:53:04
that are actually eating
the steel
:53:07
and the insides of the ship.
:53:09
I look at a rail and think,
"Oh, look at the bacteria.
:53:14
They're breaking 'Titanic' down
and taking her back to nature. "
:53:18
But then you immediately
go back and think,
:53:20
"Who touched this railing last?"
:53:26
Helen Candee is one
of my favorite passengers.
:53:29
She had written one of the
century's first best sellers.
:53:32
Basically, the theme being
:53:34
how a woman can get along
in life successfully
:53:37
without a man.
:53:38
And that's how she was traveling
first-class on the "Titanic. "
:53:42
And on the very last sunrise
:53:44
that the "Titanic"
would ever see,
:53:46
she snuck out
to the very point of the bow
:53:50
just to greet the sunrise alone.
:53:52
And she wrote about it
:53:54
and how she felt the power
and the beauty of this ship
:53:57
and that it was stronger
than nature itself,
:54:00
maybe even stronger
than God itself.
:54:02
And then, suddenly,
she felt very darkened,
:54:05
as if she had thought
something sacrilegious.
:54:21
Mmm. It's good.
What's in borscht?
:54:23
That's good borscht.
:54:24
- Borscht in Russian.
- What is in borscht?
:54:27
Borscht.
:54:31
Cabbage, potatoes, bouillon.
:54:35
Everybody eat borscht.
:54:43
Anatoly has a song
that he wrote
:54:47
about the blue sky that you see
:54:49
when you return to the surface
and the hatch opens.
:54:52
And I think that's very apropos,
because it's something
:54:55
that you didn't think
you would miss, but you do.