expert's attitude of "My dear man, you don't know what you are
talking about."
Now would you believe that the
objection put forward was absolutely
futile? I don't know whether the
distinguished President of the
Court perceived this. Very likely he did, though I don't suppose
he was ever on terms of
familiarity with a ship's bunker. But I
have. I have been inside; and you may take it that what I say of
them is correct. I don't wish to be wearisome to the benevolent
reader, but I want to put his finger, so to speak, on the inanity
of the
objection raised by the
expert. A bunker is an enclosed
space for
holding coals, generally located against the ship's side,
and having an
opening, a
doorway in fact, into the stokehold. Men
called trimmers go in there, and by means of implements called
slices make the coal run through that
opening on to the floor of
the stokehold, where it is within reach of the stokers' (firemen's)
shovels. This being so, you will easily understand that there is
constantly a more or less thick layer of coal generally shaped in a
slope lying in that
doorway. And the
objection of the
expert was:
that because of this
obstruction it would be impossible to close
the water-tight door, and
therefore that the thing could not be
done. And that
objection was inane. A water-tight door in a
bulkhead may be defined as a metal plate which is made to close a
given
opening by some
mechanical means. And if there were a law of
Medes and Persians that a water-tight door should always slide
downwards and never
otherwise, the
objection would be to a great
extent valid. But what is there to prevent those doors to be
fitted so as to move
upwards, or horizontally, or slantwise? In
which case they would go through the obstructing layer of coal as
easily as a knife goes through butter. Anyone may
convince himself
of it by experimenting with a light piece of board and a heap of
stones
anywhere along our roads. Probably the joint of such a door
would weep a little--and there is no necessity for its being
hermetically tight--but the object of converting bunkers into
spaces of safety would be attained. You may take my word for it
that this could be done without any great effort of
ingenuity. And
that is why I have qualified the
expert's
objection as inane.
Of course, these doors must not be operated from the
bridge because
of the risk of trapping the coal-trimmers inside the bunker; but on
the signal of all other water-tight doors in the ship being closed
(as would be done in case of a collision) they too could be closed
on the order of the engineer of the watch, who would see to the
safety of the trimmers. If the rent in the ship's side were within
the bunker itself, that would become
manifest enough without any
signal, and the rush of water into the stokehold could be cut off
directly the doorplate came into its place. Say a minute at the
very outside. Naturally, if the blow of a right-angled collision,
for
instance, were heavy enough to smash through the inner bulkhead
of the bunker, why, there would be then nothing to do but for the
stokers and trimmers and everybody in there to clear out of the
stoke-room. But that does not mean that the
precaution of having
water-tight doors to the bunkers is
useless,
superfluous, or
impossible. {7}
And talking of stokeholds, firemen, and trimmers, men whose heavy
labour has not a single redeeming feature; which is unhealthy,
uninspiring,
arduous, without the
reward of personal pride in it;
sheer, hard, brutalising toil, belonging neither to earth nor sea,
I greet with joy the
advent for
marine purposes of the internal
combustion engine. The
disappearance of the
marineboiler will be
a real progress, which anybody in
sympathy with his kind must
welcome. Instead of the unthrifty,
unruly, nondescript crowd the
boilers require, a crowd of men IN the ship but not OF her, we
shall have
comparatively small crews of disciplined, intelligent
workers, able to steer the ship, handle anchors, man boats, and at
the same time
competent to take their place at a bench as fitters
and repairers; the resourceful and
skilled seamen--mechanics of the
future, the
legitimate successors of these seamen--sailors of the
past, who had their own kind of skill, hardihood, and tradition,
and whose last days it has been my lot to share.
One lives and learns and hears very
surprising things--things that
one hardly knows how to take, whether
seriously or jocularly, how
to meet--with
indignation or with
contempt? Things said by solemn
experts, by exalted directors, by glorified ticket-sellers, by
officials of all sorts. I suppose that one of the uses of such an
inquiry is to give such people enough rope to hang themselves with.
And I hope that some of them won't
neglect to do so. One of them
declared two days ago that there was "nothing to learn from the
catastrophe of the Titanic." That he had been "giving his best
consideration" to certain rules for ten years, and had come to the
conclusion that nothing ever happened at sea, and that rules and
regulations, boats and sailors, were unnecessary; that what was
really wrong with the Titanic was that she carried too many boats.
No; I am not joking. If you don't believe me, pray look back
through the reports and you will find it all there. I don't
recollect the official's name, but it ought to have been Pooh-Bah.
Well, Pooh-Bah said all these things, and when asked whether he
really meant it, intimated his
readiness to give the subject more
of "his best
consideration"--for another ten years or so
apparently--but he believed, oh yes! he was certain, that had there
been fewer boats there would have been more people saved. Really,
when
reading the report of this
admirably conducted
inquiry one
isn't certain at times whether it is an Admirable Inquiry or a
felicitous OPERA-BOUFFE of the Gilbertian type--with a rather grim
subject, to be sure.
Yes, rather grim--but the comic
treatment never fails. My readers
will remember that in the number of THE ENGLISH REVIEW for May,
1912, I quoted the old case of the Arizona, and went on from that
to
prophesy the coming of a new seamanship (in a spirit of irony
far removed from fun) at the call of the
sublime builders of
unsinkable ships. I thought that, as a small boy of my
acquaintance says, I was "doing a sarcasm," and regarded it as a
rather wild sort of sarcasm at that. Well, I am
blessed (excuse
the vulgarism) if a
witness has not turned up who seems to have
been inspired by the same thought, and
evidently longs in his heart
for the
advent of the new seamanship. He is an
expert, of course,
and I rather believe he's the same gentleman who did not see his
way to fit water-tight doors to bunkers. With ludicrous
earnestness he
assured the Commission of his
intensebelief that
had only the Titanic struck end-on she would have come into port
all right. And in the whole tone of his
insistent statement there
was suggested the regret that the officer in
charge (who is dead
now, and mercifully outside the comic scope of this
inquiry) was so
ill-advised as to try to pass clear of the ice. Thus my sarcastic
prophecy, that such a
suggestion was sure to turn up, receives an
unexpected
fulfilment. You will see yet that in deference to the
demands of "progress" the theory of the new seamanship will become
established: "Whatever you see in front of you--ram it fair. . ."
The new seamanship! Looks simple, doesn't it? But it will be a
very exact art indeed. The proper handling of an unsinkable ship,
you see, will demand that she should be made to hit the
icebergvery
accurately with her nose, because should you
perchance scrape
the bluff of the bow instead, she may, without ceasing to be as
unsinkable as before, find her way to the bottom. I congratulate
the future Transatlantic passengers on the new and vigorous
sensations in store for them. They shall go bounding across from
iceberg to
iceberg at twenty-five knots with
precision and safety,
and a "cheerful bumpy sound"--as the
immortal poem has it. It will
be a teeth-loosening, exhilarating experience. The decorations
will be Louis-Quinze, of course, and the cafe shall remain open all
night. But what about the
priceless Sevres
porcelain and the
Venetian glass provided for the service of Transatlantic
passengers? Well, I am afraid all that will have to be replaced by
silver goblets and plates. Nasty, common, cheap silver. But those
who WILL go to sea must be prepared to put up with a certain amount
of hardship.
And there shall be no boats. Why should there be no boats?
Because Pooh-Bah has said that the fewer the boats, the more people