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Titanic Sinks Tonight Season 1 Episode 2

Titanic Sinks Tonight
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Transcript
00:00You
00:18He told me that apparently we'd struck something
00:30I didn't become alarmed there was no danger they said I
00:39Told her to come at once we were sinking
00:45You can imagine the chaos and the fear and the terror of finding water in your cabin and you're in the bowels of the ship
00:51It makes me panic just thinking about it
00:53The story of the titanic is the human condition spread out
00:59Pinned on a board for us to examine
01:03Then came the terrible cry women and children women and children
01:09Two men lifted me up and put me in a boat
01:14It's these small decisions these little butterfly effect moments that change the outcome
01:23I
01:33Really was every man for himself
01:37My heart stood still
01:51We're gonna die
01:54Best to die gripping something
01:58It's a split-second decision. What would you do? What would I do?
02:09It was a terrible sight
02:11Men swimming and sinking
02:13I'd been brought up to believe in a hell
02:26After death
02:34I think I went through a hell that night
02:36That night
02:43Sentinela
02:44What israndomiao?
02:46How did you fit in the Katrina's death?
02:50No
02:51Until then, it was a pretty serious
02:51But you've probably got word out today
02:54ven 62 years ago
02:56What was my原因 when we fell?
02:57All the way
02:58You had to be a bit transported
02:58That day
02:59Most of us were the million brothers
03:00Go out of here
03:01We had this
03:02We have a lot of animals
03:33Mr. Harvey ordered me to fetch some men down.
03:44I got between 15 and 20.
03:53The engineers put the pumps on.
03:59Those who would have gone off duty stairs on.
04:03Right now on the Titanic, there's a red alert emergency.
04:12Down below in the boiler room, all the crew, the firemen that would normally be down there,
04:17have been called back on ship to try to pump out the water that is flooding into the compartment.
04:24Imagine it, there's steam everywhere.
04:28There's the groaning, creaking, splitting sounds of the ship itself.
04:34It's terrifying.
04:35They are like soldiers going into battle.
04:42With five compartments flooded, the Titanic is going to sink.
04:47They have around an hour and a half until it's going to disappear below the waves.
04:51They're never going to get all of the water out of the ship.
04:54Can they hold it back just a little bit longer in order to try and save everybody on board?
04:59What I think is unfortunate in Titanic is that the captain had not established a mechanism whereby he was getting information
05:27about what the actual damage was in various parts of the ship.
05:33This is something that there should have been being worked on much earlier.
05:37As a result, time was lost.
05:41Once you begin to understand that you are really up against it in terms of time,
05:45it goes from, we can't save the ship, but can we get the passengers from the Titanic
05:51to a rescue ship before the Titanic sinks?
05:56The captain knows that the decisions that are made in the coming minutes, hours,
06:01ultimately that will be the decider on how many people will make it off of the ship alive.
06:05Send a call for assistance, ordered the captain.
06:27Which call should I send?
06:29The Regulation International Call for Help.
06:31Just that.
06:34And the captain was gone.
06:38The next moment we sent an urgent distress call.
06:45So in the radio room right now, it's a race against time.
06:49The operators must send out the distress signal.
06:54It's the standard Morse code signal that will tell shipping in the area
06:59that the Titanic is in trouble and needs help.
07:04These two young men, they're in their 20s,
07:07and now are responsible for seeking rescue for the unsinkable ship Titanic.
07:15My boats were along the port side.
07:38My idea was that I'd lower the boats and transfer passengers.
07:45It would be perfectly safe in that smooth sea until another ship picked them up.
07:49All right, gentlemen. We know what to do.
07:52Up to this time, we hadn't had chance for a boat drill,
07:55beyond just lowering some of the boats in Southampton.
07:59The crew of the Titanic had been put through a fine sift
08:04and caretaken that there were no misfits.
08:09A tap on the shoulder, an indication with the hand,
08:12was quite sufficient to set the men about the different jobs.
08:16Clearing away the boat covers,
08:18hauling tight the falls,
08:19ready for lowering.
08:21We're not going to see hysteria.
08:25We're not even going to see anxiety at this point,
08:27not least because the information is distorted and fragmented.
08:32Nobody is thinking that the ship is going to sink.
08:35Only Captain Smith really knows the extent of what is happening.
08:39The water, having reached F deck,
08:46showed me she'd been badly holed.
08:49Although I knew it was serious,
08:52I'd not have thought that it was likely to prove fatal.
08:54I figured that she'd go so far
08:57until she balanced her buoyancy
08:59and there she would remain.
09:03The captain doesn't share the information he has
09:06with all the officers that the ship is going down.
09:08And precisely why he hasn't shared it remains a mystery.
09:13It may be a strategy he doesn't want them to panic.
09:17It maybe reflects an internal chaos.
09:19He doesn't know who to tell or when.
09:22The reality is, for the crew in the Titanic at this moment,
09:26they have no idea what level of catastrophe they're in.
09:29They just know they have a job to do.
09:38There are 2,208 passengers on board.
10:05They won't all fit in the lifeboats.
10:07So the lifeboats will have to do shuttle runs,
10:09take passengers to the rescue ship,
10:12come back and then take the next lot of passengers.
10:16It's physically possible for them to save all the passengers,
10:19but they have to do it in an orderly fashion.
10:22And the people who are going to go first
10:24are those whose rooms are closest to the boat deck
10:26and those are the first-class passengers.
10:28In this emergency plan,
10:30the wealthy and the powerful have an innate advantage.
10:34They are top of the list.
10:36Suddenly, orders came down.
10:43Everybody to the boats.
10:49All stewards and stewardesses were on duty in their sections
10:54to assist and direct people.
10:56I continued through my section,
11:01trying to reassure,
11:03reminding people to put on warm clothing,
11:06take blankets and valuables.
11:11Violet Jessup is a first-class stewardess.
11:14She's 24 years old.
11:15She's the youngest stewardess on board.
11:18The first-class stewards and stewardesses
11:20really are the ones who are responsible
11:22for making this evacuation process happen.
11:25They have to demonstrate extraordinary self-control
11:29and put these other people first.
11:36Of course, we reiterated from room to room
11:39that it was just precautionary measure.
11:43Everywhere I found extraordinary calmness.
11:50People who'd been asleep were dressing,
11:53fumbling, sleepy-eyed, with buttons.
11:59They were...
12:00They were unemotional.
12:05Probably thinking, as I did,
12:07that it was all too fantastic.
12:10The first-class passengers have invested financially.
12:17They've spent a lot on their tickets.
12:19They've invested psychologically
12:20in this being safe and luxurious.
12:23And they therefore cannot believe that it can be anything but that.
12:31It's such a leap of imagination
12:33to go against everything they've internalised about this experience
12:37and start to believe that something might be going wrong.
12:41A steward knocked at the door.
12:49Sorry to alarm you, madam,
12:51but the captain's orders are that
12:53all passengers should put on lifebelts.
12:56He laughed and joked as he helped us.
13:02Wrap up warmly.
13:03We may have a little trip for an hour or so
13:05in one of the lifeboats.
13:07What a very fetching colour is it?
13:08Cosmo was so brave to try and keep us in good spirits,
13:12making a bad jest
13:14as to how unappetising we both looked
13:17in those sickly white life preservers.
13:19Lucy Lady Duff Gordon
13:26is one of the most prominent people on board.
13:30After divorcing her previous husband,
13:32she managed to build up her business,
13:35which is a fashion design house,
13:37into a multi-million pound enterprise.
13:40And this is a time when many women
13:42don't even have bank accounts.
13:44So she's obviously extraordinary.
13:46She's very resourceful.
13:47And that will come to be important.
13:52I put on a heavy crepe scarf.
13:55I wore the big squirrel coat.
13:58Bought my little velveteen ring bag.
14:02It all looked so pretty.
14:04Just like a bedroom on land.
14:07It didn't seem possible.
14:08There could be any danger.
14:13A bit of vase of flowers on the washstand
14:15slid off and fell to the floor.
14:17I got up.
14:18I got up.
14:18I got up.
14:19I got up.
14:23Yes, yes, this way.
14:51Slowly, people started, some joking, taking their time about it.
15:00To those few who showed concern, a reassuring answer was, there are plenty of boats in the
15:07vicinity, they'll be with us any moment now.
15:18I heard the crow's nest report a light on the bow.
15:28I went on the bridge right away and found this light.
15:39It was two masthead lights of a steamer just below the horizon.
15:46You could not only see her lights with the naked eye.
15:49You could see the lights of her portals.
15:52So Boxall can see the nearest ship to the Titanic, which is the Californian.
15:58She's very close by, about 14 miles.
16:02The Californian had already communicated with the Titanic earlier that evening that she
16:09was going to spend the night in the ice flow because it was too dangerous to continue.
16:14The Californian would be able to reach Titanic before she sinks.
16:21Captain Smith, we spotted a steamer on the horizon.
16:27I told the captain about this ship.
16:29He said, tell them to come at once.
16:32We are sinking.
16:34I was going to take my side.
16:53And someday around
17:00After the signal had been sent out, the ether seemed to be dead.
17:12No reply came through.
17:17Californian isn't picking up any signals.
17:20The radio operator has gone to bed, not because he's negligent, but because he's allowed to go to bed.
17:25There's no duty to stay in the radio room all night, and many ships did not ask this of their operators.
17:37But then, suddenly, a chance message comes in from a wireless operator on another ship, the Carpathia.
17:48I was about to retire. I'd taken my coat off.
17:52I should have been turning in in about ten minutes.
17:57Called the Titanic.
18:04And his only answer was, struck a berg.
18:08Come at once.
18:12We told her our position and said we were sinking by the head.
18:14I asked him if he intended me to go get the ship turned round immediately, and he said yes, quick.
18:28The operator went to tell his captain.
18:32The Carpathia is a transatlantic steamship.
18:36She's fast, but she's going in the other direction.
18:39Jack Phillips hears that the radio operator is going to tell the captain that Titanic is in trouble.
18:47The captain of the Carpathia will then make the decision about what to do,
18:52and that usually means to turn your vessel towards the ship that is in distress.
18:57That's the rule of the sea.
19:00So here is a chance of rescue.
19:02As long as Carpathia is able to get there in time.
19:08As long as we have been born,
19:10THE END
19:40away in a boat it it didn't seem possible that all this could actually be happening
19:50it was the strangest scene people bundled up in odd clothes boarding lifeboats in the night
19:58you seem to want to brave the dark sea in an open boat and it was only after considerable coaxing
20:12that many went at all people don't want to get in why would you want to get out of your warm bed and
20:19go in a lifeboat into the freezing water when there's no problem you wouldn't this is like a
20:24really annoying fire drill at school and everybody says no i'll just stay here until it's finished
20:32at that point in time the general public weren't really trusted keeping people in ignorance was
20:37considered better and we know today that actually people will respond much more sensibly in an
20:42emergency if they do have some information that information was completely lacking at this point
20:48on titanic
21:12we were just walking forward when a sailor tried to drag me away from cosmo
21:18the officers called for women and children
21:23so captain smith has ordered that women and children should be evacuated and they should be prioritized
21:32on the port side the second officer officer light toller interprets it as women and children only
21:40the consequence of this is that if you are a family turning up
21:45on the port side you will be separated and the men will not be allowed on the lifeboats
21:55saving the lives of women and children comes from deep in the edwardian mindset women at the time
22:02are seen as having a kind of childish status i mean this is before they've been allowed to vote
22:07and they are perceived to have a physical and mental weakness that means that men have to be their
22:15protectors please step back sir please step back
22:17i have no such ideas about my husband it would have been too awful to have been alone
22:29every time officer light toller prevents a man from getting into a lifeboat
22:33there is the possibility that his wife won't go that they will stay on board the ship so
22:39he's actually potentially endangering the lives of the precise people he's been told to prioritize to save
22:59a man in a great emergency like that where there were limited facilities could you not have put more
23:14people into boats
23:19i did not know it was urgent then
23:22i had no idea it was urgent
23:24you did not know it was urgent nothing like it
23:39light other wants to do a good job clearly maybe if he'd known the ship was sinking
23:45he would have allowed men in to fill up the spaces in the lifeboats
23:48but because the captain is withholding information people like light dollar can't
23:55do their job properly and this will have disastrous consequences
24:02what one wants is to have a very good relationship a band of brothers and when you've got that you must
24:08keep them informed of what's going on and what we call nowadays mission command in other words you let
24:14them know what you want to achieve overall you tell them all the facts and then you let them get on
24:19with it i think the captain smith was overwhelmed by the enormity of what was happening and was not
24:26really grasping it and taking charge
24:40so
24:56the operator returned and told us the carpathia was putting about and heading for us
25:10our captain had left us at this time phillips told me to run and tell him what the carpathia had answered
25:14i went through an awful mass of people to his cabin the decks were full
25:32i came back and heard phillips giving the carpathia fuller directions he told me to put my clothes on
25:37until that moment i forgot i wasn't dressed
25:46i went to me cabin and dressed and brought an overcoat to phillips
25:51it was very cold i slipped the overcoat on him while it worked
25:58imagine the relief in the radio room carpathia has answered the distress call is coming their way
26:07it's going to be able to do it but although she's going as fast as she can she's having to go
26:12through the same ice field where titanic has floundered
26:20she's four hours away and titanic isn't going to stay afloat that long
26:25the nearest ship to titanic is the californian but the radio operators still asleep nobody is aware
26:43of any problem on the titanic
26:49the crew of the titanic have to think on their feet
26:51so they start to use morse lamps and send a signal using light rather than sound
27:00the ship was close enough i thought to read our electric morse signal so i signaled her
27:10i told her to come at once we were sinking
27:14the captain was with me most of the time we were signaling
27:18i would signal with the morse and then go back and look at the ship
27:27i cannot say i saw any reply
27:38in a crisis you just have to increase your chances of survival survival is all about probability
27:44you know throwing as much muck at the wall as possible and seeing what sticks
27:50then we started sending off these distressed rockets the quartermaster and i on the bridge
27:55they go right up into the air and throw stars
28:08the wind for the inimigo's
28:17on the bridge
28:20and then we do it
28:21so
28:21what's that
28:21we're going to do it
28:22so
28:22see you
28:24what's that
28:25we're going to do it
28:26we're going to do it
28:26so
28:27that's
28:28Right now, the water is rising up through the body of the ship.
28:53The waterproof bulkheads only went up to a certain level.
28:56And by this stage, water was tipping over bulkheads and cascading into the next compartment.
29:03So compartment after compartment was being filled by water.
29:10And as this mass of water breaches the bulkheads, it starts flowing back on itself,
29:16making cascades and waterfalls coming down the narrow staircases.
29:26Third class passengers in the bowels of the ship are at most risk.
29:41They were really left in the dark.
29:44They are wading through water.
29:47They're not aware of what's going on, the rescue mission going on in the upper decks.
29:52They had to work it out themselves.
29:57My husband had left some money in our cabin.
30:01And there were all our clothes and things that we were taking to America.
30:14Salini is from Hardin, which was in Lebanon.
30:17And she's a newlywed bride.
30:20And her older husband is taking her to live with him in America.
30:25They are caught between going up to the higher decks and the desire to keep their belongings.
30:32It's easy to underestimate just how important things are to a migrant, to someone who's leaving home forever.
30:44Do you want to arrive in New York destitute with nothing to your name?
30:49Nothing to pay for a room?
30:51Of course not.
30:52We returned to try and get our clothes, money, and jewelry.
31:06We started down for them.
31:12But the water on our deck was waist deep.
31:16We never got there.
31:22Depending on where you are in the ship right now, you're going to start seeing a lot of water.
31:35The third class passengers in particular.
31:39Water in any quantity is terrifying because you can't push it away, you can't fight it.
31:45People are now seeing evidence with their own eyes.
31:48It's not rumor, it's not gossip.
31:51It's not even that they're waiting to be told.
31:53They can see, feel that there is a problem.
32:06By this time, the ship seemed to have tilted forward a little.
32:14And we heard queer noises as if the ship was being pulled about.
32:21Charlotte Collier is a second-class passenger.
32:32She's traveling with her husband, Harvey, and her eight-year-old daughter, Marjorie.
32:36Charlotte has health issues, she has tuberculosis, so she's eager to find a new climate for her health,
32:42as well as whatever economic benefit they might get from migrating.
32:51Whilst this whole hour has passed in which the first-class passengers are being evacuated,
32:58they were told to stay in their cabin.
33:03They are sitting there and worrying, and no one is telling them anything.
33:08Suddenly, we heard people running along the passageway in front of our door.
33:17They are sitting there, and they are sitting there, and they are sitting there.
33:23Their feet reminded me of rats scurrying.
33:28I could see my face had grown very white.
33:31My husband stammered when he spoke to me.
33:37He said we had better go on deck, and see what's wrong.
33:42I can't.
33:45We just need to get up.
33:46Come on.
33:47I can't.
33:49For anyone that was feeling confused or was just following the rules,
33:54it's very clear something major is now happening.
33:59It's going to be terrifying, especially if you're a parent with a young child.
34:09When we went on board the Titanic, every possession was with us.
34:14Neither of us took any belongings from the cabin.
34:19My husband even left his watch lying on his pillow.
34:26I had a big dolly that I got two Christmases before,
34:31and we were in such a hurry that I left it behind.
34:38I cried for my dolly, but we couldn't go back.
34:44When we reached the deck, there was a great many people.
35:05Some of them were crying.
35:06I was crying for my doll, but nobody could go back and get her.
35:19An officer said, we should put on life preservers.
35:23So, mother put one on me, and then fastened one around herself.
35:29Papa put one on too.
35:30It's a big deal.
35:31Do you know?
35:36My husband stepped over to an officer and asked him a question.
35:43I heard him shout back,
35:46keep calm, there's no danger.
35:51Nobody's telling anybody what's going on.
35:54The captain knows, a few of the officers know,
35:57but it's important to keep this away because of panic.
36:01But now, because of the noise, the tilt,
36:05people are realising that something is wrong.
36:07All the water that had been thrown on the furnaces,
36:25just making the stock all thick with steam.
36:31Mr. Shepherds was walking across in a hurry to do something.
36:33He fell down the hole and broke his leg.
36:45He lifted him up and carried him.
36:59There was a knocking noise.
37:03All at once, I saw a wave of green foam tearing between the boilers.
37:08A rush of water came through.
37:15I never stopped to look.
37:17I just jumped for the escape ladder.
37:18A huge wave of green water comes flying through into the room
37:36because the coal bunker has been gradually filling up and filling up
37:40and filling up with the pressure.
37:42And then it bursts and suddenly it's all over them.
37:45Another engineer, Jonathan Shepard, has already slipped and broken his leg,
37:51so he can't escape this wall of water.
37:54And he's the first casualty to die on the Titanic.
38:09I went off the escape and into the main alleyway.
38:13Titanic was slowing down by the edge.
38:34Water was coming down the alleyway from forward.
38:37Now that boiler room five is filled with water,
38:46the engineers realise that all their efforts are futile.
38:50There's no point pumping it out anymore.
38:52It's coming in faster than anyone can manage it.
38:56This is a moment of terror and certainty.
39:06Perhaps this is the first moment where these brave men realise
39:12that the ship is going to go down.
39:30All passengers upstairs, at last.
39:33I returned to my room.
39:45I began tidying up, folding my nightgown, putting everything in its place.
39:53There was no sound.
39:57Titanic might have been in dock and all the crew gone home.
40:01I saw Stanley at the door watching me.
40:16And he...
40:18He almost shouted at me as he seized my arm.
40:22My God, don't you realise this ship will sink?
40:25You have to follow the rest upstairs as quickly as possible.
40:31Sinking.
40:38The word repeated itself without fully...
40:45fully entering my understanding.
40:47My mind could not accept that the super perfect creation was to do so futile a thing as sink.
41:02Of course, Titanic couldn't be sinking.
41:06Suddenly, there was a commotion near one of the gangways and we saw a stoker come up from below.
41:31All the fingers of one hand had been cut off.
41:41Blood was running from the stumps and was spattered on his face and clothes.
41:48It brought up a picture of smashed engines and mangled human bodies.
42:00I went over to speak to him.
42:02I asked him if there was any danger.
42:07Danger?
42:08I should say so.
42:10It's hell down below.
42:16This ship will sink like a stone.
42:18At this moment, I got my first grip of fear.
42:29Those in charge herded us towards the nearest boat.
42:49Then, above the clamour came the terrible cry.
42:58Lower the boat, women and children.
43:01And, folks, women and children only.
43:03That's women and children only.
43:07Someone was shouting these last few words over and over again.
43:11Women and children only.
43:23It might be that Lightoller has this kind of rigid view of the world.
43:27He's come in with a set of rules.
43:29It might be that under this stressful situation, it's the only way he can function.
43:34He can't cope with more information and more decision making.
43:37So he just sticks to this one option.
43:54Cosmo pleaded with me.
43:57Well, three or four boats were launched, but I refused.
44:02I only said, promise me that whatever you do,
44:05you will not let them separate us.
44:08And I clung to him.
44:10He saw that there was no use resisting me.
44:20We'll go round to the starboard side, Cosmo said.
44:22It might be better there.
44:23One of the pivotal facts about the loading of the lifeboats is this.
44:39There are different protocols on each side of the ship.
44:42On the starboard side, Officer Murdoch's approach is more pragmatic.
44:50It's more flexible.
44:54It was better, for although there were crowds, there was no confusion.
44:59The lifeboats are being quietly filled.
45:07If you emerge on the starboard side, then Officer Murdoch might well allow the men to join the women
45:16and their children if there are spaces left.
45:20So there's Murdoch allowing men to fill up the spare places.
45:25Why not?
45:26Murdoch doesn't want to split families up.
45:31Murdoch, I think, probably had a sense of wanting to preserve life.
45:35And Light Hollow had a stricter, more patriarchal view, perhaps, of men should sacrifice themselves
45:45for women and children.
45:47But the fact that it was happening on the same ship at the same time
45:50shows just how vague this policy was.
45:55So it matters very much which side of the ship you're on if you're a man.
46:05I don't know.
46:10I was walking up and down the bridge, saw white lights in the sky,
46:38in the direction of this other steamer.
46:45I thought perhaps the ship was in communication with some other ship,
46:50or possibly signalling to us to tell us she had big icebergs around her.
46:55Didn't occur to me the ship was in distress.
46:59I just thought there were white rockets, that's all.
47:02It might have been anything.
47:03We called her up repeatedly on the Morse lamp, and received no answer whatsoever.
47:16Some people say she replied to our rockets and our signals, but I didn't see any of them.
47:23We'll never know why there was miscommunication between the Californian and Titanic.
47:31There seems to have been some confusion about the colour of these rockets.
47:35Were they distress signals?
47:38It's also possible that Boxall didn't see Californian's Morse lamp reply,
47:43because there's something strange about the atmospheric conditions that night.
47:47You've got this weird effect of warm air underneath and colder air on top,
47:53which is creating a kind of mirage effect.
47:57Shapes are being distorted in the darkness.
47:59What a chance her captain missed.
48:12He could have laid his ship right alongside the Titanic and taken practically every soul on board.
48:22However, he didn't.
48:29This must be the bitterest blow for those people who could see the ship nearby.
48:38I don't think it was bad faith.
48:40I don't think it was negligence.
48:41I think everything conspired that night to go against Titanic's chances of safety and salvation.
48:47selfish blow for those people's will never gone against theательsten.
48:57I don't think it's right now.
48:59I don't think it's good to but be...
49:07Take one conviction.
49:08Take two witnesses to this.
49:10Take a game without a Django closer to the Prince.
49:13I like to the Afternoon self-ющ entender the King Floyd's division.
49:16Every third day they're about to'?
49:16because the earlier lifeboats went out half full there are now only about 900 places left on the
49:35lifeboats and more than 2 000 people on board the ship if people don't get onto a lifeboat
49:43they will go down with the titanic
49:46suddenly we saw some sailors who were launching a little boat it was a captain's special boat
49:58lucy duff gordon knows that she needs to get off the ship this is the moment to take one of those
50:11spaces my husband asked the officer if we might get into it
50:19we were helped in followed by two american men who came up at the last minute
50:33there is something here about being in the right place in the right time but also seizing the
50:43opportunity and having the confidence to do so
50:47i think that class probably had a huge impact on people's sense of entitlement to safety to rescue
50:58you probably did assume that if you bought a first class ticket then that would buy you survival
51:05they are people who are important in the world they see themselves as having more value than people in
51:14steerage and there they are as a couple sitting safely in a lifeboat
51:20i shall never forget how black and deep the water looked below us
51:32men standing nearby joked with us because we were going out on the ocean
51:39you'll get your death of cold out there amid the ice
51:43women have a silver lining
52:04i found myself clinging to my husband's arm with little marjorie beside me
52:22i did not want to leave him
52:27charlotte knows she'll be separated from her husband
52:31not knowing if and when they'd be reunited i think she probably was just thinking
52:35please no not this i want to survive but not not at this cost
52:40dilemmas that you just have to accept in that moment
52:45those are
52:47yeah those are heavy
52:50officer lightwell
52:54you know the man's been at sea
52:57he since he was 13 he doesn't have that understanding of what it means when a woman
53:03is clinging to her husband when a child is crying for their father
53:07he just goes ahead with what he believes to be right
53:12but it's not objectively right
53:16from what you have said you discriminated entirely in the interest of the women and children
53:22in filling those lifeboats
53:24yes
53:25why did you do that
53:28because of the captain's orders or because of the rule of the sea
53:32the rule of human nature
53:35the deck seemed to be slipping under my feet
53:44i hung
53:45onto my husband's arm
53:47and although he was very brave
53:52and not trembling
53:55i saw his face was white as paper
54:00haught
54:04all-star board
54:05that sliding doors moment will determine who survives and who doesn't
54:10keep moving along the deck we are telling the lifeboats
54:14women and children only that's women and children only
54:17women and children women and children
54:19they struck utter terror into my heart and
54:24now they'll ring in my ears till i die
54:28and they'll ring in my heart
54:32no
54:33no
54:33no
54:34no
54:35you
54:36no
54:36so
54:39in
54:40never
54:42are we
54:43кон
54:55him
54:56There was a lot of confusion.
55:17People crying, swearing and praying.
55:22There's a really stark disadvantage facing third-class passengers.
55:28Chief officer shoved one of the revolvers into my hands.
55:32Chekhov said you can't put a gun in the room and not use it.
55:36All of the order has been lost.
55:39I called out, don't shoot!
55:52I called out, don't shoot!
56:02I called out, don't shoot!
56:07I called out!
56:11I called out, don't shoot!
56:15To be continued...
56:30To be continued...
56:35To be continued...
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