Â
The Riveting Squad:
 Â
The Heater Boys
Â
 Â
The Catch Boys
Â
 Â
The Holder-Ons
Â
 Â
The Riveters
Â
Second Officer Charles Lightoller
Group Photograph, Southampton
Â
The Cable-Ship Mackay-Bennett
Â
Â
Whether the rumours resulted from the faint clangs,
or the faint clangs resulted from the rumours,
Â
even the oldest believed the possibility
of a lost worker could only be an omen.
Â
No matter their sense of wonder,
the pending deadlines, or their hurried pace,
Â
in the back of some workers' minds
their rivets sealed more than just the hull.
Â
At home they hugged their children,
kissed their wives
Â
or dreamed of families
they had yet to realize.
Â
In the back of some workers' minds
their rivets sealed more than just the hull.
Â
Â
At six-twenty each morning
workers would congregate
by the green gates, often arriving early
to avoid the crush of thousands
for the sooner they reached
their work stations,
the sooner they started
to earn a wage.
Â
Those arriving late
were literally locked out
and would lose a whole day's pay
not to mention the funds spent
holed up at the public house
avoiding home.
Most workers wore duncher caps
save for the foremen
who wore bowlers
and The Hats
who'd enter the main office
in top hats black
as a stoker's coal-covered face.
They could tell a rivet's temperature
by its colour
and once it reached 650 degrees
it seemed as if they channelled Hephaestus,
the Greek god of fire,
for when they extracted rivets
with their tongs,
it looked like they were throwing
miniature lightning bolts
to the Catch Boys.
Often as young as thirteen or fourteen,
they'd catch the rivet
in a tin, grab the scorching metal
with their tongs
and then, as if passing a baton
in a relay, run full-tilt
to the Holder-Ons.
They'd help place the rivet
in the desired hole
and secure it with little more
than determination
and a fourteen-pound hammer
for the Riveters.
They needed to wear scarves
around their necks
all year long, no matter the weather,
to stop bits of rivet ember
from getting down their shirts,
burning through their skin.
They'd stand on opposite sides,
clang â clang clang â clang clang â clang
to shape everything into place.
It took three million rivets
to piece the ship together
Â
though only a few seconds
for a small child to notice
Â
it was as if the ship
had a surprise chill
Â
for it seemed her hull
was covered in goose bumps.
Perhaps it was simply
the colour
Â
of her copper propellers
that drew comparisons
Â
to giant elm trees,
a tip of the hat
Â
to the earthy hue
amongst all that grey.
Â
Or perhaps it was a desire
to connect with nature
Â
in some way,
an organic cousin
Â
when the politics
of scale veered
Â
so far into the realm
of manmade.
Twenty-two tons of train oil, tallow and soap,
and a father as he explains to his son
the art of frictionâ
it's like when your hand got stuck
in grandma's vase and your mother rubbed
butter around your wrist,
how you slid free
as easily as the
Titanic
slid in.
One woman grew accustomed
to seeing the great ship
whenever she unpinned her laundry.
Â
Sometimes it was an apron
or one of her husband's shirts,
clothing large enough
Â
that when removed
it framed a portrait
of the
Titanic
in the distance.
Â
On laundry day after the launch,
she kept squinting
in hopes her eyes had failed her,
Â
the familiar view now missing,
as if a sleeping giant woke up
and walked away.
Jenny delivered her kittens
in the weeks that preceded the maiden voyage.
Â
As if she could sense the impending disaster,
she carried her kittens by the neck,
Â
one by one, down the gangplank
to the quay at Southampton
Â
and in those moments convinced
one of the stokers to accept employment
Â
somewhere else, for even though
his impending two-week contract paid well,
Â
he learned long ago to always trust
a mother's instincts.
American,
Australian,
Austro-Hungarian,
Belgian,
British,
Bulgarian,
Canadian,
Chinese,
Danish,
Dutch,
Finnish,
French,
German,
Greek,
Italian,
Irish,
Japanese,
Mexican,
Norwegian,
Portugese,
Russian,
South African,
Spanish,
Swedish,
Swiss,
Syrian,
Turkish,
Uruguayan.
Fruits
36,000 oranges
36,000 apples
16,000 lemons
13,000 grapefruits
1,000 lbs grapes
Â
Vegetables
40 tons potatoes
7,000 heads of lettuce
3,500 onions
2,250 lbs fresh green peas
800 bundles asparagus
Â
Meats
75,000 lbs beef
25,000 lbs poultry and game
11,000 lbs fresh fish
7,500 lbs bacon and ham
2,500 lbs sausages
Â
Baking
40,000 eggs
10,000 lbs sugar
6,000 lbs butter
1,500 g fresh milk
250 barrels flour
Â
Tobacco
8,000 cigars
For many passengers,
his well-groomed appearance
solidified their trust,
Â
as if his shaving precision
somehow reflected
his seamanship.
Â
Young crewmen coveted his beard
as if it were an achievement
like the four stripes
that adorned his sleeves
and epaulettes.
Â
They dreamed of the day
their follicles could be let loose,
a well-maintained field
in a life so full of ocean.
Â
Sometimes he'd recognize himself
as a proud husband and father,
a veteran of the Boer War,
The White Star Line's esteemed
and decorated Captain,
Â
while other times it seemed
the young boy who left
for a career at sea
stared back from behind
his white mask.
Though most would not need to,
some high-society ladies practiced
their strokes each morning
while servants stood poolside
with long white towels, thick
bathrobes with monogrammed pockets.
Â
One third-class passenger figured
the twenty-five cents admission
an investment, a story he could tell for drinksâ
the one about how he swam aboard the
Titanic
,
dove six feet under to the bottom,
and stared up at the world's richest women
as their coloured bathing caps
kept their hair dry and smiles intact.
Most admirers had no clue
its epic verticality had little purpose
other than aesthetic.
In postcards and posters,
artists depicted huge plumes,
though the only smoke
came from First Class
in the smoking room
for which it served as ventilation.
As if the ship were a newborn
bet on by loved ones
trying to guess her weight,
Â
passengers placed bets
on distance travelled,
and at noon each day
Â
they'd congregate,
wait for the purser
to announce
Â
just how far they had gone
and who among them
won the jackpot.
Harry Anderson's fifty-dollar Chow
Â
Robert W Daniel's champion French Bulldog,
Gamon de Pycombe
Â
John Jacob Astor's Airedale,
Kitty
Â
Helen Bishop's
Frou Frou
Â
Miss Margaret Hays' Pomeranian
Â
Elizabeth Rothschild's Pomeranian
Â
William Ernest Carter's King Charles Spaniel
Â
Henry Sleeper Harper's Pekingese,
Sun Yat Sen
Â
In this picture, a young boy stands transfixed
at the magic of a spinning top.
Â
It doesn't matter that he walks
on the deck of the world's largest ship
Â
or that it's a maiden voyage
and everything is imbued with celebration,
Â
for he's full of wonder and intrigued
at the constant spinning and spinning
Â
as if his joy could be never-ending,
the ship's fate undetermined.