Sinking Of The Titanic And Great Sea Disasters, Logan Marshall [ebook reader with highlight function TXT] 📗
- Author: Logan Marshall
Book online «Sinking Of The Titanic And Great Sea Disasters, Logan Marshall [ebook reader with highlight function TXT] 📗». Author Logan Marshall
Where To Look For Them. Mellers, Who Had Donned A Life-
Preserver, Was Hurled Into The Air, From The Bow Of The Ship
By The Force Of The Explosion, Which He Believed Caused The
Titanic To Part In The Center.
"I Was Not Far From Where Captain Smith Stood On The
Bridge, Giving Full Orders To His Men," Said Mellers. "The
Brave Old Seaman Was Crying, But He Had Stuck Heroically
To The Last. He Did Not Shoot Himself. He Jumped From
The Bridge When He Had Done All He Could. I Heard His Final
Instructions To His Crew, And Recall That His Last Words Were:
`You Have Done Your Duty, Boys. Now Every Man For Himself.'
"I Thought I Was Doomed To Go Down With The Rest. I
Stood On The Deck, Awaiting My Fate, Fearing To Jump From
The Ship. Then Came A Grinding Noise, Followed By Two
Others, And I Was Hurled Into The Deep. Great Waves Engulfed
Me, But I Was Not Drawn Toward The Ship, So That I Believe
There Was Little Suction. I Swam About For More Than One
Hour Before I Was Picked Up By A Boat."
A Faithful Officer
Charles Herbert Lightoller, Previously Mentioned, Stood
By The Ship Until The Last, Working To Get The Passengers
Away, And When It Appeared That He Had Made His Last Trip
He Went Up High On The Officers' Quarters And Made The Best
Dive He Knew How To Make Just As The Ship Plunged Down To
The Depths. This Is An Excerpt From His Testimony Before
The Senate Investigating Committee:
Chapter 7 Pg 53"What Time Did You Leave The Ship?"
"I Didn't Leave It."
"Did It Leave You?"
"Yes, Sir."
Children Shall Hear That Episode Sung In After Years And
His Own Descendants Shall Recite It To Their Bairns. Mr.
Lightoller Acted As An Officer And Gentleman Should, And He
Was Not The Only One.
A Message From A Notorious Gambler
That Jay Yates, Gambler, Confidence Man And Fugitive
From Justice, Known To The Police And In Sporting Circles As
J. H. Rogers, Went Down With The Titanic After Assisting Many
Women Aboard Life-Boats, Became Known When A Note, Written
On A Blank Page Torn From A Diary: Was Delivered To His
Sister. Here Is A Fac-Simile Of The Note:
{Illust.}
This Note Was Given By Rogers To A Woman He Was Helping
Into A Life-Boat. The Woman, Who Signed Herself "Survivor,"
Inclosed The Note With The Following Letter.
"You Will Find Note That Was Handed To Me As I Was Leaving
The Titanic. Am Stranger To This Man, But Think He Was
A Card Player. He Helped Me Aboard A Life-Boat And I Saw
Him Help Others. Before We Were Lowered I Saw Him Jump
Into The Sea. If Picked Up I Did Not Recognize Him On The
Carpathia. I Don't Think He Was Registered On The Ship Under
His Right Name."
Rogers' Mother, Mrs. Mary A. Yates, An Old Woman,
Broke Down When She Learned Son Had Perished.
"Thank God I Know Where He Is Now," She Sobbed. "I
Chapter 7 Pg 54Have Not Heard From Him For Two Years. The Last News I
Had From Him He Was In London."
Fifty Lads Met Death
Among The Many Hundreds Of Heroic Souls Who Went Bravely
And Quietly To Their End Were Fifty Happy-Go-Lucky Youngsters
Shipped As Bell Boys Or Messengers To Serve The First Cabin
Passengers. James Humphreys, A Quartermaster, Who Commanded
Life-Boat No. 11, Told A Li{T}Tle Story That Shows
How These Fifty Lads Met Death.
Humphreys Said The Boys Were Called To Their Regular Posts
In The Main Cabin Entry And Taken In Charge By Their Captain,
A Steward. They Were Ordered To Remain In The Cabin And Not
Get In The Way. Throughout The First Hour Of Confusion And
Terror These Lads Sat Quietly On Their Benches In Various Parts
Of The First Cabin.
Then, Just Toward The End When The Order Was Passed Around
That The Ship Was Going Down And Every Man Was Free To Save
Himself, If He Kept Away From The Life-Boats In Which The Women
{Illust. Caption =
"Who Hath Measured The Waters In The Hollow Of His Hand."--Isaiah Xl:Xii}
Were Being Taken, The Bell Boys Scattered To All Parts Of The
Ship.
Humphreys Said He Saw Numbers Of Them Smoking Cigarettes
And Joking With The Passengers. They Seemed To Think That
Their Violation Of The Rule Against Smoking While On Duty Was
A Sufficient Breach Of Discipline.
Not One Of Them Attempted To Enter A Life-Boat. Not One
Of Them Was Saved.
The Heroes Who Remained
The Women Who Left The Ship; The Men Who Remained--
There Is Little To Choose Between Them For Heroism. Many Of
Chapter 7 Pg 55The Women Compelled To Take To The Boats Would Have Stayed,
Had It Been Possible, To Share The Fate Of Their Nearest And
Dearest, Without Whom Their Lives Are Crippled, Broken And
Disconsolate.
The Heroes Who Remained Would Have Said, With Grenville.
"We Have Only Done Our Duty, As A Man Is Bound To Do."
They Sought No Palms Or Crowns Of Martyrdom. "They Also
Serve Who Only Stand And Wait," And Their First Action Was
Merely To Step Aside And Give Places In The Boats To Women
And Children, Some Of Whom Were Too Young To Comprehend
Or To Remember.
There Was No Debate As To Whether The Life Of A Financier,
A Master Of Business, Was Rated Higher In The Scale Of Values
Than That Of An Ignorant Peasant Mother. A Woman Was A
Woman, Whether She Wore Rags Or Pearls. A Life Was Given For
A Life, With No Assertion That One Was Priceless And The Other
Comparatively Valueless.
Many Of Those Who Elected To Remain Might Have Escaped.
"Chivalry" Is A Mild Appellation For Their Conduct. Some
Of The Vaunted Knights Of Old Were Desperate Cowards By Comparison.
A Fight In The Open Field, Or Jousting In The Tournament,
Did Not Call Out The Manhood In A Man As Did The Waiting
Till The Great Ship Took The Final Plunge, In The Knowledge That
The Seas Round About Were Covered With Loving And Yearning
Witnesses Whose Own Salvation Was Not Assured.
When The Roll Is Called Hereafter Of Those Who Are "Purged
Of Pride Because They Died, Who Know The Worth Of Their Days,"
Let The Names Of The Men Who Went Down With The Titanic
Be Found Written There In The Sight Of God And Men.
The Obvious Lesson
And, Whatever View Of The Accident Be Taken, Whether The
Moralist Shall Use It To Point The Text Of A Solemn Or Denunciatory
Warning, Or Whether The Materialist, Swinging To The
Other Extreme, Scouts Any Other Theory Than That Of The
"Fortuitous Concurrence Of Atoms," There Is Scarcely A Thinking
Mortal Who Has Heard Of What Happened Who Has Not Been
Deeply Stirred, In The Sense Of A Personal Bereavement, To A
Profound Humility And The Conviction Of His Own Insignificance
In The Greater Universal Scheme.
Many There Are Whom The Influences Of Religion Do Not Move,
And Upon Whose Hearts Most Generous Sentiments Knock In
Vain, Who Still Are Overawed And Bowed By The Magnitude Of
This Catastrophe. No Matter What They Believe About It,
Chapter 7 Pg 56The Effect Is The Same. The Effect Is To Reduce A Man From The
Swaggering Braggart--The Vainglorious Lord Of What He Sees--
The Self-Made Master Of Fate, Of Nature, Of Time, Of Space, Of
Everything--To His True Microscopic Stature In The Cosmos.
He Goes In Tears To Put Together Again The Fragments Of The
Few, Small, Pitiful Things That Belonged To Him.
"Though Love May Pine, And Reason Chafe,
There Came A Voice Without Reply."
The Only Comfort, All That Can Bring Surcease Of Sorrow, Is
That Men Fashioned In The Image Of Their Maker Rose To The
Emergency Like Heroes, And Went To Their Grave As Bravely As
Any Who Have Given Their Lives At Any Time In War. The Hearts
Of Those Who Waited On The Land, And Agonized, And Were Impotent
To Save, Have Been Laid Upon The Same Altars Of Sacrifice.
The Mourning Of Those Who Will Not Be Comforted Rises From
Alien Lands Together With Our Own In A Common Broken Intercession.
How Little Is The 882 Feet Of The "Monster" That We
Launched Compared With The Arc Of The Rainbow We Can See
Even In Our Grief Spanning The Frozen Boreal Mist!
"The Best Of What We Do And Are,
Just God, Forgive!"
The Ancient Sacrifice
And Still Our Work Must Go On. It Is The Business Of Men
And Women Neither To Give Way To Unavailing Grief Nor To
Yield To The Crushing Incubus Of Despair, But To Find Hope
That Is At The Bottom Of Everything, Even At The Bottom
Of The Sea Where That Glorious Virgin Of The Ocean Is Dying.
"And When She Took Unto Herself A Mate
She Must Espouse The Everlasting Sea."
Even So, For Any Progress Of The Race, There Must Be The
Ancient Sacrifice Of Man's Own Stubborn Heart, And All His Pride.
He Must Forever "Lay In Dust Life's Glory Dead." He Cannot
Rise To The Height It Was Intended He Should Reach Till He Has
Plumbed The Depths, Till He Has Devoured The Bread Of The
Bitterest Affliction, Till He Has Known The Ache Of Hopes Deferred,
Of Anxious Expectation Disappointed, Of Dreams That Are Not
To Be Fulfilled This Side Of The River That Waters The Meads Of
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