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00:00:07,090 --> 00:00:12,304
[♪ dramatic music playing]
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00:00:21,104 --> 00:00:24,733
[indistinct screams
and yelling]
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{\an8}[clock ticking]
4
00:00:38,080 --> 00:00:44,461
[♪ dramatic music playing]
5
00:00:46,630 --> 00:00:51,551
[indistinct screams
and yelling]
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00:00:54,096 --> 00:00:56,848
[indistinct screams
and yelling]
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00:00:56,974 --> 00:00:58,976
- I was working in
the engine room.
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00:00:59,226 --> 00:01:00,602
We got the order,
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00:01:00,686 --> 00:01:03,438
"All hands on deck,
put your life preservers on."
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00:01:04,523 --> 00:01:07,442
{\an8}The deck was full of
male third-class passengers.
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00:01:09,111 --> 00:01:10,279
[indistinct screams
and yelling]
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00:01:10,362 --> 00:01:12,364
The last boat was
getting lowered.
13
00:01:14,575 --> 00:01:17,160
{\an8}- About this time,
I met all the engineers
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{\an8}as they came
trooping up from below.
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Until that time, they had
loyally stuck to their guns.
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{\an8}- When the crew
come up on deck,
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00:01:34,678 --> 00:01:37,139
these guys who have
worked so heroically
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to try to keep
Titanic afloat,
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00:01:39,433 --> 00:01:42,102
they expect that
there will be a place
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for them in the lifeboats,
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and, of course,
that is not the case.
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00:01:50,527 --> 00:01:53,739
- It was a bleak and
hopeless spectacle that
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00:01:53,864 --> 00:01:55,699
met their eyes.
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Empty fools hanging
from every davit head.
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00:02:01,038 --> 00:02:03,457
Not a hope
for any of them.
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[distant cries]
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00:02:11,757 --> 00:02:14,217
{\an8}- Titanic has enough people
on board that we're really
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00:02:14,301 --> 00:02:19,056
{\an8}seeing the whole range of
reactions to facing death,
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00:02:19,806 --> 00:02:22,976
from resignation
to fight and flight,
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00:02:23,435 --> 00:02:26,188
to acting out of love and
empathy to help other people.
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00:02:28,649 --> 00:02:31,902
- One fellow said, "Go to
the first cabin bar room."
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00:02:33,403 --> 00:02:36,865
There was a steward
filling up tumblers on a tray.
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00:02:38,116 --> 00:02:40,702
He said, "Go on,
lads, drink up.
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00:02:42,746 --> 00:02:44,665
She's goin' down."
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00:02:48,669 --> 00:02:50,754
- Some people prefer
to stay in their cabin
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and let the waters rise up.
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00:02:52,756 --> 00:02:55,092
Others go to the bar
and just start drinking
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00:02:55,425 --> 00:02:57,177
the place dry.
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00:02:57,260 --> 00:02:59,054
Everyone has to choose
to die in their own way,
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00:02:59,137 --> 00:03:00,555
whatever that is.
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00:03:06,228 --> 00:03:08,897
[indistinct screams
and yelling]
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00:03:10,440 --> 00:03:12,609
[Jeanette] Captain Smith
and Thomas Andrews,
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00:03:12,693 --> 00:03:16,363
the ship's designer,
must have been in hell.
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00:03:17,155 --> 00:03:20,200
This was their
unsinkable ship.
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00:03:22,953 --> 00:03:26,706
{\an8}- Andrews was seen throwing
steamer chairs into the water
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00:03:26,790 --> 00:03:28,875
{\an8}with the idea of
actually helping those who
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00:03:28,959 --> 00:03:31,962
{\an8}got into the sea to have
something to support them.
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00:03:37,134 --> 00:03:39,344
During the Falklands War,
I was a Captain.
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00:03:39,469 --> 00:03:42,389
The ship that was bombed,
which I had to abandon,
50
00:03:42,472 --> 00:03:44,516
and so I know the
pressures he was under.
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00:03:45,058 --> 00:03:47,602
And I personally think
that he probably stayed
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00:03:47,686 --> 00:03:50,939
on the bridge and
waited to meet his fate.
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00:03:53,483 --> 00:03:54,693
[Martha] There's
something of the stiff
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00:03:54,818 --> 00:03:56,695
upper lip happening
here, but inside,
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00:03:56,820 --> 00:04:00,198
there must be inner turmoil
because survival instinct
56
00:04:00,323 --> 00:04:02,159
is really powerful.
57
00:04:02,242 --> 00:04:05,036
And the Captain is
probably suppressing it
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00:04:05,328 --> 00:04:06,496
as much as he can.
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00:04:06,621 --> 00:04:08,999
The social codes of conduct,
fighting against that very
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00:04:09,082 --> 00:04:12,752
ancient part of the brain,
the primitive part that
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00:04:12,836 --> 00:04:14,796
just drives us
forward biologically.
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00:04:16,715 --> 00:04:19,259
- I wanted to jump out
and try to catch one of the,
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00:04:19,342 --> 00:04:21,470
the empty lifeboat falls.
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00:04:24,973 --> 00:04:26,516
I couldn't just jump.
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00:04:26,600 --> 00:04:29,186
{\an8}We might hit wreckage
or a steamer chair and
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00:04:29,269 --> 00:04:30,854
{\an8}be knocked unconscious.
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00:04:31,521 --> 00:04:32,939
Milton dissuaded me.
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00:04:33,440 --> 00:04:34,566
Milton we
gotta do something!
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00:04:34,691 --> 00:04:37,736
- Milton Long, 29-year-old
American law clerk,
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00:04:37,861 --> 00:04:40,197
and Jack had struck up
a conversation many hours
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00:04:40,280 --> 00:04:42,073
earlier in
the dining saloon,
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00:04:42,449 --> 00:04:44,367
and now they find
themselves facing this
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00:04:44,451 --> 00:04:46,495
life-or-death
moment together.
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00:04:48,747 --> 00:04:51,500
[Jack] So many thoughts
passed through my mind.
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00:04:52,959 --> 00:04:54,920
I thought of all
the good times I'd had.
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00:04:57,172 --> 00:05:00,425
Sincerely pitied myself.
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00:05:01,802 --> 00:05:04,971
[indistinct screams
and yelling]
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00:05:06,264 --> 00:05:08,350
[clock ticking]
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00:05:16,608 --> 00:05:18,026
[Jeanette] Back
in the wireless room,
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00:05:18,109 --> 00:05:21,238
Jack Phillips has stuck to
his post right to the end,
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00:05:21,696 --> 00:05:24,741
even when Captain Smith said
it's every man for himself,
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00:05:25,408 --> 00:05:27,452
because he believes he's
doing something useful.
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00:05:28,745 --> 00:05:31,540
The sea has almost
reached the wireless room,
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00:05:32,415 --> 00:05:34,084
and they have
just minutes before
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00:05:34,209 --> 00:05:36,336
it's filled
with freezing water.
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00:05:37,587 --> 00:05:41,049
[Harold] I was back in my room
getting Phillips' money for him,
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00:05:41,424 --> 00:05:43,593
and as I
looked out the door,
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00:05:43,718 --> 00:05:49,099
I saw a stoker or somebody
from below decks slipping
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00:05:49,182 --> 00:05:51,268
the lifebelt off his back.
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00:05:51,601 --> 00:05:53,520
{\an8}I remembered in a
flash the way Phillips
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00:05:53,603 --> 00:05:56,439
{\an8}had clung on, how I'd
had to fix that lifebelt
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00:05:56,523 --> 00:05:58,608
{\an8}in place because he
was too busy to do it.
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00:06:00,735 --> 00:06:02,362
And I felt a passion
not to let that man die
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00:06:02,445 --> 00:06:04,114
a decent sailor's death.
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00:06:05,073 --> 00:06:09,369
[grunting]
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00:06:10,954 --> 00:06:13,540
I hope I finished him,
I don't know.
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00:06:14,541 --> 00:06:16,710
We left him on the floor
of the wireless cabin.
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00:06:17,961 --> 00:06:19,796
He wasn't moving.
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00:06:21,298 --> 00:06:24,092
[indistinct screams
and yelling]
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00:06:25,677 --> 00:06:28,471
I climbed on top
of the officer's quarters,
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00:06:29,598 --> 00:06:32,183
and I saw
the last of Phillips.
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00:06:32,475 --> 00:06:33,435
[Jeanette] He
doesn't say goodbye.
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00:06:33,518 --> 00:06:34,644
He doesn't give
any explanation.
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00:06:34,769 --> 00:06:37,022
There's no clap on
the back to his junior.
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00:06:37,147 --> 00:06:38,148
He's done everything.
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00:06:38,231 --> 00:06:39,357
There is
nothing more to do.
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00:06:39,482 --> 00:06:41,735
The man is ready to die.
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00:06:41,818 --> 00:06:43,820
[indistinct screams
and yelling]
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[clock ticking]
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00:06:55,290 --> 00:06:56,499
{\an8}- At this stage,
all the lifeboats
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00:06:56,625 --> 00:06:58,001
{\an8}on the boat deck
have been launched, and,
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00:06:58,126 --> 00:06:59,961
{\an8}of course, there's,
there's a panic that there
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00:07:00,045 --> 00:07:03,715
{\an8}are no lifeboats left,
but there is actually two
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00:07:03,840 --> 00:07:06,843
more stashed away on the
roof of the officer's quarters,
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00:07:07,510 --> 00:07:09,471
collapsible A and B.
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00:07:11,681 --> 00:07:14,851
[♪ dramatic music playing]
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[indistinct screams
and yelling]
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00:07:20,357 --> 00:07:23,234
- I saw the boat and the
men trying to push it off.
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00:07:23,610 --> 00:07:25,362
They couldn't do it.
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00:07:26,071 --> 00:07:28,448
I went up to them,
lending a hand.
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00:07:30,492 --> 00:07:33,078
[indistinct screams
and yelling]
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00:07:34,537 --> 00:07:36,706
- Now the crew are
trying to launch them
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00:07:36,831 --> 00:07:40,210
in increasingly difficult
and desperate conditions.
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00:07:41,628 --> 00:07:43,922
[indistinct screams
and yelling]
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00:07:44,047 --> 00:07:46,174
- Just then,
the ship took a slight
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00:07:46,257 --> 00:07:47,967
but definite plunge.
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The sea came
rolling up in a wave.
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00:07:54,474 --> 00:07:57,977
[JJ] And a large wave washes
collapsible A and B overboard.
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00:07:59,729 --> 00:08:01,439
You've just
been given that hope,
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00:08:01,564 --> 00:08:02,732
but in amongst the chaos,
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00:08:02,816 --> 00:08:05,735
the lifeboats are stolen
from you by the elements,
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00:08:05,860 --> 00:08:08,488
and that is
just devastating.
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00:08:10,407 --> 00:08:12,784
- The big wave
carried the boat off.
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00:08:13,368 --> 00:08:17,163
I had hold of an oar
lock and went off with it.
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00:08:21,501 --> 00:08:24,212
- Water was washing
right across the deck,
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00:08:25,338 --> 00:08:28,133
{\an8}and we were in
water right to our hips.
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00:08:29,426 --> 00:08:32,554
Another lurch threw
myself off and away from
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00:08:32,637 --> 00:08:34,180
the ship into the water.
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00:08:34,597 --> 00:08:37,726
- No! No! No!
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00:08:38,351 --> 00:08:41,730
- I was underwater and
knew I had to fight for it.
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00:08:43,440 --> 00:08:44,774
[indistinct screams
and yelling]
142
00:08:44,858 --> 00:08:47,527
- The temperature in the
water is minus two degrees,
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00:08:48,111 --> 00:08:50,155
so as soon as that
cold water hits the body,
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00:08:50,280 --> 00:08:52,490
there's a shock reaction,
145
00:08:52,615 --> 00:08:55,201
and the mind is reacting
in a state of panic.
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00:08:58,121 --> 00:09:01,916
- Everything I touched
seemed to be women's hair.
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00:09:04,294 --> 00:09:09,174
Children crying,
women screaming.
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00:09:11,342 --> 00:09:13,178
Their hair in my face.
149
00:09:14,888 --> 00:09:17,599
[indistinct screams
and yelling]
150
00:09:17,682 --> 00:09:20,060
If only I could forget
those hands and faces
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00:09:20,143 --> 00:09:21,144
that I touched.
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00:09:22,645 --> 00:09:25,190
[clock ticking]
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00:09:32,864 --> 00:09:35,742
- The ship was sinking
on its head very quickly.
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00:09:36,618 --> 00:09:38,661
The water was
right up to the bridge.
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00:09:39,913 --> 00:09:42,999
The crowd moved with it,
pushing towards the stern.
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00:09:45,585 --> 00:09:47,670
- A sight that
doesn't bear dwelling on.
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00:09:49,881 --> 00:09:53,176
To stand there above the
wheelhouse watching the
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00:09:53,301 --> 00:09:56,304
frantic struggles to
climb up the sloping deck,
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00:09:57,263 --> 00:10:00,517
unable to even hold
out a helping hand.
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00:10:00,600 --> 00:10:04,979
♪ ♪
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00:10:05,939 --> 00:10:08,066
I knew what the futility
of following that instinct
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00:10:08,191 --> 00:10:10,068
for self-preservation.
163
00:10:11,945 --> 00:10:14,239
It would only be
postponing the plunge
164
00:10:14,364 --> 00:10:16,324
and prolonging the agony.
165
00:10:19,911 --> 00:10:22,956
Turning to the bridge,
I took a header.
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00:10:28,962 --> 00:10:32,382
Striking water was like
a thousand knives being
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00:10:32,465 --> 00:10:34,342
driven into one's body.
168
00:10:35,260 --> 00:10:36,386
For a few moments,
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00:10:36,469 --> 00:10:38,930
I completely
lost grip of myself.
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00:10:44,394 --> 00:10:47,897
- We were at the starboard rail
to keep away from the crowd.
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00:10:49,524 --> 00:10:52,819
The ship began
to shoot down fast,
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00:10:53,570 --> 00:10:55,572
the water rushing up
towards us.
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00:10:56,114 --> 00:10:57,740
We had no time to think,
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00:10:57,824 --> 00:10:59,909
only to act.
175
00:11:04,164 --> 00:11:07,041
- The people who choose
to jump are ultimately the
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00:11:07,125 --> 00:11:11,171
people who take some form
of control in a situation
177
00:11:11,254 --> 00:11:13,256
where you are powerless.
178
00:11:18,761 --> 00:11:22,265
[indistinct screams
and yelling]
179
00:11:25,560 --> 00:11:29,272
[♪ somber music playing]
180
00:11:30,023 --> 00:11:34,694
- We were about five minutes
away from the ship,
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00:11:36,321 --> 00:11:39,199
{\an8}but we could still see
it as the lights stayed on.
182
00:11:42,118 --> 00:11:45,371
The ship stood
almost on its nose,
183
00:11:45,455 --> 00:11:47,332
slowly sinking.
184
00:11:48,750 --> 00:11:52,462
And the people on
the Titanic were
185
00:11:52,545 --> 00:11:55,048
yelling and crying.
186
00:11:57,050 --> 00:12:00,303
I could see some of them
as they jumped into the water.
187
00:12:01,471 --> 00:12:04,474
[clock ticking]
188
00:12:15,777 --> 00:12:19,322
[Charles] I found myself
drawn against the grating
189
00:12:19,405 --> 00:12:21,783
covering a ventilator.
190
00:12:23,826 --> 00:12:26,496
The pressure of the
water glued me there.
191
00:12:27,664 --> 00:12:30,667
The shaft led to a stokehold,
192
00:12:31,334 --> 00:12:33,461
a sheer drop of
100 feet right
193
00:12:33,544 --> 00:12:35,630
to the bottom of the ship.
194
00:12:36,381 --> 00:12:39,050
I struggled and
kicked for all I was worth.
195
00:12:40,760 --> 00:12:43,012
Every instinct
expecting the wire to go,
196
00:12:45,223 --> 00:12:47,517
to find myself shot down
into the bowels of the ship.
197
00:12:49,811 --> 00:12:52,063
[grunting]
198
00:12:54,691 --> 00:12:56,192
- The shock of the
water took the breath
199
00:12:56,276 --> 00:12:57,777
from my lungs.
200
00:12:58,653 --> 00:13:01,990
Down and down I went,
spinning in all directions.
201
00:13:03,366 --> 00:13:05,368
The cold was terrific.
202
00:13:06,869 --> 00:13:09,289
- Most people think of
drowning in a circumstance
203
00:13:09,372 --> 00:13:11,708
like this, it is that
ultimately your body runs
204
00:13:11,791 --> 00:13:13,334
out of energy,
but actually,
205
00:13:13,418 --> 00:13:16,254
you can drown as soon as
you first hit freezing water.
206
00:13:17,714 --> 00:13:19,882
- Some may have
cardiac arrest almost
207
00:13:20,008 --> 00:13:22,302
immediately
because of the shock.
208
00:13:25,221 --> 00:13:27,307
[Charles] I was still
fighting when a blast of
209
00:13:27,390 --> 00:13:30,768
hot air came up the
shaft and blew me right away
210
00:13:30,893 --> 00:13:33,313
from the airshaft
and up to the surface.
211
00:13:35,732 --> 00:13:38,985
[indistinct screams
and yelling]
212
00:13:42,071 --> 00:13:45,533
- Finally, I came up,
my lungs bursting.
213
00:13:48,244 --> 00:13:50,413
The ship was
in front of me.
214
00:13:51,080 --> 00:13:53,875
Suddenly, the second funnel
seemed to be lifted off.
215
00:13:57,795 --> 00:13:59,839
- The funnel
started to fall right
216
00:13:59,922 --> 00:14:03,801
amongst the struggling
mass of humanity already
217
00:14:03,926 --> 00:14:05,386
in the water.
218
00:14:06,262 --> 00:14:07,722
[indistinct screams
and yelling]
219
00:14:07,805 --> 00:14:10,683
[Jack] It missed me by
only 20 to 30 feet.
220
00:14:11,017 --> 00:14:13,102
The suction of
it drew me down.
221
00:14:15,271 --> 00:14:18,816
[Eugene] Those poor people
were sucked down in those
222
00:14:18,941 --> 00:14:24,072
funnels like flies.
223
00:14:26,991 --> 00:14:28,785
[Jack] As I came
to the surface,
224
00:14:28,910 --> 00:14:30,953
my hand came
against something,
225
00:14:31,788 --> 00:14:33,372
one of the
collapsible lifeboats.
226
00:14:33,456 --> 00:14:36,125
It was floating in the
water, bottom side up.
227
00:14:37,919 --> 00:14:40,713
About four or five
men clinging onto her,
228
00:14:41,714 --> 00:14:44,050
so I asked them to give
me a hand up, which they did.
229
00:14:46,094 --> 00:14:49,305
Sitting on my haunches,
holding on for dear life,
230
00:14:50,348 --> 00:14:52,308
it seemed as though hours had
passed since I left the ship.
231
00:14:56,354 --> 00:14:58,815
[Jeanette] People like
Jack and Officer Lightoller
232
00:14:58,898 --> 00:15:01,984
are swarming onto
collapsible B upside down,
233
00:15:02,068 --> 00:15:05,113
using it like a raft
in the freezing water just
234
00:15:05,196 --> 00:15:07,949
as a way of
trying to survive.
235
00:15:08,991 --> 00:15:11,369
[clock ticking]
236
00:15:21,754 --> 00:15:25,174
{\an8}- The end was very close.
237
00:15:26,384 --> 00:15:30,096
Something in the bowels
of the Titanic exploded,
238
00:15:30,346 --> 00:15:32,682
and sparks shot up to the sky.
239
00:15:34,016 --> 00:15:36,185
Two other
explosions followed,
240
00:15:36,561 --> 00:15:39,522
dull and heavy
as if below the surface.
241
00:15:41,691 --> 00:15:44,193
[West] The huge weight of
seawater in the bows and
242
00:15:44,318 --> 00:15:47,530
in the stern meant that
the two things were unable
243
00:15:47,655 --> 00:15:49,824
to remain as one part.
244
00:15:50,533 --> 00:15:53,411
- The whole superstructure
of the ship seemed to split.
245
00:15:55,121 --> 00:15:58,416
- The lights suddenly go out,
and then darkness falls.
246
00:16:00,042 --> 00:16:02,628
[indistinct screams]
247
00:16:10,553 --> 00:16:13,222
[Charlotte] The Titanic
broke in two before my eyes.
248
00:16:14,265 --> 00:16:17,602
The fore part wallowed over
and disappeared instantly.
249
00:16:20,104 --> 00:16:25,610
{\an8}- The ship seemed to right
herself like a hurt animal
250
00:16:25,860 --> 00:16:27,445
{\an8}with a broken back.
251
00:16:30,907 --> 00:16:33,993
- For a strange,
hallucinatory moment,
252
00:16:34,410 --> 00:16:36,871
it looks as though
everything is going to be fine
253
00:16:36,954 --> 00:16:40,666
because the weird,
wonky, distorted angles
254
00:16:40,750 --> 00:16:44,670
of the great ship
start to settle.
255
00:16:45,880 --> 00:16:48,090
[JJ] There's people that think
that some sort of safety
256
00:16:48,174 --> 00:16:50,259
feature has kicked in,
you know, at least this
257
00:16:50,343 --> 00:16:52,887
half of the ship
is going to somehow survive,
258
00:16:53,221 --> 00:16:55,223
and those on board
are going to be spared,
259
00:16:55,306 --> 00:16:57,016
but ultimately
that is short-lived.
260
00:16:57,600 --> 00:16:59,936
[indistinct screams
and yelling]
261
00:17:00,519 --> 00:17:03,606
{\an8}- I saw the Titanic
go up in the air,
262
00:17:03,731 --> 00:17:05,274
{\an8}ever so big.
263
00:17:07,443 --> 00:17:10,988
- Huge ship reared
herself on end.
264
00:17:11,739 --> 00:17:14,659
Rudder and propeller
clear of the water until
265
00:17:14,784 --> 00:17:18,746
at least she assumed a
perpendicular position.
266
00:17:22,291 --> 00:17:26,212
- We saw groups of the
1,500 people still aboard
267
00:17:26,295 --> 00:17:28,631
clinging like
swarming bees.
268
00:17:29,549 --> 00:17:32,134
[indistinct screams
and yelling]
269
00:17:32,218 --> 00:17:36,138
- The contents of the Titanic is
now falling through it,
270
00:17:36,222 --> 00:17:38,266
and tragically,
people as well.
271
00:17:39,350 --> 00:17:42,144
{\an8}- I think it was only at
that moment that many of
272
00:17:42,270 --> 00:17:46,065
{\an8}those poor souls onboard
realized their fate.
273
00:17:48,025 --> 00:17:50,152
- If we're
gonna die, I said,
274
00:17:50,278 --> 00:17:52,572
it would be best to
die gripping something.
275
00:17:54,740 --> 00:17:56,325
We gripped the rail.
276
00:17:56,993 --> 00:18:01,414
[indistinct screams
and yelling]
277
00:18:08,004 --> 00:18:10,756
- A sharp exclamation
from my husband,
278
00:18:12,300 --> 00:18:15,761
"My God, she is going now."
279
00:18:17,972 --> 00:18:22,226
{\an8}- The steamer,
without a sound
280
00:18:22,351 --> 00:18:26,147
{\an8}except for the shrieks of
the people still onboard,
281
00:18:28,107 --> 00:18:30,735
stood right on end.
282
00:18:33,738 --> 00:18:36,407
It stood there several
moments and slipped
283
00:18:36,532 --> 00:18:40,328
straight down
into the water.
284
00:18:41,329 --> 00:18:43,539
[distant screams]
285
00:18:43,623 --> 00:18:45,541
- As easily as a
pebble in a pond.
286
00:18:48,628 --> 00:18:51,464
- Our proud ship.
287
00:18:51,881 --> 00:18:55,301
Our beautiful Titanic .
288
00:18:56,302 --> 00:19:00,389
[distant screams]
289
00:19:02,683 --> 00:19:04,644
[clock ticking]
290
00:19:12,443 --> 00:19:17,782
[♪ dramatic music playing]
291
00:19:21,202 --> 00:19:23,663
[distant screams]
292
00:19:23,746 --> 00:19:25,373
[Charles] Everyone round
me on the upturned boat
293
00:19:25,456 --> 00:19:29,460
breathed the two words,
"She's gone."
294
00:19:32,004 --> 00:19:35,591
[distant screams]
295
00:19:39,261 --> 00:19:41,389
- I did not wish
to see her go down.
296
00:19:43,391 --> 00:19:45,768
{\an8}I'm glad that I did not.
297
00:19:47,853 --> 00:19:49,772
My back was turned to her.
298
00:19:50,439 --> 00:19:52,191
We were pulling away.
299
00:19:54,110 --> 00:19:55,403
[Suzannah] This is his ship.
300
00:19:55,486 --> 00:19:59,031
This is his company,
and there is intense
301
00:19:59,115 --> 00:20:01,867
professional and
personal shame here.
302
00:20:02,827 --> 00:20:06,247
I think that was just
too overwhelming for him
303
00:20:06,330 --> 00:20:08,249
to be able to look.
304
00:20:11,794 --> 00:20:14,380
- Probably a minute
passed with almost
305
00:20:14,463 --> 00:20:16,132
dead silence and quiet.
306
00:20:16,257 --> 00:20:18,718
[clock ticking]
307
00:20:21,429 --> 00:20:24,265
[Violet] Then an
unforgettable cry went up
308
00:20:24,348 --> 00:20:28,310
from 1,500
despairing throats.
309
00:20:33,065 --> 00:20:35,317
- A bedlam of
shrieks and cries.
310
00:20:36,152 --> 00:20:37,820
[distant screams]
311
00:20:37,903 --> 00:20:41,490
- A nightmare of
both sight and sound.
312
00:20:43,159 --> 00:20:44,827
[distant screams]
313
00:20:44,910 --> 00:20:48,330
- Hearing desperate
disembodied voices in
314
00:20:48,414 --> 00:20:49,874
the darkness of the ocean...
315
00:20:49,999 --> 00:20:52,543
[distant screaming]
316
00:20:52,668 --> 00:20:58,466
A cacophony of tears
and shouts and despair
317
00:20:58,549 --> 00:21:01,510
is, is almost like
a soundscape of hell.
318
00:21:02,011 --> 00:21:04,555
Potentially, it's your
husband, your brother,
319
00:21:04,680 --> 00:21:07,349
your father,
your loved ones' voices.
320
00:21:07,933 --> 00:21:09,852
I don't know how
you recover from that.
321
00:21:11,520 --> 00:21:16,025
- I have never
heard such screams
322
00:21:19,528 --> 00:21:24,617
from the hundreds
of people floating about us.
323
00:21:32,875 --> 00:21:37,379
[♪ somber music playing]
324
00:21:41,383 --> 00:21:42,676
- It was a horrible row.
325
00:21:42,760 --> 00:21:46,972
[indistinct screams
and yelling]
326
00:21:47,056 --> 00:21:48,474
- Mother!
327
00:21:48,557 --> 00:21:49,892
- One young man near
me shouted...
328
00:21:49,975 --> 00:21:52,102
- Mother! Mother!
329
00:21:52,228 --> 00:21:53,145
- "Mother."
330
00:21:53,229 --> 00:21:56,315
- Mother! Mother!
331
00:21:56,398 --> 00:22:00,694
- A man alongside me
crushed me round the neck.
332
00:22:04,198 --> 00:22:06,492
I choked him off.
333
00:22:09,537 --> 00:22:12,581
- Nobody knows how they'll
react in that circumstance.
334
00:22:12,706 --> 00:22:15,459
You're surrounded by
others in a panic with you.
335
00:22:15,835 --> 00:22:18,420
You begin to lose the
function of your arms and
336
00:22:18,546 --> 00:22:20,256
the function of your legs,
337
00:22:20,339 --> 00:22:21,882
the thing that you
need to keep afloat,
338
00:22:21,966 --> 00:22:24,260
and that can happen
extremely quickly because
339
00:22:24,385 --> 00:22:27,096
that body's reaction
to keep your vital
340
00:22:27,221 --> 00:22:29,515
organs warm
is so powerful.
341
00:22:33,561 --> 00:22:36,146
[Suzannah] The people in
the lifeboats are sitting
342
00:22:36,272 --> 00:22:39,066
and listening
to others die,
343
00:22:39,900 --> 00:22:43,112
and everyone's response
to that trauma situation
344
00:22:43,195 --> 00:22:45,072
will be different.
345
00:22:47,950 --> 00:22:50,744
- We chatted of little
unimportant things,
346
00:22:50,828 --> 00:22:52,454
as people do when
they've been through
347
00:22:52,580 --> 00:22:54,748
great mental strain.
348
00:22:56,125 --> 00:22:58,460
Try to make feeble jokes.
349
00:22:59,503 --> 00:23:03,215
I remember I
teased Ms. Fragatelli,
350
00:23:03,299 --> 00:23:04,925
"Just fancy,
351
00:23:05,009 --> 00:23:07,970
you left your beautiful
nightdress behind you."
352
00:23:08,095 --> 00:23:10,639
[laughing]
353
00:23:11,015 --> 00:23:12,975
And we all laughed.
354
00:23:15,644 --> 00:23:18,606
But in our hearts, we
felt very far from laughter.
355
00:23:19,773 --> 00:23:22,526
[Suzannah] Lucy's comments
sound tone deaf to us,
356
00:23:23,068 --> 00:23:25,321
but I think they're
a trauma response.
357
00:23:25,988 --> 00:23:31,493
It is far easier to
comprehend the loss of
358
00:23:31,577 --> 00:23:33,662
a beautiful
piece of clothing.
359
00:23:33,787 --> 00:23:37,541
She's a fashion designer,
of course, than it is to
360
00:23:37,666 --> 00:23:42,922
wrap their heads around
the extraordinary horror of
361
00:23:43,005 --> 00:23:45,966
the loss of human life that
they're seeing before them.
362
00:23:47,968 --> 00:23:53,390
- For those in the water,
a fatal countdown has begun.
363
00:23:53,766 --> 00:23:56,226
Once severe
hypothermia sets in,
364
00:23:56,352 --> 00:24:00,522
you've got about 15 minutes
until you'll become unconscious.
365
00:24:02,024 --> 00:24:03,901
[Thomas] A large number
of people gave up the
366
00:24:04,026 --> 00:24:07,237
struggle and
were content to die,
367
00:24:07,363 --> 00:24:10,449
for the water was so cold.
368
00:24:13,077 --> 00:24:15,412
[JJ] When the darkness
starts to creep in on you,
369
00:24:15,537 --> 00:24:16,789
that's when you have
to have a real word with
370
00:24:16,872 --> 00:24:19,041
yourself and remind
yourself that you still
371
00:24:19,124 --> 00:24:20,876
have some fight in you.
372
00:24:21,710 --> 00:24:24,797
[indistinct screams
and yelling]
373
00:24:27,549 --> 00:24:30,052
[Thomas] I swam as
though I was in a race.
374
00:24:30,552 --> 00:24:33,722
I got myself away
from the crowd.
375
00:24:34,640 --> 00:24:36,642
Behind me, there
was the horrible volume
376
00:24:36,725 --> 00:24:38,477
of groans which...
377
00:24:38,560 --> 00:24:41,480
[distant groaning]
378
00:24:42,690 --> 00:24:44,775
I can hear them now.
379
00:24:46,610 --> 00:24:48,904
- It was a terrible
sight all around.
380
00:24:50,239 --> 00:24:52,241
Men swimming and sinking.
381
00:24:52,449 --> 00:24:53,784
I saw a boat of some kind.
382
00:24:53,909 --> 00:24:56,912
And I put all my strength
into an effort to swim to it.
383
00:24:58,122 --> 00:24:59,790
It was hard work.
384
00:25:00,916 --> 00:25:05,754
I was all done when
a hand reached from the
385
00:25:05,879 --> 00:25:08,048
boat and pulled me aboard.
386
00:25:08,132 --> 00:25:09,258
[grunting]
387
00:25:09,341 --> 00:25:10,759
- Come on, that's it.
388
00:25:10,843 --> 00:25:13,012
[Suzannah] Collapsible B that
had been stored on the roof of
389
00:25:13,095 --> 00:25:15,347
the officers' quarters,
was washed off deck and
390
00:25:15,431 --> 00:25:20,602
is now the last hope
of the men who jump
391
00:25:20,728 --> 00:25:22,563
from the Titanic .
392
00:25:22,813 --> 00:25:25,607
Among the 30 men
on Collapsible B,
393
00:25:25,691 --> 00:25:29,653
we have Harold Bride,
Jack Thayer, Eugene Daly,
394
00:25:30,237 --> 00:25:31,780
and Charles Lightoller.
395
00:25:32,781 --> 00:25:35,993
- Others came near,
nobody gave them a hand.
396
00:25:36,118 --> 00:25:38,704
The bottom-up boat already
had more men than it would
397
00:25:38,787 --> 00:25:40,789
hold and was sinking.
398
00:25:42,166 --> 00:25:46,128
- We were very low in the
water, standing, sitting,
399
00:25:46,253 --> 00:25:48,630
kneeling, lying in all
conceivable positions.
400
00:25:50,299 --> 00:25:53,135
- People came up beside
us and begged us to get
401
00:25:53,260 --> 00:25:55,262
on this upturned boat.
402
00:25:58,140 --> 00:26:01,935
Saving ourselves, we were
obliged to push them off.
403
00:26:05,439 --> 00:26:07,024
One man was alongside us
404
00:26:07,149 --> 00:26:09,693
and asked if he could
get up on top of it.
405
00:26:11,779 --> 00:26:14,156
We told him that if he did,
we would all go down.
406
00:26:17,159 --> 00:26:20,746
His reply was,
"God bless you, goodbye."
407
00:26:24,249 --> 00:26:27,503
- To look another human being
in the eye and say to them,
408
00:26:27,586 --> 00:26:30,005
"You're going to
have to perish,"
409
00:26:30,130 --> 00:26:32,424
like that, is an
impossible thing not just
410
00:26:32,508 --> 00:26:35,177
to live through in the moment
but then to have to live with.
411
00:26:39,014 --> 00:26:40,057
[distant screams
and yelling]
412
00:26:40,182 --> 00:26:43,185
- There are 1,500
people in ice cold water
413
00:26:43,268 --> 00:26:46,271
in the Atlantic, and
there are some lifeboats
414
00:26:46,355 --> 00:26:48,482
that are full to capacity,
415
00:26:48,690 --> 00:26:50,526
and there's nothing
they can do.
416
00:26:50,859 --> 00:26:53,028
But there are many
others that are even
417
00:26:53,153 --> 00:26:55,072
less than half full.
418
00:26:56,073 --> 00:26:59,118
- Because the 18 lifeboats
are not at capacity,
419
00:26:59,201 --> 00:27:02,121
there's still space
for over 400 people.
420
00:27:03,163 --> 00:27:05,791
It could save them from
almost certain death.
421
00:27:08,794 --> 00:27:11,547
- Within the lifeboats,
there's an intense dilemma.
422
00:27:11,797 --> 00:27:13,757
Do they go back
and save people,
423
00:27:13,882 --> 00:27:16,176
or do they stay at a safe
distance so that they don't
424
00:27:16,260 --> 00:27:19,388
get overcrowded and
everyone in that lifeboat
425
00:27:19,471 --> 00:27:21,306
end up in the water?
426
00:27:23,183 --> 00:27:26,103
[Eleanor] Three times an officer
ordered his men to turn about,
427
00:27:27,771 --> 00:27:29,648
{\an8}but each time they
were prevented from
428
00:27:29,731 --> 00:27:32,025
{\an8}doing so by some
of the passengers.
429
00:27:34,361 --> 00:27:37,030
They grasped the oars
so that the seamen were
430
00:27:37,114 --> 00:27:40,409
forced to give up
turning back to rescue
431
00:27:40,534 --> 00:27:42,327
any of the unfortunates.
432
00:27:46,874 --> 00:27:49,710
- In the Duff-Gordon boat,
one of the crew members says,
433
00:27:49,793 --> 00:27:51,378
"It's up to us to
go back and see if we
434
00:27:51,461 --> 00:27:53,130
can pick anyone up."
435
00:27:54,256 --> 00:27:56,300
The Duff-Gordons object.
436
00:27:56,425 --> 00:27:57,634
They say they'll
be swamped,
437
00:27:57,759 --> 00:28:00,387
and they persuade the
crew not to go back.
438
00:28:01,722 --> 00:28:04,308
- I find it chilling that
the Duff-Gordons are just
439
00:28:04,433 --> 00:28:07,895
openly hostile to letting
anyone in their lifeboat.
440
00:28:07,978 --> 00:28:11,481
All along, they have
been given privileges that
441
00:28:11,607 --> 00:28:13,442
other people
haven't been given,
442
00:28:13,567 --> 00:28:18,447
and to die slowly in
ice-cold water within earshot
443
00:28:18,572 --> 00:28:20,616
of people who
might save your life,
444
00:28:20,741 --> 00:28:23,035
I think there's a
particular cruelty to that.
445
00:28:26,788 --> 00:28:30,000
- Men and women
were going to their death
446
00:28:30,125 --> 00:28:32,252
beneath the icy
waters of the Atlantic,
447
00:28:32,336 --> 00:28:37,966
but I noticed in a hazy,
detached sort of way.
448
00:28:39,259 --> 00:28:42,471
I'd gone through too much
in those hours to think clearly.
449
00:28:45,933 --> 00:28:47,643
[Martha] She's so
traumatized she's not
450
00:28:47,768 --> 00:28:51,313
able to get out of her
own experience enough
451
00:28:51,396 --> 00:28:54,483
to engage with what
those people in the water
452
00:28:54,608 --> 00:28:56,109
are going through
at that time.
453
00:28:56,944 --> 00:28:59,821
[indistinct screams
and yelling]
454
00:29:01,782 --> 00:29:05,160
[Jack] Partially filled
lifeboats standing by
455
00:29:05,243 --> 00:29:08,205
only a few hundred yards
away never came back.
456
00:29:11,041 --> 00:29:15,879
Why on earth they did not
come back is a mystery.
457
00:29:16,004 --> 00:29:19,007
How could any human being
fail to heed those cries?
458
00:29:20,133 --> 00:29:23,011
[indistinct screams
and yelling]
459
00:29:24,221 --> 00:29:26,181
[West] I think it is
extremely unfortunate the
460
00:29:26,264 --> 00:29:28,934
lifeboats didn't go ahead
and start to rescue people.
461
00:29:29,017 --> 00:29:31,520
They were willing to sit
with people screaming
462
00:29:31,645 --> 00:29:32,896
and dying in the water,
463
00:29:33,021 --> 00:29:34,898
and I find that
quite surprising.
464
00:29:38,485 --> 00:29:42,197
[Thomas] I became so
numb I could hardly swim.
465
00:29:44,491 --> 00:29:46,827
My head was so queer.
466
00:29:52,082 --> 00:29:55,043
But when I was almost at
my last gasp, I shouted,
467
00:29:55,127 --> 00:30:01,341
"Boats ahoy" on the off
chance that one might be near.
468
00:30:04,720 --> 00:30:09,766
[Joseph] I had room for a
dozen more people in my boat,
469
00:30:09,891 --> 00:30:11,893
{\an8}but it was dark.
470
00:30:15,063 --> 00:30:17,024
{\an8}We didn't pick
up any swimmers.
471
00:30:20,610 --> 00:30:22,696
- We all like to think that
we'd be the noble one that
472
00:30:22,779 --> 00:30:24,906
does the right thing,
473
00:30:25,032 --> 00:30:27,075
but that's not
how survival works.
474
00:30:28,744 --> 00:30:30,203
Ultimately,
as human beings,
475
00:30:30,287 --> 00:30:32,247
we are animals
who have survived.
476
00:30:32,330 --> 00:30:34,082
That's how we've
evolved to be what we are.
477
00:30:34,166 --> 00:30:36,460
So survival instinct is
absolutely within our DNA.
478
00:30:37,085 --> 00:30:40,005
And so you have no idea
what you are capable of
479
00:30:40,088 --> 00:30:42,215
until you are
pushed in an extreme.
480
00:30:43,550 --> 00:30:46,553
- Disasters reveal an
aspect of your personality
481
00:30:46,636 --> 00:30:47,929
that you might
not know is there,
482
00:30:48,055 --> 00:30:50,098
and you might not
like being there,
483
00:30:50,223 --> 00:30:51,600
to, to save
your own life,
484
00:30:51,725 --> 00:30:53,268
to let hundreds
of people die?
485
00:30:53,351 --> 00:30:54,478
I think that's, that's
something that would
486
00:30:54,603 --> 00:30:57,230
weigh heavily on you
for the rest of your life.
487
00:30:58,774 --> 00:31:03,320
[♪ dramatic music playing]
488
00:31:06,198 --> 00:31:08,867
- There's a cluster
of lifeboats closer
489
00:31:08,950 --> 00:31:10,952
to where the
Titanic went down,
490
00:31:11,036 --> 00:31:13,622
including
Lifeboats 14 and 4,
491
00:31:14,623 --> 00:31:16,166
and this is a kind
of case of right place,
492
00:31:16,291 --> 00:31:18,585
right time for some
people in the water.
493
00:31:20,128 --> 00:31:22,589
- Fortunately,
my shout was heard.
494
00:31:23,715 --> 00:31:25,759
[passenger] Over here!
495
00:31:25,842 --> 00:31:28,303
[Thomas] I was hauled
into Lifeboat No. 4.
496
00:31:29,554 --> 00:31:33,600
- About seven people are
rescued because of that boat,
497
00:31:34,059 --> 00:31:36,478
including Thomas Dillon.
498
00:31:37,062 --> 00:31:40,232
- I think I'd been
20 minutes in the water.
499
00:31:43,819 --> 00:31:48,657
I would rather die
100 times than go through
500
00:31:48,782 --> 00:31:50,659
such an experience again.
501
00:31:53,245 --> 00:31:58,625
[♪ dramatic music playing]
502
00:32:02,671 --> 00:32:05,632
- Mr. Lowe went in
search of other lifeboats.
503
00:32:06,633 --> 00:32:11,054
He found 4 or 5 and took
command of the little fleet.
504
00:32:11,471 --> 00:32:13,890
- The whole of you
are under my orders.
505
00:32:14,349 --> 00:32:16,226
[JJ] Lifeboat 14
is very full,
506
00:32:16,351 --> 00:32:18,603
but Lowe realizes
that actually,
507
00:32:18,687 --> 00:32:20,605
if this group works together,
508
00:32:20,689 --> 00:32:24,025
they have a chance of being
able to launch a rescue mission.
509
00:32:25,193 --> 00:32:27,946
They were able to
redistribute those passengers,
510
00:32:28,029 --> 00:32:30,532
and they actually free
up an entire lifeboat,
511
00:32:31,283 --> 00:32:34,286
which allows them to go
in and search for survivors.
512
00:32:34,703 --> 00:32:36,705
- Row.
513
00:32:36,913 --> 00:32:39,291
{\an8}- I went with just
the boat's crew,
514
00:32:39,374 --> 00:32:42,127
{\an8}no passengers.
515
00:32:42,210 --> 00:32:45,380
Of course, I had to
wait for the yells and
516
00:32:45,505 --> 00:32:48,216
shrieks to subside,
517
00:32:48,717 --> 00:32:50,719
for the people to thin out.
518
00:32:52,637 --> 00:32:57,058
- Officer Lowe is very
aware of the potential risks.
519
00:32:57,184 --> 00:32:58,852
You can be capsized
when trying to pull
520
00:32:58,935 --> 00:33:00,896
survivors into the vessel.
521
00:33:01,313 --> 00:33:03,315
The vessel can be swamped,
522
00:33:03,523 --> 00:33:05,483
but they
choose to go back.
523
00:33:05,567 --> 00:33:07,736
They're not just
survivors in this moment;
524
00:33:07,861 --> 00:33:09,404
they continue
to be crewmen.
525
00:33:09,487 --> 00:33:10,655
Your training
just kicks in,
526
00:33:10,739 --> 00:33:12,240
and you have
a responsibility
527
00:33:12,365 --> 00:33:15,035
to those around you,
even before yourself.
528
00:33:16,077 --> 00:33:18,038
[Harold] I searched the
wreck thoroughly and
529
00:33:18,121 --> 00:33:20,123
found four persons.
530
00:33:20,457 --> 00:33:23,752
One was a Mr. Hoyt
from New York.
531
00:33:27,339 --> 00:33:29,382
He was bleeding
from the mouth.
532
00:33:30,342 --> 00:33:32,093
I loosened his shirt
so as to give him every
533
00:33:32,177 --> 00:33:37,224
chance to breathe, but
unfortunately, he died.
534
00:33:38,391 --> 00:33:40,769
I suppose he was too far
gone when we picked him up.
535
00:33:49,361 --> 00:33:51,196
[Fred] Most of those that
jumped in the sea died within
536
00:33:51,279 --> 00:33:53,323
a quarter of an hour.
537
00:33:54,032 --> 00:33:56,159
The awful moaning
ceased after that.
538
00:33:58,203 --> 00:34:02,874
{\an8}We saw nothing but
ice and dead bodies.
539
00:34:02,958 --> 00:34:06,795
{\an8}[victim] My God!
540
00:34:06,920 --> 00:34:08,171
{\an8}My...
541
00:34:08,296 --> 00:34:10,006
- I remember
the very last cry,
542
00:34:10,131 --> 00:34:13,009
this man's
voice calling loudly,
543
00:34:13,134 --> 00:34:18,807
"My God, my God."
544
00:34:20,558 --> 00:34:22,978
[groaning]
545
00:34:23,103 --> 00:34:25,689
[victim] My God.
546
00:34:25,814 --> 00:34:28,316
- I think it would have
been very haunting to slowly
547
00:34:28,400 --> 00:34:30,527
hear fewer and fewer voices,
548
00:34:30,652 --> 00:34:33,405
and that's one of the
most traumatic memories
549
00:34:33,488 --> 00:34:36,283
that people had is the
sound of those screams.
550
00:34:38,159 --> 00:34:42,497
[♪ dramatic music playing]
551
00:34:44,874 --> 00:34:47,460
[shivering]
552
00:34:47,544 --> 00:34:50,755
- The air was leaking
from under the boat,
553
00:34:51,673 --> 00:34:54,217
lowering us further and
further into the icy water.
554
00:34:56,344 --> 00:34:58,388
- Soaking wet, freezing.
555
00:34:58,513 --> 00:35:01,308
The pack of huddled
men on Collapsible B
556
00:35:01,391 --> 00:35:04,269
have survived so many odds.
557
00:35:04,894 --> 00:35:07,397
But that's all for nothing
if nobody comes to your rescue,
558
00:35:08,106 --> 00:35:09,816
and they don't
know if that's coming.
559
00:35:10,775 --> 00:35:15,322
- Some lost consciousness
and slipped overboard.
560
00:35:16,197 --> 00:35:17,407
[Jeanette] The problem
with trying to stay on
561
00:35:17,532 --> 00:35:19,826
an upside-down boat, which
they're now using as a raft,
562
00:35:19,909 --> 00:35:21,328
is that it's not stable.
563
00:35:21,411 --> 00:35:25,165
This is a balancing act,
literally to save your life.
564
00:35:27,167 --> 00:35:28,877
[Suzannah] Their
class differences cease
565
00:35:28,960 --> 00:35:31,046
to be important.
566
00:35:31,129 --> 00:35:32,255
We've got men
from first class,
567
00:35:32,380 --> 00:35:34,007
men from third, crew members
568
00:35:34,090 --> 00:35:36,301
united by this
will to survive.
569
00:35:37,802 --> 00:35:40,388
- Harold Bride helped
keep our hopes up.
570
00:35:41,556 --> 00:35:44,059
He said time
and time again,
571
00:35:44,184 --> 00:35:46,269
" The Carpathia is coming
as fast as she can,
572
00:35:46,728 --> 00:35:48,605
The Carpathia is coming
as fast as she can."
573
00:35:53,860 --> 00:35:56,363
Lightoller found his whistle.
574
00:35:57,238 --> 00:35:59,199
[whistle blowing]
575
00:35:59,282 --> 00:36:02,869
After desperate calling,
we got the attention of
576
00:36:02,952 --> 00:36:04,871
the other lifeboats.
577
00:36:06,373 --> 00:36:08,833
Two of the boats
realized the position
578
00:36:08,917 --> 00:36:11,169
we were in
and drew toward us.
579
00:36:14,172 --> 00:36:16,758
[Harold] They had a
right-side-up boat,
580
00:36:18,093 --> 00:36:19,761
and it was
full to its capacity.
581
00:36:22,806 --> 00:36:25,433
Yet they came to us
and loaded us all into it.
582
00:36:27,936 --> 00:36:33,900
[♪ dramatic music playing]
583
00:36:39,364 --> 00:36:41,783
- Officer Boxhall
took some green flares
584
00:36:41,908 --> 00:36:45,370
from the bridge, and
now he's lighting them,
585
00:36:45,453 --> 00:36:48,123
hoping that he will
attract the attention of
586
00:36:48,248 --> 00:36:50,792
the approaching
rescue vessel.
587
00:36:52,085 --> 00:36:54,546
[clock ticking]
588
00:37:01,803 --> 00:37:05,265
- About this time,
the edge of the sun
589
00:37:05,348 --> 00:37:07,851
came above the horizon.
590
00:37:11,479 --> 00:37:14,315
To feel that
glowing warmth,
591
00:37:14,441 --> 00:37:17,277
which we'd never
expected to see again,
592
00:37:17,360 --> 00:37:19,946
that's something
never to be forgotten.
593
00:37:23,324 --> 00:37:28,079
- We were all very
tired when we saw
594
00:37:28,163 --> 00:37:29,873
a big light.
595
00:37:32,208 --> 00:37:35,712
- Look! Look! It's a ship!
596
00:37:38,173 --> 00:37:40,425
- Suddenly,
a flicker of hope,
597
00:37:40,508 --> 00:37:43,511
a ship getting
closer every minute.
598
00:37:46,973 --> 00:37:49,392
[Jeanette] Coming towards
the sight of the wreck
599
00:37:49,517 --> 00:37:53,062
and the lifeboats bobbing
about in this freezing,
600
00:37:53,188 --> 00:37:58,151
empty sea,
finally is The Carpathia.
601
00:37:58,735 --> 00:38:01,654
She's come as fast as she
could through the ice flows,
602
00:38:01,738 --> 00:38:03,990
through the
night responding to
603
00:38:04,073 --> 00:38:06,451
Jack Phillips's
distress calls.
604
00:38:15,043 --> 00:38:20,215
- Nothing has ever
looked so good to me as
605
00:38:20,340 --> 00:38:22,967
the lights
from The Carpathia.
606
00:38:24,469 --> 00:38:28,765
- Even through my numbness,
I began to realize I was saved.
607
00:38:30,350 --> 00:38:35,313
[♪ hopeful music playing]
608
00:38:42,529 --> 00:38:45,740
[Harold] At last,
The Carpathia was alongside,
609
00:38:45,865 --> 00:38:48,910
and people were being
taken up by rope ladder.
610
00:38:51,913 --> 00:38:54,082
One man was dead.
611
00:38:55,416 --> 00:38:57,418
I passed him and
went up the ladder.
612
00:39:05,635 --> 00:39:08,721
The dead man was Phillips.
613
00:39:09,889 --> 00:39:13,560
He had died on the raft of
exposure and cold, I guess.
614
00:39:17,772 --> 00:39:20,066
He stood his ground until
the crisis had passed;
615
00:39:20,149 --> 00:39:23,736
then he collapsed.
616
00:39:34,914 --> 00:39:39,043
- No survivor
knows better than I
617
00:39:39,127 --> 00:39:42,463
the cruelty
of disappointment.
618
00:39:45,800 --> 00:39:49,470
I had a husband
to search for.
619
00:39:52,307 --> 00:39:55,351
A husband whom I
believed would be found
620
00:39:55,476 --> 00:39:58,563
in one of the boats.
621
00:40:03,318 --> 00:40:06,654
He was not there.
622
00:40:11,701 --> 00:40:14,245
- My friends were all
among the missing when
623
00:40:14,329 --> 00:40:16,414
the role was called.
624
00:40:18,374 --> 00:40:21,794
The loss
affected me badly.
625
00:40:27,842 --> 00:40:29,510
[Jeanette] The big
narrative is always going
626
00:40:29,636 --> 00:40:33,222
to be about heroism
and loss and sacrifice,
627
00:40:33,932 --> 00:40:36,517
but the Titanic
was a disaster.
628
00:40:38,519 --> 00:40:41,856
These are real people's
lives that are lost.
629
00:40:43,191 --> 00:40:45,777
Real people who suffered.
630
00:40:47,862 --> 00:40:52,533
[♪ dramatic music playing]
631
00:40:57,705 --> 00:41:03,127
[♪ dramatic music playing]
632
00:41:08,758 --> 00:41:12,887
- Shut all dampers!
- Dropping!
633
00:41:13,221 --> 00:41:15,723
[Fred] The engineers were
the heroes, I think.
634
00:41:16,265 --> 00:41:18,267
They kept going in some
minutes before the Titanic
635
00:41:18,393 --> 00:41:20,353
went out of sight.
636
00:41:20,812 --> 00:41:22,772
Not a man of
them was saved.
637
00:41:28,194 --> 00:41:31,698
- In 1912, it was taken
for granted that the price
638
00:41:31,781 --> 00:41:34,575
of a first-class ticket
included a greater
639
00:41:34,701 --> 00:41:36,744
likelihood of surviving.
640
00:41:38,705 --> 00:41:41,749
[Nadifa] What the Titanic
teaches us is what happens when
641
00:41:41,833 --> 00:41:45,086
people's lives are
given unequal value.
642
00:41:46,879 --> 00:41:49,382
Every element from your
breakfast to how you're
643
00:41:49,465 --> 00:41:51,592
treated in an emergency,
644
00:41:51,676 --> 00:41:54,804
all of that is impacted
by class and hierarchy,
645
00:41:54,929 --> 00:41:56,723
and status.
646
00:41:57,181 --> 00:42:00,560
- This happened in an age
where the British stiff
647
00:42:00,643 --> 00:42:02,937
upper lip was
stiffer than ever,
648
00:42:03,062 --> 00:42:04,105
but the reality is,
649
00:42:04,188 --> 00:42:06,524
it doesn't matter how
resilient you think you are,
650
00:42:06,607 --> 00:42:09,485
sometimes we're just
not capable of processing
651
00:42:09,610 --> 00:42:11,237
that level of horror.
652
00:42:12,113 --> 00:42:14,449
- Personal trauma
was not recognized.
653
00:42:14,574 --> 00:42:16,951
You just suffered,
and you carried on.
654
00:42:17,368 --> 00:42:19,787
Those people who survive,
they were just now going
655
00:42:19,871 --> 00:42:21,414
to have to pick up
their lives as best
656
00:42:21,497 --> 00:42:23,791
they could and manage.
657
00:42:24,500 --> 00:42:27,795
[Suzannah] These are searing
memories that never leave them,
658
00:42:27,920 --> 00:42:30,757
and the grief was huge,
659
00:42:30,840 --> 00:42:32,800
but I like to
imagine that there were
660
00:42:32,884 --> 00:42:37,013
those who felt that this
encounter with death
661
00:42:37,138 --> 00:42:40,641
made them live the rest
of their days more fully,
662
00:42:40,975 --> 00:42:43,811
and that they owed it
to those who died to live.
663
00:42:54,280 --> 00:42:59,327
[♪ dramatic music playing]
664
00:43:08,878 --> 00:43:15,134
[♪ dramatic music playing]
665
00:43:24,685 --> 00:43:28,856
[♪ dramatic music playing]
666
00:43:37,865 --> 00:43:44,622
[♪ dramatic music playing]
667
00:43:54,799 --> 00:44:01,389
[♪ dramatic music playing]
668
00:44:10,690 --> 00:44:15,236
[♪ dramatic music playing]
669
00:44:24,579 --> 00:44:28,749
{\an8}[♪ dramatic music playing]
670
00:44:36,883 --> 00:44:41,679
[♪ dramatic music playing]
671
00:44:50,855 --> 00:44:54,942
[♪ dramatic music playing]
672
00:45:02,450 --> 00:45:07,330
[Eugene] I lost my pipes, which
I prided myself so much on.
673
00:45:08,289 --> 00:45:12,543
I lost all my
clothes and 98 pounds,
674
00:45:12,793 --> 00:45:15,796
which had taken
me many years to save.
675
00:45:19,300 --> 00:45:22,595
Here I am stripped of
all I had but thankful to
676
00:45:22,678 --> 00:45:25,723
God that He left me my life.
677
00:45:29,644 --> 00:45:34,482
[♪ dramatic music playing]
678
00:45:36,901 --> 00:45:39,362
{\an8}[♪ music playing
through credits]