But this ship can't sink!
>>220419311Can't... or won't?
>>220419311>She's the Maid of Iron, sir! I assure you she can.What does a ship's name have to do with the proclivity of sinking?
>In his personal life, Ismay became a man of solitary habits, spending his summers at his Connemara cottage and indulging in a love of trout and salmon fishing. When in Liverpool, he would attend concerts by himself at St George's Hall or visit a cinema, at other times wandering through the Liverpool parks and engaging transients in conversation. A family friend observed that the spectre of Titanic was never far from Ismay's thoughts, saying that he continually "tormented himself with useless speculation as to how the disaster could possibly have been avoided." At a Christmas time family gathering in 1936, less than a year before Ismay's death, one of his grandsons by his daughter Evelyn, who had learned Ismay had been involved in maritime shipping, enquired if his grandfather had ever been shipwrecked. Ismay finally broke his quarter-century silence on the tragedy that had blighted his life, replying: "Yes, I was once in a ship which was believed to be unsinkable."
>>220419311*plop*WHEN YOURRRRRRRRRRRRRRRR HEEEEERRRRRREE
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=OuSdU8tbcHYthis video is 19 years old
>>220419311>sir, I assure you this ship is going to the bottom faster than West Ham United