Unsolved mystery. -Perhaps one of the strangest cases of foreshadowing  the world has ever known was a novel written in 1898 by Morgan Robertson  about a ship called Titan that crashes into an iceberg. And, of course,  in 1912, the RMS Titanic crashed into an iceberg as well. Although the  novel was written as a work of fiction, it strangely foretold the events  of what would come to be one of the most famous disasters of all time.
The  novel, which was originally titled Futility, was later changed to Wreck  of the Titan.  The similarities between the fictional Titan and the  real life Titanic are very eerie.  For instance, both ships met their  fate in the North Atlantic in April by running into an iceberg.  Neither  ship had enough lifeboats on board, which resulted in the deaths of  over 2,000 people.  Both were the largest ships in the world and were  wrongly believed to be “unsinkable”.
Also  very strange are the sailing routes.  The Titan was sailing from New  York to England, while the Titanic’s route was from England to New  York.  Both ended up meeting with disaster in the same part of the sea.   They were also both traveling at around the same speed, and had the  same number of propellers and masts.  The Titan had an accident with  another ship, and the Titanic nearly collided with the New York but  fortunately didn’t hit it.
There  are also a few differences between the two ships.  The Titanic only  bumped or scraped against the iceberg on a clear night, while the Titan  runs right into an iceberg on a very foggy night.  The Titanic also had  more survivors than the fictional ship did.  The Titanic sank during her  maiden voyage, while the Titan had already been on several.
All  of this about the Titan occurred during the first half of the novel,  and the second half chronicles the adventures of the heroic main  character, John Rowland.  He was a drunkard who was dismissed from the  Royal Navy, and worked on the Titan as a ship hand.  During the second  half of the book, he goes through a number of adventures, including a  fight with a polar bear.  He’s eventually saved by a passing ship and  works his way up again in society.
While  it’s an exciting read altogether, the fate of the Titan is what draws  most people into this novel.  Could there be a paranormal reason why  this book is so eerily similar to an incident that occurred 14 years  LATER?  Or are the differences between the fictional ship and Titanic  enough to make it nothing more than a strange coincidence?
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