Life & Style Weekly

Prophesies & Premonitio­ns

110 years after Titanic sank beneath the surface into the icy, dark abyss, many questions and mysteries remain. Was the Ship of Beauty’s fate prophesied before it even set sail? Or is it all just myth and legends?

-

The Great Storytelle­r

First Class passenger, investigat­ive journalist, newspaper editor and spirituali­st, William Thomas Stead was enroute to New York to attend a peace congress at Carnegie Hall at the request of President Taft. As stories go, at the last dinner on Titanic, he captivated his dinner companions with a tale of a cursed mummy at the British Museum. A great storytelle­r, did Stead predict the sinking in his own writing and foresee his own death? Before boarding Titanic, Stead penned the following two articles. 1886: “How the Mail Steamer went Down in Mid Atlantic”, Pall Mall Gazette. Two ships crash and sink resulting into a large loss of life due to a lack of lifeboats. 1892: “From the Old World to the New”, The Review of Reviews. A character dreams of a ship sailing among icebergs, hitting one, and sinking with the crew crying out for help.

Coincidenc­e or Premonitio­n?

Published in 1898, Futility, written by former first mate Morgan Robertson tells the story of a disgraced US Navy officer who works on a ship called the Titan. When the Titan strikes an iceberg and sinks, the character survives while saving a young girl on an iceberg. The actual events of the Titanic’s sinking are eerily close to the events of this novella written 14 years ahead of the tragic accident.

The Addergoole 14

Nestled in County Mayo, the northweste­rn county in Ireland is Addergoole parish. Fourteen men and women from this parish set sail on Titanic, one of whom was Bridget Delia Mahon from the village of Derrymarti­n, located in the foothills of Nephin mountain. Before she left, her brother read her tea leaves. He allegedly told her there would be a terrible disaster and that she would die. She was on her way to Brooklyn, NY to be with friends and family. Days later when disaster struck, only three of the Addergoole 14 survived and sadly, she was not one of them. Delia’s brother’s reading was correct. Many other family members reported having had bad feelings and uneasiness.

 ?? ??
 ?? ??
 ?? ?? Regardless of the stories and the premonitio­ns, the outcome of this first internatio­nal accident changed the world.
Regardless of the stories and the premonitio­ns, the outcome of this first internatio­nal accident changed the world.
 ?? ?? Nephin or Néifinn, loosely translated as “heavenly” or “Finn’s Heaven.” (photo Public Domain)
Nephin or Néifinn, loosely translated as “heavenly” or “Finn’s Heaven.” (photo Public Domain)

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States