<p><SPAN name="link2HCH0006" id="link2HCH0006"></SPAN></p>
<h2> CHAPTER VI. "WOMEN AND CHILDREN FIRST!" </h2>
<p>COOL-HEADED OFFICERS AND CREW BRING ORDER OUT OF CHAOS—FILLING THE
LIFE-BOATS—HEARTRENDING SCENES AS FAMILIES ARE PARTED—FOUR
LIFE-BOATS LOST—INCIDENTS OF BRAVERY—"THE BOATS ARE ALL
FILLED!"</p>
<p>ONCE on the deck, many hesitated to enter the swinging life-boats. Tho
glassy sea, the starlit sky, the absence, in the first few moments, of
intense excitement, gave them the feeling that there was only some slight
mishap; that those who got into the boats would have a chilly half hour
below and might, later, be laughed at.</p>
<p>It was such a feeling as this, from all accounts, which caused John Jacob
Astor and his wife to refuse the places offered them in the first boat,
and to retire to the gymnasium. In the same way H. J. Allison, a Montreal
banker, laughed at the warning, and his wife, reassured by him, took her
time dressing. They and their daughter did not reach the Carpathia. Their
son, less than two years old, was carried into a life-boat by his nurse,
and was taken in charge by Major Arthur Peuchen.</p>
<p>THE LIFE-BOATS LOWERED</p>
<p>The admiration felt by the passengers and crew for the matchlessly
appointed vessel was translated, in those first few moments, into a
confidence which for some proved deadly. The pulsing of the engines had
ceased, and the steamship lay just as though she were awaiting the order
to go on again after some trifling matter had been adjusted. But in a few
minutes the canvas covers were lifted from the life-boats and the crews
allotted to each standing by, ready to lower them to the water.</p>
<p>Nearly all the boats that were lowered on the port side of the ship
touched the water without capsizing. Four of the others lowered to
starboard, including one collapsible, were capsized. All, however, who
were in the collapsible boats that practically went to pieces, were
rescued by the other boats.</p>
<p>Presently the order was heard: "All men stand back and all women retire to
the deck below." That was the smoking-room deck, or the B deck. The men
stood away and remained in absolute silence, leaning against the rail or
pacing up and down the deck slowly. Many of them lighted cigars or
cigarettes and began to smoke.</p>
<p>LOADING THE BOATS</p>
<p>The boats were swung out and lowered from the A deck above. The women were
marshaled quietly in lines along the B deck, and when the boats were
lowered down to the level of the latter the women were assisted to climb
into them.</p>
<p>As each of the boats was filled with its quota of passengers the word was
given and it was carefully lowered down to the dark surface of the water.</p>
<p>Nobody seemed to know how Mr. Ismay got into a boat, but it was assumed
that he wished to make a presentation of the case of the Titanic to his
company. He was among those who apparently realized that the splendid ship
was doomed. All hands in the life-boats, under instructions from officers
and men in charge, were rowed a considerable distance from the ship
herself in order to get far away from the possible suction that would
follow her foundering.</p>
<p>COOLEST MEN ON BOARD</p>
<p>Captain Smith and Major Archibald Butt, military aide to the President of
the United States, were among the coolest men on board. A number of
steerage passengers were yelling and screaming and fighting to get to the
boats. Officers drew guns and told them that if they moved towards the
boats they would be shot dead. Major Butt had a gun in his hand and
covered the men who tried to get to the boats.</p>
<p>The following story of his bravery was told by Mrs. Henry B. Harris, wife
of the theatrical manager:</p>
<p>"The world should rise in praise of Major Butt. That man's conduct will
remain in my memory forever. The American army is honored by him and the
way he taught some of the other men how to behave when women and children
were suffering that awful mental fear of death. Major Butt was near me and
I noticed everything that he did.</p>
<p>"When the order to man the boats came, the captain whispered something to
Major Butt. The two of them had become friends. The major immediately
became as one in supreme command. You would have thought he was at a White
House reception. A dozen or more women became hysterical all at once, as
something connected with a life-boat went wrong. Major Butt stepped over
to them and said:</p>
<p>"'Really, you must not act like that; we are all going to see you through
this thing.' He helped the sailors rearrange the rope or chain that had
gone wrong and lifted some of the women in with a touch of gallantry. Not
only was there a complete lack of any fear in his manner, but there was
the action of an aristocrat.</p>
<p>"When the time came he was a man to be feared. In one of the earlier boats
fifty women, it seemed, were about to be lowered, when a man, suddenly
panic-stricken, ran to the stern of it. Major Butt shot one arm out,
caught him by the back of the neck and jerked him backward like a pillow.
His head cracked against a rail and he was stunned.</p>
<p>"'Sorry,' said Major Butt, 'women will be attended to first or I'll break
every damned bone in your body.'</p>
<p>FORCED MEN USURPING PLACES TO VACATE</p>
<p>"The boats were lowered one by one, and as I stood by, my husband said to
me, 'Thank God, for Archie Butt.' Perhaps Major Butt heard it, for he
turned his face towards us for a second and smiled. Just at that moment, a
young man was arguing to get into a life-boat, and Major Butt had a hold
of the lad by the arm, like a big brother, and was telling him to keep his
head and be a man.</p>
<p>"Major Butt helped those poor frightened steerage people so wonderfully,
so tenderly and yet with such cool and manly firmness that he prevented
the loss of many lives from panic. He was a soldier to the last. He was
one of God's greatest noblemen, and I think I can say he was an example of
bravery even to men on the ship."</p>
<p>LAST WORDS OF MAJOR BUTT</p>
<p>Miss Marie Young, who was a music instructor to President Roosevelt's
children and had known Major Butt during the Roosevelt occupancy of the
White House, told this story of his heroism.</p>
<p>"Archie himself put me into the boat, wrapped blankets about me and tucked
me in as carefully as if we were starting on a motor ride. He, himself,
entered the boat with me, performing the little courtesies as calmly and
with as smiling a face as if death were far away, instead of being but a
few moments removed from him.</p>
<p>"When he had carefully wrapped me up he stepped upon the gunwale of the
boat, and lifting his hat, smiled down at me. 'Good-bye, Miss Young,' he
said. 'Good luck to you, and don't forget to remember me to the folks back
home.' Then he stepped back and waved his hand to me as the boat was
lowered. I think I was the last woman he had a chance to help, for the
boat went down shortly after we cleared the suction zone."</p>
<p>COLONEL ASTOR ANOTHER HERO</p>
<p>Colonel Astor was another of the heroes of the awful night. Effort was
made to persuade him to take a place in one of the life-boats, but he
emphatically refused to do so until every woman and child on board had
been provided for, not excepting the women members of the ship's company.</p>
<p>One of the passengers describing the consummate courage of Colonel Astor
said:</p>
<p>"He led Mrs. Astor to the side of the ship and helped her to the life-boat
to which she had been assigned. I saw that she was prostrated and said she
would remain and take her chances with him, but Colonel Astor quietly
insisted and tried to reassure her in a few words. As she took her place
in the boat her eyes were fixed upon him. Colonel Astor smiled, touched
his cap, and when the boat moved safely away from the ship's side he
turned back to his place among the men."</p>
<p>Mrs. Ida S. Hippach and her daughter Jean, survivors of the Titanic, said
they were saved by Colonel John Jacob Astor, who forced the crew of the
last life-boat to wait for them.</p>
<p>"We saw Colonel Astor place Mrs. Astor in a boat and assure her that he
would follow later," said Mrs. Hippach.</p>
<p>"He turned to us with a smile and said, 'Ladies, you are next.' The
officer in charge of the boat protested that the craft was full, and the
seamen started to lower it.</p>
<p>"Colonel Astor exclaimed, 'Hold that boat,' in the voice of a man
accustomed to be obeyed, and they did as he ordered. The boat had been
lowered past the upper deck and the colonel took us to the deck below and
put us in the boat, one after the other, through a port-hole."</p>
<p>{illust. caption = LOADING THE LIFE-BOATS</p>
<p>Here occurred the heart-rending separation of husbands and wives, as the
women were given precedence in the boats.}</p>
<p>HEART-BREAKING SCENES</p>
<p>There were some terrible scenes. Fathers were parting from their children
and giving them an encouraging pat on the shoulders; men were kissing
their wives and telling them that they would be with them shortly. One man
said there was absolutely no danger, that the boat was the finest ever
built, with water-tight compartments, and that it could not sink. That
seemed to be the general impression.</p>
<p>A few of the men, however, were panic-stricken even when the first of the
fifty-six foot life-boats was being filled. Fully ten men threw themselves
into the boats already crowded with women and children. These men were
dragged back and hurled sprawling across the deck. Six of them, screamed
with fear, struggled to their feet and made a second attempt to rush to
the boats.</p>
<p>About ten shots sounded in quick succession. The six cowardly men were
stopped in their tracks, staggered and collapsed one after another. At
least two of them vainly attempted to creep toward the boats again. The
others lay quite still. This scene of bloodshed served its purpose. In
that particular section of the deck there was no further attempt to
violate the rule of "women and children first."</p>
<p>"I helped fill the boats with women," said Thomas Whiteley, who was a
waiter on the Titanic. "Collapsible boat No. 2 on the starboard jammed.
The second officer was hacking at the ropes with a knife and I was being
dragged around the deck by that rope when I looked up and saw the boat,
with all aboard, turn turtle. In some way I got overboard myself and clung
to an oak dresser. I wasn't more than sixty feet from the Titanic when she
went down. Her big stern rose up in the air and she went down bow first. I
saw all the machinery drop out of her."</p>
<p>HENRY B. HARRIS</p>
<p>Henry B. Harris, of New York, a theatrical manager, was one of the men who
showed superb courage in the crisis. When the life-boats were first being
filled, and before there was any panic, Mr. Harris went to the side of his
wife before the boat was lowered away.</p>
<p>"Women first," shouted one of the ship's officers. Mr. Harris glanced up
and saw that the remark was addressed to him.</p>
<p>"All right," he replied coolly. "Good-bye, my dear," he said, as he kissed
his wife, pressed her a moment to his breast, and then climbed back to the
Titanic's deck.</p>
<p>THREE EXPLOSIONS</p>
<p>Up to this time there had been no panic; but about one hour before the
ship plunged to the bottom there were three separate explosions of
bulkheads as the vessel filled. These were at intervals of about fifteen
minutes. From that time there was a different scene. The rush for the
remaining boats became a stampede.</p>
<p>The stokers rushed up from below and tried to beat a path through the
steerage men and women and through the sailors and officers, to get into
the boats. They had their iron bars and shovels, and they struck down all
who stood in their way.</p>
<p>The first to come up from the depths of the ship was an engineer. From
what he is reported to have said it is probable that the steam fittings
were broken and many were scalded to death when the Titanic lifted. He
said he had to dash through a narrow place beside a broken pipe and his
back was frightfully scalded.</p>
<p>Right at his heels came the stokers. The officers had pistols, but they
could not use them at first for fear of killing the women and children.
The sailors fought with their fists and many of them took the stoke bars
and shovels from the stokers and used them to beat back the others.</p>
<p>Many of the coal-passers and stokers who had been driven back from the
boats went to the rail, and whenever a boat was filled and lowered several
of them jumped overboard and swam toward it trying to climb aboard.
Several of the survivors said that men who swam to the sides of their
boats were pulled in or climbed in.</p>
<p>Dozens of the cabin passengers were witnesses of some of the frightful
scenes on the steerage deck. The steerage survivors said that ten women
from the upper decks were the only cool passengers in the life-boat, and
they tried to quiet the steerage women, who were nearly all crazed with
fear and grief.</p>
<p>OTHER HEROES</p>
<p>Among the chivalrous young heroes of the Titanic disaster were Washington
A. Roebling, 2d, and Howard Case, London representative of the Vacuum Oil
Company. Both were urged repeatedly to take places in life-boats, but
scorned the opportunity, while working against time to save the women
aboard the ill-fated ship. They went to their death, it is said by
survivors, with smiles on their faces.</p>
<p>Both of these young men aided in the saving of Mrs. William T. Graham,
wife of the president of the American Can Company, and Mrs. Graham's
nineteen-year-old daughter, Margaret.</p>
<p>Afterwards relating some of her experiences Mrs. Graham said:</p>
<p>"There was a rap at the door. It was a passenger whom we had met shortly
after the ship left Liverpool, and his name was Roebling—Washington
A. Roebling, 2d. He was a gentleman and a brave man. He warned us of the
danger and told us that it would be best to be prepared for an emergency.
We heeded his warning, and I looked out of my window and saw a great big
iceberg facing us. Immediately I knew what had happened and we lost no
time after that to get out into the saloon.</p>
<p>"In one of the gangways I met an officer of the ship.</p>
<p>"'What is the matter?' I asked him.</p>
<p>"'We've only burst two pipes,' he said. 'Everything is all right, don't
worry.'</p>
<p>"'But what makes the ship list so?' I asked.</p>
<p>"'Oh, that's nothing,' he replied, and walked away.</p>
<p>"Mr. Case advised us to get into a boat.</p>
<p>"'And what are you going to do?' we asked him.</p>
<p>"'Oh,' he replied, 'I'll take a chance and stay here.'</p>
<p>"Just at that time they were filling up the third life-boat on the port
side of the ship. I thought at the time that it was the third boat which
had been lowered, but I found out later that they had lowered other boats
on the other side, where the people were more excited because they were
sinking on that side.</p>
<p>"Just then Mr. Roebling came up, too, and told us to hurry and get into
the third boat. Mr. Roebling and Mr. Case bustled our party of three into
that boat in less time than it takes to tell it. They were both working
hard to help the women and children. The boat was fairly crowded when we
three were pushed into it, and a few men jumped in at the last moment, but
Mr. Roebling and Mr. Case stood at the rail and made no attempt to get
into the boat.</p>
<p>"They shouted good-bye to us. What do you think Mr. Case did then? He just
calmly lighted a cigarette and waved us good-bye with his hand. Mr.
Roebling stood there, too—I can see him now. I am sure that he knew
that the ship would go to the bottom. But both just stood there."</p>
<p>IN THE FACE OF DEATH</p>
<p>Scenes on the sinking vessel grew more tragic as the remaining passengers
faced the awful certainty that death must be the portion of the majority,
death in the darkness of a wintry sea studded with its ice monuments like
the marble shafts in some vast cemetery.</p>
<p>In that hour, when cherished illusions of possible safety had all but
vanished, manhood and womanhood aboard the Titanic rose to their sublimest
heights. It was in that crisis of the direst extremity that many brave
women deliberately rejected life and chose rather to remain and die with
the men whom they loved.</p>
<p>DEATH FAILS TO PART MR. AND MRS. STRAUS</p>
<p>"I will not leave my husband," said Mrs. Isidor Straus. "We are old; we
can best die together," and she turned from those who would have forced
her into one of the boats and clung to the man who had been the partner of
her joys and sorrows. Thus they stood hand in hand and heart to heart,
comforting each other until the sea claimed them, united in death as they
had been through a long life.</p>
<p>"Greater love hath no man than this, that a man lay down his life for his
friends."</p>
<p>Miss Elizabeth Evans fulfilled this final test of affection laid down by
the Divine Master. The girl was the niece of the wife of Magistrate
Cornell, of New York. She was placed in the same boat with many other
women. As it was about to be lowered away it was found that the craft
contained one more than its full quota of passengers.</p>
<p>The grim question arose as to which of them should surrender her place and
her chance of safety. Beside Miss Evans sat Mrs. J. J. Brown, of Denver,
the mother of several children. Miss Evans was the first to volunteer to
yield to another.</p>
<p>GIRL STEPS BACK TO DOOM</p>
<p>"Your need is greater than mine," said she to Mrs. Brown. "You have
children who need you, and I have none."</p>
<p>So saying she arose from the boat and stepped back upon the deck. The girl
found no later refuge and was one of those who went down with the ship.
She was twenty-five years old and was beloved by all who knew her.</p>
<p>Mrs. Brown thereafter showed the spirit which had made her also volunteer
to leave the boat. There were only three men in the boat and but one of
them rowed. Mrs. Brown, who was raised on the water, immediately picked up
one of the heavy sweeps and began to pull.</p>
<p>In the boat which carried Mrs. Cornell and Mrs. Appleton there were places
for seventeen more than were carried. This too was undermanned and the two
women at once took their places at the oars.</p>
<p>The Countess of Rothes was pulling at the oars of her boat, likewise
undermanned because the crew preferred to stay behind.</p>
<p>Miss Bentham, of Rochester, showed splendid courage. She happened to be in
a life-boat which was very much crowded—so much so that one sailor
had to sit with his feet dangling in the icy cold water, and as time went
on the sufferings of the man from the cold were apparent. Miss Bentham
arose from her place and had the man turn around while she took her place
with her feet in the water.</p>
<p>Scarcely any of the life-boats were properly manned. Two, filled with
women and children, capsized immediately, while the collapsible boats were
only temporarily useful. They soon filled with water. In one boat eighteen
or twenty persons sat in water above their knees for six hours.</p>
<p>{illust. caption =</p>
<p>In the darkness and confusion, punctuated by screams, sobs and curses, the
boats were lowered after being filled with women, children and a few men.
The sketch, drawn from description of eye-witnesses, shows the lofty side
of the stricken vessel and the laden boats descending.</p>
<p>THE LIFE-BOATS BEING LOWERED}</p>
<p>{illust. caption = Copyright by Underwood & Underwood, N. Y.</p>
<p>{illust. caption = Copyright by Underwood & Underwood, N. Y.
LIFE-BOATS, AS SEEN FROM THE CARPATHIA</p>
<p>Photographs taken from the rescue ship as she reached the first boats
carrying the Titanic's sufferers.}</p>
<p>heard it, but have forgotten it. But I saw an order for five pounds which
this man gave to each of the crew of his boat after they got aboard the
Carpathia. It was on a piece of ordinary paper addressed to the Coutts
Bank of England.</p>
<p>"We called that boat the 'money boat.' It was lowered from the starboard
side and was one of the first off. Our orders were to load the life-boats
beginning forward on the port side, working aft and then back on the
starboard. This man paid the firemen to lower a starboard boat before the
officers had given the order."</p>
<p>Whiteley's own experience was a hard one. When the uncoiling rope, which
entangled his feet, threw him into the sea, it furrowed the flesh of his
leg, but he did not feel the pain until he was safe aboard the Carpathia.</p>
<p>"I floated on my life-preserver for several hours," he said, "then I came
across a big oak dresser with two men clinging to it. I hung on to this
till daybreak and the two men dropped off. When the sun came up I saw the
collapsible raft in the distance, just black with men. They were all
standing up, and I swam to it—almost a mile, it seemed to me—and
they would not let me aboard. Mr. Lightoller, the second officer, was one
of them.</p>
<p>"'It's thirty-one lives against yours,, he said, 'you can't come aboard.
There's not room.'"</p>
<p>"I pleaded with him in vain, and then I confess I prayed that somebody
might die, so I could take his place. It was only human. And then some one
did die, and they let me aboard.</p>
<p>"By and by, we saw seven life-boats lashed together, and we were taken
into them."</p>
<p>MEN SHOT DOWN</p>
<p>The officers had to assert their authority by force, and three foreigners
from the steerage who tried to force their way in among the women and
children were shot down without mercy.</p>
<p>Robert Daniel, a Philadelphia passenger, told of terrible scenes at this
period of the disaster. He said men fought and bit and struck one another
like madmen, and exhibited wounds upon his face to prove the assertion.
Mr. Daniel said that he was picked up naked from the ice-cold water and
almost perished from exposure before he was rescued. He and others told
how the Titanic's bow was completely torn away by the impact with the
berg.</p>
<p>K. Whiteman, of Palmyra, N. J., the Titanic's barber, was lowering boats
on deck after the collision, and declared the officers on the bridge, one
of them First Officer Murdock, promptly worked the electrical apparatus
for closing the water-tight compartments. He believed the machinery was in
some way so damaged by the crash that the front compartments failed to
close tightly, although the rear ones were secure.</p>
<p>Whiteman's manner of escape was unique. He was blown off the deck by the
second of the two explosions of the boilers, and was in the water more
than two hours before he was picked up by a raft.</p>
<p>"The explosions," Whiteman said; "were caused by the rushing in of the icy
water on the boilers. A bundle of deck chairs, roped together, was blown
off the deck with me, and I struck my back, injuring my spine, but it
served as a temporary raft.</p>
<p>"The crew and passengers had faith in the bulkhead system to save the ship
and we were lowering a collapsible boat, all confident the ship would get
through, when she took a terrific dip forward and the water swept over the
deck and into the engine rooms.</p>
<p>"The bow went clean down, and I caught the pile of chairs as I was washed
up against the rim. Then came the explosions which blew me fifteen feet.</p>
<p>"After the water had filled the forward compartments, the ones at the
stern could not save her, although they did delay the ship's going down.
If it wasn't for the compartments hardly anyone could have got away."</p>
<p>A SAD MESSAGE</p>
<p>One of the Titanic's stewards, Johnson by name, carried this message to
the sorrowing widow of Benjamin Guggenheim:</p>
<p>"When Mr. Guggenheim realized that there was grave danger," said the room
steward, "he advised his secretary, who also died, to dress fully and he
himself did the same. Mr. Guggenheim, who was cool and collected as he was
pulling on his outer garments, said to the steward:—</p>
<p>PREPARED TO DIE BRAVELY</p>
<p>"'I think there is grave doubt that the men will get off safely. I am
willing to remain and play the man's game, if there are not enough boats
for more than the women and children. I won't die here like a beast. I'll
meet my end as man.'</p>
<p>"There was a pause and then Mr. Guggenheim continued:</p>
<p>"'Tell my wife, Johnson, if it should happen that my secretary and I both
go down and you are saved, tell her I played the game out straight and to
the end. No woman shall be left aboard this ship because Ben Guggenheim
was a coward.</p>
<p>"'Tell her that my last thoughts will be of her and of our girls, but that
my duty now is to these unfortunate women and children on this ship. Tell
her I will meet whatever fate is in store for me, knowing she will approve
of what I do.'"</p>
<p>In telling the story the room steward said the last he saw of Mr.
Guggenheim was when he stood fully dressed upon the upper deck talking
calmly with Colonel Astor and Major Butt.</p>
<p>Before the last of the boats got away, according to some of the
passengers' narratives, there were more than fifty shots fired upon the
decks by officers or others in the effort to maintain the discipline that
until then had been well preserved.</p>
<p>THE SINKING VESSEL</p>
<p>Richard Norris Williams, Jr., one of the survivors of the Titanic, saw his
father killed by being crushed by one of the tremendous funnels of the
sinking vessel.</p>
<p>"We stood on deck watching the life-boats of the Titanic being filled and
lowered into the water," said Mr. Williams. "The water was nearly up to
our waists and the ship was about at her last. Suddenly one of the great
funnels fell. I sprang aside, endeavoring to pull father with me. A moment
later the funnel was swept overboard and the body of father went with it.</p>
<p>"I sprang overboard and swam through the ice to a life-raft, and was
pulled aboard. There were five men and one woman on the raft. Occasionally
we were swept off into the sea, but always managed to crawl back.</p>
<p>"A sailor lighted a cigarette and flung the match carelessly among the
women. Several screamed, fearing they would be set on fire. The sailor
replied: 'We are going to hell anyway and we might as well be cremated now
as then.'"</p>
<p>A huge cake of ice was the means of aiding Emile Portaleppi, of Italy, in
his hairbreadth escape from death when the Titanic went down. Portaleppi,
a second class passenger, was awakened by the explosion of one of the
bulkheads of the ship. He hurried to the deck, strapped a life-preserver
around him and leaped into the sea. With the aid of the preserver and by
holding to a cake of ice he managed to keep afloat until one of the
life-boats picked him up. There were thirty-five other people in the boat,
he said, when he was hauled aboard.</p>
<p>THE COWARD</p>
<p>Somewhere in the shadow of the appalling Titanic disaster slinks—still
living by the inexplicable grace of God—a cur in human shape, to-day
the most despicable human being in all the world.</p>
<p>In that grim midnight hour, already great in history, he found himself
hemmed in by the band of heroes whose watchword and countersign rang out
across the deep—"Women and children first!"</p>
<p>What did he do? He scuttled to the stateroom deck, put on a woman's skirt,
a woman's hat and a woman's veil, and picking his crafty way back among
the brave and chivalric men who guarded the rail of the doomed ship, he
filched a seat in one of the life-boats and saved his skin.</p>
<p>His name is on that list of branded rescued men who were neither picked up
from the sea when the ship went down nor were in the boats under orders to
help get them safe away. His identity is not yet known, though it will be
in good time. So foul an act as that will out like murder.</p>
<p>The eyes of strong men who have read this crowded record of golden deeds,
who have read and re-read that deathless roll of honor of the dead, are
still wet with tears of pity and of pride. This man still lives. Surely he
was born and saved to set for men a new standard by which to measure
infamy and shame.</p>
<p>It is well that there was sufficient heroism on board the Titanic to
neutralize the horrors of the cowardice. When the first order was given
for the men to stand back, there were a dozen or more who pushed forward
and said that men would be needed to row the life-boats and that they
would volunteer for the work.</p>
<p>The officers tried to pick out the ones that volunteered merely for
service and to eliminate those who volunteered merely to save their own
lives. This elimination process however, was not wholly successful.</p>
<p>THE DOOMED MEN</p>
<p>As the ship began to settle to starboard, heeling at an angle of nearly
forty-five degrees, those who had believed it was all right to stick by
the ship began to have doubts, and a few jumped into the sea. They were
followed immediately by others, and in a few minutes there were scores
swimming around. Nearly all of them wore life-preservers. One man, who had
a Pomeranian dog, leaped overboard with it and striking a piece of
wreckage was badly stunned. He recovered after a few minutes and swam
toward one of the life-boats and was taken aboard.</p>
<p>Said one survivor, speaking of the men who remained on the ship. "There
they stood—Major Butt, Colonel Astor waving a farewell to his wife,
Mr. Thayer, Mr. Case, Mr. Clarence Moore, Mr. Widener, all
multimillionaires, and hundreds of other men, bravely smiling at us all.
Never have I seen such chivalry and fortitude. Such courage in the face of
fate horrible to contemplate filled us even then with wonder and
admiration."</p>
<p>Why were men saved? ask: others who seek to make the occasional male
survivor a hissing scorn; and yet the testimony makes it clear that for a
long time during that ordeal the more frightful position seemed to many to
be in the frail boats in the vast relentless sea, and that some men had to
be tumbled into the boats under orders from the officers. Others express
the deepest indignation that 210 sailors were rescued, the testimony shows
that most of these sailors were in the welter of ice and water into which
they had been thrown from the ship's deck when she sank; they were human
beings and so were picked up and saved.</p>
<p>"WOMEN AND CHILDREN FIRST"</p>
<p>The one alleviating circumstance in the otherwise immitigable tragedy is
the fact that so many of the men stood aside really with out the necessity
for the order, "Women and children first," and insisted that the weaker
sex should first have places in the boats.</p>
<p>There were men whose word of command swayed boards of directors, governed
institutions, disposed of millions. They were accustomed merely to
pronounce a wish to have it gratified. Thousands "posted at their
bidding"; the complexion of the market altered hue when they nodded; they
bought what they wanted, and for one of the humblest fishing smacks or a
dory they could have given the price that was paid to build and launch the
ship that has become the most imposing mausoleum that ever housed the
bones of men since the Pyramids rose from the desert sands.</p>
<p>But these men stood aside—one can see them!—and gave place not
merely to the delicate and the refined, but to the scared Czech woman from
the steerage, with her baby at her breast; the Croatian with a toddler by
her side, coming through the very gate of Death and out of the mouth of
Hell to the imagined Eden of America.</p>
<p>To many of those who went it was harder to go than to stay there on the
vessel gaping with its mortal wounds and ready to go down. It meant that
tossing on the waters they must wait in suspense, hour after hour even
after the lights of the ship were engulfed in appalling darkness, hoping
against hope for the miracle of a rescue dearer to them than their own
lives.</p>
<p>It was the tradition of Anglo-Saxon heroism that was fulfilled in the
frozen seas during the black hours of Sunday night. The heroism was that
of the women who went, as well as of the men who remained!</p>
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