Friday, September 4, 2009

A Matter of Faith 5/5

Establishing shot of the house as seen through the open barn door. Inside the house, Caroline is using the table to lift herself up to the medicine cabinet. Horse linament? No -- she grabs a smaller bottle and starts chugging. After she takes whatever medicine was in that bottle, Caroline looks over at the table and sees the key to the front door. She slowly works her way across the table and grabs the key. We’re zoomed in on her hand, specifically her wedding ring, as Caroline struggles to reach the door. Once there she unlocks it, opens the door and goes outside. She steps with her right leg and drags her left (which is even grosser looking than before) and grabs some firewood.

Later, Caroline is sitting by the fireplace and is pulling a soaking cloth out of a kettle over the fire. She takes a moment before she throws the hot, wet cloth onto the wound. Caroline probably should have grabbed a wooden spoon to bite into before doing that. She does grab onto the rocking chair as the pain courses through her body. More wedding ring close-ups.

Then Charles, in his red full body underwear, swings on a rope and jumps into a lake. Laura is next to go. Really show? White nightgowns for the girls, the oldest of which is 14? I understand that those were probably the style of the time, but from a filming perspective WHAT WERE YOU THINKING? Anyway, Laura and Pa are laughing and tell Mary to hop in. Mary’s all pensive, saying she doesn’t want her head to go underwater. She asks Pa to make sure he’ll catch her and he promises. He then crosses fingers on both hands and shows them to Laura in a way that even Mary should have been able to see but she doesn’t. And no, she isn’t blind yet. Mary grabs onto the rope, swings, and Pa completely misses his daughter. Mary isn’t too bothered by it, saying it was fun. Laura takes another turn and there is more laughter. Then Pa says they should get cleaned up before Reverend Alden shows up.

Meanwhile, Caroline is contemplating her current predicament. She looks like she has an idea and grabs her Bible. She starts flipping through it as if it were a magazine with a really good recipe for gingerbread. She’s found the passage she was looking for (here it is for those playing along at home). We get a closeup of the passage, then we see Caroline reading the passage aloud, then we get a tighter closeup with a literal spotlight on the phrase “cut it off”. Caroline thinks about it for a moment, then a third closeup with “cut it off” completely filling the frame. But it’s not your foot – it’s your leg. Caroline doesn’t seem to care about that argument, instead looking around the room for the sharpest thing she can find. She gets out of the chair and hobbles over to the drawer to get the dullest knife she can find. Yuck, self-amputation is bad enough but that knife is going to make it take forever. Caroline drags herself back to the Bible to reread the passage, knife in hand.

A babbling brook, some swimming ducks, and the Ingalls family playing Blind Man’s Bluff nearby. Charles is wearing the blindfold as the kids and Jack taunt Pa. Laura sneaks behind him to snap his suspenders while Jack bites at his feet. Did Jack read that passage, too? Charles eventually grabs Carrie and tries to guess who he has. He jokes about feeling whiskers on her face and guesses Mr. Edwards. Cute. Pa takes off the blindfold and says “It’s Carrie! How are you?” What’s funny is it works both as a daddy/daughter moment and a “oh, you’re still on the show?” moment.

Laura and Mary notice a wagon approaching and Charles can see that it is Reverend Alden. The family goes to greet the Reverend and Mrs. Foster. Alden tells Mary and Laura that their Ma’s pies were the first items to sell at the fundraiser bringing in $4. Alden takes some of the credit, boasting about his salesmanship. Uh huh. Charles approaches and asks if Caroline changed her mind about making the trip, but the Reverend thought she left early to join the family. Ruh roh. Charles is surprised that there wasn’t even a note but the reverend tells him he need not worry. Um, actually, that is exactly why you should be concerned. Charles decides to go home to check things out.

Back at the chop shop, Caroline’s leg is still attached but she is preparing for some unpleasantness. She has tied a spoon around her leg and seems ready to do what she believes she has to do. She moves the knife blade into the fire. Then we fade to a Scrubbing Bubbles commercial.

On the road back to the house a neighbor stops Charles. Apparently the Ingalls cow has been causing all sorts of trouble. Charles is surprised that Caroline has come to retrieve the animal. While the neighbor passive-aggressively complains about the cow, Charles decides to pick up the pace to return to the house. When Charles arrives he finds Caroline passed out on the floor. I don’t see any blood, but I also don’t see Caroline’s legs.

That night, Laura looks through the window into the bedroom as Doc Baker examines his patient. She walks over to join Pa and Mary, commenting that she has never seen her Ma that sick. Mary asks if Ma is going to die, but Pa tells her not to talk like that yet saying “God takes care of those that love him.” Laura suggests they all pray with all their hearts before she starts to cry.

Charles goes inside and sees Reverend Alden holding a sleeping Carrie in the rocking chair. The Reverend looks like he has seen better days. Outside, Mary and Laura are comforting one another. In the bedroom, Charles is praying at the foot of the bed while Doc Baker changes out Caroline’s wet cloths.

Sunrise the next day. Yet another closeup of Caroline’s wedding ring as her hand reaches over to touch Charles’s hand. He fell asleep at the foot of the bed, but his wife’s touch wakes him right up. Charles calls for Doc Baker who pronounces the fever broken. He says if Caroline didn’t open the infection when she did she probably would have lost her leg or even died. Instead, the prognosis is significantly better. Doc Baker goes out to tell the girls the good news. The Reverend overhears this as he stands watch outside the house. Doc Baker walks over and confides that he would have had a tough time making the decision that Caroline did. “How she picked exactly the right moment … only God knows,” says Baker. “I’m sure he does,” the Reverend replies. The entire family is now gathered around their recovering Ma. Aww, Deus ex Machina works in mysterious ways.

13 comments:

Amy said...

This blog is great! This particular episode is one I've referenced several times over the years. Thanks for the trip down memory lane.

Unknown said...

I watched the episode today, and I still can't figure out what exactly Caroline did to her leg"!!! My only guess is that she used the hot knife from the fire to burn the infected area, I've also been wondering what she had?!?(either way it was a really good episode)

Mike said...

She took a washcloth out of a pot of boiling water, and put it on her infected leg, to break open the infection, to help it drain. But because she was still sick with a bad fever, and getting worse, she was going to cut her leg off with a large knife that she was heating up in the fire.

But she ended up passing out because of her high fever, and Charles got home just in the knick of time to get her to the doctor.

Mike said...

She took a washcloth out of a pot of boiling water, and put it on her infected leg, to break open the infection, to help it drain. But because she was still sick with a bad fever, and getting worse, she was going to cut her leg off with a large knife that she was heating up in the fire.

But she ended up passing out because of her high fever, and Charles got home just in the knick of time to get her to the doctor.

Ellie Fe said...

Was Caroline intending to cut off her leg? Or was she just going to cut the wound open to drain it? Please help us resolve this argument in our house.

Unknown said...

following
I guess you find out in following episodes if she still has 2 legs?!

Unknown said...

She was cuttint it too let out infection

Anonymous said...

@Mike and Ellie Fe: Caroline definitely just cut the infected wound to drain it. She didn't attempt to cut her whole leg off. We know this because Dr. Baker says that she opened the infection at just the right time. After lancing the wound, she passed out from the pain, which she anticipated would happen; that's why she tied a tourniquet around her leg in advance. The show tries to frighten us with the possibility that she will try to perform a self-amputation, but in the end, we find out that the Bible passage just gave her the idea to "cut off" the infection, not her whole leg.

Little Mouse on the Prairie said...

@Unknown July 20, 2018: I've seen some healthcare professionals say that Caroline had sepsis, colloquially known as "blood poisoning."

Anonymous said...

Your tone is disgusting. Get a life since you don’t have anything better to do with your time than be nasty about one episode on an old show.

Anonymous said...

First off, Caroline cut her leg on a rusty piece of bail wiring. Not a nail as many say.. So 2 types of infection are then possible; tetanus, and or sepsis/blood poisoning. & Carolyn was in no way attempting to cut her leg off. This is proven by the type of knife she gets. It would have been serrated blade had she planned on cutting off her leg as that is what would be needed to get through the bone. She threw the boiling rag on to draw out the infection. The heated blade was to cut the infection out and cauterize the wound. And as doc Baker says, if she didn't cut open the infection when she did she would have lost her leg or her life. These methods are often used in backwoods/off grid surgeries and so on.. also was given some first hand information as I was lucky enough to know a few people who worked on the show at the time. It was my favorite show at the time and many reruns still bring me much happiness and reminiscence of great television!

HMPz said...

Ps- what the heck is really wrong with the swimming scene? That is exactly how it was and Michael Landon was great at keeping it real and being an extremely caring doting man. Everyone has nothing but amazing things to say about him. Nothing was see-through or shown. I think everything was Tastefully done. Some need to stop looking and nitpicking for negative things. Especially on great wholesome programming.

Anonymous said...

Since tetanus generally kills a person it was more likely sepsis