nice to see the place get back
on something like a paying basis.
I don't believe it was only two years ago,
Christmas, that we were almost burnt out.
Couldn't have done it
without Father Ralph
advancing us the money for new stock.
Good day, Meghann.
Missus.
Good day, O'Neill.
What can we do for you?
- I've come about the shearing contest.
- I thought you weren't interested.
The lads have been on at me about it,
so I thought I might give it a go.
Fine, just name your terms.
If I was to win, what would you say
to hire me as a stockman?
- A stockman?
- Just for a month, say, to try me out.
I know my way around livestock, all right.
I thought we weren't hiring
any new stockmen this year.
If Luke here is as good in the saddle
as he is at the board
Stone the crows,
you'd think I'd already lost this contest.
What if you lost, O'Neill?
Same terms,
except I work the month for free.
You'll actually work for no wages
just to be a stockman?
But that's daft. You could make more
at shearing, anyway.
Yeah, but a shearer's a rover.
I don't intend to be a rover all my life.
And I do like it here on Drogheda.
All right, lads, this is the last call.
Gentlemen, let's hear them.
This f5 on Cleary.
I'll match any of that.
Now, we all know the rules.
The men will shear for two hours only
and since my own brother's in there,
I'm stepping out.
So I want one of you shearing men
to keep score
and you, Drogheda lads,
choose a man to watch the time.
- Are we ready, men?
- Yeah!
Mr. Cleary, show him
what a boss cocky can do.
We'll show him!
Hold him steady, O'Neill.
Come on!
Here we go.
Come on.
All right, Mr. Cleary, come clear.
Just squeeze him through the breezer.
Hurry up! Down the chute!
Good show, O'Neill!
You're making twice the number of blows
because you're not filling your shears.
Fill your shears, boy!
Don't let us down.
Come on, O'Neill.
That's it, O'Neill,
you've got him on the run now!
- Come on!
- Jack, who's winning?
It's only half-over, still an hour to go.
But looks like old Bob's losing so far.
Losing? Come on, Meggie.
Judy, you go back to the house.
You can do it. Long blows, Mr. Cleary.
Fill your shears, boy!
Luke, pay attention!
Come on, Bob, let's show them
what Drogheda men are made of!
- I could out-shear that learner.
- That's his job, missus.
Stay in there, Bob! You can do it!
Don't stop! Keep going!
Come on, Bob!
Two minutes to go!
Go! Go!
What did I tell you? I taught him myself!
What about a cheer
for a bonzer opponent? Luke O'Neill!
Hip, hip, hooray!
There's not a pub around for 40 miles,
but if a barrel of rum and another of ale
will take away the sting, they're outside!
Well done, Bob.
That's my Bob.
Feel like a champion, then, Bob?
- Congratulations, Mr. Cleary.
- Bob.
It was only by half a sheep.
Could have gone the other way.
You've got yourself a stockman,
free of charge for the next month.
Then if you like what you see
There's not much to see here
now we got the wool away.
I wonder you didn't go with it.
You don't appear to have made
much of a bargain here.
I'm happy with it.
There's a dance next Saturday night.
Will you come with me?
Thank you, but I can't dance
so there wouldn't be much point.
There's nothing to dancing.
I could teach you
in two flicks of a lamb's tail.
Wonder if your brother
would lend us the car.
We ought to go in style, don't you think?
- I said I wouldn't go.
- No. You said you couldn't dance
and I saidI'd teach you.
Not scared, are you?
No. Not here.
It's only a wool shed, you know.
And it's a wool-shed ball we're going to.
Now
One, two, three
One, two, three
- Having fun?
- Don't let go of me.
I don't intend to.
You're the most beautiful girl
I've ever seen in that dress.
Thank you. I don't really like it,
but it's the only party dress I have.
Go on, a posh girl like you?
You could've bought
as many dresses as you liked.
Is that what you think?
That I'm some snobby squatter's
daughter? Because I'm not.
The Clearys don't even own Drogheda,
and we never will.
Touched a nerve, didn't I?
I'm sorry, Meghann.
I know the blessed papists
did you out of your place.
- What do you mean?
- My, but we're sensitive.
I suppose now you'll never have me
because I'm Protestant.
- You are?
- Orange through and through.
I think the Catholic Church
is run by a bunch of poofters
in black nightgowns.
You do waltz divinely, Mr. O'Neill.
I do hope Meggie is not intending
to be selfish.
It would be an honor
to dance with you, Miss Carmichael
but, you see, Miss Cleary here
has hired me for the whole night.
- This isn't so bad, is it?
- What?
- Dancing.
- I think I'm learning to like it.
Good, cause there's another dance
next week
and the week after that,
and the week after that.
So I went to the wool shed when I was 12,
as a tar-boy.
Me and my mate, Arne Swenson.
He's the best, Arne is.
Always looked out for me.
- Is he still shearing?
- No, not Arne.
He runs a gang of cane-cutters
up in northern Queensland.
You reckon shearing's hard, but I tell you
there's not too many blokes
big enough or strong enough
to cut the sugarcane.
You make it sound like
your life's ambition.
I wouldn't mind trying it
for the money it can make.
My life's ambition
is to have my own place
my own sheep station, up in
western Queensland, where I come from.
And I will someday, too,
have my own place.
And someone to share it with.
Someone who'll love me
and work alongside me.
God, you are beautiful.
How many times have you been in love?
Only once.
Whoever he was,
he was a fool to let you go.
Good night, Meghann.
You did not understand
this play, Phaedra?
You've noticed how quiet I've been
through the conference here in Athens.
My Greek isn't up to yours,
I'm afraid, Your Grace.
You must study your languages
if you're to be a church diplomat.
The dying youth in the play is Hippolytus.
He is cold to Aphrodite,
the goddess of love.
To punish him for his neglect
she causes his mother
to fall hopelessly in love with him.
But, Hippolytus spurns her.
And that's why she kills herself?
Hippolytus' father blames him
and has him killed
by the god of the sea.
A cruel story, and so unjust.
Hippolytus dies even though he's innocent.
In fact, he behaves laudably.
A good Catholic interpretation,
yes, perhaps.
But to the ancient Greeks
he is quite guilty of the sin of pride.
You see, it is that
Hippolytus holds himself
above human love.
He's cold.
He will not even admit
that human passion exists.
And what if he would admit it?
Would he then escape his fate?
That is the cruelty
because this is his fate.
He cannot choose to love
anymore than his poor mother
can choose to be cold.
The gods have willed it for their sport.
Cruel, but rather an appealing system,
is it not?
No decisions to make, no conscience,
no agony of free will
nothing. All fated from the first.
Rather shockingly at odds
with the teachings of the Church of Rome.
My dear Ralph,
do you not find it humbling to realize
that when this play was first performed
Rome was still infested
with fur-clad barbarians?
They simply find you beautiful.
Blessed by the gods, perhaps?
They've been out together again.
I don't see the harm.
He never lets it get in the way of work.
But I'm beginning to see
why he likes it so much here.
I'm just as glad.
He's the only man Meggie's ever shown
the least bit of interest in.
And somebody's got to keep
the Cleary line going.
I hope that Meggie is all he wants.
I saw Angus MacQueen in Gilly
the other day.
He seemed to think that Luke might be
something of a fortune hunter.
A fortune hunter, Luke?
Of course, Meggie does have the money
Father Ralph sets by for her
but it's not what I'd call a fortune.
Some might, though. But I think
he's just what he appears to be.
A hardworking bloke
with plenty of ambition.
I suppose you're right.
Anyway, Meggie's a grown woman.
How she chooses to spend her life
or her money is her own affair, isn't it?
You know
I was just thinking
of that old woman in the market.
She reminded me
of how very certain I once was
that I had found your Achilles' heel.
Those looks of yours
They had to have made you the target,
or perhaps even the victim
of so many desires.
But, I have tested you
had you watched
thrown you together
with beautiful women, and with men.
No result. Not a flicker.
No. Whatever you burn for, Ralph
is not for the flesh.
I am
surprised, Your Grace.
Shocked, you mean, by my methods.
But you shouldn't be.
They are simply tactics
of which you must be aware
if your weakness lies
where I think it does:
In ambition.
If that is a flaw, I shall try to mend it
Archbishop.
I might find that rather tedious
as it is a weakness which I share.
And like all self-perpetuating institutions
the Church has always a place
for ambitious men.
In fact
you are everything the Church admires
in her high officials.
You are conservative, quick, subtle.
You know enough never to give away
what is going on behind those eyes.
And you have the most exquisite gift
of knowing how to please.
Even when it comes to pleasing
those you loathe.
You make me out to be a Machiavelli,
except that he was an Italian.
My dear Ralph, you are a delight.
I can scarcely wait to see your effect
on our short, fat prelates in Rome.
Rome?
The beautiful, sleek cat
among the plump, startled pigeons.
In time, my ambitious friend. In time.
These conferences will soon be over
and then we shall see
what fate has in store at the Vatican
for both of us.
This is great.
We do have better in Queensland,
of course.
You can't imagine how absurd you were
that night, claiming I might drown.
You could've pretended
you were drowning.
- And make myself as ridiculous as you?
- Then I could've swooped you up
Put me down.
and do what I've been wanting to
ever since that moment.
No. That's enough.
- I'm sorry, I didn't mean to offend you.
- You didn't offend me. Really.
I suppose
I'm just not very used to it, that's all.
That's all right.
You said you'd been in love once,
so I thought he must've
- But I guess it wasn't like that.
- No, it wasn't.
He wasn't.
We'd best go in.
Marry me, Meghann.
Up so late, Mom?
I wanted to get this summary report
in order for Father Ralph.
We've really come back very strongly
since the fire.
Maybe even stronger than ever.
I think Ralph will be quite surprised.
- Is he back from Greece?
- No.
In fact, I had a letter just today.
Quite an announcement.
He's off to the Vatican with that
The one with the name a yard long.
Ralph's to be made a bishop.
So who knows
if he'll ever be back to Australia.
The Vatican.
- That's nice.
- Nice?
- I thought you'd be pleased for him.
- Of course, I'm pleased.
It's what he always wanted, isn't it?
It's just that I've got
my own announcement to make.
I'm going to marry Luke O'Neill.
What I wouldn't give if she were yours
instead of Luke's.
God knows how much I've hurt you.
But I do love you.
- Meghann's my wife, not yours!
- Then be a husband to her, man!
I tried to forget you with someone else!
Two lives on a collision course
with destiny.
I've tried so hard
to get her out of my heart.
The Thorn Birds continues.
Part 5
From the outback of Australia
comes a turbulent saga
that spans the decades.
Fire. Fire on Drogheda.
Colleen McCullough's best-selling novel:
The Thorn Birds.
The story of an ambitious priest,
a beautiful woman
and a love that lasts a lifetime.
You can marry me. You love me.
But I love God more.
His ambition took him
from the woman he loved
to the corridors of power.
Her desire brought her to a man
who could take his place.
God, you are beautiful.
Ralph's to be made a bishop.
I've got my own announcement to make.
I'm going to marry Luke O'Neill.
And tonight, the story continues.
I'll never have what I really want.
with no home, no babies.
No husband, for that matter.
And Meggie's fighting back
the only way she can.
Meghann, what have you done to me?
What I wouldn't give if she were yours
instead of Luke's.
Meghann's my wife, not yours.
God knows how much I've hurt you,
but I do love you.
You haven't the least idea
what real love is!
I'm not going to waste the rest of my life
dreaming of a man I can never have.
Forgive me.
No more.
Christopher Plummer,
Piper Laurie, Earl Holliman
Ken Howard, Mare Winningham
Philip Anglim, Jean Simmons
Bryan Brown, Rachel Ward
and Richard Chamberlain.
A love unattainable
forbidden forever: The Thorn Birds.
I wonder what Ralph will think
when I write
that you've married a Protestant.
What difference does it make?
I'm doing what he wanted, aren't I?
Mom
I'd really rather you didn't write.
I'll send Father Ralph a letter about it
as soon as we settle in Queensland.
I'll miss you, Meggie.
If you don't stop,
you'll have me crying as well
- And how would that look?
- I'm a silly old goose.
It's just that Queensland
seems so far away.
It's not forever, and I'll be home to visit.
It's just that Luke can earn so much more
cutting cane in Queensland.
I suppose that means you'll be able to buy
your own sheep station that much sooner.
That's right. And just think
I'll have a new home of my own
to take care of.
And I'll have children one day.
I've just got to have something
of my own
something real that I can care about.
Meggie, darling.
And I need Luke.
He's not one of those complicated men
who'll always be wanting something
more than he wants me.
Luke loves me, Mrs. Smith.
Truly, he does.
F14,000?
Why, that's more than a lot of squatters
are worth. I had no idea.
What, she didn't tell you?
Oh, Lord. That's Meggie.
No more idea than a child
about such things.
Ralph gave us money
when the Church inherited Drogheda.
Father de Bricassart.
He oversees the estate for the Church.
I've transferred Meggie's money
to the bank in Dungloe
and put it in your name.
I want you to know how much I appreciate
the way you Clearys have treated me.
I don't have much,
but what I do have is Meghann's.
And you can be sure I'll never touch
a penny of this except to buy us a station.
And I'll take good care of her.
You have my word on that.
Come on, you two!
Goodbye, Pete.
- All the best, Meggie.
- Thanks, Alastair.
Be happy, Meggie.
Come on, Meghann, we'll miss our train.
Your Eminence.
Eminence?
I think I'm not quite accustomed yet
to being a cardinal, Ralph.
I'm almost rather startled
when you call me that.
You will see what I mean
when first you are addressed
as My Lord Bishop de Bricassart.
But I trust you're ready for it.
I hope that I am
and that I can be worthy of it.
My dear Ralph.
Often when I speak to you
of your progress in the Church
I do so in ways that sound worldly
even cynical.
I do not fully understand you yet.
Perhaps I never shall.
But I have never doubted
that your life is dedicated to God.
Nor do I doubt that in making you
My Lord Bishop today
the Church will bring you
the greatest happiness
you have ever known.
Luke, look.
It's like paradise.
It's Queensland, love.
- Luke, what on earth are they doing?
- They're burning up the cane.
Drives out the rats and snakes,
makes it easier for the fellows to get at.
Smells wonderful, doesn't it?
That's what you'll be doing?
- That's coolie labor.
- Coolie labor?
Queensland cutters are the finest
in the world, the elite.
I'll be a lucky lad
if my old mate, Arne, will hire me.
He will, if he wants a good worker.
I can earn 10 times as much in that cane
as I ever could at Drogheda.
And that means we'll be able
to buy a place that much sooner.
So if I have to be a coolie now, then I will.
Because one day, Mrs. O'Neill,
I intend to be the headpin
out on the best sheep station
in the whole of Western Queensland.
I'm sorry.
Forget it, love.
First time and all.
- Does it always hurt so much?
- Never got any complaints before.
I'm just so tired.
- Three days on the train and then the bus.
- I know.
And this wet heat makes it worse
when you're not used to it.
Tell you what. You have a nice nap,
and I'll go and see Arne.
Then we'll both look at Dungloe together.
Tell me about Arne Swenson.
You haven't said a word.
Should've seen his face
when I told him I was married.
- Couldn't believe I'd do it to him.
- Does he have a job for you?
- Only f20 a week, starting tomorrow.
- F20?
That's wonderful.
Tomorrow? We don't even
have a house yet.
I suppose I could look for one by myself.
That's what I wanted to talk to you about.
See, Arne's gang works six days a week,
up and down the coast.
They live in barracks,
and I'll have to live with them.
What am I supposed to do?
- I don't want to stay here by myself.
- Of course not, and I wouldn't want you to.
Besides what sort of sense would that be?
Paying rent on a place for just one person.
I fixed up for you to stay
with someone Arne knows.
The Muellers.
- Mrs. Mueller needs help round the house
- Luke.
You hired me out as a housemaid?
You make it sound
like the end of the world.
You'll be on a big cane plantation.
The Mueller's manage it.
And they're nice people.
I looked them over very carefully.
I thought at least
I'd make some kind of home for us.
It's not as if we were destitute.
We've got my f14,000.
And that's to stay in the bank
as our nest egg.
The rest we can earn together.
If we put our heads down and work hard,
we'll have our own place in no time.
- I just want us to have the best.
- I know.
But living in some stranger's house
- Never seeing you?
- Of course, you'll see me.
We'll have every Sunday together.
Make up for the rest of the week.
Come on, let's get back to the hotel.
We got some honeymooning to do.
Good life all right, cutting the sugar.
Best life there is
for the man that's up to it.
And Luke, he's got the stuff
to be a bloody good cutter
if he's not interfered with.
Let's just hope
Luke is bloody good enough
to make lots of money
- Because that's what he wants out of it.
- Yeah, that's what I used to say.
Look at this, Meghann.
Didn't I say it was nice?
There's plenty of cane,
if that's what you mean.
- Bye, Luke.
- Come on, Luke.
- Come on, say goodbye to your
- Bye, love.
- See you Sunday.
- She'll be waiting for you Sunday.
Come, let's go.
We are family now.
Good day!
Can you tell me
where to find the manager?
Thank you.
Get those slobs off their behinds and on
their feet or I'll find somebody who can.
There's plenty looking for your job.
Mr. Mueller? I'm Meggie Cleary.
- What?
- O'Neill.
You're the new girl.
Why aren't you up at the house then?
Bet you took the wrong road.
Everybody does.
Come on, I'd best take you up.
A wife shouldn't be left alone so long.
Hop in.
- How do you like our Himmelhoch?
- It's lovely, Mr. Mueller.
- So green.
- Not like home?
Your husband tells me you come from
somewhere down in New South Wales.
- Damn.
- Anne, you all right?
God, why do you try to do these things?
Yes, why do i?
That's enough of your nonsense now.
Just hand me my canes, Luddie.
Anne, this is the new girl.
Mrs. O'Neill.
Meggie, I hope you have a strong back
and plenty of patience.
I better get back to the mill.
I'll just clear this away.
Make sure you get all the pieces.
Get a move on, fellows.
Not like that, mate.
Not unless you wanna be
the only one-handed cutter.
Give it here.
I'm beginning to see
why this job pays so good.
Cut it low and throw it out.
Low and throw it out.
It's easy when you know how.
But you'd best stay away
from that bride of yours.
To make it in this game,
a man's gotta give it all to the cane.
I can certainly see
why they banned this one.
- That gamekeeper.
- Anne, you and your spicy books.
I'll go and start tea.
No point waiting for Luke any longer.
No doubt he'll be working.
Working.
- Like every Sunday.
- There's a depression on.
You can hardly blame him for working
when he has the chance.
Fine.
If you ask me,
he's just like most of the men around here.
Marry some poor girl and go off
and traipse all over with their mates.
If a bachelor's life is what they truly want,
why marry at all?
At 11:00, there's a meeting
on consular relations with the secretary.
I'd watch him, Your Grace,
I hear he's opposed to your position.
Then the congregation
for the Oriental churches
to discuss the establishment
of more regional seminaries.
An exciting trend, don't you think?
Because a native clergy would
be more sensitive to their own people.
No doubt,
but all these endless conferences
policy, diplomacy.
Are you so very certain
that you want to be a cardinal?
How else can I hope to be elected Pope?
The perfect answer, always.
Deceiving with the truth.
Do you never have
one unguarded moment?
I beg your pardon,
I've offended Your Eminence.
And I wish you'd stop calling me
by that exalted title of mine.
My name is Vittorio.
When Pius X became Pope
he was given a wonderful bed.
Do you know what he said?
It's beautiful
but I shall die in it.
So much for the rewards of ambition.
Five tons a day, O'Neill.
Not bad for a beginner.
- While you're cutting 12 a day.
- So, that's it, is it?
You're looking to outstrip me.
Could be, Arne.
Let's see those hands.
Poor Lukie.
Of course, you could always try
wearing gloves.
Gloves? You think I can't beat your tally?
I think you're full of blarney,
same as you always were.
Old Luke and his big plans.
Like those rich cocky's daughters
you were going to marry.
Yeah, well, I didn't do too bad.
F14,000, more coming in.
You'll be a cocky yourself in no time.
I will.
Come on, let's go into town
and look around.
- I thought you said no sheila.
- There's no harm in letting them look.
Give them something to wish for.
I'm sorry, boys, that's all there is.
She'll either be wanting money
or a wedding ring.
Bloody hell, she's having another kid.
I told you not to go home last time.
What in heaven
have you got on your head?
Isn't it glorious?
Luddie, we had the best time.
Meggie took me into Dungloe,
Christmas shopping.
She did?
What next?
There's a letter in there for you.
Thanks.
Bad girl, I could do that well.
I'm sorry.
Meggie, what is it?
Luke's not taking me home
for Christmas after all.
He and Arne have found some extra work.
Doesn't that man do anything but work?
This dream of his to have the best place
in Australia comes before everything.
We've been here almost a year
and now he says
it may be another year
before we're ready, maybe two.
I suppose you have to respect him
for having a goal
and being willing to sacrifice for it.
Yes.
Except I'm the sacrifice.
Well, I've no one to blame but myself.
I've married Luke and I'll see it through.
Oh, rubbish!
You wouldn't understand,
you're not a Catholic.
Another load of rubbish.
Will you stop clattering about
and sit down
and tell me what you really want?
I'll never have what I really want.
But when I married Luke
I thought I'd have something of my own.
And here I am with no home
no babies
no money
and no husband, for that matter.
I know it's not like
having your own place
but as far as children are concerned,
Luddie and I would love it.
I could never have any.
Well, I have been thinking
that if we were to have a baby
maybe Luke would be willing
to settle down and buy the station sooner.
- Or at least get us our own house.
- Then do it!
It's not that easy.
What? You mean,
because Luke is here so seldom.
No.
Well, yes.
It's just that
the few times that
we have been together
Luke has seen to it that
Good Lord, girl, out with it.
You have the face of an angel
and the body of a goddess
and you don't know
how to make a man get you pregnant.
What you need is a good education.
Lady Chatterley's Lover.
And Henry Miller.
Definitely Henry Miller!
It's true that we do much that is good
but often the sacrifices
seem to outweigh the rewards.
But doesn't every priest,
whatever he is in the Church
wonder about the sacrifices
he must make?
Always, if he is honest with himself.
When we're young it is the promise
of chastity that is hardest to bear
isn't it?
Never to be swept away
on a tidal wave of passion.
And then knowing
that there will be no wife
no soft
round comfort in the night.
And no child.
No one to come after you.
Not ever.
But lately I've been feeling
another kind of isolation.
The simple human need
to share my inmost self
with someone
like any other man.
We're not like other men, we're priests.
Our inmost selves must be shared
only with God.
Another perfect answer.
You think I am testing you again,
don't you?
Still probing for the sake of the Church.
Never fear, for all of my probing
there is still in the very core of you
something I have not found.
If you haven't found it,
perhaps it isn't there.
How lovely.
Still the faintest fragrance.
I kept a rose for many years
from my mother.
I want no memories of my mother.
This was the sacrifice.
It is very fragile.
We must be careful with it.
Look what I've got here.
Hi, love. Happy 1934.
Luke, what on earth
Don't just stand there,
get your dancing shoes on.
Are you off to a fancy dress ball?
No, it's a ceilidh. Out to Kanes'.
- But you're not a Scot.
- What's the difference?
We're better dancers
than those Scot blokes.
We ought to be.
We're out there every Saturday night.
But tonight's special.
To make up for Christmas.
I wouldn't miss this chance for the world.
Come on, that's enough.
Eleven tons I cut yesterday, mate.
I told you if you match my 12 tons,
I'll make you my partner.
I'll match you before the season's out.
- Two whiskies, thanks.
- That's 12 tons and a new truck.
With the money you've married,
you can afford it.
Too right.
And we'll get the best bloody truck.
Hello, sweetheart. Having a good time?
I think I'm about to.
Eleven tons, mate.
Let's see you cut 11 tomorrow.
Got to go, love. Work tomorrow.
Come on, Luke,
I've got something to show you.
Don't worry, Arne,
I won't keep your mate very long.
Meghann
I can't stay.
I've got to start early
you know that.
Why not start now?
Meghann, what have you done to me?
That was so wonderful.
We should always do it that way.
I shouldn't have done it like that this time.
You know we can't afford a baby now.
Just once isn't going to matter.
Or even twice,
so long as you know what you're doing.
I read up on it.
You will never tell me, will you, Ralph?
Your Eminence?
Why you remain so deeply troubled.
I've recommended that you take up
my former post in Australia
as Papal Legate.
You wish to have me sent away?
But why?
Have I not been doing well?
Well? You've had a brilliant career so far.
You've become an archbishop already.
And there is nothing
to stop you from rising higher.
Nothing.
Except the rose.
When your rose fell to the ground,
I understood at last
the sadness
you always wear like a holy mantle.
I've tried so hard
to get her out of my heart.
- You think I don't know that?
- Then why?
Our God has given us free will
and with that gift
comes the burden of choice.
It is time, far past time
that you took up that burden
because until you do
you cannot go on.
But sending me back to where she is
is like asking me to fail.
It's asking you to choose.
I think we've seen
about the last of the wet, thank heaven.
Three solid months of that rain is enough
to send a person round the bend.
- You say that every year.
- It's true every year.
It was the wet
when we first met, wasn't it, Luddie?
You were sitting in a mud puddle
as I remember.
In the mud?
Yeah, I fished her out, carried her home.
Ruined my only suit.
- And your life.
- And my life.
There.
It's absolutely beautiful.
I'll treasure it.
You can't do much work
during the wet, anyway.
Unless you're Luke O'Neill.
He and Arne are off to Sydney
to work in the sugar refinery
until the rains are over.
How did he take the news about the baby?
Doesn't know yet.
I'm gonna write to him tonight.
This just might bring him around.
The main thing is you'll have that baby.
I will.
- It's been a long time, Father.
- Welcome home.
Thank you, boys.
The place looks wonderful.
We've had some rough phases.
But I think she's coming up right along.
- Fee.
- Hello, Ralph.
I should be kissing your hand
now that you're an archbishop.
Fee, not you.
How are you?
You never tell me a thing
when you send me your financial reports.
- Where's Meggie?
- Still in Queensland.
At least I guess she is.
Haven't heard a word since Christmas,
and that's been six months.
Queensland? Whatever is she doing there?
They're settling there, you know.
Although we're all wondering
if Luke will ever buy a place.
Luke's work takes him away
most of the time, I gather.
So Meggie stays with some friends of his.
Luke?
Meggie's husband.
Ralph, you didn't know Meggie married?
Little Meggie?
And no one told me?
- Blimey, did she never write to you?
- Luke's not Catholic, you see.
Meggie wanted to tell you herself.
You wanted her to marry.
In fact, you're quite good
at getting what you want, aren't you?
Mary Carson's been dead, how long?
And here you are, an archbishop already.
What kind of man is this Luke O'Neill
that he roams about and doesn't even
make a home for Meggie?
The ambitious kind.
Thank you.
All right, you sent for me and here I am.
So what do you want?
You haven't come
since I wrote to you about the baby.
I'm sorry you're not happier about it.
I don't know why
you ever thought I would be.
I always told you
exactly how I felt about it.
Yes, you did. I was wrong.
But the fact remains
we're going to have a baby
and we've got to make
some kind of home for it.
Too right.
And I'm supposed to just fall in line
and forget about all the things I want.
But we want the same things, don't we?
I mean, I want the station, too.
You've got a fair way of showing it,
giving us another mouth to feed.
Please listen, Luke.
You said you need about f5,000 more
to buy the kind of place you want.
At least that. And now
- Then it's yours.
- What do you mean?
I mean that I can get the money
if that's truly what's stopping you
from getting us settled.
- Where can you get it?
- What difference does it make?
- It's what you want, isn't it?
- Answer me. Where?
I wrote to Father Ralph in Rome.
I know he'll give it to me.
You what? Damn you, Meghann!
You mightn't have any pride, but I do.
I've never taken money from any man
much less a flaming Catholic priest.
I'm not about to start now!
- Luke, listen to me.
- You made your bed, now lay in it.
Luke, please don't go.
Better let me.
- What are you doing?
- I'm going home.
- Home?
- Yes, home to Drogheda.
Because it's the only home I'll ever have.
Luke doesn't want me,
and he doesn't want a place.
He doesn't want anything.
Just to work his guts out
in that damn cane until he drops.
Have you lost your mind?
You can't go anywhere.
- You're about to have that baby, girl.
- I don't care!
- Meggie.
- I hate Luke!
- Stop it.
- And I hate this baby!
Stop it, Meggie.
She's not strong enough
to make it to the hospital.
So a cesarean's out of question.
You'll just have to hope she has
the strength to bear this baby by herself.
I've given her as much laudanum
as I dared.
- I'll go sit with her.
- The midwife's there.
- So Luke's come, after all.
- Luddie sent a lad to fetch her husband.
Yes, and I ought to thrash him.
If it came down to a choice
between Meggie's life
and the baby's
what would your conscience advise?
The Church is clear on that point, Doctor.
Neither may be sacrificed
to save the other.
You're a priest and I suppose
you must speak as a priest.
It doesn't seem so clear
to an ordinary man like me.
- Lf the husband were here
- Lf I were the husband
I think I couldn't bear to sacrifice her
for anything.
Then she didn't know
that you'd returned here to Australia.
No, I thought it best.
Her letter was forwarded on to me
from Rome.
When I read it, I had to come.
I felt there must be something wrong.
We're just glad you did come, Your Grace.
It's good to know there's someone
in the world who cares about the poor girl.
No, thank you. I want to go back in to her.
Cares about her, Luddie?
If you ask me, he's in love with her.
Isn't she a beauty?
There's nothing wrong with you, is there?
Hush up. We could all use some rest.
Yes, I think we could all use a little rest.
Here.
I'm afraid dear Justine
is going to be a screamer.
She might as well learn early.
Meggie, all babies cry.
Yes.
Here you go.
I must go soon.
I expected that.
It's funny how you always show up
for life's great crises
and then just melt away
like the Holy Ghost.
I'm sorry you're not happier
about the baby.
Before she was born
I said I hated her.
I don't.
What I wouldn't give
if she were yours instead of Luke's.
Why must the Church have all of you?
Even that part of you she has no use for,
your manhood.
You already know the answer to that,
my Meggie.
It is a necessary sacrifice.
"Necessary."
Come off it, Ralph.
I'm not a child anymore.
And I'm not your Meggie! I never was!
All those years that I loved you
and I waited for you, and I wanted you!
You never wanted me.
So I tried to forget you with someone else.
He doesn't want me either.
You think you're no ordinary man
but there's not a penny's worth of
difference between you and Luke O'Neill.
You're both
just great, big, hairy moths
bashing yourselves to pieces
over a silly flame.
While all the while out there
in the cool night
there's food and love and babies to get.
Don't you see it?
Do you want it?
No.
And so it's back after the flame again,
until it kills you.
God knows how much I've hurt you.
But I do love you.
Yes, you love me. And God more than me.
And yourself most of all, Ralph.
Yourself and your ambition.
This is very hard, I know.
But please, don't let it make you hard.
You've always been my rose.
The most beautiful human image
and thought
An image? A thought?
That's all I am to you, isn't it,
you romantic, dreaming fool?
You haven't the least idea
what real love is!
Go away!
I can't bear to look at you anymore!
There's one thing you've forgotten
about your precious roses, Ralph.
They've got nasty, hooky thorns!
Bring the truck around.
Wait for me, please.
- Good day.
- I'm looking for Luke O'Neill.
He's down the end.
Getting a little close, aren't you, there?
What's a priest doing here?
He ain't giving me the last rites.
- Look for the lines now.
- All right.
- Mr. O'Neill?
- That's right.
- I've come about your wife.
- Meghann?
She's not any sicker, is she?
The baby was born on Wednesday.
A girl.
I'm Archbishop de Bricassart.
Saints preserve us.
The famous Father Ralph.
Mr. O'Neill, I'm very concerned
about Meggie and your daughter.
- They need a home and they need you.
- I suppose Meghann sent you?
No, but she wrote to me, as you know.
I can understand why you might not want
to accept my money
but for Meggie's sake,
I urge you to reconsider.
- We can certainly make it a loan.
- Now, wait a minute!
Who the hell do you think you are,
telling me what we can and can't do?
- Meghann's my wife, not yours.
- Then be a husband to her, man.
If you can't give her the love she deserves
at least give her some kind of decent life.
She's not starving. And she's got the kid
she tricked me into. What's the complaint?
She can wait
till I'm ready to quit the cane.
When I'm offering you the means to have
what you say you want
Do you think I'd take
a brass razoo from you?
Get out of here, Your Holiness,
and take your means with you.
- I work for what I have.
- Or marry for it.
Why, you flaming Catholic poof.
I ought to knock your head off.
No bloody fear.
I won't spoil your nice dress.
But don't let's talk about which of us
got the most of Meghann's money.
Go on, mate, we got work to do.
Good on you, Luke.
Another Christmas without Luke.
I think you have to face the fact
that Luke may never leave the sugar
while he's got the strength to cut it.
I know. He loves the life, he really does.
Out there every day proving to himself
how manly he is.
Maybe if I were able to truly love him
it would be different.
It's the Archbishop you love, isn't it?
Always.
All my life I've cried for him
like a child crying for the moon.
But I've got to stop crying.
I'm not going to waste the rest of my life
dreaming of a man I can never have.
I don't know if I can wear Luke out
or to wait for him to wear himself out
in that bloody cane, but I've got to try.
Why do you have to try
when he's brought you nothing but grief?
What else do I have?
And I've got to make
some kind of home for Jussie.
I owe her that much.
Yeah, sorry to keep you waiting.
That's the finest Christmas dinner
I've ever seen.
Listen to me for a moment.
Anne and I are worried about you.
You haven't gained your strength back
since Jussie was born.
What you need is some time to think
time to rest, get away.
Figure out what it is you really want.
We're sending you away for a while.
And all on your own.
Away?
What about you?
What about Jussie?
It's all taken care of.
I don't want to hear any more about it.
- Good day, Sam.
- Good day, Rob.
Here we go.
That does it.
How do you do?
You'll be Mrs. O'Neill, of course.
I'm Rob Walter.
Welcome to Matlock Island.
Watch your step. Here we go.
Bye-bye, now. Best of luck to you.
We're supposed to be a honeymoon resort.
Perhaps Mr. O'Neill will be along later?
I really don't expect him.
The cupboards are all stocked.
If there's anything you need
I'll call in every day at sunset
to make sure you're all right.
Thank you, Mr. Walter. Bye.
Father, please.
Help me get free of this.
Turn around, Mrs. O'Neill!
A surprise for you!
I've brought your husband!
They told me where to find you.
Forgive me.
No. Damn you.
No more.
I was afraid to sleep.
Afraid you'd be gone when I woke.
What are you thinking?
That in all my life
I've never awakened in the same bed
with another human being.
That I'll never awaken again
without wanting you there beside me.
That I've fought a terrible battle
and I've lost it.
All those years of denying
that I was a man
and all to find with you
that I want nothing more
than to be a man.
That I'll never be more than that.
The day that I first met you
at the Gilly station
you smiled at me.
Then you said my name.
Then you touched me.
And since that day,
I have somehow known
though I never saw you again
my last thought, this side of the grave,
would be of you.
And there's nothing I can do to change it.
You know how terrifying it is,
that power you have over me?
How could I fail to know?
Ralph?
When Justine was born
you said I still saw you as a child
or as some ideal image.
And it was true.
How else could I fight you?
To see you as you really are,
with a body that molds perfectly to mine
and a soul that lies open to me
would be to lose my soul.
And now, you think you have lost it
just by being a man.
What kind of God would shut men
out of Paradise for loving women?
A God I still can't give up for you.
I know.
But now you're here with me.
And while you're here, you're mine.
What will you do now?
I have the house for two months.
And then?
- I'll write to you from Rome.
- No.
I don't want letters.
I may never see you again.
- As punishment for this?
- My punishment
is never to be sure again
that I love God
more than you.
I have broken all my vows.
I know I can never have Ralph.
But at least I've got part of him
the Church can never have.
- What are you doing here?
- I'm leaving you.
A legacy passed down
from generation to generation.
You finally murdered your leading man.
I went to bed with him.
You are everything I want to be.
You know nothing of the man I am.
The compelling conclusion.
What else have I ever done
but pay for the great sin
of loving Ralph de Bricassart?
The Thorn Birds.
SOFTITLER
Part 6
From the raw Australia of the 1900s
comes a turbulent saga
that spans the decades.
Colleen McCullough's best-selling novel:
The Thorn Birds.
The story of an ambitious priest,
a beautiful woman
and a love that lasted a lifetime.
You can marry me. You love me.
But I love God more.
His ambition took him
from the woman he loved
to the corridors of power.
Her desire brought her to the man
she thought could take his place.
Got my own announcement to make.
I'm going to marry Luke O'Neill.
But her heart was with the man
she could never have.
What I wouldn't give if she were yours
instead of Luke's.
God knows how much I've hurt you.
But I do love you.
- Meghann's my wife, not yours!
- Then be a husband to her, man!
What kind of God would shut
men out of Paradise for loving women?
A God I still can't give up for you.
And tonight, the story continues.
I found a pleasure in her
I never dreamed existed.
Meghann, what are you doing here?
You complacent, conceited
Meghann, shut up!
I've come back.
- Will you tell Ralph?
- What should I tell him?
That he has a son.
And from generation to generation
their desire and torment live on.
From the London stage
to the islands of Greece
and back to Australia.
What else have I done
but pay for the great sin
of loving Ralph de Bricassart?
Featuring Christopher Plummer,
Piper Laurie
Earl Holliman, Ken Howard
Mare Winningham, Philip Anglim,
Jean Simmons
Bryan Brown, Rachel Ward
and Richard Chamberlain.
A love unattainable
forbidden forever: The Thorn Birds.
Himmelhoch's the same as ever.
We missed you, Meggie.
Wait till you see little Justine.
Jussie remembers me all right.
Ralph did come, didn't he?
What was I to do?
When he saw you weren't here,
I thought the man would die.
He already looked
like he'd been haunting houses as well.
I thought
maybe he might even
mean to give it all up for you.
And you can still look so happy.
I'll never have
what you and Luddie have together.
But I can live forever
on those few days with Ralph if I have to.
Far better that, than watching him
grow to hate me more each day
for keeping him
from what he thinks he needs.
You'll be leaving us.
Yes.
Welcome back to Rome.
You have chosen.
You said I must
if I'm to go on in the Church.
But having chosen
how can I go on?
I have broken
all my vows.
You went to the rose.
Yes.
I never felt such ecstasy in God's presence
as I felt with her.
I found a pleasure in her
I never dreamed existed.
Not just in her body
but because I love to be with her
smile at her
talk with her
share her food, share her thoughts.
I wanted never to leave her.
But you left her.
You found the strength to leave her.
But I haven't let go of her.
That's what wounds me,
and I don't know how to heal myself!
Perhaps you're not meant to.
Perhaps that wound has saved you.
Do you remember
the Greek story of Hippolytus?
The play we saw in Athens.
- He was killed because he couldn't love.
- No.
Because he was too proud
to love.
Too arrogant to count himself
among mortal men.
Yes, your vows are broken.
But so, too, let us hope,
is that proud spirit
that kept you
from the thing you wanted most.
You see
one cannot truly be a priest
without the humility to understand
that one is first a man.
When you think of your rose
think that it was she
that led you to understand that.
No.
To see her only
as some means of saving me
would be the greatest arrogance of all.
She loves, Vittorio, despite everything.
And with a singleness of mind and heart.
If only
I could love like that.
How can I ever thank you?
You've been more like parents to me
than my own were.
Rubbish!
We'll be down to see you in Drogheda
one day. Won't we, Luddie?
I wouldn't mind having a look at it.
Come on, Jussie.
Hold onto him.
There are few enough like him.
Thank God!
The outfit's perfect, Meggie.
Wish I could see the farewell performance!
Bye.
Take him down!
That's a takedown!
Hello, Luke.
Meghann, what are you doing here?
What the hell do you mean
coming here with the kid?
That's right.
You've never seen her, have you?
Luke, this is Justine.
If you've come with another of your
"let's settle down in our nest" speeches
Is that what you think?
Wasn't it enough you sending
your damned Roman priest after me?
- What are you talking about?
- When I refused Father Ralph's money
you sent him to beg for you, didn't you?
I haven't seen him
since the day Justine was born.
Sounds like him, though.
Like all meddling priests.
He'd be only too happy to see me
settle down with half a dozen more brats!
That's what you want, isn't it?
I was stupid enough to think so.
Thanks to you, Luke,
I've had time to get around
and to find out what I've been missing!
And to realize that the last thing I want
is to be stuck out in some dried-up station
in western Queensland with you
- For the rest of my life!
- Meghann, shut up!
That would be my big reward, wouldn't it?
After wasting
God knows how many years waiting
while you try to prove you're a real man
when you're not and you never will be!
- So I'm leaving you.
- Leaving me? No, you're not.
Cheer up, Luke.
You still got your mate Arne.
Maybe you'll be more use to him
because you're none to me!
If I did wanna have more kids
it wouldn't be hard
to find a better breeder.
Cause I found out something else lately
you complacent, conceited
self-centered bastard!
You can't make love for toffee.
And about the money you stole from me,
Luke. Take it!
I'm happy to sacrifice it.
On one condition:
Don't ever make me set eyes on you again.
Not as long as I live!
Take me to Dungloe station.
Mail truck's coming!
Good! I hope he's brought my pastry flour.
Bob, Jack, it's me! I'm home!
Meggie, what are you doing here?
Oh, my God! Mrs. Cleary!
Mrs. Cleary, come!
Meggie, it's you! You've come back!
What a surprise!
What have we here?
Wouldn't you tell a person
you were coming?
Look at this little ángel.
- Where's Luke?
- Coming later, no doubt.
Mom, I've come back.
To stay.
So you've left Luke then?
He didn't want me.
Or his children.
- Children?
- Yes.
I'm going to have another baby.
I knew he'd be beautiful.
He's got the Cleary mouth all right.
- He's a bonzer little bloke.
- But can he sit ahorse?
He will.
Jussie, there you are.
Look at what's here.
Come here, darling.
Look at your new little brother Dane.
It's all right.
It's all right, darling.
Take care of yourself, Meggie.
- Rest well, Meggie.
- See you later.
Mom, wouldn't you like to hold Dane?
Will you tell Ralph?
Father de Bricassart?
I don't know. What should I tell him?
That he has a son.
How could you?
That's insane.
Don't lie to me, Meggie. Not to me.
I knew it the moment you came home.
That's why you came home.
You had what you wanted.
You didn't need Luke anymore.
No. I told you. Luke didn't want me.
I've been watching
you and Ralph de Bricassart for years.
All he had to do was crook his little finger
and you went running.
It was the same for him,
from the moment he laid eyes on you.
Poor Ralph.
When he came here last year
and found you married and gone
I knew that sooner or later
he would have to go to you.
And he did, didn't he?
You're very cruel, Mom.
One might think that you of all people
would understand.
Because of Frank.
You can give as good as you get.
How long have you known?
Since I was a little girl.
Since Frank went away.
I was 16 when I met him.
He was everything that Paddy wasn't.
Sophisticated, cultured, charming.
I thought I couldn't live without him.
But he was an important man
a politician
and already married.
He wasn't about to
sacrifice all that for me.
I was nothing to his noble ambition.
Just as you're nothing to Ralph's.
I know I can never have Ralph.
But at least I've got part of him
the Church can never have.
Yes. That's what I thought.
To take of him what I could.
To have his child to love at least.
But what have I got now?
I lost Frank.
I paid in the worst way a mother could.
And you're going to pay, too.
Believe me, God will see to that.
You think I haven't paid already?
What else have I ever done
but pay for the great sin
of loving Ralph de Bricassart?
All my life I trod the straight
and narrow for fear of God Almighty
and what did it get me but a broken heart?
No, Mom, I'm not afraid of God anymore.
And as for Ralph
he'll never know Dane's his
unless you tell him.
And if you do, I warn you
I'll be as merciful to you
as you have always been to me!
Yes, you'll beat God himself as I did.
I have beaten God.
Dane is mine,
and nothing's gonna take him from me.
Hello?
"He has outsoared the shadow of our night
"Envy and calumny and hate and pain
"And that unrest
which men miscall delight
"Can touch him not and torture not again
"From the contagion
of the worid's slow stain
"He is secure
"and now can never mourn
A heart grown cold
"a head grown gray in vain"
No! You forgot again.
It's "He lives, he wakes
'tis Death is dead, not"
Good day. We were just pretending.
Can we help you, sir?
I've come to see the Clearys.
Uncle Jack's taken everyone to Sydney
for Christmas shopping.
They'll be back soon.
- Lf it's about the stud rams
- You must be Meggie's boy, Dane.
Yes, sir.
I'm Cardinal de Bricassart.
But, Your Eminence
we weren't expecting you until tomorrow.
Are you actually the Cardinal?
You're disappointed.
I did think you'd arrive all decked out,
trailing clouds of glory or something.
You'll have to
come to the Vatican for that.
Pity. I'll bet you're smashing in red.
I'm Justine, by the way.
Could we dispense with the ring business?
I'm afraid I think religion
is rather a load of codswallop.
It's all right, Dane.
Justine and I are old friends.
The first time we met, you wet on me,
as I remember.
Mother's going to be so happy to see you.
Must be 20 years since I was here last.
Hello, my darling.
Mom, look who's here. Father Ralph.
Hello, Meggie.
Isn't it wonderful?
Wonderful.
I was ready to administer last rites.
There was Dane, evidently past all hope
and you were very convincing, my dear.
Our Jussie considers herself
quite the actress.
Thanks, Mom.
Actually, I'm rather good.
As you might discover
if you'd ever come to a performance.
Jussie's wonderful.
She's the best one in the theater group.
If you ask me,
I think it's a lot of nonsense, Jussie.
You've just turned 20.
Best be thinking of marriage instead of
parading on some stage in Sydney.
Marriage, Uncle Bob?
And spoil the family tradition?
I hardly think I'm gonna waste my talent
wiping snotty noses
and salaaming to some joker
just because he's my husband.
Charmingly phrased, Jussie, as always.
It looks as though it'll be up to Dane
to keep the Cleary clan from dying out.
Mom, have a heart.
You'll need a house full of sons
to take over Drogheda
the way we've been growing.
Yes, you've been doing splendidly
since the war.
I'd say so.
Our yield this year could have bought
and sold Mary Carson several times over.
I think 1955 could be even better.
So I don't think we've given
the Church much to complain of.
Now, Mom.
If not for the Church
the government would have broken us up.
MacQueen's place is down to half its size.
Think of that, Ralph.
One day Dane will be the head of
the last great station in New South Wales.
Hear, hear.
I can't imagine
a better future for you, Dane.
Hear, hear.
So, Judy, still here on Drogheda?
I was meaning to go, of course.
- Was it 30 years? More than 30.
- That long.
Why, I remember so well
when you were Queen of the Gilly fair.
I was, wasn't i?
Nana Fee, look at that hat.
Jussie, that was considered quite smart
in my day.
Mom, you amaze me.
I had no idea you'd
kept these photographs all these years.
I've only looked at them once
since the fire, myself.
I thought it was time
the children saw them.
This is your grandfather, Paddy
Little Hal and Stuie.
Dear Stuie.
He's the one I remind you of, Mom?
Yes, he is, in so many ways.
Who's this hero in the gloves?
Never a Cleary, surely.
- Jus.
- That's all right.
This is my Frank.
It was in his things
the prison sent back to me when he died.
Mom, is this you?
You were beautiful.
Were? The cruelty of youth.
What a lovely dress. Blue, wasn't it?
No, Mom. Yours was blue.
Meggie's dress was rose.
"Ashes of Roses," it was called.
In it, she was the most beautiful thing
any of us had ever seen.
It never really changes, does it?
Not even after all these years of silence
between us.
Only that you're lovelier than ever.
Much lovelier than that girl
in her Ashes of Roses gown.
It's because I'm so happy.
When you left me on Matlock Island,
I thought it was forever.
And here you are again, so soon.
Why now
when you have everything
you said you wanted?
Everything
except what I had with you
on Matlock Island.
In all the years since then
I've fought against my need for you.
But I couldn't bear to leave this life
without being with you again.
- You're not ill?
- No.
Just getting old.
Feeling my mortality, like any man.
And God help me, after all these years
it still hurts
that after Matlock Island
you could go back to Luke
give him a son.
You must never think of Dane
as Luke's son.
Or as anyone's but mine.
You love Dane very much, don't you?
Almost too much, I sometimes think
as I've always loved you too much.
Father, it's gonna be a scorcher of a day.
Perhaps we'd best take the jeep instead.
It might be wiser, Ralph.
It must be years since you've ridden.
And we're none of us any younger, are we?
I'll just try to struggle along
if you're sure she's nice and gentle.
Shall we?
Come on!
Be careful!
Dane's very taken with him, Meggie.
He's never known a father.
Let him enjoy Ralph while he can.
I thought you might tell Ralph, after all.
Who would it serve?
Who does it serve not to?
I honestly think you're disappointed
I haven't been struck by
some retributive bolt of lightning.
I'm happy for once in my life.
Can't you let me enjoy it?
Where's Dane?
Damn! I wanted to tell him.
Jussie, what on earth are you doing?
I'm off to tread the boards, Mom.
They just phoned me from the theater.
Seems our Mrs. Cratchit's got the pip.
God bless us every one.
You're going back to Sydney?
Uncle Jack's flying me down.
- Jussie, it's Christmas!
- Yes, Mother.
That's often when one stages
Dickens' Christmas Carol.
You know how much this Christmas
means to me, with Ralph here.
I am understudy. I really shouldn't have
come home as it was.
That's just wonderful, isn't it?
Yes, I think it is.
Really, Mom, you might be happy for me.
I may get to do as many as
a dozen performances.
- God, you are exactly like
- My father?
So you've said.
I should look him up one day.
We'd have lots to talk about.
Ta, Nana Fee.
It means a great deal to me
to have you here.
I realize you know very little about me
but I've wanted for so long to know you
to talk with you.
Father
did you ever have any regrets
about entering the priesthood?
Yes. Inevitably, I suppose.
I've missed things.
A woman to share my life.
Perhaps even a son, like you.
I would've liked that, Dane, very much.
What caused you to make your decisión
to become a priest?
Curiously
it wasn't really like a conscious decisión.
More like something
you've always known from the first.
My fate, you might say.
Father
I also want to be a priest.
Why?
When you can do anything with your life
be anything.
How can you say that
when you are everything I want to be?
Dane, no.
You know nothing of the man I am.
You look at me and see the Cardinal,
the Prince of the Church.
I see the priest
the perfect priest.
Then you're wrong.
To say it was my fate to be a priest
isn't to say it was given to me like a gift.
An entire lifetime of trying
to offer myself up totally to God
has brought me no more
than moments of oneness with him.
And I have broken every vow.
Do you understand? Every vow.
I have not been equal
to the sacrifice God asks.
But you have spent your life trying.
Father, when I said the perfect priest
I didn't mean some infallible being.
I mean someone who strives
to do God's will.
Maybe I won't
be equal to the sacrifice either.
But if I don't try
my life will have no meaning.
It's the only way I know to show God
how much I love him.
Do you know
what this will mean to your mother?
It's why I've tried for so long
to put it out of my mind.
I know how important it is to her
to have me stay on here in Drogheda.
And I love her so much.
But I must do this.
Then you must let me help you, son.
I'll tell her, because I love her, too.
Don't touch me!
Please believe me.
Dane's mind was made up
long before I arrived.
I believe you!
Don't you think I don't know
you're just here to collect for what I stole!
- I don't understand.
- No, you wouldn't.
But understanding's beside the point
for you men of God, isn't it?
Faith! That's the great thing!
Let me tell you, Ralph
I've got more faith than you and Dane
and all the heavenly host combined
because God has never failed me!
He's always there to take away
whatever happiness I've got!
Dane isn't being taken from you.
He is simply doing what he must.
Can't you see what this is costing him?
He loves you so much.
But, Ralph
- He loves God more!
- Meggie, stop it!
When I became a priest
my mother swore she'd never forgive me
and she never did.
Don't do that to Dane, Meggie.
Then take him.
If I must give him up, let it be to you.
Take him?
Yes.
When he finishes his schooling
this spring
I'll send him to you in Rome
where you can look after him.
Keep him safe
and promise me
that if he should ever wish it,
you'll send him back
because he belonged to me first.
You don't have to do this.
He can be settled in a seminary in Sydney,
where you can be near him.
You know it takes years
to prepare for the priesthood.
No, Ralph.
Your God wants reparation.
Very well.
Let Dane go to you
and then I'll have nothing more to repay.
I will have given everything
that I have ever had or loved
in my whole life.
Surely even God
can't ask for more than that.
I'm so sorry.
- Please forgive me.
- I didn't want to hurt you.
"In loving wrongly and beyond all reason,
I have sinned against the gods.
"I tremble that the burden of my crime
will fall upon my children
"fell them both."
You're gonna be a wonderful Phaedra.
I mean, if I had talent like that
Believe me, Martha, talent you don't need.
The virgin goddess Artemis bids you enter.
Darling! Was my performance that good?
Jus, I'm so sorry.
I missed the whole matinee.
Let me guess.
You were having a little talk with Jesus
and forgot all about the time.
Dane, honestly!
Let me finish dressing.
I won't be a minute.
Hello.
I haven't seen you in a long time.
Hello, Martha.
How are you?
Stunned, as always,
by your resemblance to Adonis.
- Maybe I'll wait in the park.
- Never mind. I'm going.
Another time.
Ta-ta.
Poor Martha.
She'll never forgive you
for saving it all for God.
Which reminds me.
Guess what I did last night.
You finally murdered your leading man.
Close. I went to bed with him.
I needed the experience.
I play the lead in Phaedra next,
so I have to know about passión, right?
All this pretending you don't care
as if you're too smart to need anyone
or love anyone.
Maybe I am too smart.
So far, loving and needing people
hasn't bought me a lot, has it?
Are you ever going to forgive me?
For becoming Father Rhubarb?
Probably not.
- When do you leave for Rome?
- Thursday.
I want to go spend some time
with Mom first.
I wish you'd visit Mom sometimes.
I know things have never been very good
between you two.
Yes, I used to weep salt tears about it,
but I've done with tears forever, okay?
I can't hold Mom's hand for you
because I won't be here either.
What do you mean?
I've decided I've far too much talent
to stay buried here in Aussie land.
So I'm taking myself off to London
- After Phaedra is finished, of course.
- London?
That means I'll get to see you.
Dane, I've always taken care of you.
You surely can't expect to get along
without me now, can you?
I love you.
I couldn't sleep either.
What time does your plane leave
from Sydney?
Not till late tomorrow.
Do you want to fly down with Uncle Jack
and see me off?
It's freezing in here.
You'll catch your death.
- Mom.
- Come on.
I've always loved your bed
the way it smells of you.
Remember when I used to
come in on the cold mornings?
Jussie would sort of
lurk about in the doorway
half in and half out.
I wonder if you realize
how much she needed you.
You've always been so different
from one another.
I guess I thought
she never really needed me.
She did and does.
She loves you every bit as much as I do.
I'm glad she's going to be near you.
We've got it all planned out.
Every year when I get time off
from the seminary
we're gonna tour and visit
a different country together
then fly home for Christmas.
It's not as if I'm going away forever, is it?
There's so much I wanted to say to you.
To tell you
that you've brought my life joy
and meaning in ways you can never know.
It hurts to leave you.
- I wish you could understand.
- But I do.
And it's that
that I most wanted to say to you.
I can't share your love of God.
But I do understand your need
to give your life to him.
Because each of us has within us
something that just won't be denied.
Something to which we are driven
even though it makes us
scream aloud to die.
Has it been like that for you, Mom?
Dane, goodbye.
- Cappuccino for you.
- Thanks.
How do you do?
I'm Rainer Hartheim. Welcome to Rome.
You've a terrific approach, Mr. Hartman,
but I won't be needing a tour guide.
You are Miss O'Neill, Dane's sister?
Yes. Is Dane all right?
He was supposed to meet me
at the station.
He was also to leave a message here,
saying that I would bring you along.
- Along?
- To tea with Cardinal de Bricassart.
Shall we?
Why not? You look safe enough.
Do I?
How very disappointing.
I must say you don't look at all like Dane.
So they tell me. Herr Hartman
Hartheim. Rainer Moerling Hartheim.
All that?
- Impressive.
- Isn't it? I chose it myself.
Who are you, exactly?
An old friend of Cardinal de Bricassart.
I see.
Do all his friends have those little flags
on their fenders?
I'm a member
of the West German parliament.
I make a point of visiting the Cardinal
whenever I'm in Rome.
Remarkable man, the Cardinal.
A matter of taste, I suppose.
You're not like your brother, are you?
No, I'm the comic relief.
Sorry.
It's just it's always been rather difficult
measuring up to Dane
his being so Christlike and all.
I gather it's a case of sibling rivalry.
No. None.
Strange, isn't it?
By rights, I should resent him terribly
but, in fact, I've always adored him.
Good Lord! Do you always do this?
What?
Go about worming intimate facts
from perfect strangers.
Whenever possible.
And I doubt that you're perfect.
Here we are.
Crikey!
I always wanted to play the Vatican.
The latest reports from our UN observer
are not encouraging.
Your Eminence.
My dear Justine, you disappoint me.
Just rendering unto Caesar,
Your Eminence.
Besides, I'm determined
not to embarrass Dane.
I won't hold you to it.
Come, I want you
to meet Cardinal Contini-Verchese.
Really, darling,
must I meet the entire team?
Miss O'Neill
Dane tells me you are an actress.
In London, yes.
How exciting.
What play are you doing now?
I'll start Joan of Arc in January.
I see.
No doubt you will be quite splendid.
After this, I'll be better.
I get the feeling that our little worid
antagonizes you, my dear.
No, I suppose it shouldn't, really.
One doesn't often get such good theater.
It's very male, though. Isn't it?
I mean, with the exception
of the Virgin Mary
women are relegated to the cheap seats,
in the upper balcony.
Yeah, but you are forgetting
that we call that upper balcony
Il Paradiso.
Paradise.
Your Eminence.
- I'll see you when I return.
- Thank you, Your Eminence.
- You are looking forward to your holiday?
- Cardinal, it's been a fascinating afternoon.
You Cleary women.
Forever pitting yourselves
against God and the Church.
Our fate, perhaps.
Or maybe it's hereditary
a sort of bad seed.
There's little question
you're descended from Mary Carson.
And from your mother.
Much as Mom might wish otherwise.
Fortunately, we Cleary women have Dane
to pray for our redemption.
You feel very protective toward Dane,
don't you?
And, I think, rather fearing for him
here among we red-robed vultures.
Even I wouldn't have put it
that uncharitably
but it's pretty fast company
for a boy whose only ambition
is to give his soul to God.
Touché, my dear.
You're very young to be so cynical.
And so wise.
- Rainer will take care of you.
- How very disappointing.
A bit of fresh pasta, a green salad.
Exquisite.
Here.
When you suggested dinner, I had some
mad idea we'd end up in a restaurant.
An understandable error.
Grazie, Giovanni.
I thought you lived in Germany.
Yes, but I'm often here in Rome
so I keep this place.
I've another in London, as well.
I seem to need to make a home
for myself wherever I go.
Perhaps because I was orphaned
as a child.
Bit of a posh life for an orphan,
wouldn't you say?
If you're all that domesticated,
why not marry?
I did, once. But for the worst of reasons.
I'm sure I'll never marry,
not for any reason.
No? But why?
For starters, there's my work.
You're saying an actress can't marry?
Some can, of course.
But each of us has only so much to give,
haven't we?
And just imagine
on the stage
I can commit suicide or murder.
I can go mad, sacrifice myself for love
save men or ruin them.
Compared to all that
I suppose marriage does sound rather dull.
You seem to have forgotten
that there is an excellent reason to marry.
Falling in love.
That.
Of course that. What could be better?
Almost anything, I think.
The truth is, if you love people,
they kill you.
If you need people, they kill you.
So I don't want to need anyone, not ever.
Very sad.
It's what I want most of all.
Then I hope you find it.
You're awfully certain about things,
aren't you?
Why not wait and give life a chance
see what develops?
Nothing will, I can assure you.
What about friendship?
At least is that allowed?
Only if you feed me. I'm starving.
Then you'd best start doing your share,
hadn't you?
So, my Ralph
the children of the rose.
I very much like this Justine.
Most entertaining.
But one wonders
what hurts could be so deep
that she must make such an effort
to keep them hidden.
Rather sad.
It is easier to be fond of Dane.
You're very
taken with Dane
aren't you?
Sometimes when I watch him
it's like watching my own self at his age.
We'd best get you in bed.
My beautiful bed, in which I shall die
one of these fine days.
And not even a pope's bed.
But there still may be time
for you.
Now, Vittorio.
Good evening.
Will you tell Herr Hartheim that I'm here?
I'm sorry I'm late. Bloody London traffic.
How are you?
How's Germany? How's Dane?
I'm fine, Germany's cold
and Dane's dying to see you in Rome
when your play's finished here.
Herzen.
You look marvelous.
Thanks, but the black's
to match my mood.
I trust you've seen my reviews.
I doubt this evening will cheer you up.
It's all politicians and diplomats.
God.
- And their little wives.
- Lf you'd rather not
Nonsense, darling. I've been
playing hostess to you for three years.
I shall do so again, brilliantly.
What are friends for?
- You're sure?
- Lay on, Macduff.
Good evening.
How delightful to see you again.
You just look stunning, simply stunning.
Regarding the election
of the new Roman pontiff
we, of the College of Cardinals
in conclave
do promise and swear
that we will most religiously
keep secret all those things
which in any manner
pertain to that election.
Dane, how good to find you here.
You must've been waiting
a very long time.
- Are you all right, Father?
- Quite all right.
Just rather hot work
this business of electing a pope.
But I think we've done very well.
I think he may surprise them all
our new Pope John.
Not the most conventional of choices.
I must say you're very contained
for a seminary student
who's just witnessed
one of the worid's greatest events.
There have been rumors
That I was among those favored
for election?
Yes, I know.
The strange thing is I feel no regret.
It's a pity
Vittorio couldn't hear me say that.
He had such a taste for irony.
You still miss him very much, don't you?
Very much.
I find it appropriate
that I should have his quarters now.
I've always followed in his footsteps.
He was almost like a father to me.
As you are to me.
You make me very happy, Dane.
If I have no regrets about today
it's because my ambitions now
are all for you.
I must admit to hoping that you'll
follow in my footsteps in the Church.
I've a long way to go
before I'm even made a priest
and I'm far from knowing yet
how best I may serve God.
Of course.
But I already see such promise in you.
What more could I want
than to help you all I can?
Rain, you're supposed to herd
the poor beasts, not scare them to death.
I thought you were a leader.
Of men, Herzen, of men.
Don't listen to her.
You can have a place here anytime.
I can see it now:
Rainer Hartheim, head cocky.
Cocky? What's a cocky?
Maybe you should accept Uncle Bob's
job offer for the sake of the outfit.
It's awfully dashing on you.
Do you know I've never seen you
in anything but a suit and tie?
I've always been dashing.
You just never noticed.
I'm so glad you came home with me.
Thank you.
Justine, I've already told you.
I'm not going to Dane's ordination
and I'd rather not discuss it further.
I've come 12,000 miles
and interrupted my work to discuss it.
Pity you've made such a sacrifice
for something that needn't concern you.
Dane's counting on you to come.
Surely you can understand that.
I wish you'd let it alone!
I'll talk with Dane when he comes home
for Christmas.
What if he doesn't come?
He won't be a seminary student with
long vacations any more. He'll be a priest.
He'll come.
Mother, I don't think you understand.
There's no place as exciting for Dane
right now as Rome
especially with Vatican II going on,
and Ralph the aide to Pope John.
Ralph will see that Dane has a part of it.
Justine, please! I have my reasons.
Have you, Mom?
I hope they're damn good ones.
I hope they're worth hurting Dane
as deeply as you're going to.
You're really something, Mother.
If it were my ordination,
I would understand it.
But Dane's supposedly the one you love.
God!
I'm sorry, Mr. Hartheim.
I'm afraid my daughter and I
never understood one another very well.
And I'm sorry you've come 12,000 miles
for nothing, too.
My reasons for coming
are rather different.
I've heard about Drogheda for years
from Dane and Justine
and from the Cardinal.
I am sorry that you will
miss the ordination, Mrs. O'Neill.
The Cardinal speaks of you so very often.
And he has been quite ill,
you know, this winter.
I hope that you will
give my love to Ralph
and to my son for me.
I've never been very clear
about your relationship to Ralph.
I was a young soldier when I met him
quite by accident.
I had come to St. Peter's to pray.
I ended up talking with him
through the night
all about my hopes for Hitler's downfall
my dreams of rebuilding
a new and better Germany
single-handedly, of course.
You've certainly been
a part of that effort, haven't you?
At a cost, yes.
I'm afraid I used my wife
rather badly in the process.
I was quite the ambitious idealist, you see.
I thought such noble ends as mine
justified any means.
When Cardinal de Bricassart
learned of this
he told me something which has been
very useful to me since.
That there are no ambitions noble enough
to justify breaking someone's heart.
He said that, did he?
Yes.
You were kind to your wife in the end.
You got rid of her.
Whereas Jussie can keep you
because she'll never let you
get under her skin.
Unfortunately, you may be correct.
I'm no longer an idealist, Mrs. Cleary.
But I do still have some dreams.
And I have patience.
The Father anointed Jesus Christ as Lord
through the power of the Holy Spirit.
May Jesus keep you worthy
of offering sacrifice to God
and of sanctifying the Christian assembly.
Peace be with you.
And also with you.
And also with you.
Where are you, Herzen?
Just Rather a day, what?
Thanks for being such a dear
with the uncles all week.
Is Dane traveling back
to Australia with them?
No, he's gonna spend
a few days in Greece first.
He always wanted to do that.
I think you are
rather disappointed about Dane's decisión.
No, not really. No.
It'll thrill Mom at least.
Dane is what she's always wanted.
I never was, God knows.
But then I assume you got the picture
when we were there.
One can hardly blame Mom,
given the way I am.
That doesn't sound like you.
And I would have you no other way.
I was just your age
when, as a priest, I came to Gilly.
But for such different reasons.
I was forced to go,
as penance for my pride.
You choose it, out of humility and love.
But it is very difficult
because I love you, too.
You once said to me that
becoming a priest for you wasn't a gift
but something hard-won
by sacrifice and suffering.
I understand that better, leaving you.
It is a sacrifice
giving up all the things
you could have made possible for me here.
But I think I will feel closer to God
and better able to do his work
in a simpler place.
And in choosing Gilly,
I can make my mother happy.
She deserves that.
Yes.
She deserves that.
You know, I had great hopes for you
great ambitions
that you would go as far as i
in the Church. Perhaps even farther.
But you have made me see
what I only glimpsed long ago
about my ambitions for myself.
That they had less to do with God's will
than with my own.
The truth is
you have always been far beyond me.
I'm so proud of you, Dane.
I doubt that a man could be prouder
of his own son.
Thank you, Father.
I hope I may be truly worthy of that.
But I wonder
if the time comes
when I must truly suffer
can I accept it?
Can I put myself into God's hands
and not fight his will?
You must never doubt it.
Because you are that rarest of things:
A truly holy man.
You don't really know how I am.
You only know what I let you see.
- You insult me.
- I don't mean to.
But I'm a better actress than you think.
I'm not about to let you
into the dark recesses of my mind
and risk scaring you away.
- I need you too much.
- Not only insulting, but selfish.
We knew that, didn't we?
Anyway, I'm not disappointed about Dane.
I think he's mad to give up Rome
but Drogheda's home to him.
He's always belonged to it
in a way I never could.
That's no failing on your part.
If you don't belong to Drogheda,
it's because it simply isn't you.
Sometimes I wonder where I do belong.
Sometimes I feel a little lost.
Usually, in fact,
unless I'm actually performing.
Do you think there's such a thing
as off-stage fright?
It's very simple, Justine.
- You belong with me.
- Oh, really? In Bonn?
Do grow up.
What do you think,
I'd want to turn you into a Hausfrau?
Obviously for people like us
it isn't a question of place,
it's a question of love.
I've grown to love you very much.
I think you love me, too.
It could never work.
I told you that from the first.
- But, Herzen
- No, I can't.
You'll get it wet.
"As flies to wanton boys
are we to the gods.
"They kill us for their sport."
- Poor Lear.
- Poor me, you mean.
Fancy me in the role of Cordelia.
How's the water?
It's a pretty strong undertow,
but it's wonderful.
Communing with mighty Neptune.
Really, Father O'Neill, too pagan of you.
You'll be excommunicated.
Your soul's already in mortal danger
as it is.
Don't tell me you haven't noticed
those two dying for you.
He's cute. I wonder how we can meet him.
They'd be after you like a shark
if I weren't protecting you.
I'll tell you something
I have noticed, sister.
I've noticed that you haven't
given me a straight answer
as to what you're doing here
in Greece with me.
Now, you can tell me anything, my child.
Remember, I am a priest.
All right.
It's Rain.
- He wants me to marry him.
- That's wonderful!
Jus, I hoped it would be
something like this.
You did?
The man's been in love with you for ages.
But I can't marry him.
I've always said I'd never marry anyone.
This is hardly the time
to stand on principle.
I thought you'd understand at least.
- I'm sorry. But if you love him
- But that's just it!
I don't think I can love anyone.
I don't think I've got it in me.
You know how it's always been with me.
I know you've always
been able to love me.
You're my brother.
Besides, if I love you it's because
you've always accepted me, warts and all.
Because I'm such a saint?
Isn't that how it goes? Saint Dane?
Look, Jus.
All our lives, you've always known
that I was the favorite.
A lot of sisters might have hated me for it.
But you never gave me anything but love.
That's because
I always used to deny it
when you said that Mom didn't love you.
Always used to imply
that somehow if you just tried harder
everything would be all right.
Because I couldn't bear the thought
of Mom being unloving.
I couldn't stand the guilt
of getting your share as well as mine.
The truth is that Mom didn't love you
the way she should.
She didn't show you the love
you should have had.
I know it's hard for her, knowing that.
It isn't that you can't love.
It is that you've been made to feel
that you don't deserve to be loved.
But you do.
You do.
Jussie! Are you coming?
Where were you all morning?
Rain's coming. Right now.
Really? I'll be right up.
Go commune with
mighty Neptune awhile, all right?
It'll be all right.
Hello.
Where's our new Father O'Neill?
I sent him out for a dip.
He'll be up later.
You see how easily
you command the fates of your men.
I hardly think I commanded you to come.
But you must admit your wire
was much too intriguing to resist.
"Did you mean it, Rain?"
Did I mean what, Herzen?
That you love me.
Is that what all this is about?
Why else would you have come?
Why else?
To salvage what I could of friendship.
I'll settle for that, if I must.
Look, sport, you're the one who changed
the status quo between us, not I.
And you want what now,
an apology for that?
If I offered one, you'd throw me out
like a smelly, old rag.
- I can do that yet, mate.
- But you won't
because you need me
to keep you on the hop.
- Is that why you came?
- What do you think?
I think you're a prize sadist.
Say you love me again, you big kraut,
and watch me spit in your eye!
And you would, too. You'd love to have
another chance to humiliate me
for the unpardonable sin
of finding you worth loving.
You can't stand it, can you?
It goes against everything
you believe about yourself.
God, Rain.
I'm sorry.
I was going to tell you that I love you
and that I want you.
I'm such an ass.
I had this marvelous seduction scene
all planned.
Poor darling.
You could still show me
how it would've gone.
What?
Look, he just went in.
- Let's meet him, okay?
- Okay, let's go.
We've got him all to ourselves.
It's cold.
Let me up here.
Careful! The undertow is strong.
- Help!
- All right, hang on! I'm coming!
I don't deserve to be this happy.
Why didn't all this happen years ago?
Because
you weren't ready.
- I'm not sure I am now.
- Too late.
Where are you going?
I bought you a Christmas present
in the market.
Just in case you did come.
- What is it?
- Nothing.
Just some people on the beach.
I expect we'll hear all about it from Dane.
I'm so glad you're here.
It wouldn't be Christmas
without Anne and Luddie.
How many have we missed
in the last 20 years?
There.
- Watch your step.
- What do you think?
I think it's going to be
the best Christmas ever.
Luddie, you say that every year.
- I'll get it.
- Thank you, Judy.
You know, Luddie may be right this time.
I did think of having a do
for the whole district.
But I'm not certain Dane would want that.
I think it's best to wait
and talk to him first.
He said so little in his letter.
Mind you, Bob and Jack did say he seemed
very happy about coming home.
You don't seem quite as thrilled
as I thought you would be, somehow.
Anne, I am.
Of course, I am.
It's just that
I hope it's what he really wants.
I hope he's not just doing it for my sake.
When he went to Ralph, I vowed
that I would never try to influence him.
Is that the reason you didn't go to Rome?
Which, by the way,
I personally haven't forgiven you for.
I know. Nor has Jussie, or the boys
or Mom.
Although I think at least
she understands it.
It's just that
I felt it would be tempting fate to go.
- Or tempting God.
- Meggie, how absurd!
I know.
Fancy what Jussie would make of it.
But I fought God so hard for so long
that I wanted to show him finally
that I could accept the fact
that Dane and Ralph are his not mine.
I sacrificed the chance to go
in hopes of making peace with God at last.
Don't question why Dane is coming home.
Take it as a sign of peace.
What's the matter?
Mom?
What is it?
Dane is dead.
No.
He's coming home.
Jussie telephoned.
He drowned.
He was trying to save somebody.
He's dead.
Father
we entrust unto you
Dane
whom we loved so much in this life.
Welcome him into Paradise
where there will be
no more sorrow or pain
no more weeping
but only peace and joy with your Son
and with the Holy Spirit
forever
- And ever.
- Amen.
The Lord is merciful and kind
and rich in mercy.
Man's days are like the grass.
He flowers like the flowers of the field.
The wind blows
and he is gone
and his place never sees him again.
How will we live without him?
We will.
Your God gathers in the good ones
and leaves the living
to those of us who fail.
Your greedy God.
There is no peace with him.
Meggie, no. No more.
What can God do to me now?
What more do I have to lose?
Your soul.
Your heart.
Your love.
The love you've always had within you,
despite everything.
Despite everything but this.
I loved you, Ralph.
I never stopped loving you
despite everything.
Despite the fact that you were never mine.
What part of you I got, I had to steal.
But that part was the best.
Because that part was Dane.
Dane was your son, too.
Yours and mine.
It isn't true.
He was your son, Ralph.
And you couldn't see it.
Couldn't see that he was just
a more perfect versión of you.
Couldn't love me enough to see that
I would never have gone back
to Luke or to any man after you.
And now you say it isn't true.
Poor Ralph.
Poor Cardinal de Bricassart.
It's no good, Rain. Let's just not
talk about it anymore, all right?
Mrs. O'Neill, your mother and I
would like to speak with you.
Please.
Meggie, Jussie's in a very bad way.
She's got it into her head somehow
that Dane's death is her fault.
She insists she must give up
the theater and me
and stay here with you on Drogheda.
She won't listen to us
but if you will help her see that
My son is dead!
How can you ask anything of me now?
Yes, Dane is dead and we also mourn him.
But you still have a daughter.
She needs you very much right now.
She needs to know
that you don't blame her
so that she can take up her life again.
Mr. Hartheim, I don't know
why she feels to blame.
But Jussie has never listened
to anything that I had to say.
She feels to blame because
she sent Dane off swimming
so that she could be alone with me.
I love her, Mrs. O'Neill.
And Dane died at the very moment
she finally understood
that she could be loved.
If you won't help her, she'll waste
her life away here on Drogheda
trying to make it up to you
for living while he died.
Mr. Hartheim, I should
like to speak to my daughter alone.
0f course.
For years I've sat by and watched you
do all the things that I did.
Crying for a man
that you could never have.
Giving all your love to his son,
the way I gave mine to Frank.
Neglecting Jussie, as I neglected you.
You've lived your life as I did mine.
Driven, always driven!
I don't know, and never will
how much of our lives
we're allowed to choose
how much is decided
long before we're born.
But looking back,
I see now choices I could've made
and didn't!
Even after Paddy died.
Even after I lost Frank.
I might have asked your forgiveness
years ago:
But it's too late for me now, Meggie.
But it's not too late for you.
And it's not too late for Jussie,
if you'll help her!
I've always loved this place.
When I was little,
I used to make believe it was a stage.
My very own stage, where I was the star.
I never knew that.
No, you wouldn't.
No one did.
Except Dane.
Poor Dane.
I'd go on and on, and he'd applaud.
When I was little, I thought God lived here.
I'd steal in very quietly,
hoping to catch him out.
So I could see him.
He was always too quick for me.
Do you know
I learned to dance on this very floor?
Your father taught me.
He laughed because I didn't know how,
even though I was 20-something.
Did you ever love him, Mom?
Not enough to marry him.
And I did wrong to marry him, Jussie.
And no matter
what he may have done to me
he wasn't what I wanted,
and I couldn't love him for what he was.
Jussie, I've made you pay
so dearly for being his child
and for so many of my other sins
that you know nothing of
And now you think you have to pay
for Dane's death, too.
He was coming back to you.
- Lf it weren't for me, you'd have him back.
- Jussie, no.
I sent him out there all alone.
I didn't go with him.
- He was drowning, and Rain and I were
- Jussie, it wasn't your fault!
Dane wasn't a child.
He wasn't your responsibility.
I don't know why
you always thought he was.
Because he was.
I did love Dane. Truly I did.
But I was always afraid that something
bad was going to happen to him.
Because I used to wish
that he were gone
so you would love me instead.
I asked what more God could do to me.
Now I know.
Jussie, you must listen to me.
I do love you. I always have.
But I've always hurt you.
And I'm not going to hurt you now
by pretending that I didn't love Dane more.
I did.
But you're no more to blame for that
than you are for his death.
Don't think of staying here on Drogheda.
Please, I need to be
what comfort to you I can.
It cannot comfort me to watch you
hand me your life like a sacrifice.
What I need most is your forgiveness.
You have your work.
And you have the love of a man
who will never break your heart.
That's more than
most of us get in a lifetime.
Don't give it up for anything.
And least of all for me.
But how can I leave you here
- Grieving for Dane and
- You must. To give us hope.
A light has gone out.
Not just for me, but for all of us.
We will spend who knows how long
in mourning it.
But if you go, your light can burn for us.
Knowing that
will bring an end to our mourning.
My precious girl.
When we go there'll be no one.
Drogheda will go on with new people.
But there'll be no one left
to remember what it was like for us.
Best go out and see
how dry that grass has got.
I'll come out when I get back.
- Bye, Nana Fee.
- Come back next Christmas if you can.
Always.
Where's Ralph?
He isn't returning to Rome.
He asked that we go on without him.
He's very ill, Mrs. O'Neill.
He asked for you.
Be happy, Jus.
Thank you.
My Meggie.
I knew you'd forgive me.
I knew.
All your life
I've watched you
wage your battles against God.
Yet you were always closer
to his desires for us than i.
In the end
you've always been able to love.
For all you've lost
you've never lost that.
Somewhere in me
I must have known from the very first
that Dane was mine.
But I didn't want to know.
I wanted to be Cardinal de Bricassart
more than I wanted our son.
More than I wanted you.
Of all the wrong I've done
the worst is that I never made a choice
for love.
Half given to you, half given to God
but really given to my own ambition.
I knew it
and I did it anyway.
I told myself it was meant to be.
Long ago
I told you a story, a legend about a bird
that sings only when it dies.
The bird with the thorn in its breast.
You said it pays its life for that one song.
But the whole worid stills to listen.
And God in his Heaven smiles.
Driven to the thorn, with no knowledge
of the dying to come.
When we press the thorn to our breast
we know
we understand
and still we do it.
SOFTITLER
English
Part 7
How are you?
How's Germany? How's Dane?
I'm fine, Germany's cold
and Dane's dying to see you in Rome
when your play's finished here.
Herzen.
You look marvelous.
Thanks, but the black's
to match my mood.
I trust you've seen my reviews.
I doubt this evening will cheer you up.
It's all politicians and diplomats.
God.
- And their little wives.
- Lf you'd rather not
Nonsense, darling. I've been
playing hostess to you for three years.
I shall do so again, brilliantly.
What are friends for?
- You're sure?
- Lay on, Macduff.
Good evening.
How delightful to see you again.
You just look stunning, simply stunning.
Regarding the election
of the new Roman pontiff
we, of the College of Cardinals
in conclave
do promise and swear
that we will most religiously
keep secret all those things
which in any manner
pertain to that election.
Dane, how good to find you here.
You must've been waiting
a very long time.
- Are you all right, Father?
- Quite all right.
Just rather hot work
this business of electing a pope.
But I think we've done very well.
I think he may surprise them all
our new Pope John.
Not the most conventional of choices.
I must say you're very contained
for a seminary student
who's just witnessed
one of the worid's greatest events.
There have been rumors
That I was among those favored
for election?
Yes, I know.
The strange thing is I feel no regret.
It's a pity
Vittorio couldn't hear me say that.
He had such a taste for irony.
You still miss him very much, don't you?
Very much.
I find it appropriate
that I should have his quarters now.
As you are to me.
You make me very happy, Dane.
If I have no regrets about today
it's because my ambitions now
are all for you.
I must admit to hoping that you'll
follow in my footsteps in the Church.
I've a long way to go
before I'm even made a priest
and I'm far from knowing yet
how best I may serve God.
Of course.
But I already see such promise in you.
What more could I want
than to help you all I can?
Rain, you're supposed to herd
the poor beasts, not scare them to death.
I thought you were a leader.
Of men, Herzen, of men.
Don't listen to her.
You can have a place here anytime.
I can see it now:
Rainer Hartheim, head cocky.
Cocky? What's a cocky?
Maybe you should accept Uncle Bob's
job offer for the sake of the outfit.
It's awfully dashing on you.
Do you know I've never seen you
in anything but a suit and tie?
I've always been dashing.
You just never noticed.
I'm so glad you came home with me.
Thank you.
Justine, I've already told you.
I'm not going to Dane's ordination
and I'd rather not discuss it further.
I've come 12,000 miles
and interrupted my work to discuss it.
Pity you've made such a sacrifice
for something that needn't concern you.
Dane's counting on you to come.
Surely you can understand that.
I wish you'd let it alone!
I'll talk with Dane when he comes home
for Christmas.
What if he doesn't come?
He won't be a seminary student with
long vacations any more. He'll be a priest.
He'll come.
Mother, I don't think you understand.
There's no place as exciting for Dane
right now as Rome
especially with Vatican II going on,
and Ralph the aide to Pope John.
Ralph will see that Dane has a part of it.
Justine, please! I have my reasons.
Have you, Mom?
I hope they're damn good ones.
I hope they're worth hurting Dane
as deeply as you're going to.
You're really something, Mother.
If it were my ordination,
I would understand it.
But Dane's supposedly the one you love.
God!
I'm sorry, Mr. Hartheim.
I'm afraid my daughter and I
never understood one another very well.
And I'm sorry you've come 12,000 miles
for nothing, too.
My reasons for coming
are rather different.
I've heard about Drogheda for years
from Dane and Justine
and from the Cardinal.
I am sorry that you will
miss the ordination, Mrs. O'Neill.
The Cardinal speaks of you so very often.
And he has been quite ill,
you know, this winter.
I hope that you will
give my love to Ralph
and to my son for me.
I've never been very clear
about your relationship to Ralph.
I was a young soldier when I met him
quite by accident.
I had come to St. Peter's to pray.
I ended up talking with him
through the night
all about my hopes for Hitler's downfall
my dreams of rebuilding
a new and better Germany
single-handedly, of course.
You've certainly been
a part of that effort, haven't you?
At a cost, yes.
I'm afraid I used my wife
rather badly in the process.
I was quite the ambitious idealist, you see.
I thought such noble ends as mine
justified any means.
When Cardinal de Bricassart
learned of this
he told me something which has been
very useful to me since.
That there are no ambitions noble enough
to justify breaking someone's heart.
He said that, did he?
Yes.
You were kind to your wife in the end.
You got rid of her.
Whereas Jussie can keep you
because she'll never let you
get under her skin.
Unfortunately, you may be correct.
I'm no longer an idealist, Mrs. Cleary.
But I do still have some dreams.
And I have patience.
The Father anointed Jesus Christ as Lord
through the power of the Holy Spirit.
May Jesus keep you worthy
of offering sacrifice to God
and of sanctifying the Christian assembly.
Peace be with you.
And also with you.
And also with you.
Where are you, Herzen?
Just Rather a day, what?
Thanks for being such a dear
with the uncles all week.
Is Dane traveling back
to Australia with them?
No, he's gonna spend
a few days in Greece first.
He always wanted to do that.
I think you are
rather disappointed about Dane's decisión.
No, not really. No.
It'll thrill Mom at least.
Dane is what she's always wanted.
I never was, God knows.
But then I assume you got the picture
when we were there.
One can hardly blame Mom,
given the way I am.
That doesn't sound like you.
And I would have you no other way.
I was just your age
when, as a priest, I came to Gilly.
But for such different reasons.
I was forced to go,
as penance for my pride.
You choose it, out of humility and love.
But it is very difficult
because I love you, too.
You once said to me that
becoming a priest for you wasn't a gift
but something hard-won
by sacrifice and suffering.
I understand that better, leaving you.
It is a sacrifice
giving up all the things
you could have made possible for me here.
But I think I will feel closer to God
and better able to do his work
in a simpler place.
And in choosing Gilly,
I can make my mother happy.
She deserves that.
Yes.
She deserves that.
You know, I had great hopes for you
great ambitions
that you would go as far as i
in the Church. Perhaps even farther.
But you have made me see
what I only glimpsed long ago
about my ambitions for myself.
That they had less to do with God's will
than with my own.
The truth is
you have always been far beyond me.
I'm so proud of you, Dane.
I doubt that a man could be prouder
of his own son.
Thank you, Father.
I hope I may be truly worthy of that.
But I wonder
if the time comes
when I must truly suffer
can I accept it?
Can I put myself into God's hands
and not fight his will?
You must never doubt it.
Because you are that rarest of things:
A truly holy man.
You don't really know how I am.
You only know what I let you see.
- You insult me.
- I don't mean to.
But I'm a better actress than you think.
I'm not about to let you
into the dark recesses of my mind
and risk scaring you away.
- I need you too much.
- Not only insulting, but selfish.
We knew that, didn't we?
Anyway, I'm not disappointed about Dane.
I think he's mad to give up Rome
but Drogheda's home to him.
He's always belonged to it
in a way I never could.
That's no failing on your part.
If you don't belong to Drogheda,
it's because it simply isn't you.
Sometimes I wonder where I do belong.
Sometimes I feel a little lost.
Usually, in fact,
unless I'm actually performing.
Do you think there's such a thing
as off-stage fright?
It's very simple, Justine.
- You belong with me.
- Oh, really? In Bonn?
Do grow up.
What do you think,
I'd want to turn you into a Hausfrau?
Obviously for people like us
it isn't a question of place,
it's a question of love.
I've grown to love you very much.
I think you love me, too.
It could never work.
I told you that from the first.
- But, Herzen
- No, I can't.
You'll get it wet.
"As flies to wanton boys
are we to the gods.
"They kill us for their sport."
- Poor Lear.
- Poor me, you mean.
Fancy me in the role of Cordelia.
How's the water?
It's a pretty strong undertow,
but it's wonderful.
Communing with mighty Neptune.
Really, Father O'Neill, too pagan of you.
You'll be excommunicated.
Your soul's already in mortal danger
as it is.
Don't tell me you haven't noticed
those two dying for you.
He's cute. I wonder how we can meet him.
They'd be after you like a shark
if I weren't protecting you.
I'll tell you something
I have noticed, sister.
I've noticed that you haven't
given me a straight answer
as to what you're doing here
in Greece with me.
Now, you can tell me anything, my child.
Remember, I am a priest.
All right.
It's Rain.
- He wants me to marry him.
- That's wonderful!
Jus, I hoped it would be
something like this.
You did?
The man's been in love with you for ages.
But I can't marry him.
I've always said I'd never marry anyone.
This is hardly the time
to stand on principle.
I thought you'd understand at least.
- I'm sorry. But if you love him
- But that's just it!
I don't think I can love anyone.
I don't think I've got it in me.
You know how it's always been with me.
I know you've always
been able to love me.
You're my brother.
Besides, if I love you it's because
you've always accepted me, warts and all.
Because I'm such a saint?
Isn't that how it goes? Saint Dane?
Look, Jus.
All our lives, you've always known
that I was the favorite.
A lot of sisters might have hated me for it.
But you never gave me anything but love.
That's because
I always used to deny it
when you said that Mom didn't love you.
Always used to imply
that somehow if you just tried harder
everything would be all right.
Because I couldn't bear the thought
of Mom being unloving.
I couldn't stand the guilt
of getting your share as well as mine.
The truth is that Mom didn't love you
the way she should.
She didn't show you the love
you should have had.
I know it's hard for her, knowing that.
It isn't that you can't love.
It is that you've been made to feel
that you don't deserve to be loved.
But you do.
You do.
Jussie! Are you coming?
Where were you all morning?
Rain's coming. Right now.
Really? I'll be right up.
Go commune with
mighty Neptune awhile, all right?
It'll be all right.
Hello.
Where's our new Father O'Neill?
I sent him out for a dip.
He'll be up later.
You see how easily
you command the fates of your men.
I hardly think I commanded you to come.
But you must admit your wire
was much too intriguing to resist.
"Did you mean it, Rain?"
Did I mean what, Herzen?
That you love me.
Is that what all this is about?
Why else would you have come?
Why else?
To salvage what I could of friendship.
I'll settle for that, if I must.
Look, sport, you're the one who changed
the status quo between us, not I.
And you want what now,
an apology for that?
If I offered one, you'd throw me out
like a smelly, old rag.
- I can do that yet, mate.
- But you won't
because you need me
to keep you on the hop.
- Is that why you came?
- What do you think?
I think you're a prize sadist.
Say you love me again, you big kraut,
and watch me spit in your eye!
And you would, too. You'd love to have
another chance to humiliate me
for the unpardonable sin
of finding you worth loving.
You can't stand it, can you?
It goes against everything
you believe about yourself.
God, Rain.
I'm sorry.
I was going to tell you that I love you
and that I want you.
I'm such an ass.
I had this marvelous seduction scene
all planned.
Poor darling.
You could still show me
how it would've gone.
What?
Look, he just went in.
- Let's meet him, okay?
- Okay, let's go.
We've got him all to ourselves.
It's cold.
Let me up here.
Careful! The undertow is strong.
- Help!
- All right, hang on! I'm coming!
I don't deserve to be this happy.
Why didn't all this happen years ago?
Because
you weren't ready.
- I'm not sure I am now.
- Too late.
Where are you going?
I bought you a Christmas present
in the market.
Just in case you did come.
- What is it?
- Nothing.
Just some people on the beach.
I expect we'll hear all about it from Dane.
I'm so glad you're here.
It wouldn't be Christmas
without Anne and Luddie.
How many have we missed
in the last 20 years?
There.
- Watch your step.
- What do you think?
I think it's going to be
the best Christmas ever.
Luddie, you say that every year.
- I'll get it.
- Thank you, Judy.
You know, Luddie may be right this time.
I did think of having a do
for the whole district.
But I'm not certain Dane would want that.
I think it's best to wait
and talk to him first.
He said so little in his letter.
Mind you, Bob and Jack did say he seemed
very happy about coming home.
You don't seem quite as thrilled
as I thought you would be, somehow.
Anne, I am.
Of course, I am.
It's just that
I hope it's what he really wants.
I hope he's not just doing it for my sake.
When he went to Ralph, I vowed
that I would never try to influence him.
Is that the reason you didn't go to Rome?
Which, by the way,
I personally haven't forgiven you for.
I know. Nor has Jussie, or the boys
or Mom.
Although I think at least
she understands it.
It's just that
I felt it would be tempting fate to go.
- Or tempting God.
- Meggie, how absurd!
I know.
Fancy what Jussie would make of it.
But I fought God so hard for so long
that I wanted to show him finally
that I could accept the fact
that Dane and Ralph are his not mine.
I sacrificed the chance to go
in hopes of making peace with God at last.
Don't question why Dane is coming home.
Take it as a sign of peace.
What's the matter?
Mom?
What is it?
Dane is dead.
No.
He's coming home.
Jussie telephoned.
He drowned.
He was trying to save somebody.
He's dead.
Father
we entrust unto you
Dane
whom we loved so much in this life.
Welcome him into Paradise
where there will be
no more sorrow or pain
no more weeping
but only peace and joy with your Son
and with the Holy Spirit
forever
- And ever.
- Amen.
The Lord is merciful and kind
and rich in mercy.
Man's days are like the grass.
He flowers like the flowers of the field.
The wind blows
and he is gone
and his place never sees him again.
How will we live without him?
We will.
Your God gathers in the good ones
and leaves the living
to those of us who fail.
Your greedy God.
There is no peace with him.
Meggie, no. No more.
What can God do to me now?
What more do I have to lose?
Your soul.
Your heart.
Your love.
The love you've always had within you,
despite everything.
Despite everything but this.
I loved you, Ralph.
I never stopped loving you
despite everything.
Despite the fact that you were never mine.
What part of you I got, I had to steal.
But that part was the best.
Because that part was Dane.
Dane was your son, too.
Yours and mine.
It isn't true.
He was your son, Ralph.
And you couldn't see it.
Couldn't see that he was just
a more perfect versión of you.
Couldn't love me enough to see that
I would never have gone back
to Luke or to any man after you.
And now you say it isn't true.
Poor Ralph.
Poor Cardinal de Bricassart.
It's no good, Rain. Let's just not
talk about it anymore, all right?
Mrs. O'Neill, your mother and I
would like to speak with you.
Please.
Meggie, Jussie's in a very bad way.
She's got it into her head somehow
that Dane's death is her fault.
She insists she must give up
the theater and me
and stay here with you on Drogheda.
She won't listen to us
but if you will help her see that
My son is dead!
How can you ask anything of me now?
Yes, Dane is dead and we also mourn him.
But you still have a daughter.
She needs you very much right now.
She needs to know
that you don't blame her
so that she can take up her life again.
Mr. Hartheim, I don't know
why she feels to blame.
But Jussie has never listened
to anything that I had to say.
She feels to blame because
she sent Dane off swimming
so that she could be alone with me.
I love her, Mrs. O'Neill.
And Dane died at the very moment
she finally understood
that she could be loved.
If you won't help her, she'll waste
her life away here on Drogheda
trying to make it up to you
for living while he died.
Mr. Hartheim, I should
like to speak to my daughter alone.
0f course.
For years I've sat by and watched you
do all the things that I did.
Crying for a man
that you could never have.
Giving all your love to his son,
the way I gave mine to Frank.
Neglecting Jussie, as I neglected you.
You've lived your life as I did mine.
Driven, always driven!
I don't know, and never will
how much of our lives
we're allowed to choose
how much is decided
long before we're born.
But looking back,
I see now choices I could've made
and didn't!
Even after Paddy died.
Even after I lost Frank.
I might have asked your forgiveness
years ago:
But it's too late for me now, Meggie.
But it's not too late for you.
And it's not too late for Jussie,
if you'll help her!
I've always loved this place.
When I was little,
I used to make believe it was a stage.
My very own stage, where I was the star.
I never knew that.
No, you wouldn't.
No one did.
Except Dane.
Poor Dane.
I'd go on and on, and he'd applaud.
When I was little, I thought God lived here.
I'd steal in very quietly,
hoping to catch him out.
So I could see him.
He was always too quick for me.
Do you know
I learned to dance on this very floor?
Your father taught me.
He laughed because I didn't know how,
even though I was 20-something.
Did you ever love him, Mom?
Not enough to marry him.
And I did wrong to marry him, Jussie.
And no matter
what he may have done to me
he wasn't what I wanted,
and I couldn't love him for what he was.
Jussie, I've made you pay
so dearly for being his child
and for so many of my other sins
that you know nothing of
And now you think you have to pay
for Dane's death, too.
He was coming back to you.
- Lf it weren't for me, you'd have him back.
- Jussie, no.
I sent him out there all alone.
I didn't go with him.
- He was drowning, and Rain and I were
- Jussie, it wasn't your fault!
Dane wasn't a child.
He wasn't your responsibility.
I don't know why
you always thought he was.
Because he was.
I did love Dane. Truly I did.
But I was always afraid that something
bad was going to happen to him.
Because I used to wish
that he were gone
so you would love me instead.
I asked what more God could do to me.
Now I know.
Jussie, you must listen to me.
I do love you. I always have.
But I've always hurt you.
And I'm not going to hurt you now
by pretending that I didn't love Dane more.
I did.
But you're no more to blame for that
than you are for his death.
Don't think of staying here on Drogheda.
Please, I need to be
what comfort to you I can.
It cannot comfort me to watch you
hand me your life like a sacrifice.
What I need most is your forgiveness.
You have your work.
And you have the love of a man
who will never break your heart.
That's more than
most of us get in a lifetime.
Don't give it up for anything.
And least of all for me.
But how can I leave you here
- Grieving for Dane and
- You must. To give us hope.
A light has gone out.
Not just for me, but for all of us.
We will spend who knows how long
in mourning it.
But if you go, your light can burn for us.
Knowing that
will bring an end to our mourning.
My precious girl.
When we go there'll be no one.
Drogheda will go on with new people.
But there'll be no one left
to remember what it was like for us.
Best go out and see
how dry that grass has got.
I'll come out when I get back.
- Bye, Nana Fee.
- Come back next Christmas if you can.
Always.
Where's Ralph?
He isn't returning to Rome.
He asked that we go on without him.
He's very ill, Mrs. O'Neill.
He asked for you.
Be happy, Jus.
Thank you.
My Meggie.
I knew you'd forgive me.
I knew.
All your life
I've watched you
wage your battles against God.
Yet you were always closer
to his desires for us than i.
In the end
you've always been able to love.
For all you've lost
you've never lost that.
Somewhere in me
I must have known from the very first
that Dane was mine.
But I didn't want to know.
I wanted to be Cardinal de Bricassart
more than I wanted our son.
More than I wanted you.
Of all the wrong I've done
the worst is that I never made a choice
for love.
Half given to you, half given to God
but really given to my own ambition.
I knew it
and I did it anyway.
I told myself it was meant to be.
Long ago
I told you a story, a legend about a bird
that sings only when it dies.
The bird with the thorn in its breast.
You said it pays its life for that one song.
But the whole worid stills to listen.
And God in his Heaven smiles.
Driven to the thorn, with no knowledge
of the dying to come.
When we press the thorn to our breast
we know
we understand
and still we do it.