The Sailor's Word-Book by W. H. Smyth

introduction of armour-plating afloat leads to furnishing

97814 words  |  Chapter 6

coast-batteries with the heaviest guns of all. GARRISON ORDERS. Those given out by the commandant of a garrison. GARROOKA. A fishing-craft of the Gulf of Persia. GARTERS. A slang term for the ship's irons or bilboes. GARTHMAN. One who plies at a _fish-garth_, but is prohibited by statute from destroying the fry of fish. GARVIE. A name on our northern shores for the sprat. GASKET. A cord, or piece of plaited stuff, to secure furled sails to the yard, by wrapping it three or four times round both, the turns being at a competent distance from each other.--_Bunt-gasket_ ties up the bunt of the sail, and should consequently be the strongest; it is sometimes made in a peculiar net form. In some ships they have given place to beckets.--_Double gaskets._ Passing additional frapping-lines round the yards in very stormy weather.--_Quarter-gasket._ Used only for large sails, and is fastened about half-way out upon the yard, which part is called the quarter.--_Yard-arm gasket._ Used for smaller sails; the end is made fast to the yard-arm, and serves to bind the sail as far as the quarter-gasket on large yards, but extends quite into the bunt of small sails. GAS-PIPE. A term jocularly applied to the newly-introduced breech-loading rifle. GAT. A swashway, or channel amongst shoals. GATE. The old name for landing-places, as Dowgate and Billingsgate; also in cliffs, as Kingsgate, Margate, and Ramsgate; those in Greece and in Italy are called _scala_. Also, a flood, sluice, or water gate. GATE, OR SEA-GATE. When two ships are thrown on board one another by a wave, they are said to be in a sea-gate. GATHER AFT A SHEET, TO. To pull it in, by hauling in slack. GATHER WAY, TO. To begin to feel the impulse of the wind on the sails, so as to obey the helm. GATH-LINN. A name of the north polar star; two Gaelic words, signifying ray and moisture, in allusion to its subdued brightness. GATT. A gate or channel, a term used on the Flemish coast and in the Baltic. The Hellegat of New York has become Hell Gate. GAUB-LINE. A rope leading from the martingale in-board. The same as _back-rope_. GAUGE. _See_ GAGE. GAUGE. An instrument for measuring shot, wads, &c. For round shot there are two kinds, viz. the high gauge, a cylinder through which the shot must pass; and the low gauge, a ring through which it must not pass. GAUGE-COCKS. A neat apparatus for ascertaining the height of the water in a steamer's boiler. GAUGE-ROD. A graduated iron for sounding the pump-well. GAUGNET. The _Sygnathus acus_, sea-needle, or pipe-fish. GAUNTLET. (_See_ GIRT-LINE.) Also, a rope round the ship to the lower yard-arms, for drying scrubbed hammocks. Of old the term denoted the armed knight's iron glove. (_See_ GANT-LOPE, for _running the gauntlet_.) GAUNTREE. The stand for a water or beer cask. GAUNTS. The great crested grebe in Lincolnshire. GAUT, OR GHAUT. In the East Indies, a landing-place; and also a chain of hills, as the Western Gauts, on the Mysore coast. GAVELOCK. An iron crow. Of old, a pike; thus in Arthur and Merlin-- "Gavelokes also thicke flowe So gnattes, ichil avowe." GAVER. A Cornish name for the sea cray-fish. GAW. A southern term for a boat-pole. GAWDNIE. The dragonet, or yellow gurnard; _Callionymus lyra_. GAW-GAW. A lubberly simpleton. GAWKY. A half-witted, awkward youth. Also, the shell called horse-cockle. GAWLIN. A small sea-fowl which the natives of the Western Isles of Scotland trust in, as a prognosticator of the weather. GAWN-TREE. _See_ GANTREE. GAWPUS. A stupid, idle fellow. GAWRIE. A name for the red gurnard; _Trigla cuculus_. GAZONS [Fr.] Sods of earth or turf, cut in wedge-shaped form, to line the parapet and face the outside of works. GAZZETTA. The name of a small coin in the Adriatic and Levant. It was the price of the first Venetian newspaper, and thereby gave the name to those publications. In the Greek islands the word is used for ancient coins. G.C.B. The initials for Grand Cross of the most honourable and Military Order of the Bath. GEAR [the Anglo-Saxon _geara_, clothing]. A general name for the rigging of any particular spar or sail; and in or out of gear implies anything being fit or unfit for use. GEARING. A complication of wheels and pinions, or of shafts and pulleys, &c. GEARS. _See_ JEERS. GEE, TO. To suit or fit; as, "that will just gee." GELLYWATTE. An old term for a captain's boat, the original of _jolly-boat_. (_See_ Captain Downton's voyage to India in 1614, where "she was sent to take soundings within the sands.") GENERAL. The commander of an army: the military rank corresponding to the naval one of admiral. The title includes all officers above colonels, ascending with qualifying prefixes, as brigadier-general, major-general, lieutenant-general, to general, above which is nothing save the exceptional rank of field-marshal and of captain-general or commander-in-chief of the land forces of the United Kingdom. GENERAL AVERAGE. A claim made upon the owners of a ship and her cargo, when the property of one or more has been sacrificed for the good of the whole. GENERAL BREEZO. _See_ BREEZO. GENERALISSIMO. The supreme commander of a combined force, or of several armies in the field. GENERAL OFFICERS. All those above the rank of a colonel. GENERAL ORDERS. The orders issued by the commander-in-chief of the forces. GENERAL SHIP. Where persons unconnected with each other load goods on board, in contradistinction to a _chartered_ ship. GENEVA PRINT. An allusion to the spirituous liquor so called,-- "And if you meet An officer preaching of sobriety, Unless he read it in _Geneva print_, Lay him by the heels."--_Massinger._ GENOUILLERE [Fr.] That part of a battery which remains above the platform, and under the gun after the opening of the embrasure. Of course a knee-step. GENTLE. A maggot or grub used as a bait by anglers. GENTLE GALE. In which a ship carries royals and flying-kites; force 4. GENTLEMEN. The messmates of the gun-room or cockpit--as mates, midshipmen, clerks, and cadets. GEOCENTRIC. As viewed from the centre of the earth. GEO-GRAFFY. A beverage made by seamen of burnt biscuit boiled in water. GEOGRAPHICAL POSITION. _See_ POSITION, GEOGRAPHICAL. GEORGIUM SIDUS. The planet discovered by Sir W. Herschel was so named at first; but astronomers adopted _Uranus_ instead, as safer to keep in the neutral ground of mythology. GERLETROCH. The _Salmo alpinus_, red char, or galley-trough. GERRACK. A coal-fish in its first year. GERRET. A samlet or parr. GERRICK. A Cornish name for a sea-pike. GERRON. A cant name for the sea-trout. GESERNE. Anglo-Norman for battle-axe. GESTLING. A meeting of the members of the Cinque Ports at Romney. GET AFLOAT. Pulling out a grounded boat. GET-A-PULL. The order to haul in more of a rope or tackle. GHAUT. _See_ GAUT. GHEE. The substitute for butter served out to ships' companies on the Indian station. GHOST. A false image in the lens of an instrument. GHRIME-SAIL. The old term for a smoke-sail. GIB. A forelock. GIBB. The beak, or hooked upper lip of a male salmon. GIBBOUS. The form of a planet's disc exceeding a semicircle, but less than a circle. GIB-FISH. A northern name for the male of the salmon. GIBRALTAR GYN. Originally devised there for working guns under a low roof. (_See_ GYN.) GIDDACK. A name on our northern coasts for the sand-launce or sand-eel, _Ammodytes tobianus_. GIFFOOT. A Jewish corruption of the Spanish spoken at Gibraltar and the sea-ports. GIFT-ROPE [synonymous with _guest-rope_]. A rope for boats at the guest-warp boom. GIG. A light narrow galley or ship's boat, clincher-built, and adapted for expedition either by rowing or sailing; the latter ticklish at times. GILDEE. A name in the Scottish isles for the _Morhua barbata_, or whiting pout. GILGUY. A guy for tracing up, or bearing a boom or derrick. Often applied to inefficient guys. GILL. A ravine down the surface of a cliff; a rivulet through a ravine. The name is often applied also to the valley itself. GILLER. A horse-hair fishing line. GILLS. Small hackles for drying hemp. GILPY. Between a man and boy. GILSE. A common misnomer of _grilse_ (which see). GILT. A cant, but old term for money, on which Shakspeare (_Henry V._ act ii. scene 1) committed a well-known pun-- "Have for the gilt of France (O guilt indeed!)" GILT-HEAD, OR GILT-POLL. The _Sparus aurata_, a fish of the European and American seas, with a golden mark between the eyes. (_See_ SEDOW.) GIMBALS. The two concentric brass rings, having their axles at right angles, by which a sea-compass is suspended in its box, so as to counteract the effect of the ship's motion. (_See_ COMPASS.) Also used for the chronometers. GIMBLETING. The action of turning the anchor round on its fluke, so that the motion of the stock appears similar to that of the handle of a gimlet when it is employed to bore a hole. To turn anything round on its end. GIMLET-EYE. A penetrating gaze, which sees through a deal plank. GIMMART. _See_ GYMMYRT. GIMMEL. Any disposition of rings, as links, device of machinery. (_See_ GIMBALS.) GIN. A small iron cruciform frame, having a swivel-hook, furnished with an iron sheave, to serve as a pulley for the use of chain in discharging cargo and other purposes. GINGADO. _See_ JERGADO. GINGAL. A long barrelled fire-arm, throwing a ball of from 1/4 to 1/2 lb., used throughout the East, especially in China; made to load at the breach with a movable chamber. (_See also_ JINGAL.) GINGERBREAD-HATCHES. Luxurious quarters-- "Gingerbread-hatches on shore." GINGERBREAD WORK. Profusely carved decorations of a ship. GINGERLY. Spruce and smart, but somewhat affected in movement. GINNELIN. Catching fish by the hand; tickling them. GINNERS, OR GINNLES. The gills of fish. GINSENG. A Chinese root, formerly highly prized for its restorative virtues, and greatly valued among the items of a cargo. It is now almost out of the _Materia Medica_. GIP, TO. To take the entrails out of fishes. GIRANDOLE. Any whirling fire-work. GIRD, TO. To bind; used formerly for striking a blow. GIRDLE. An additional planking over the wales or bends. Also, a frapping for girding a ship. GIRT. The situation of a ship which is moored so taut by her cables, extending from the hawse to two distant anchors, as to be prevented from swinging to the wind or tide. The ship thus circumstanced endeavours to swing, but her side bears upon one of the cables, which catches on her heel, and interrupts her in the act of traversing. In this position she must ride with her broadside or stern to the wind or current, till one or both of the cables are slackened, so as to sink under the keel; after which the ship will readily yield to the effort of the wind or current, and turn her head thither. (_See_ RIDE.) GIRT-LINE. A whip purchase, consisting of a rope passing through a single block on the head of a lower mast to hoist up the rigging thereof, and the persons employed to place it; the girt-line is therefore the first rope employed to rig a ship. (Sometimes mis-called _gant-line_.) GISARMS. An archaic term for a halbert or hand-axe. GIVE A SPELL. To intermit or relieve work. (_See_ SPELL.) GIVE CHASE, TO. To make sail in pursuit of a stranger. GIVE HER SO AND SO. The direction of the officer of the watch to the midshipman, reporting the rate of sailing by the log, and which requires correction in the judgment of that officer, from winds, &c., before marking on the log-board. GIVE HER SHEET. The order to ease off; give her rope. GIVE WAY. The order to a boat's crew to renew rowing, or to increase their exertions if they were already rowing. To hang on the oars. GIVE WAY TOGETHER. So that the oars may all dip and rise together, whereby the force is concentrated. GIVE WAY WITH A WILL. Pull heartily together. GIVING. The surging of a seizing; new rope stretching to the strain. GLACIS. In fortification, that smooth earthen slope outside the ditch which descends to the country, affording a secure parapet to the covered way, and exposing always a convenient surface to the fire of the place. GLADENE. A very early designation of the sea-onion. GLAIRE. A broadsword or falchion fixed on a pike. GLANCE. (_See_ NORTHERN-GLANCE.) Also, a name for anthracite coal. GLASAG. The Gaelic name of an edible sea-weed of our northern isles. GLASS. The usual appellation for a telescope (see the old sea song of Lord Howard's capture of Barton the pirate). Also, the familiar term for a barometer. _Glass_ is also used in the plural to denote time-glass on the duration of any action; as, they fought yard-arm and yard-arm three glasses, _i.e._ three half-hours.--_To flog or sweat the half-hour glass._ To turn the sand-glass before the sand has quite run out, and thus gaining a few minutes in each half-hour, make the watch too short.--_Half-minute and quarter-minute glasses_, used to ascertain the rate of the ship's velocity measured by the log; they should be occasionally compared with a good stop watch.--_Night-glass._ A telescope adapted for viewing objects at night. GLASS CLEAR? Is the sand out of the upper part? asked previously to turning it, on throwing the log. GLASSOK. A coast name for the say, seath, or coal-fish. GLAVE. A light hand-dart. Also, a sword-blade fixed on the end of a pole. GLAYMORE. A two-handed sword. (_See_ CLAYMORE.) GLAZED POWDER. Gunpowder of which the grains, by friction against one another in a barrel worked for the purpose, have acquired a fine polish, sometimes promoted by a minute application of black-lead; reputed to be very slightly weaker than the original, and somewhat less liable to deterioration. GLEN. An Anglo-Saxon term denoting a dale or deep valley; still in use for a ravine. GLENT, TO. To turn aside or quit the original direction, as a shot does from accidentally impinging on a hard substance. GLIB-GABBET. Smooth and ready speech. GLIM. A light; familiarly used for the eyes.--_Dowse the glim_, put out the light. GLOAMING. The twilight. Also, a gloomy dull state of sky. GLOBE RANGERS. A soubriquet for the royal marines. GLOBULAR SAILING. A general designation for all the methods on which the rules of computation are founded, on the hypothesis that the earth is a sphere; including great circle sailing. GLOG. The Manx or Erse term which denotes the swell or rolling of the sea after a storm. GLOOM-STOVE. Formerly for drying powder, at a temperature of about 140 deg.; being an iron vessel in a room heated from outside, but steam-pipes are now substituted. GLOOT. _See_ GALOOT. GLOWER, TO. To stare or look intently. GLUE. _See_ MARINE GLUE. GLUM. As applied to the weather, overcast and gloomy. Socially, it is a grievous look. GLUT. A piece of wood applied as a fulcrum to a lever power. Also, a bit of canvas sewed into the centre of a sail near the head, with an eyelet-hole in the middle for the bunt-jigger or becket to go through. Glut used to prevent slipping, as sand and nippers glut the messenger; the fall of a tackle drawn across the sheaves, by which it is choked or glutted; junks of rope interposed between the messenger and the whelps of the capstan. GLYN. A deep valley with convex sides. (_See_ CWM.) GNARLED. Knotty; said of timber. GNARRE. An old term for a hard knot in a tree; hence Shakspeare's "unwedgeable and gnarled oak." GNOLL. A round hillock. (_See_ KNOLL.) GNOMON. The hand; style of a dial. GO! A word sometimes given when all is ready for the launch of a vessel from the stocks. GO AHEAD! OR GO ON! The order to the engineer in a steamer. GO ASHORE, TO. To land on leave. GO ASHORES. The seamen's best dress. GOBARTO. A large and ravenous fish of our early voyagers, probably a shark. GOBBAG. A Gaelic name for the dog-fish. GOB-DOO. A Manx term for a mussel. GOBISSON. _Gambesson_; quilted dress worn under the habergeon. GOBLACHAN. A Gaelic name for the parr or samlet. GOB-LINE. _See_ GAUB-LINE. GOBON. An old English name for the whiting. GOB-STICK. A horn or wooden spoon. GO BY. Stratagem.--_To give her the go by_, is to escape by deceiving. GOBY. A name of the _gudgeon_ (which see). It was erroneously applied to white-bait. GOD. We retain the Anglo-Saxon word to designate the ALMIGHTY; signifying good, to do good, doing good, and to benefit; terms such as our classic borrowings cannot pretend to. GODENDA. An offensive weapon of our early times, being a poleaxe with a spike at its end. GO DOWN. The name given to store-houses and magazines in the East Indies. GODSEND. An unexpected relief or prize; but wreckers denote by the term vessels and goods driven on shore. GOE. A creek, smaller than a voe. GOELETTE [Fr.] A schooner. Also, a sloop-of-war. GOGAR. A serrated worm used in the north for fishing-bait. GOGLET. An earthen vase or bottle for holding water. GOILLEAR. The Gaelic for a sea-bird of the Hebrides, said to come ashore only in January. GOING ABOUT. Tacking ship. GOING FREE. When the bowlines are slackened, or sailing with the wind abeam. GOING LARGE. Sailing off the wind. GOING THROUGH THE FLEET. A cruel punishment, long happily abolished. The victim was sentenced to receive a certain portion of the flogging alongside the various ships, towed in a launch by a boat supplied from each vessel, the drummers beating the rogue's march. GOLDENEY. A name for the yellow gurnard among the northern fishermen. GOLD FISH. The trivial name of the _Cyprinus auratus_, one of the most superb of the finny tribe. It was originally brought from China, but is now generally naturalized in Europe. GOLD MOHUR. A well known current coin in the East Indies, varying a little in value at each presidency, but averaging fifteen rupees, or thirty shillings. GOLE. An old northern word for a stream or sluice. GOLLETTE. The shirt of mail formerly worn by foot soldiers. Also, a French sloop-of-war, spelled goelette. GOMER. A particular form of chamber in ordnance, consisting in a conical narrowing of the bore towards its inner end. It was first devised for the service of mortars, and named after the inventor, Gomer, in the late wars. GOMERE [Fr.] The cable of a galley. GONDOLA. A light pleasure-barge universally used on the canals of Venice, generally propelled by one man standing on the stern with one powerful oar, though the larger kinds have more rowers. The middle-sized gondolas are upwards of 30 feet long and 4 broad, with a well furnished cabin amidships, though exclusively black as restricted by law. They always rise at each end to a very sharp point of about the height of a man's breast. The stem is always surmounted by the ferro, a bright iron beak or cleaver of one uniform shape, seemingly derived from the ancient Romans, being the "rostrisque tridentibus" of Virgil, as may be seen in many of Hadrian's large brass medals. The form of the gondola in the water is traced back till its origin is lost in antiquity, yet (like that of the Turkish caiques) embodies the principles of the wave-line theory, the latest effort of modern ship-building science. Also, a passage-boat of six or eight oars, used on other parts of the coast of Italy. GONDOLIER. A man who works or navigates a gondola. GONE. Carried away. "The hawser or cable is _gone_;" parted, broken. GONE-GOOSE. A ship deserted or given up in despair (_in extremis_). GONFANON [Fr.] Formerly a cavalry banneret; corrupted from the _gonfalone_ of the Italians. GONG. A kind of Chinese cymbal, with a powerful and sonorous tone produced by the vibrations of its metal, consisting mainly of copper and tutenag or zinc; it is used by some vessels instead of a bell. A companion of Sir James Lancaster in 1605 irreverently states that it makes "a most hellish sound." GONGA. A general name for a river in India, whence comes Ganges. GOOD-AT-ALL-POINTS. Practical in every particular. GOOD-CONDUCT BADGE. Marked by a chevron on the lower part of the sleeve, granted by the admiralty, and carrying a slight increase of pay, to petty officers, seamen, and marines. One of a similar nature is in use in the army. GOOD MEN. The designation of the able, hard-working, and willing seamen. GOOD SHOALING. An approach to the shore by very gradual soundings. GOOLE. An old term for a breach in a sea-bank. GOOSANDER. The _Mergus merganser_, a northern sea-fowl, allied to the duck, with a straight, narrow, and serrated bill, hooked at the point. GOOSE-NECK. A curved iron, fitted outside the after-chains to receive a spare spar, properly the swinging boom, a davit. Also, a sort of iron hook fitted on the inner end of a boom, and introduced into a clamp of iron or eye-bolt, which encircles the mast; or is fitted to some other place in the ship, so that it may be unhooked at pleasure. It is used for various purposes, especially for guest-warps and swinging booms of all descriptions. GOOSE-WINGS OF A SAIL. The situation of a course when the buntlines and lee-clue are hauled up, and the weather-clue down. The clues, or lower corners of a ship's main-sail or fore-sail, when the middle part is furled or tied up to the yard. The term is also applied to the fore and main sails of a schooner or other two-masted fore-and-aft vessel; when running before the wind she has these sails set on opposite sides. GOOSE WITHOUT GRAVY. A severe starting, so called because no blood followed its infliction. GORAB. _See_ GRAB. GORD. An archaism denoting a deep hole in a river. GORES. Angular pieces of plank inserted to fill up a vessel's planking at any part requiring it. Also, the angles at one or both ends of such cloths as increase the breadth or depth of a sail. (_See_ GORING-CLOTH.) GORGE. The upper and narrowest part of a transverse valley, usually containing the upper bed of a torrent. Also, in fortification, a line joining the inner extremities of a work. GORGE-HOOK. Two hooks separated by a piece of lead, for the taking of pike or other voracious fish. GORGET. In former times, and still amongst some foreign troops, a gilt badge of a crescent shape, suspended from the neck, and hanging on the breast, worn by officers on duty. GORING, OR GORING-CLOTH. That part of the skirts of a sail cut on the bias, where it gradually widens from the upper part down to the clues. (_See_ SAIL.) GORMAW. A coast name for the cormorant. GORSE. Heath or furze for breaming a vessel's bottom. GO SLOW. The order to the engineer to cut off steam without stopping the play of the engine. GOSSOON. A silly awkward lout. GOTE. _See_ GUTTER. GOUGING. In ship-building (_see_ SNAIL-CREEPING). Also, a cruel practice in one or two American states, now extremely rare, in which a man's eye was squeezed out by his rival's thumb-nail, the fingers being entangled in the hair for the necessary purchase. GOUGINGS. A synonym of _gudgeons_ (which see). GOUKMEY. One of the names in the north for the gray gurnard. GOULET. Any narrow entrance to a creek or harbour, as the _goletta_ at Tunis. GOURIES. The garbage of salmon. GOVERNMENT. Generally means the constitution of our country as exercised under the legislature of king or queen, lords, and commons. GOVERNOR. An officer placed by royal commission in command of a fortress, town, or colony. Governors are also appointed to institutions, hospitals, and other establishments. Also, a revolving bifurcate pendulum, with two iron balls, whose centrifugal divergence equalizes the motion of the steam-engine. GOW. An old northern term for the gull. GOWDIE. The _Callionymus lyra_, dragonet, or chanticleer. GOWK. The cuckoo; but also used for a stupid, good-natured fellow. GOWK-STORM. Late vernal equinoctial gales contemporary with the gowk or cuckoo. GOWT, OR GOTE. A limited passage for water. GOYLIR. A small sea-bird held to precede a storm; hence seamen call them _malifiges_. Arctic gull. GRAB. The large coasting vessel of India, generally with two masts, and of 150 to 300 tons.--_To grab._ In familiar language, to catch or snatch at anything with violence. GRABBLE, TO. To endeavour to hook a sunk article. To catch fish by hand in a brook. GRAB SERVICE. Country vessels first employed by the Bombay government against the pirates; afterwards erected into the Bombay Marine. GRACE. _See_ ACT OF GRACE. GRADE. A degree of rank; a step in order or dignity. GRAFTING. An ornamental weaving of fine yarns, &c., over the strop of a block; or applied to the tapered ends of the ropes, and termed pointing. GRAIN OF TIMBER. In a transverse section of a tree, two different grains are seen: those running in a circular manner are called the _silver grain_; the others radiate, and are called _bastard grain_.--_Grain_ is also a whirlwind not unfrequent in Normandy, mixed with rain, but seldom continues above a quarter of an hour. They may be foreseen, and while they last the sea is very turbulent; they may return several times in the same day, a dead calm succeeding. GRAIN. In the _grain of_, is immediately preceding another ship in the same direction.--_Bad-grain_, a sea-lawyer; a nuisance. GRAIN-CUT TIMBER. That which is cut athwart the grain when the grain of the wood does not partake of the shape required. GRAINED POWDER. That corned or reduced into grains from the cakes, and distinguished from mealed powder, as employed in certain preparations. GRAINS. A five-pronged fish-spear, grains signifying branches. GRAIN UPSET. When a mast suffers by buckles, it is said to have its grain upset. A species of wrinkle on the soft outer grain which will be found corresponding to a defect on the other side. It is frequently produced by an injudicious setting up of the rigging. GRAM. A species of pulse given to horses, sheep, and oxen in the East Indies, and supplied to ships for feeding live-stock. GRAMPUS. A corruption of _gran pisce_. An animal of the cetacean or whale tribe, distinguished by the large pointed teeth with which both jaws are armed, and by the high falcate dorsal fin. It generally attains a length of 20 to 25 feet, and is very active and voracious. GRAMPUS, BLOWING THE. Sluicing a person with water, especially practised on him who skulks or sleeps on his watch. GRAND DIVISION. A division of a battalion composed of two companies, or ordinary divisions, in line. GRANDSIRE. The name of a four-oared boat which belonged to Peter the Great, now carefully preserved at St. Petersburg as the origin of the Russian fleet. GRANNY'S BEND. The slippery hitch made by a lubber. GRANNY'S KNOT. This is a term of derision when a reef-knot is crossed the wrong way, so as to be insecure. It is the natural knot tied by women or landsmen, and derided by seamen because it cannot be untied when it is jammed. GRAPESHOT. A missile from guns intermediate between case-shot and solid shot, having much of the destructive spread of the former with somewhat of the range and penetrative force of the latter. A round of grapeshot consists of three tiers of cast-iron balls arranged, generally three in a tier, between four parallel iron discs connected together by a central wrought-iron pin. For carronades, the grape, not being liable to such a violent dispersive shock, they are simply packed in canisters with wooden bottoms. GRAPNEL, OR GRAPLING. A sort of small anchor for boats, having a ring at one end, and four palmed claws at the other.--_Fire grapnel._ Resembling the former, but its flukes are furnished with strong fish-hook barbs on their points, usually fixed by a chain on the yard-arms of a ship, to grapple any adversary whom she intends to board, and particularly requisite in fire-ships. Also, used to grapple ships on fire, in order to tow them away from injuring other vessels. GRAPNEL-ROPE. That which is bent to the grapnel by which a boat rides, now substituted by chain. GRAPPLE, TO. To hook with a grapnel; to lay hold of. First used by Duilius to prevent the escape of the Carthaginians. GRASP. The handle of a sword, and of an oar. Also, the small of the butt of a musket. GRASS. A term applied to vegetables in general. (_See_ FEED OF GRASS.) GRASS-COMBERS. A galley-term for all those landsmen who enter the naval service from farming counties. Lord Exmouth found many of them learn their duties easily, and turn out valuable seamen. GRATING-DECK. A light movable deck, similar to the hatch-deck, but with open gratings. GRATINGS. An open wood-work of cross battens and ledges forming cover for the hatchways, serving to give light and air to the lower decks. In nautical phrase, he "who can't see a hole through a grating" is excessively drunk. GRATINGS OF THE HEAD. _See_ HEAD-GRATINGS. GRATUITOUS MONEY. A term officially used for bounty granted to volunteers in Lord Exmouth's expedition against Algiers. GRAVE, TO. To clean a vessel's bottom, and pay it over. GRAVELIN. A small migratory fish, commonly reputed to be the spawn of the salmon. GRAVELLED. Vexed, mortified. GRAVING. The act of cleaning a ship's bottom by burning off the impurities, and paying it over with tar or other substance, while she is laid aground during the recess of the tide. (_See_ BREAMING.) GRAVING BEACH OR SLIP. A portion of the dockyard where ships were landed for a tide. GRAVING-DOCK. An artificial receptacle used for the inspecting, repairing, and cleaning a vessel's bottom. It is so contrived that after the ship is floated in, the water may run out with the fall of the tide, the shutting of the gates preventing its return. GRAVITATION. The natural tendency or inclination of all bodies towards the centre of the earth; and which was established by Sir Isaac Newton, as the great law of nature. GRAVITY, CENTRE OF. The centre of gravity of a ship is that point about which all parts of the body, in any situation, balance each other. (_See_ SPECIFIC GRAVITY.) GRAWLS. The young salmon, probably the same as _grilse_. GRAY-FISH, AND GRAY-LORD. Two of the many names given to the _Gadus carbonarius_ or coal-fish. GRAYLE. Small sand. Also, an old term for thin gravel. GRAYLING. A fresh-water fish of the Salmo tribe. (_See_ OMBRE.) GRAYNING. A species of dace found on our northern coast. GRAY-SCHOOL. A particular shoal of large salmon in the Solway about the middle of July. GRAZE. The point at which a shot strikes and rebounds from earth or water. GRAZING-FIRE. That which sweeps close to the surface it defends. GREASY. Synonymous with dirty weather. GREAT CIRCLE. One whose assumed plane passes through the centre of the sphere, dividing it equally. GREAT-CIRCLE SAILING. Is a method for determining a series of points in an arc of a great circle between two points on the surface of the earth, for the purpose of directing a ship's course as nearly as possible on such arc; that is, on the curve of shortest distance between the place from which she sets out, and that at which she is to arrive. GREAT GUN. The general sea-term for cannons, or officers of great repute. GREAT GUNS AND SMALL-ARMS. The general armament of a ship. Also, a slang term for the blowing and raining of heavy weather. GREAT-LINE FISHING. That carried on over the deeper banks of the ocean. (_See_ LINE-FISHING.) It is more applicable to hand-fishing, as on the banks of Newfoundland, in depths over 60 fathoms. GREAT OCEAN. The Pacific, so called from its superior extent. GREAT SHAKES. _See_ SHAKE. GREAVES. Armour for the legs. GRECALE. A north-eastern breeze off the coast of Sicily, _Greece_ lying N.E. GREEN. Raw and untutored; a metaphor from unripe fruit--thus Shakspeare makes Pandulph say: "How green are you and fresh in this old world!" GREEN-BONE. The trivial name of the viviparous blenny, or guffer, the backbone of which is green when boiled; also of the gar-fish. GREEN-FISH. Cod, hake, haddock, herrings, &c., unsalted. GREEN-HANDS. Those embarked for the first time, and consequently inexperienced. GREEN-HORN. A lubberly, uninitiated fellow. A novice of marked gullibility. GREENLAND DOVE. The puffinet; called _scraber_ in the Hebrides; about the size of a pigeon. GREENLAND WHALE. _See_ RIGHT WHALE. GREEN-MEN. The five supernumerary seamen who had not been before in the Arctic Seas, whom vessels in the whale-fishery were obliged to bear, to get the tonnage bounty. GREEN SEA. A large body of water shipped on a vessel's deck; it derives its name from the green colour of a sheet of water between the eye and the light when its mass is too large to be broken up into spray. GREEN-SLAKE. The sea-weed otherwise called _lettuce-laver_ (which see). GREEN TURTLE. The common name for the edible turtle, which does not yield tortoise-shell. GREENWICH STARS. Those used for lunar computations in the nautical ephemeris. GREEP. The old orthography of _gripe_. GREGO. A coarse Levantine jacket, with a hood. A cant term for a rough great-coat. GRENADE. Now restricted to hand-grenade, weighing about 2 lbs., and the fuze being previously lit, is conveniently thrown by hand from the tops of ships on to an enemy's deck, from the parapet into the ditch, or generally against an enemy otherwise difficult to reach. A number of grenades, moreover, being quilted together with their fuzes outwards, called a "bouquet," is fired short distances with good effect from mortars in the latter stages of a siege. GRENADIERS. Formerly the right company of each battalion, composed of the largest men, and originally equipped for using hand-grenades. Now-a-days the companies of a regiment are equalized in size and other matters; and the title in the British army remains only to the fine regiment of grenadier guards. GRENADO. The old name for a live shell. Thuanus says that they were first used at the siege of Wacklindonck, near Gueldres; and that their inventor, in an experiment in Venice, occasioned the burning of two-thirds of that city. GREVE. A low flat sandy shore; whence _graving_ is derived. GREY-FRIARS. A name given to the oxen of Tuscany, with which the Mediterranean fleet was supplied. GREY-HEAD. A fish of the haddock kind, taken on the coast of Galloway. GREYHOUND. A hammock with so little bedding as to be unfit for stowing in the nettings. GRIAN. A Gaelic term for the bottom, whether of river, lake, or sea. GRIBAN. A small two-masted vessel of Normandy. GRID. The diminutive of _gridiron_. GRIDIRON. A solid timber stage or frame, formed of cross-beams of wood, for receiving a ship with a falling tide, in order that her bottom may be examined. The Americans also use for a similar purpose an apparatus called a _screw-dock_, and another known as the _hydraulic-dock_. GRIFFIN, OR GRIFF. A name given to Europeans during the first year of their arrival in India; it has become a general term for an inexperienced youngster. GRIG. Small eels. GRILL, TO. To broil on the bars of the galley-range, as implied by its French derivation. GRILSE. One of the salmon tribe, generally considered to be a young salmon on the return from its first sojourn at the sea; though by some still supposed to be a distinct fish. GRIN AND BEAR IT. The stoical resignation to unavoidable hardship, which, being heard on board ship by Lord Byron, produced the fine stanza in "Childe Harold," commencing "Existence might be borne." GRIND. A half kink in a hempen cable. GRIP. The Anglo-Saxon _grep_. The handle of a sword; also a small ditch or drain. To hold, as "the anchor grips." Also, a peculiar groove in rifled ordnance. GRIPE. Is generally formed by the scarph of the stem and keel. (_See_ FORE-FOOT.) This is retained, or shaved away, according to the object of making the vessel hold a better wind, or have greater facility in wearing.--_To gripe._ To carry too much weather-helm. A vessel gripes when she tends to come up into the wind while sailing close-hauled. She gripes according to her trim. If it continues it is remedied by lightening forward, or making her draw deeper aft. GRIPED-TO. The situation of a boat when secured by gripes. GRIPES. A broad plait formed by an assemblage of ropes, woven and fitted with thimbles and laniards, used to steady the boats upon the deck of a ship at sea. The gripes are fastened at their ends to ring-bolts in the deck, on each side of the boat; whence, passing over her middle and extremities, they are set up by means of the laniards. Gripes for a quarter boat are similarly used. GRITT. An east-country term for the sea-crab. GROATS. An allowance for each man per mensem, assigned formerly to the chaplain for pay. GROBMAN. A west-country term for a sea-bream about two-thirds grown. GRODAN. A peculiar boat of the Orcades; also the Erse for a gurnard. GROG. A drink issued in the navy, consisting of one part of spirits diluted with three of water; introduced in 1740 by Admiral Vernon, as a check to intoxication by mere rum, and said to have been named from his grogram coat. Pindar, however, alludes to the Cyclops diluting their beverage with ten waters. As the water on board, in olden times, became very unwholesome, it was necessary to mix it with spirits, but iron tanks have partly remedied this. The addition of sugar and lemon-juice now makes grog an agreeable anti-scorbutic. GROG-BLOSSOM. A red confluence on the nose and face of an excessive drinker of ardent spirits; though sometimes resulting from other causes. GROG-GROG. The soft cry of the solan goose. GROGGY, OR GROGGIFIED. Rendered stupid by drinking, or incapable of performing duty by illness; as also a ship when crank, and birds when crippled. GROGRAM. From _gros-grain_. A coarse stuff of which boat-cloaks were made. From one which Admiral Vernon wore, came the term _grog_. GROINING. A peculiar mode of submarine embankment; a quay run out transversely to the shore. GROMAL. An old word for gromet, or apprentice. GROMET. A boy of the crew of the ships formerly furnished by the Cinque Ports (a diminutive from the Teutonic _grom_, a youth); his duty was to keep ship in harbour. Now applied to the ship's apprentices. GROMMET, OR GRUMMET. A ring formed of a single strand of rope, laid in three times round; used to fasten the upper edge of a sail to its stay in different places, and by means of which the sail is hoisted or lowered. Iron or wooden hanks have now been substituted. (_See_ HANKS.) Grommets are also used with pins for large boats' oars, instead of rowlocks, and for many other purposes. GROMMET-WAD. A ring made of 1-1/2 or 2 inch rope, having attached to it two cross-pieces or diameters of the same material; it acts by the ends of these pieces biting on the interior of the bore of the gun. GROOVE-ROLLERS. These are fixed in a groove of the tiller-sweep in large ships, to aid the tiller-ropes, and prevent friction. GROPERS. The ships stationed in the Channel and North Sea. GROPING. An old mode of catching trout by tickling them with the hands under rocks or banks. Shakspeare makes the clown in "Measure for Measure" say that Claudio's offence was-- "Groping for trouts in a peculiar river." GROSETTA. A minute coin of Ragusa, somewhat less than a farthing. GROUND, TO. To take the bottom or shore; to be run aground through ignorance, violence, or accident.--_To strike ground._ To obtain soundings. GROUNDAGE. A local duty charged on vessels coming to anchor in a port or standing in a roadstead, as _anchorage_. GROUND-BAIT, OR GROUNDLING. A loach or loche. GROUND-GRU. _See_ ANCHOR-ICE. GROUND-GUDGEON. A little fish, the _Cobitis barbatula_. GROUND-ICE. _See_ ANCHOR-ICE. GROUNDING. The act of laying a ship on shore, in order to bream or repair her; it is also applied to runnings aground accidentally when under sail. GROUND-PLOT. _See_ ICHNOGRAPHY. GROUND-SEA. The West Indian name for the swell called _rollers_, or in Jamaica the _north sea_. It occurs in a calm, and with no other indication of a previous gale; the sea rises in huge billows, dashes against the shore with roarings resembling thunder, probably due to the "northers," which suddenly rage off the capes of Virginia, round to the Gulf of Mexico, and drive off the sea from America, affecting the Bahama Banks, but not reaching to Jamaica or Cuba. The rollers set in terrifically in the Gulf of California, causing vessels to founder or strike in 7 fathoms, and devastating the coast-line. H.M.S. _Lily_ foundered off Tristan d'Acunha in similar weather. In all the latter cases no satisfactory cause is yet assigned. (_See_ ROLLER.) GROUND-STRAKE. A name sometimes used for _garboard-strake_. GROUND-SWELL. A sudden swell preceding a gale, which rises along shore, often in fine weather, and when the sea beyond it is calm. (_See_ ROLLER.) GROUND-TACKLE. A general name given to all sorts of ropes and furniture which belong to the anchors, or which are employed in securing a ship in a road or harbour. GROUND-TIER. The lowest water-casks in the hold before the introduction of iron tanks. It also implies anything else stowed there. GROUND-TIMBERS. Those which lie on the keel, and are fastened to it with bolts through the kelson. GROUND-WAYS. The large blocks and thick planks which support the cradle on which a ship is launched. Also, the foundation whereon a vessel is built. GROUP. A set of islands not ranged in a row so as to form a chain, and the word is often used synonymously with _cluster_. GROUPER. A variety of the snapper, which forms a staple article of food in the Bermudas, and in the West Indies generally. GROWEN. _See_ GROWN-SEA. GROWING. Implies the direction of the cable from the ship towards the anchors; as, the cable _grows_ on the starboard-bow, _i.e._ stretches out forwards towards the starboard or right side. GROWING PAY. That which succeeds the _dead-horse_, or pay in prospect. GROWLERS. Smart, but sometimes all-jaw seamen, who have seen some service, but indulge in invectives against restrictive regulations, rendering them undesirable men. There are also too many "civil growlers" of the same kidney. GROWN-SEA. When the waves have felt the full influence of a gale. GRUANE. The Erse term for the gills of a fish. GRUB. A coarse but common term for provisions in general-- "In other words they toss'd the grub Out of their own provision tub." GRUB-TRAP. A vulgarism for the mouth. GRUFF-GOODS. An Indian return cargo consisting of raw materials--cotton, rice, pepper, sugar, hemp, saltpetre, &c. GRUMBLER. A discontented yet often hard-working seaman. Also, the gurnard, a fish of the blenny kind, which makes a rumbling noise when struggling to disengage itself on reaching the surface. GRUMMET. _See_ GROMMET. GRUNTER. A name of the _Pogonias_ of Cuvier (a fish also termed the banded drum and young sheepskin); and several other fish. GRYPHON. An archaic term for the meteorological phenomenon now called _typhoon_. (_See_ TYPHOON.) GUANO. The excrement of sea-birds, a valuable manure found in thick beds on certain islets on the coast of Peru, indeed, in all tropical climates. The transport of it occupies a number of vessels, called _guaneros_. It is of a dingy yellow colour, and offensive ammoniacal effluvium. Captain Shelvocke mentions it in 1720, having taken a small bark laden with it. GUARA. The singular and ingenious rudder by which the rafts or balzas of Peru are enabled to work to windward. It consists of long boards between the beams, which are raised or sunk according to the required evolution. A device not unlike the sliding-keels or centre-boards lately introduced. GUARANTEE. An undertaking to secure the performance of articles stipulated between any two parties. Also, the individual who so undertakes. GUARD. The duty performed by a body of men stationed to watch and protect any post against surprise. A division of marines appointed to take the duty for a stated portion of time. "Guard, turn out!" the order to the marines on the captain's approaching the ship. Also, the bow of a trigger and the hilt of a sword. GUARDA-COSTA. Vessels of war of various sizes which formerly cruised against smugglers on the South American coasts. GUARD-BOARDS. Synonymous with _chain-wales_. GUARD-BOAT. A boat appointed to row the rounds amongst the ships of war in any harbour, &c., to observe that their officers keep a good look-out, calling to the guard-boat as she passes, and not suffering her crew to come on board without previously having communicated the watch-word of the night. Also, a boat employed to enforce the quarantine regulations. GUARD-BOOK. Report of guard; a copy of which is delivered at the admiral's office by the officer of the last guard. Also, a full set of his accounts kept by a warrant-officer for the purpose of passing them. GUARD-FISH. A corruption of the word _gar-fish_. GUARDIAN OF THE CINQUE PORTS. Otherwise _lord warden_ (which see). GUARD-IRONS. Curved bars of iron placed over the ornaments of a ship to defend them from damage. GUARDO. A familiar term applied equally to a guard-ship or any person belonging to her. It implies "harbour-going;" an easy life. GUARDO-MOVE. A trick upon a landsman, generally performed in a guard-ship. GUARD-SHIP. A vessel of war appointed to superintend the marine affairs in a harbour, and to visit the ships which are not commissioned every night; she is also to receive seamen who are impressed in time of war. In the great ports she carries the flag of the commander-in-chief. Each ship takes the guard in turn at 9 A.M.; the vessel thus on duty hoists the union-jack at the mizen, and performs the duties afloat for twenty-four hours. The officer of the guard is accountable to the admiral for all transactions on the water during his guard. GUBB, OR GUBBEN. The Erse term for a young sea-gull. GUBBER. One who gathers oakum, driftwood, &c., along a beach. The word also means black mud. GUDDLE, TO. To catch fish with the hands by groping along a stream's bank. GUDGE, TO. To poke or prod for fish under stones and banks of a river. GUDGEON. The _Gobio fluviatilis_, a well-known river-fish, 6 or 7 inches in length. GUDGEONS. The metal braces with eyes bolted upon the stern-post for the pintles of the rudder to work in, as upon hinges. Also, the notches made in the carrick-bitts for receiving the metal bushes wherein the spindle of a windlass works. GUEBRES. Fire-worshippers. (_See_ PARSEES.) GUERDON. A reward or recompense for good service. GUERILLA. Originally an irregular warfare, but now used mostly for the irresponsible kind of partisan who carries it on. GUERITE, OR GALITA. In fortification, a projecting turret on the top of the escarp, whence a sentry may observe the outside of the rampart. GUERNSEY-FROCK. _See_ JERSEY. GUESS-WARP, OR GUEST-ROPE. A rope carried to a distant object, in order to warp a vessel towards it, or to make fast a boat. (_See_ CHEST-ROPE.) GUESTLINGS. The name of certain meetings held at the Cinque Ports. GUEST-WARP BOOM. A swinging spar (lower studding-boom) rigged from the ship's side with a warp for boats to ride by. GUFFER. A British sea-fish of the blenny tribe, common under stones at low-water mark, remarkable as being ovo-viviparous. GUIDE. _See_ FLOOR-GUIDE. GUIDE-RODS. The regulators of the cross-head of an engine's air-pump. GUIDES. Men supposed to know the country and its roads employed to direct a body of men on their march. The French and Belgians have "corps de guides." GUIDON. The swallow-tailed silk flag in use by dragoon regiments, instead of a standard. Also, the sergeant bearing the same. GUIDOR. A name in our old statutes synonymous with _conder_ (which see). GUILLEM. A sea-fowl. (_See_ LAVY.) GUILLEMOT. A web-footed diving sea-bird allied to the auks. GUIMAD. A small fish of the river Dee. GUINEA-BOAT. A fast-rowing galley, of former times, expressly built for smuggling gold across the Channel, in use at Deal. GUINEAMAN. A negro slave-ship. GUINEA-PIGS. The younger midshipmen of an Indiaman. GUIST. The same as _guess_ or _guest_ (which see). GULDEN. A name for a water-fowl. GULF, OR GULPH. A capacious bay, and sometimes taking the name of a sea when it is very extensive; such are the Euxine or Black Sea, otherwise called the Gulf of Constantinople; the Adriatic Sea, called also the Gulf of Venice; the Mediterranean is itself a prodigious specimen. A gulf is, strictly speaking, distinguished from a sea in being smaller, and from a bay in being larger and deeper than it is broad. It is observed that the sea is always most dangerous near gulfs, from the currents being penned up by the shores. GULF-STREAM. Is especially referable to that of Mexico, the waters of which flow in a warm stream at various velocities over the banks between Cuba and America, past the Bermudas, touch the tail of the great bank of Newfoundland, and thence in a sweep to Europe, part going north, and the other southerly down to the tropics again. GULF-WEED. The _Fucus natans_, considered to belong to the Gulf Stream, and found floating in the Sargasso Sea in the North Atlantic. Many small crustacea live amongst it, and assume its bright orange-yellow hue. GUL-GUL. A sort of chunam or cement made of pounded sea-shells mixed with oil, which hardens like a stone, and is put over a ship's bottom in India, so that worms cannot penetrate even when the copper is off. GULL. A well-known sea-bird of the genus _Larus_; there are many species. Also, a large trout in the north. The name is, moreover, familiarly used for a lout easily deceived or cheated; thus Butler in _Hudibras_-- "The paltry story is untrue, And forg'd to cheat such gulls as you." It is also applied to the washing away of earth by the violent flowing of water; the origin perhaps of the Kentish gull-stream. GULLET. A small stream in a water-worn course. GULL-SHARPER. One who preys upon Johnny Raws. GULLY. The channels worn on the face of mountains by heavy rains. Also, a rivulet which empties itself into the sea. GULLY SQUALL. Well known off tropical America in the Pacific, particularly abreast of the lakes of Leon, Nicaragua, &c. Monte Desolado gusts have dismantled many stout ships. GULPIN. An awkward soldier; a weak credulous fellow [from the Gaelic _golben_, a novice]. GUM. "Shaking the gum out of a sail" is said of the effect of bad weather on new canvas. GUMPUS. A fish, called also _numscull_, for allowing itself to be guddled. GUN. The usual service name for a _cannon_ (which see); it was originally called great gun, to distinguish it from the small or hand guns, muskets, blunderbusses, &c. The general construction for guns of cast metal is fairly represented by the old rule that the circumference at the breech ought to measure eleven calibres, at the trunnions nine, and at the muzzle seven, for iron; and in each instance two calibres less for brass guns. But the introduction of wrought-iron guns, built up with outer jackets of metal shrunk on one above another, is developing other names and proportions in the new artillery. (_See_ BUILT-UP GUNS.) The weight of these latter, though differently disposed, and required not so much for strength as for modifying the recoil or shock to the carriage on discharge, is not very much less, proportionally, for heavy guns of full power, than that of the old ones, being about 1-1/4 cwt. of gun for every 1 lb. of shot; for light guns for field purposes it is about 3/4 cwt. for every 1 lb. of shot. Guns are generally designated from the weight of the shot they discharge, though some few natures, introduced principally for firing shells, were distinguished by the diameter of their bore in inches; with the larger guns of the new system, in addition to this diameter, the weight in tons is also specified.--_Gun_, in north-country cant, meant a large flagon of ale, and _son of a gun_ was a jovial toper: the term, owed its derivation to lads born under the breast of the lower-deck guns in olden times, when women were allowed to accompany their husbands. Even in 1820 the best petty officers were allowed this indulgence, about one to every hundred men. Gunners also, who superintended the youngsters, took their wives, and many living admirals can revert to kindness experienced from them. These "sons of a gun" were tars, and no mistake.--_Morning gun_, a signal fired by an admiral or commodore at day-break every morning for the drums or bugles to sound the reveille. A gun of like name and nature is generally in use in fortresses; as is also the _evening gun_, fired by an admiral or commodore at 9 P.M. in summer, and 8 P.M. in winter, every night, on which the drums or bugles sound the retreat. GUN AND HEAD MONEY. Given to the captors of an enemy's ship of war destroyed, or deserted, in fight. It was formerly assumed to be about L1000 per gun. GUNBOAT. A light-draught boat fitted to carry one or more cannon in the bow, so as to cannonade an enemy while she is end-on. They are principally useful in fine weather, to cover the landing of troops, or such other occasions. They were formerly impelled by sails and sweeps but now by steam-power, which has generally increased their size, and much developed their importance. According to Froissart, cannon were fired from boats in the fourteenth century. GUN-CHAMBERS. In early artillery, a movable chamber with a handle, like a paterero, used in loading at the breech. In more recent times the name has been used for the small portable mortars for firing salutes in the parks. GUN-COTTON. An explosive compound, having some advantages over gunpowder, but so irregular hitherto in its action that it is at present used only for mining purposes. It consists of ordinary cotton treated with nitric and sulphuric acid and water, and has been named by chemists "pyroxylin," "nitro-cellulose," &c. GUN-DECK. _See_ DECKS. GUN-FIRE. The morning or evening guns, familiarly termed "the admiral falling down the hatchway." GUN-GEAR. Everything pertaining to its handling. GUN-HARPOON. _See_ HARPOON. GUN-LADLE. _See_ LADLE. GUN-LOD. A vessel filled with combustibles, but rather for explosion than as a fire-ship. GUN-METAL. The alloy from which brass guns are cast consists of 100 parts of copper to 10 of tin, retaining much of the tenacity of the former, and much harder than either of the components; but the late improved working of wrought-iron and steel has nearly superseded its application to guns. GUNNADE. A short 32-pounder gun of 6 feet, introduced in 1814; afterwards termed the shell-gun. GUNNEL. _See_ GUNWALE. GUNNELL. A spotted ribbon-bodied fish, living under stones and among rocks. GUNNER, OF A SHIP OF WAR. A warrant-officer appointed to take charge of the ammunition and artillery on board; to keep the latter properly fitted, and to instruct the sailors in the exercise of the cannon. The warrant of chief-gunner is now given to first-class gunners.--_Quarter-gunners._ Men formerly placed under the direction of the gunner, one quarter-gunner being allowed to every four guns. In the army, gunner is the proper title of a private soldier of the Royal Artillery, with the exception of those styled drivers. GUNNER-FLOOK. A name among our northern fishermen for the _Pleuronectes maximus_, or turbot. GUNNER'S DAUGHTER. The name of the gun to which boys were _married_, or lashed, to be punished. GUNNER'S HANDSPIKE. Is shorter and flatter than the ordinary handspike, and is shod with iron at the point, so that it bites with greater certainty against the trucks of guns. GUNNER'S MATE. A petty officer appointed to assist the gunner. GUNNER'S PIECE. In destroying and bursting guns, means a fragment of the breech, which generally flies upward. GUNNER'S QUADRANT. _See_ QUADRANT. GUNNER'S TAILOR. An old rating for the man who made the cartridge-bags. GUNNER'S YEOMAN. _See_ YEOMAN. GUNNERY. The art of charging, pointing, firing, and managing artillery of all kinds. GUNNERY-LIEUTENANT. "One who, having obtained a warrant from a gunnery ship, is eligible to large ships to assist specially in supervising the gunnery duties; he draws increased pay." GUNNERY-SHIP. A ship fitted for training men in the practice of charging, pointing, and firing guns and mortars for the Royal Navy. (_See_ SEAMEN-GUNNERS.) GUNNING. An old term for shooting; it is now adopted by the Americans. After the wreck of the _Wager_, on hearing the pistols fired at Cozens, "it was rainy weather, and not fit for gunning, so that we could not imagine the meaning of it."--_Gunning a ship._ Fitting her with ordnance.--_Gunning_, in mining, is when the blast explodes and does not rend the mass.--_Gunning_, signals enforced by guns. GUNNING-BOAT, OR GUNNING-SHOUT. A light and narrow boat in which the fen-men pursue the flocks of wild-fowl. GUNNY. Sackcloth or coarse canvas, made of fibres used in India, chiefly of jute. GUNNY-BAGS. The sacks used on the India station for holding rice, biscuit, &c.; often as sand-bags in fortification. GUN-PENDULUM. _See_ BALLISTIC PENDULUM. GUN-PORTS. _See_ PORTS. GUNPOWDER. The well-known explosive composition which, for its regularity of effect and convenience in manufacture and use, is still preferred for general purposes to all the new and more violent but more capricious agents. In England it is composed of 75 parts saltpetre to 10 sulphur and 15 charcoal; these proportions are varied slightly in different countries. The ingredients are mixed together with great mechanical nicety, and the compound is then pressed and granulated. On the application of fire it is converted into gas with vast explosive power, but subject to tolerably well-known laws. GUN-ROOM. A compartment on the after-end of the lower gun-deck of large ships of war, partly occupied by the junior officers; but in smaller vessels it is below the gun-deck, and the mess-room of the lieutenants. GUNROOM-PORTS. In frigates, stern-ports cut through the gun-room. GUN-SEARCHER. An iron instrument with several sharp-pointed prongs and a wooden handle: it is used to find whether the bore is honey-combed. GUN-SHOT. Formerly, the distance up to which a gun would throw a shot direct to its mark, without added elevation; as the "line of metal" (which see) was generally used in laying, this range was about 800 yards. But now that ranges are so greatly increased, with but slight additions to the elevation, the term will include the distances of ordinary "horizontal fire" (which see); as between ships, with rifled guns, it will not quite reach two miles: though when the mark is large, as a town or dockyard, it is still within long range at five miles' distance. GUN-SIGHT. _See_ DISPART, or SIGHTS. GUN-SLINGS. Long rope grommets used for hoisting in and mounting them. GUN-STONES. An old term for cannon-balls, from stones having been first supplied to the ordnance and used for that purpose. Shakspeare makes Henry V. tell the French ambassadors that their master's tennis-balls shall be changed to gun-stones. This term was retained for a bullet, after the introduction of iron shot. GUN-TACKLE PURCHASE. A tackle composed of a rope rove through two single blocks, the standing part being made fast to the strop of one of the blocks. It multiplies the power applied threefold. GUNTEN. A boat of burden in the Moluccas. GUNTER'S LINE. Called also the _line of numbers_, and the _line of lines_, is placed upon scales and sectors, and named from its inventor, Edmund Gunter. It is a logarithmic scale of proportionals, wherein the distance between each division is equal to the number of mean proportionals contained between the two terms, in such parts as the distance between 1 and 10 is 10,000, &c. GUNTER'S QUADRANT. A kind of stereographic projection on the plane of the equinoctial; the eye is supposed in one of the poles, so that the tropic, ecliptic, and horizon form the arches of the circles, but the hour-circles are all curves, drawn by means of several altitudes of the sun, for some particular latitude, for every day in the year. The use of this instrument is to find the hour of the day, the sun's azimuth, and other common problems of the globe; as also to take the altitude of an object in degrees. GUNWALE, OR GUNNEL. Nearly synonymous with _plank-sheer_ (which see); but its strict application is that horizontal plank which covers the heads of the timbers between the main and fore drifts. The _gunwale of a boat_ is a piece of timber going round the upper sheer-strake as a binder for its top-work.--_Gunwale-to._ Vessels heeling over, so that the gunwale is even with the water. When a boat sails with a free wind, and rolls each side, or gunwale, to the water's edge, she rolls gunwale-to. GURGE. A gulf or whirlpool. GURNARD. A fish of the genus _Trigla_, so called from its peculiar grunt when removed from the water. Falstaff uses the term "soused gurnet" in a most contemptuous view, owing to its poorness; and its head being all skin and bone gave rise to the saying that the flesh on a gurnard's head is rank poison. GURNET-PENDANT. A rope, the thimble of which is hooked to the quarter-tackle of the main-yard; it is led through a hole in the deck, for the purpose of raising the breech of a gun, when hoisting in, to the level required to place it on its carriage. GUSSOCK. An east-country term for a strong and sudden gust of wind. GUST, OR GUSH. A sudden violent wind experienced near mountainous lands; it is of short duration, and generally succeeded by fine breezes. GUT. A somewhat coarse term for the main part of a strait or channel, as the Gut of Gibraltar, Gut of Canso. GUTTER [Anglo-Saxon _geotan_, to pour out or shed]. A ditch, sluice, or gote. GUTTER-LEDGE. A cross-bar laid along the middle of a large hatchway in some vessels, to support the covers and enable them the better to sustain any weighty body. GUY. A rope used to steady a weighty body from swinging against the ship's side while it is hoisting or lowering, particularly when, there is a high sea. Also, a rope extended from the head of sheers, and made fast at a distance on each side to steady them. The jib-boom is supported by its guys. Also, the name of a tackle used to confine a boom forward, when a vessel is going large, and so prevent the sail from gybing, which would endanger the springing of the boom, or perhaps the upsetting of the vessel. Also, a large slack rope, extending from the head of the main-mast to the head of the fore-mast, and sustaining a temporary tackle to load or unload a ship with. GYBING. Another form for _jibing_ (which see). GYE. A west-country term for a salt-water ditch. GYMMYRT. The Erse or Manx for rowing with oars. GYMNOTUS ELECTRICUS. An eel from the Surinam river, several feet in length, which inflicts electrical shocks. GYN. A three-legged machine fitted with a windlass, heaving in the fall from a purchase-block at the summit, much used on shore for mounting and dismounting guns, driving piles, &c. (_See_ GIBRALTAR GYN.) GYP. A strong gasp for breath, like a fish just taken out of the water. GYVER. An old term for blocks or pulleys. GYVES. Fetters; the old word for handcuffs. H. HAAF. Cod, ling, or tusk deep-sea fisheries of the Shetland and Orkney islanders. HAAF-BOAT. One fitted for deep-water fishing. HAAFURES. A northern term for fishermen's lines. HAAK. _See_ HAKE. HAAR. A chill easterly wind on our northern coasts. (_See_ HARR.) HABERDDEN. Cod or stock-fish dried and cured on board; that cured at Aberdeen was the best. HABERGEON. A coat of mail for the head and shoulders. HABILIMENTS OF WAR. A statute term, for arms and all provisions for maintaining war. HABLE. An Anglo-Norman term for a sea-port or haven; it is used in statute 27 Henry VII. cap. 3. HACKATEE. A fresh-water tortoise in the West Indies; it has a long neck and flat feet, and weighs 10 to 15 lbs. HACKBUSH. A heavy hand-gun. (_See_ HAGBUT.) HACKLE, HECKLE, OR HETCHEL. A machine for teazing flax. Also, a west-country name for the stickleback. HACK-SAW. Used for cutting off the heads of bolts; made of a scythe fresh serrated. HACK-WATCH, OR JOB-WATCH (which see). HACOT. From the Anglo-Saxon _hacod_, a large sort of pike. HADDIE. A north-coast diminutive of haddock. HADDO-BREEKS. A northern term for the roe of the haddock. HADDOCK. The _Gadus aeglefinus_, a species of cod fabled to bear the thumb-mark of St. Peter. HAEVER. _See_ EAVER. HAFNE. An old word for haven, from the Danish. HAFT. (_See_ HEFT.) The handle of a knife or tool. HAG-BOAT. _See_ HECK-BOAT. HAGBUT. A wall-piece placed upon a tripod; the arquebuse. HAGBUTAR. The bearer of a fire-arm formerly used; it was somewhat larger than a musket. HAGG. An arquebuse with a bent butt. Also, a swampy moss. HAG'S TEETH. (_See_ HAKE'S TEETH.) Those parts of a matting or pointing interwoven with the rest in an irregular manner, so as to spoil the uniformity. (_See_ POINTING.) In soundings, _see_ HAKE'S TEETH. HAIK. _See_ HIKE UP. HAIL, TO. To hail "from a country," or claim it as a birthplace. A ship is said to _hail_ from the port where she is registered, and therefore properly belongs to. When hailed at sea it is, "From whence do you come?" and "where bound?"--"_Pass within hail_," a special signal to approach and receive orders or intelligence, when boats cannot be lowered or time is precious. One vessel, the senior, lies to; the other passes the stern under the lee.--_Hail-fellows_, messmates well matched. HAILING. To call to another vessel; the salutation or accosting of a ship at a distance. HAILING-ALOFT. To call to men in the tops and at the mast-head to "look out," too often an inconsistent bluster from the deck. HAIL-SHOT. Small shot for cannon. HAILSHOT-PIECE. A sort of gun supplied of old to our ships, with dice of iron as the missile. HAIR. The cold nipping wind called _haar_ in the north: as in Beaumont and Fletcher, "Here all is cold as the hairs in winter." HAIR-BRACKET. The moulding at the back of the figure-head. HAIR-TRIGGER. A trigger to a gun-lock, so delicately adjusted that the slightest touch will discharge the piece. HAKE. An old term for a hand-gun. Also, the fish _Gadus merluccius_, a well-known gregarious and voracious fish of the cod family, often termed sea-pike. HAKE'S TEETH. A phrase applied to some part of the deep soundings in the British Channel; but it is a distinct shell-fish, being the _Dentalium_, the presence of which is a valuable guide to the Channel pilot in foggy weather. HALBAZ. _See_ KALBAZ. HALBERT. A sort of spear formerly carried by sergeants of infantry, that they, standing in the ranks behind the officers or the colours, should afford additional defence at those important points. HALCYON PISCATOR, OR KING-FISHER. This beautiful bird's floating nest was fabled to calm the winds and seas while the bird sat. This occurring in winter gave rise to the expression "halcyon days." HALE. An old word for _haul_ (which see). HALF AN EYE, SEEING WITH. Discerning instantly and clearly. HALF-BEAMS. Short timbers, from the side to the hatchways, to support the deck where there is no framing. (_See_ FORK-BEAMS.) HALF-BREADTH OF THE RISING. A ship-builder's term for a curve in the floor-plan, which limits the distances of the centres of the floor-sweeps from the middle line of the body-plan. HALF-BREADTH PLAN. In ship-building, the same as _floor-plan_. HALF-COCK. To go off at half-cock is an unexpected discharge of a fire-arm; hurried conduct without due preparation, and consequently failure. HALF-DAVIT. Otherwise _fish-davit_ (which see). HALF-DECK. A space between the foremost bulk-head of the steerage and the fore-part of the quarter-deck. In the Northumberland colliers the steerage itself is called the _half-deck_, and is usually the habitation of the crew. HALF-DROWNED LAND. Shores which are rather more elevated and bear more verdure than _drowned land_ (which see). HALF-FLOOD. _See_ FLOOD. HALF-GALLEY. _See_ GALLEY. HALF-HITCH. Pass the end of a rope round its standing part, and bring it up through the bight. (_See_ THREE HALF-HITCHES.) HALF-LAUGHS AND PURSER'S GRINS. Hypocritical and satirical sneers. HALF-MAN. A landsman or boy in a coaster, undeserving the pay of a _full-man_. HALF-MAST. The lowering a flag in respect for the death of an officer. HALF-MINUTE GLASS. _See_ GLASS. HALF-MOON. An old form of outwork somewhat similar to the ravelin, originally placed before the salients of bastions. HALF-PIKE. An iron spike fixed on a short ashen staff, used to repel the assault of boarders, and hence frequently termed a _boarding-pike_. HALF-POINT. A subdivision of the compass card, equal to 5 deg. 37' of the circle. HALF-PORTS. A sort of one-inch deal shutter for the upper half of those ports which have no hanging lids; the lower half-port is solid and hinged, having a semicircle cut out for the gun when level, and falling down outwards when ready for action; the upper half-port fits loosely into rabbets, and is secured only by laniards. HALF-SEA. The old term for mid-channel. HALF SEAS OVER. Nearly intoxicated. This term was used by Swift. HALF-SPEED! An order in steam navigation to reduce the speed. (_See_ FULL SPEED!) HALF-TIDE ROCKS. Those showing their heads at half-ebb. (_See_ TIDE.) HALF-TIMBERS. The short timbers or futtocks in the cant-bodies, answering to the lower futtocks in the square-body; they are placed so as to give good shiftings. HALF-TOP. The mode of making ships' tops in two pieces, which are afterwards secured as a whole by what are termed sleepers. HALF-TOPSAILS, UNDER. Said of a chase about 12 miles distant, the rest being below the horizon. HALF-TURN AHEAD! An order in steam navigation. (_See_ TURN AHEAD!) HALF-WATCH TACKLE. A luff purchase. (_See_ WATCH-TACKLE.) HALIBUT. A large oceanic bank fish, _Hippoglossus vulgaris_, weighing from 300 to 500 lbs. particularly off Newfoundland; it resembles plaice, and is excellent food, nor does it easily putrefy. HALLEY'S CHART. The name given to the protracted curves of the variation of the compass, known as the variation chart. HALLIARDS, HALYARDS, OR HAULYARDS. The ropes or tackles usually employed to hoist or lower any sail upon its respective yards, gaffs, or stay, except the cross-jack and spritsail-yard, which are always slung; but in small craft the spritsail-yard also has halliards. (_See_ JEERS.) HALO. An extensive luminous ring including, the sun or moon, whose light, passing through the intervening vapour, gives rise to the phenomenon. Halos are called _lunar_ or _solar_, according as they appear round the moon or sun. Prismatically coloured halos indicate the presence of watery vapour, whereas white ones show that the vapour is frozen. HALSE, OR HALSER. Archaic spelling for _hawser_. HALSTER. A west-country term for a man who draws a barge along by a rope. HALT! The military word of command to stop marching, or any other evolution. A halt includes the period of such discontinuance. HALVE-NET. A standing net used in the north to prevent fishes from returning with the falling tide. HALYARDS. _See_ HALLIARDS. HAMACS. Columbus found that the inhabitants of the Bahama Islands had for beds nets of cotton suspended at each end, which they called _hamacs_, a name since adopted universally amongst seamen. (_See_ HAMMOCK.) HAMBER, OR HAMBRO'-LINE. Small line used for seizings, lashings, &c. HAMMACOE. Beam battens. (_See_ HAMMOCK-BATTENS.) HAMMER. The shipwright's hammer is a well-known tool for driving nails and clenching bolts, differing from hammers in general. HAMMER, OF A GUN-LOCK. Formerly the steel covering of the pan from which the flint of the cock struck sparks on to the priming; but now the cock itself, by its hammer action on the cap or other percussion priming, discharges the piece. Whether the hammer will be superseded by the needle remains to be determined. HAMMER-HEADED SHARK. The _Zygaena malleus_, a strange, ugly shark. The eyes are situated at the extremities of the hammer-shaped head. They seldom take bait or annoy human beings. They are for the most part inert, live near the surf edge, and are frequently found washed up on sandy beaches. Chiefly found on the coasts of Barbary. HAMMERING. A heavy cannonade at close quarters. HAMMOCK. A swinging sea-bed, the undisputed invention of Alcibiades; but the modern name is derived from the Caribs. (_See_ HAMACS.) At present the hammock consists of a piece of canvas, 6 feet long and 4 feet wide, gathered together at the two ends by means of clews, formed by a grommet and knittles, whence the _head-clue_ and _foot-clue_: the hammock is hung horizontally under the deck, and forms a receptacle for the bed on which the seamen sleep. There are usually allowed from 14 to 20 inches between hammock and hammock in a ship of war. In preparing for action, the hammocks, together with their contents, are all firmly corded, taken upon deck, and fixed in various nettings, so as to form a barricade against musket-balls. (_See_ ENGAGEMENT.) HAMMOCK-BATTENS OR RACKS. Cleats or battens nailed to the sides of a vessel's beams, from which to suspend the seamen's hammocks. HAMMOCK-BERTHING. Forecastle-men forward, and thence passing aft, foretop-men, maintop-men, mizentop-men, waisters, after-guard, and boys. Quartermasters in the tiers. HAMMOCK-CLOTHS. To protect them from wet while stowed in the nettings on deck. HAMMOCK GANT-LINES. Lines extended from the jib-boom end around the ship, triced up to the lower yard-arms, for drying scrubbed hammocks. HAMMOCK-NETTINGS. Take their distinguishing names according to their location in the ship, as forecastle, waist, quarter-deck. HAMMOCK-RACKS. _See_ HAMMOCK-BATTENS. HAMPER. Things, which, though necessary, are in the way in times of gale or service. (_See_ TOP-HAMPER.) HAMPERED. Perplexed and troubled. HAMRON. An archaic term, meaning the hold of a ship. HANCES. Spandrels; the falls or descents of fife-rails. Also, the breakings of the rudder abaft. (_See_ HAUNCH.) HAND. A phrase often used for the word man, as, "a hand to the lead," "clap more hands on," &c.--_To hand a sail_, is to furl it.--_To lend a hand_, to assist.--_Bear a hand_, make haste.--_Hand in the leech_, a call in furling sails. To comprehend this it must be understood that the leech, or outer border of the sail, if left to belly or fill with wind, would set at naught all the powers of the men. It is therefore necessary, as Falconer has it, "the tempest to disarm;" so by handing in this leech-rope before the yard, the canvas is easily folded in, and the gasket passed round. HAND-GRENADE. A small shell for throwing by hand. (_See_ GRENADE.) HAND-GUN. An old term for small arms in the times of Henry VII. and VIII. HANDLASS. A west-country term for a small kind of windlass. HANDLE. The title prefixed to a person's name.--_To handle a ship well_, is to work her in a seamanlike manner. HAND-LEAD. A small lead used in the channels, or chains, when approaching land, and for sounding in rivers or harbours under 20 fathoms. (_See_ LEAD.) HANDLES OF A GUN. The dolphins. HAND-LINE. A line bent to the hand-lead, measured at certain intervals with what are called _marks_ and _deeps_ from 2 and 3 fathoms to 20. HAND MAST-PIECE. The smaller hand mast-spars. HAND MAST-SPAR. A round mast; those from Riga are commonly over 70 feet long by 20 inches diameter. HANDMAID. An old denomination for a tender; thus, in Drake's expedition to Cadiz, two of Her Majesty's pinnaces were appointed to attend his squadron as handmaids. HAND-OVER-HAND. Hauling rapidly upon any rope, by the men passing their hands alternately one before the other, or one above the other if they are hoisting. A sailor is said to go hand-over-hand if he lifts his own weight and ascends a single rope without the help of his legs. Hand-over-hand also implies rapidly; as, we are coming up with the chase hand-over-hand. HAND-PUMP. The common movable pump for obtaining fresh water, &c., from tanks or casks. HAND-SAW. The smallest of the saws used by shipwrights, and used by one hand. HAND-SCREW. A handy kind of single jack-screw. HANDSOMELY. Signifies steadily or leisurely; as, "lower away handsomely," when required to be done gradually and carefully. The term "handsomely" repeated, implies "have a care; not so fast; tenderly." HANDSPIKE. A lever made of tough ash, and used to heave round the windlass in order to draw up the anchor from the bottom, or move any heavy articles, particularly in merchant ships. The handle is round, but the other end is square, conforming to the shape of the holes in the windlass. (_See_ GUNNER'S HANDSPIKE.) HANDS REEF TOP-SAILS! The order to reef by all hands, instead of the watch, or watch and idlers. HAND-TIGHT. A rope hauled as taut as it can be by hand only. HAND-UNDER-HAND. Descending a rope by the converse of hand-over-hand ascent. HANDY-BILLY. A small jigger purchase, used particularly in tops or the holds, for assisting in hoisting when weak-handed. A watch-tackle. (_See_ JIGGER.) HANDY-SHIP. One that steers easily, and can be worked with the watch; or as some seamen would express it, "work herself." HANG. In timber, opposed to _sny_ (which see).--_To hang._ Said of a mast that inclines; _it hangs forward_, if too much stayed; _hangs aft_, if it requires staying.--_To hang the mast._ By some temporary means, until the mast-rope be fleeted.--_To hang on a rope or tackle-fall_, is to hold it fast without belaying; also to pull forcibly with the whole weight.--_To hang aback._ To be slack on duty. HANGER. The old word for the Persian dagger, and latterly for a short curved sword. HANG-FIRE. When the priming burns without igniting the cartridge, or the charge does not rapidly ignite after pulling the trigger. Figuratively, _to hang fire_, is to hesitate or flinch. HANGING. A word expressive of anything declining in the middle part below a straight line, as the hanging of a deck or a sheer. Also, when a ship is difficult to be removed from the stocks, or in man[oe]uvre. HANGING-BLOCKS. These are sometimes fitted with a long and short leg, and lash over the eyes of the top-mast rigging; when under, they are made fast to a strap. The topsail-tye reeves through these blocks, the tye-block on the yard, and the standing part is secured to the mast-head. HANGING-CLAMP. A semicircular iron, with a foot at each end to receive nails, by which it is fixed to any part of the ship to hang stages to, &c. HANGING-COMPASS. A compass so constructed as to hang with its face downwards, the point which supports the card being fixed in the centre of the glass, and the gimbals are attached to a beam over the observer's head. There is usually one hung in the cabin, that, by looking up to it, the ship's course may be observed at any moment; whence it is also termed a tell-tale. HANGING HOOK-POTS. Tin utensils fitted for hanging to the bars before the galley-grate. HANGING-KNEES. Those which are applied under the lodging-knees, and are fayed vertically to the sides. HANGING-STAGE. Any stage hung over the side, bows, or stern, for painting, caulking, or temporary repairs. HANGING STANDARD-KNEE. A knee fayed vertically beneath a hold-beam, with one arm bolted on the lower side of the beam. HANGING-STOVES. Used for ventilating or drying between decks. HANGING THE RUDDER. So as to allow the pintles to fall into their corresponding braces, constantly in boats, and frequently also in whaling vessels, but seldom in other ships: the rudder after being shipped is generally secured by wood-locks to prevent its unshipping at sea. HANG ON HER! In rowing, is the order to stretch out to the utmost to preserve or increase head-way on the boat. HANK FOR HANK. In beating against the wind each board is thus sometimes denoted. Also, expressive of two ships which tack simultaneously and make progress to windward together in racing, &c. HANKS. Hoops or rings of rope, wood, or iron, fixed upon the stays, to seize the luff of fore-and-aft sails, and to confine the staysails thereto, at different distances. Those of wood are used in lieu of grommets, being much more convenient, and of a later invention. They are framed by the bending of a rough piece of wood into the form of a wreath, and fastened at the two ends by means of notches, thereby retaining their circular figure and elasticity; whereas the grommets which are formed of rope are apt to relax in warm weather, and adhere to the stays, so as to prevent the sails from being readily hoisted or lowered.--_Iron hanks_ are more generally used now that stays are made of wire.--_Hank_ is also a skein of line or twine.--_Getting into a hank_, irritated by jokes. HANSE-TOWNS. Established in the 13th century, for the mutual protection of mercantile property. Now confined to Luebeck, Hamburg, and Bremen. HAPPY-GO-LUCKY. A reckless indifference as to danger. HAQUE. A little hand-gun of former times. HAQUEBUT. A form of spelling _arquebuse_. A bigger sort of hand-gun than the _haque_. HARASS, TO. To torment and fatigue men with needless work. HARBOUR. A general name given to any safe sea-port. The qualities requisite in a good harbour are, that it should afford security from the effects of the wind and sea; that the bottom be entirely free from rocks and shallows, but good holding ground; that the opening be of sufficient extent to admit the entrance or departure of large ships without difficulty; that it should have convenience to receive the shipping of different nations, especially those which are laden with merchandises; and that it possess establishments for refitting vessels. To render a harbour complete, there ought to be good defences, a good lighthouse, and a number of mooring and warping buoys; and finally, that it have plenty of fuel, water, provisions, and other materials for sea use. Such a harbour, if used as a place of commercial transactions, is called a port. HARBOUR-DUES. _See_ PORT-CHARGES. HARBOUR-DUTY MEN. Riggers, leading men, and others, ordered to perform the dockyard or port duties, too often superannuated, or otherwise unfit. HARBOUR-GASKETS. Broad, but short and well-blacked gaskets, placed at equal distances on the yard, for showing off a well-furled sail in port: there is generally one upon every other seam. HARBOUR-GUARDS. Men detached from the ordinary, as a working party. HARBOUR-LOG. That part of the log-book which consists solely of remarks, and relates only to transactions while the ship is in port. HARBOUR-MASTER. An officer appointed to inspect the moorings, and to see that the ships are properly berthed, and the regulations of the harbour strictly observed by the different ships frequenting it. HARBOUR-REACH. The reach or stretch of a winding river which leads direct to the harbour. HARBOUR-WATCH. A division or subdivision of the watch kept on night-duty, when the ship rides at single anchor, to meet any emergency. HARD. A road-path made through mud for landing at. (_See_ ARD.) HARD-A-LEE. The situation of the tiller when it brings the rudder hard over to windward. Strictly speaking, it only relates to a tiller which extends _forward_ from the rudder-head; now many extend _aft_, in which case the _order_ remains the same, but the tiller and rudder are both brought over to windward. Also, the order to put the tiller in this position. HARD AND FAST. Said of a ship on shore. HARD-A-PORT! The order so to place the tiller as to bring the rudder over to the starboard-side of the stern-post, whichever way the tiller leads. (_See_ HARD-A-LEE.) HARD-A-STARBOARD. The order so to place the tiller as to bring the rudder over to the port-side of the stern-post, whichever way the tiller leads. (_See_ HARD-A-LEE.) HARD-A-WEATHER! The order so to place the tiller as to bring the rudder on the lee-side of the stern-post, whichever way the tiller leads, in order to bear away; it is the position of the helm as opposed to _hard-a-lee_ (which see). Also, a hardy seaman. HARD BARGAIN. A useless fellow; a skulker. HARD FISH. A term indiscriminately applied to cod, ling, haddock, torsk, &c., salted and dried. HARD GALE. When the violence of the wind reduces a ship to be under her storm staysails, No. 10 force. HARD-HEAD. The _Clupea menhaden_, or _Alosa tyrannus_, an oily fish taken in immense quantities on the American coasts, insomuch that they are used for manuring land. Also, on our coasts the father-lasher or sea-scorpion, _Cottus scorpius_, and in some parts the grey gurnard, are so called. HARD-HORSE. A tyrannical officer. HARDING. A light kind of duck canvas made in the north. HARD UP. The tiller so placed as to carry the rudder close over to leeward of the stern-post. Also, used figuratively for being in great distress, or poverty-struck; obliged to bear up for Poverty Bay; cleared out. HARD UP IN A CLINCH, AND NO KNIFE TO CUT THE SEIZING. Overtaken by misfortune, and no means of evading it. HARDS. _See_ ACUMBA. HARLE. Mists or thick rolling fogs from the sea, so called in the north. Also, a name of the _goosander_ (which see). HARMATTAN. A Fantee name for a singular periodical easterly wind which prevails on the west coast of Africa, generally in December, January, and February; it is dry, though always accompanied by haze, the result of fine red dust suspended in the atmosphere and obscuring the sun; this wind is opposed to the sea-breeze, which would otherwise blow fresh from the west on to the land. HARNESS. An old statute term for the tackling or furniture of a ship. HARNESS-CASK. A large conical tub for containing the salt provisions intended for present consumption. Alluding to the junk, which is often called salt-horse, it has been described as the tub where the horse, and not the harness, is kept. HARP-COCK. An old modification of the harpoon. HARPENS. _See_ HARPINGS. HARPER-CRAB. _See_ TOMMY HARPER. HARPINGS, OR HARPENS. The fore-parts of the wales which encompass the bow of a ship, and are fastened to the stem, being thicker than the after-part of the wales, in order to strengthen the ship in that place where she sustains the greatest shock of resistance in plunging into the sea, or dividing it, under a great pressure of sail. Also, the pieces of oak, similar to ribbands, but trimmed and bolted to the shape of the body of the ship, which hold the fore and after cant bodies together, until the ship is planked. But this term is mostly applicable to those at the bow; hence arises the phrase "clean and full harpings." Harpings in the bow of a vessel are decried as rendering the ship uneasy.--_Cat harpings._ The legs which cross from futtock-staff to futtock-staff, below the tops, to girt in the rigging, and allow the lower yards to brace sharp up. HARPOON, OR HARPAGO. A spear or javelin with a barbed point, used to strike whales and other fish. The harpoon is furnished with a long shank, and has at one end a broad and flat triangular head, sharpened at both edges so as to penetrate the whale with facility, but blunt behind to prevent its cutting out. To the other end a fore-ganger is bent, to which is fastened a long cord called the whale-line, which lies carefully coiled in the boat in such a manner as to run out without being interrupted or entangled. Several coils, each 130 fathoms of whale-line (soft laid and of clean silky fibre) are in readiness; the instant the whale is struck the men cant the oars, so that the roll may not immerse them in the water. The line, which has a turn round the bollard, flies like lightning, and is intensely watched. One man pours water on the smoking bollard, another is ready with a sharp axe to cut, and the others see that the lines run free. Seven or eight coils have been run out before the whale "sounds," or strikes bottom, when he rises again to breathe, and probably gets a similar dose.--_Gun harpoon._ A weapon used for the same purpose as the preceding, but it is fired out of a gun, instead of being thrown by hand; it is made entirely of steel, and has a chain or long shackle attached to it, to which the whale-line is fastened. Greener's harpoon-gun is a kind of wall-piece fixed in a crutch, which steps into the bow-bollard of the whale-boat. The harpoon projects about four inches beyond the muzzle. It consists of its barbed point attached to a long link, with a solid button at its opposite end to fit the gun; on one rod of this link is a ring which runs to the muzzle, and is there attached to the whale-line by a thong of seal or walrus hide, wet. The gun being fired, the harpoon is projected, the ring sliding up to the button, when the line follows. Some of these harpoons or other engines have grenades--glass globules with prussic acid or other chemicals--which sicken the whale instantly, and little trouble ensues. HARPOONER, HARPONEER, OR HARPINEER. The expert bowman in a whale-boat, whose duty it is to throw or fire the harpoon. HARP-SEAL. The _Phoca gr[oe]nlandica_, a species of seal from the Arctic seas; so called from the form of a dark-brown mark upon its back. HARQUEBUSS, OR ARQUEBUSS. Something larger than a musket. Sometimes called caliver. (_See_ ARQUEBUSS.) HARR, OR HARL. A sea-storm, from a northern term for snarling, in allusion to the noise. Also, a cold thick mist or fog in easterly winds; the _haar_. HARRY-BANNINGS. A north-country name for sticklebacks. HARRY-NET. A net with such small meshes, and so formed, as to take even the young and small fish. HARVEST-MOON. The full moon nearest the autumnal equinox, when for several successive evenings she rises at the same hour; and this name is given in consequence of the supposed advantage of the additional length of moonlight to agriculture. HASEGA. A corruption of _asseguay_ (which see). HASK. An archaism for a fish-basket. HASLAR HAGS. The nurses of the naval hospital Haslar. HASLAR HOSPITAL. A fine establishment near Gosport, for the reception and cure of the sick and wounded of the Royal Navy. HASP. A semicircular clamp turning in an eye-bolt in the stem-head of a sloop or boat, and fastened by a forelock in order to secure the bowsprit down to the bows. (_See_ SPAN-SHACKLE.) HASTAN. The Manx or Erse term for a large eel or conger. HASTY-PUDDING. A batter made of flour or oatmeal stirred in boiling water, and eaten with treacle or sugar at sea. This dish is not altogether to be despised in need, although Lord Dorset--the sailor poet--speaks of it disparagingly: "Sure hasty-pudding is thy chiefest dish, With bullock's liver, or some stinking fish." HATCH. A half-door. A contrivance for trapping salmon. (_See_ HECK.) HATCH-BARS. To secure the hatches; are padlocked and sealed. HATCH-BOAT. A sort of small vessel known as a pilot-boat, having a deck composed almost entirely of hatches. HATCH-DECK. Gun brigs had hatches instead of lower decks. HATCHELLING. The combing and preparing hemp for rope-making. HATCHES. Flood-gates set in a river to stop the current of water. Also, coverings of grating, or close hatches to seal the holds.--_To lie under hatches, stowed in the hold._ Terms used figuratively for being in distress and death. HATCHET-FASHION. Cutting at the heads of antagonists, instead of thrusting. HATCH-RINGS. Rings to lift the hatches by, or replace them. HATCHWAY. A square or oblong opening in the middle of the deck of a ship, of which there are generally three--the fore, main, and after--affording passages up and down from one deck to another, and again descending into the hold. The coverings over these openings are called hatches. Goods of bulk are let down into the hold by the hatchways. To lay anything in the hatchway, is to put it so that the hatches cannot be approached or opened. The hatches of a smaller kind are distinguished by the name of _scuttles_. HATCHWAY-NETTINGS. Nettings sometimes placed over the hatchways instead of gratings, for security and circulation of air. They arrest the fall of any one from a deck above. HATCHWAY-SCREENS. Pieces of fear-nought, or thick woollen cloth, put round the hatchways of a man-of-war in time of action, to screen the passages to the magazine. HATCHWAY-STOPPERS. Those for a hempen cable are fitted as a ring-stopper, only a larger rope. They are rove through a hole on each side of the coamings, in the corner of the hatchway; and both tails, made selvagee-fashion, are dogged along the cable. When a chain-cable is used, the stopper works from a beam on the lower deck. HAT-MONEY. A word sometimes used for _primage_, or the trifling payment received by the master of a ship for care of goods. HAUBERK. _See_ AUBERK. HAUGH. Flat or marshy ground by the side of a river. HAUL, TO. An expression peculiar to seamen, implying to pull or bowse at a single rope, without the assistance of blocks or other mechanical powers upon it; as "haul in," "haul down," "haul up," "haul aft," "haul together." (_See_ BOWSE, HOIST, and ROUSE.) A vessel _hauls her wind_ by trimming the yards and sails so as to lie nearer to, or close to the wind, and by the power of the rudder shaping her course accordingly. HAUL ABOARD THE FORE AND MAIN TACKS. This is to haul them forward, and down to the chess-trees on the weather-side. HAUL AFT A SHEET. To pull it in more towards the stern, so as to trim the sail nearer to the wind. HAULAGE. A traction-way. HAUL-BOWLINGS. The old name for the able-bodied seamen. HAUL HER WIND. Said of a vessel when she comes close upon the wind.--_Haul your wind_, or _haul to the wind_, signifies that the ship's head is to be brought nearer to the wind--a very usual phrase when she has been going free. HAUL IN, TO. To sail close to the wind, in order to approach nearer to an object. HAULING DOWN VACANCY. The colloquialism expressive of the promotion of a flag-lieutenant and midshipman on an admiral's hauling down his flag. HAULING-LINE. A line made fast to any object, to be hauled nearer or on board, as a hawser, a spar, &c. HAULING SHARP. Going upon half allowance of food. HAUL MY WIND. An expression when an individual is going upon a new line of action. To avoid a quarrel or difficulty. HAUL OF ALL! An order to brace round all the yards at once--a man[oe]uvre sometimes used in tacking, or on a sudden change of wind; it requires a strong crew. HAUL OFF, TO. To sail closer to the wind, in order to get further from any object. HAUL OUT TO LEEWARD! In reefing top-sails, the cry when the weather earing is passed. HAUL ROUND. Said when the wind is gradually shifting towards any particular point of the compass. Edging round a danger. HAULS AFT, OR VEERS AFT. Said of the wind when it draws astern. HAULSER. The old orthography for _hawser_. HAULS FORWARD. Said of the wind when it draws before the beam. HAUL UNDER THE CHAINS. This is a phrase signifying a ship's working and straining on the masts and shrouds, so as to make the seams open and shut as she rolls. HAULYARDS. _See_ HALLIARDS. HAUNCES. The breakings of the rudder abaft. HAUNCH. A sudden fall or break, as from the drifts forward and aft to the waist. The same as _hance_. HAVEN [Anglo-Saxon, _haefen_]. A safe refuge from the violence of wind and sea; much the same as harbour, though of less importance. A good anchorage rather than place of perfect shelter. Milford Haven is an exception. HAVENET. This word has appeared in vocabularies as a small haven. HAVEN-SCREAMER. The sea-gull, called _haefen_ by the Anglo-Saxons. HAVERSACK. A coarse linen bag with a strap fitting over the shoulder worn by soldiers or small-arm men in marching order, for carrying their provision, instead of the knapsack. HAVILLER. _See_ HUFFLER. HAVOC. Formerly a war cry, and the signal for indiscriminate slaughter. Thus Shakspeare, "Cry havoc! and let slip the dogs of war." HAWK'S-BILL. _Chelone imbricata_, a well-known turtle frequenting the Atlantic and Indian Oceans, so named from having a small mouth like the beak of a hawk; it produces the tortoise-shell of commerce. The flesh is indifferent, but the eggs very good. HAWSE. This is a term of great meaning. Strictly, it is that part of a vessel's bow where holes are cut for her cables to pass through. It is also generally understood to imply the situation of the cables before the ship's stem, when she is moored with two anchors out from forward, one on the starboard, and the other on the port bow. It also denotes any small distance between her head and the anchors employed to ride her, as "he has anchored in our hawse," "the brig fell athwart our hawse," &c. Also, said of a vessel a little in advance of the stem; as, she sails _athwart hawse_, or has anchored _in the hawse_. If a vessel drives at her anchors into the hawse of another she is said to "_foul the hawse_" of the vessel riding there; hence the threat of a man-of-war's-man, "If you foul my hawse, I'll cut your cable," no merchant vessel being allowed to approach a ship-of-war within certain limits, and never to make fast to the government buoys.--_A bold hawse_ is when the holes are high above the water. "Freshen hawse," or "veer out more cable," is said when part of the cable that lies in the hawse is fretted or chafed, and more should be veered out, so that another part of it may rest in the hawse. "Freshen hawse" also means, clap a service on or round the cable in the hawses to prevent it from fretting; hemp cables only are rounded or cackled. Also, a dram after fatiguing duty. "Clearing hawse," is untwisting or disentangling two cables that come through different holes, and make a foul hawse. HAWSE-BAGS. Canvas bags filled with oakum, used in heavy seas to stop the hawse-holes and prevent the water coming in. HAWSE-BLOCKS. Bucklers, or pieces of wood made to fit over the hawse-holes when at sea, to back the hawse-plugs. HAWSE-BOLSTERS. Planks above and below the hawse-holes. Also, pieces of canvas stuffed with oakum and roped round, for plugging when the cables are bent. HAWSE-BOX, OR NAVAL HOOD. Pieces of plank bolted outside round each of the hawse-holes, to support the projecting part of the hawse-pipe. HAWSE-BUCKLERS. Plugs of wood to fit the hawse-holes, and hatches to bolt over, to keep the sea from spurting in. HAWSE-FALLEN. To ride hawse-fallen, is when the water breaks into the hawse in a rough sea, driving all before it. HAWSE-FULL. Riding hawse-full; pitching bows under. HAWSE-HOLES. Cylindrical holes cut through the bows of a ship on each side of the stem, through which the cables pass, in order to be drawn into or let out of the vessel, as occasion requires. HAWSE-HOOK. A compass breast timber which crosses the hawse-timber above the ends of the upper-deck planking, and over the hawse-holes. (_See_ BREAST-HOOKS.) HAWSE-PIECES. The timbers which compose the bow of a vessel, and their sides look fore and aft; it is a name given to the foremost timbers of a ship, whose lower ends rest upon the knuckle-timbers. They are generally parallel to the stem, having their upper ends sometimes terminated by the lower part of the beak-head and otherwise by the top of the bow. Also, timbers through which the hawse-holes are cut. HAWSE-PIPE. A cast-iron pipe in the hawse-holes to prevent the cable from cutting the wood. HAWSE-PLUGS. Blocks of wood made to fit into the hawse-pipes, and put in from the outside to stop the hawses, and thereby prevent the water from washing into the manger. The plug, coated with old canvas, is first inserted, then a mat or swab, and over it the buckler or shield, which bolts upward and downward into the breast-hooks. HAWSER. A large rope or cablet, which holds the middle degree between the cable and tow-line, being a size smaller than the former, and as much larger than the latter; curiously, it is not hawser but cable laid. HAWSER-LAID ROPE. Is rope made in the usual way, being three or four strands of yarns laid up right-handed, or with the sun; it is used for small running rigging, as well as for standing rigging, shrouds, &c.; in the latter case it is generally tarred to keep out rain. It is supposed that this style of rope is stronger in proportion to the number of yarns than cable or water-laid rope, which is more tightly twisted, each strand being a small rope. This latter is more impervious to water, and therefore good for cables, hawsers, &c.; it is laid left-handed, or against the sun. HAWSE-TIMBERS. The upright timbers in the bow, bolted on each side of the stem, in which the hawse-holes are cut. HAWSE-WOOD. A general name for the hawse-timbers. HAY. A straight rank of men drawn up exactly in a line. HAYE. A peculiar ground-shark on the coast of Guinea. HAYLER. An archaism for halliard. HAZE. A grayish vapour, less dense than a fog, and therefore does not generally exclude objects from sight. HAZE, TO. To punish a man by making him do unnecessary work. HEAD. The upper part or end of anything, as a mast-head, a timber-head. Also, an ornamental figure on a ship's stem expressive of her name, or emblematical of her object, &c. (_See_ BILLET-HEAD, BUST-HEAD, FAMILY-HEAD, FIDDLE-HEAD, FIGURE-HEAD, SCROLL-HEAD, &c.) Also, in a more enlarged sense, the whole fore-part of a ship, including the bows on each side; the head therefore opens the column of water through which the ship passes when advancing; hence we say, _head-way_, _head-sails_, _head-sea_, &c. It is evident that the fore-part of a ship is called its head, from its analogy to that of a fish, or any animal while swimming. Also, in a confined sense, to that part on each side of the stem outside the bows proper which is appropriated to the use of the sailors for wringing swabs, or any wet jobs, for no wet is permitted in-board after the decks are dried. Also, hydrographically, the upper part of a gulf, bay, or creek.--_By the head_, the state of a ship which, by her lading, draws more water forward than aft. This may be remedied without reference to cargo in ships-of-war, by shifting shot, guns, &c. Vessels _by the head_ are frequently uneasy, gripe and pitch more than when _by the stern_. HEAD AND GUN-MONEY. An encouragement in the prize acts by which L5 a head is given to the captors for every person on board a captured vessel of war, or pirate. HEAD-BOARDS. The berthing or close-boarding between the head-rails. HEAD-CLUE OF A HAMMOCK. Where the head rests. (_See_ HAMMOCK.) HEAD-CRINGLES. Earing-cringles at the upper clues or corners of a sail. HEAD-EARINGS. The laniards to haul out the earings. (_See_ EARINGS.) HEADER. The person in the Newfoundland fishing vessels who is engaged to cut open the fish, tear out the entrails, break off the head, and pass it over to the _splitter_, who sits opposite to him. HEAD-FAST. A rope or chain employed to fasten the head of a ship or boat to a wharf or buoy, or to some other vessel alongside.--_Head-fast of a boat_, the tow-rope or painter. HEAD-HOLES. The eyelet-holes where the rope-bands of a sail are fitted; they are worked button-hole fashion, over grommets of twine of several thicknesses; sometimes of cod-line. HEADING. As to ships in company, one advancing by sail or steam faster than another heads her. HEADING UP THE LAND WATER. When the flood-tide is backed by a wind, so that the ebb is retarded, causing an overflow. HEAD-KNEES. Pieces of moulded compass timber fayed edgeways to the cut-water and stem, to steady the former. These are also called _cheek-knees_. HEADLAND. Wherever the coast presents a high cliffy salient angle to the sea, without projecting far into it, it is called a headland; but if the point be low, it is a spit, tongue, or point. (_See_ BLUFF.) HEADMOST. The situation of any ship or ships which are the most advanced in a fleet, or line of battle. The opposite of _sternmost_. HEAD-NETTING. An ornamental netting used in merchant ships instead of the fayed planking to the _head-rails_. HEAD OF A COMET. The brighter part of a comet, from which the tail proceeds. HEAD OF A MAST, OR MAST-HEAD. The upper part of any mast, or that whereon the caps or trucks are fitted. HEAD OF A WORK. In fortification, the part most advanced towards the enemy. In progressive works, such as siege-approaches and saps, it is the farthest point then attained. HEAD OF WATER. Water kept to a height by winds, or by artificial dams and sluice-gates. The vertical column which dock-gates have to bear. HEAD-PIECE. A term for the helmet. HEAD-PUMP. A small pump fixed at the vessel's bow, its lower end communicating with the sea: it is mostly used for washing decks. HEAD-QUARTERS. The place where the general, or commanding officer, takes up his quarters. Also, the man-of-war, or transport, which carries the staff of an expedition. HEAD-RAILS. The short rails of the head, extending from the back of the figure to the cat-head: equally useful and ornamental. There are two on each side, one straight and the other curved. (_See_ FALSE RAIL.) Also, used familiarly for teeth. HEAD-ROPE. That part of the bolt-rope which terminates any sail on the upper edge, and to which it is accordingly sewed. (_See_ BOLT-ROPE.) Also, the small rope to which a flag is fastened, to hoist it to the mast-head, or head of the ensign-staff. HEAD-SAILS. A general name for all those sails which may be set on the fore-mast and bowsprit, jib, and flying jib-boom, and employed to influence the fore-part of the ship. HEAD-SEA. A name given to the waves when they oppose a ship's course, as the ship must rise over, or cut through each. Their effect depends upon their height, form, and speed; sometimes they are steep, quick, and irregular, so that a ship is caught by a second before she has recovered from the first; these render her wet and uneasy. HEAD-SHEETS. Specially jibs and staysail sheets, before the fore-mast. HEAD-STICK. A short round stick with a hole at each end, through which the head-rope of some triangular sails is thrust, before it is sewed on. Its use is to prevent the head of the sail from twisting. HEAD TO WIND. The situation of a ship or boat when her head is pointed directly to windward. The term is particularly applied in the act of tacking, or while lying at anchor. HEAD-WAY. A ship is said to gather head-way when she passes any object thrown overboard at the bow, and it passes astern into her wake. A ship may also, by the action of swell, forge ahead. HEAD-WIND. A breeze blowing from the direction of the ship's intended course. Thus, if a ship is bound N.E. a N.E. wind is a head-wind "dead on end," as seamen express it.--_The wind heads us_, that is, veers towards the direction of the ship's course. HEALD. The _heel_ over of a grounded ship. HEALTH-GUARD. Officers appointed to superintend the due observance of the quarantine regulations. HEART. A block of wood forming a peculiar sort of triangular dead-eye, somewhat resembling the shape of a heart; it is furnished with only one large hole in the middle, grooved for the rope instead of the three holes. It is principally used to the stays, as the dead-eyes are to the shrouds. (_See_ DEAD-EYE.) HEARTH. Applied to the ship's fire-place, coppers, and galley generally. HEARTY. Open and free. "My hearties," a cheerful salute to shipmates and seamen in general. "What cheer, my hearties?" how fare ye? what's your news? HEART-YARNS. The centre yarns of a strand. Also, the heart-yarn or centre, on which four-stranded rope is formed. HEATH. Various broom-stuffs used in breaming. HEAVE, TO. To throw anything overboard. To cast, as heaving the log or the lead. Also, to drag, prize, or purchase, as heaving up the anchor. HEAVE ABOUT, TO. To go upon the other tack suddenly. HEAVE AND A-WASH. An encouraging call when the ring of the anchor rises to the surface, and the stock stirs the water. HEAVE AND A-WEIGH. Signifies that the next effort will start the anchor from its bed, and make it _a-trip_. "Heave and a-weigh, sir," from the forecastle, denotes that the anchor is a-weigh; it inspirits the men to run it to the bows rapidly. HEAVE AND IN SIGHT. A notice given by the boatswain to the crew when the anchor is drawn up so near the surface of the water as to be seen by its muddy water surrounding it. HEAVE AND PAUL. Is the order to turn the capstan or windlass till the paul may be put in, by which it is prevented from coming up, and is something similar to _belay_, applied to a running rope. HEAVE AND RALLY! An encouraging order to the men at the capstan to heave with spirit, with a rush, and thereby force the anchor out of the ground. When there is a rising sea "heave and rally" implies, "heave and stand to your bars," the pauls taking the strain, and the next wave probably lifting the anchor. HEAVE AND SET. The ship's motion in rising and falling to the waves when at anchor. HEAVE HANDSOMELY. Gently. HEAVE HEARTY. Heave strong and with a will. HEAVE OF THE SEA. The power that the swell of the sea exerts upon a ship in driving her out of, or faster on in, her course, and for which allowance must be made in the day's work. It is a similar, or the same action in force as in a head-sea. HEAVE OUT THERE! The order to hasten men from their hammocks. HEAVER. A wooden bar or staff, sometimes tapered at the ends; it is employed as a lever or purchase on many occasions, such as setting up the top-mast shrouds, stropping large blocks, seizing the standing rigging, &c. Also, a name on the Kentish shores for the haviler crab. HEAVE SHORT, TO. To heave in on the cable until the vessel is nearly over her anchor, or sufficiently near it for sail being made before the anchor is tripped. Short, is when the fore-stay and cable are in line. HEAVE THE LEAD. To take soundings with the hand lead-line. "Get a cast of the lead," with the deep-sea lead and line. HEAVE THE LOG. Determine the ship's velocity by the log line and glass. HEAVE-TO, TO. To put a vessel in the position of _lying-to_, by adjusting her sails so as to counteract each other, and thereby check her way, or keep her perfectly still. In a gale, it implies to set merely enough sail to steady the ship; the aim being to keep the sea on the weather bow whilst the rudder has but little influence, the sail is chiefly set on the main and mizen-mast; as hove-to under a close-reefed main-topsail, or main-trysail, or driver. It is customary in a foul wind gale, and a last resource in a fair one. HEAVING AHEAD. Is the act of advancing or drawing a ship forwards by heaving on a cable or rope made fast to some fixed point before her. HEAVING AND SETTING. Riding hard, pitching and sending. HEAVING ASTERN. Causing a ship to recede or go backwards, by heaving on a cable or other rope fastened to some fixed point behind her. This more immediately applies to drawing a vessel off a shoal. HEAVING A STRAIN. Working at the windlass or capstan with more than usual exertion. HEAVING DOWN. (_See_ CAREENING.) The bringing one of a ship's sides down into the water, by means of purchases on the masts, in order to repair any injury which is below her water-line on the other. HEAVING IN. Shortening in the cable. Also, the binding a block and hook by a seizing. HEAVING IN STAYS. The act of tacking, when, the wind being ahead, great pressure is thrown upon the stays. HEAVING KEEL OUT. The utmost effect to be produced by careening, viz. to raise the keel out of the water in order to repair or clean it. (_See_ HEAVING DOWN.) HEAVING OUT. The act of loosing or unfurling a sail; particularly applied to the staysails; or in the tops, footing the sail out of the top. HEAVING TAUT. The act of turning the capstan, &c., till the rope applied thereto becomes straight and ready for action. HEAVING THROUGH ALL. The surging or slipping of the cable when the nippers do not hold. HEAVY DRIFT-ICE. Dense ice, which has a great depth in the water in proportion to its size, and is not in a state of decay, therefore dangerous to shipping. HEAVY GALE. A strong wind, in which a ship is reduced to storm-staysails and close-reefed main-topsail. Force 10. HEAVY METAL, OR HEAVY ORDNANCE. Ordnance of large calibre. HEAVY SEA. High and strong waves. HEBBER-MAN. An old name for a fisherman on the Thames below London Bridge, who took whitings, smelts, &c., commonly at ebbing-water. HEBBING-WEIR. Contrivances for taking fish at ebbing-water. HECK-BOAT. The old term for pinks. Latterly a clincher-built boat with covered fore-sheets, and one mast with a trysail. HECKLE. Said to be from the Teutonic _heckelen_, to dress flax for rope-making. Also, an artificial fly for fishing. HECKLE-BACK. A name of the fifteen-spined stickleback, _Gasterosteus spinachia_. HEDA. An early term for a small haven, wharf, or landing-place. HEDAGIUM. A toll or duty paid at the wharf for landing goods, &c. HEDGEHOGS. A name formerly applied to vessels which rowed with many oars. Also, small stunted trees unfit for timber. HEEL. The after end of a ship's keel, and the lower end of the stern-post to which it is connected. Also, the lower end of any mast, boom, bowsprit, or timber. Also, that part of the end of the butt of a musket which is uppermost when at the firing position.--_To heel._ To lie over, or incline to either side out of the perpendicular: usually applied to a ship when canted by the wind, or by being unequally ballasted. (_See_ CRANK, STIFF, and TRIM.) HEEL-BRACE. A piece of iron-work applicable to the lower part of a rudder, in case of casualty to the lower pintles. HEELING GUNWALE TO. Pressing down sideways to her upper works, particularly applied to boats running before a heavy sea, when they may roll their weather gunwales to. HEEL-KNEE. The compass-piece which connects the keel with the stern-post. HEEL-LASHING. The rope which secures the inner part of a studding-sail boom to the yard; also, that which secures the jib-boom. HEEL OF A MAST. The lower end, which either fits into the step attached to the keel, or in top-masts is sustained by the fid upon the trestle-trees. Heeling is the square part of the spar through which the fid hole is cut. HEEL-ROPE. That which hauls out the bowsprit in cutters, and the jib and studding-sail booms, or anything else where it passes through the heel of the spar, except in the case of top-masts and topgallant-masts, where it becomes a _mast-rope_. HEELS. _Having the heels of a ship_; sailing faster. HEEL-TACKLES. The luff purchases for the heels of each sheer previous to taking in masts, or otherwise using them. HEEVIL. An old northern term for the conger. HEFT. The Anglo-Saxon _haeft_; the handle of a dirk, knife, or any edge-tool; also, the handle of an oar. HEIGHT. Synonymous with hill, and meaning generally any ground above the common level of the place. Our early navigators used the word as a synonym of latitude. HEIGHT OF THE HOLD. Used for the depth of the hold. HEIGHT OF BREADTH. In ship-building, is a delineation generally in two lines--upper and lower--determining the height of the broadest place of each timber. HELIACAL. A star rises heliacally when it first becomes visible in the morning, after having been hidden in the sun's rays; and it sets heliacally when it is first lost in the evening twilight, owing to the sun's proximity. HELIER. A cavern into which the tide flows. HELIOCENTRIC. As seen from, or having reference to, the centre of the sun. HELIOMETER. An instrument designed for the accurate measurement of the diameters of the sun or planets. HELIOSTAADT, OR HELIOTROPE. This instrument reflects the sun's rays by a silvered disc, used in the great trigonometrical surveys. It has been visible at 100 miles' distance, from Cumberland to Ireland. HELL-AFLOAT. A vessel with a bad name for tyranny. HELM. Properly is the tiller, but sometimes used to express the rudder, and the means used for turning it, which, in small vessels and boats, is merely a tiller, but in larger vessels a wheel is added, which supplies the leverage for pulling the tiller either way; they are connected by ropes or chains.--_A-lee the helm_, or _Down with the helm!_ So place the tiller that the rudder is brought on the weather side of the stern-post. These, and the following orders, were established when tillers extended forward from the rudder-head, but now they often extend aft, which requires the motion of the tiller to be reversed. With the latter style of tiller the order "down with the helm" is carried out by bringing the tiller _up_ to the weather side of the ship; which being done, the order "Helm's a lee" follows.--_Bear up the helm._ That is, let the ship go more large before the wind.--_Ease the helm._ To let the helm come more amidships, when it has been put hard up or down.--It is common to ease the helm before a heavy sea takes the ship when close-hauled.--_Helm amidships_, or _right the helm_. That is, keep it even with the middle of the ship, in a line with the keel.--_Helm over._ The position of the tiller to enable a vessel steaming ahead to describe a curve.--_Port the helm._ Place the tiller so as to carry the rudder to starboard. (_See_ _A-lee the helm_.)--_Shift the helm._ Put it from port to starboard, and _vice versa_, or it may be amidships.--_Starboard the helm._ Place the tiller so as to carry the rudder to port.--_Up with the helm._ Place the tiller so as to carry the rudder to leeward. (_See_ _A-lee the helm_.) HELMED. An old word for steered; it is metaphorically used by Shakspeare in _Measure for Measure_. HELMET. A piece of defensive armour; a covering for the head. HELM-PORT. The round hole or cavity in a ship's counter, through which the head of the rudder passes into the trunk. HELM-PORT TRANSOM. The piece of timber placed across the lower counter, withinside the height of the helm-port, and bolted through every timber for the security of that part of the ship. HELMSMAN. The timoneer, or person, who guides the ship or boat by the management of the helm. The same as _steersman_. HELM-WIND. A singular meteorological phenomenon which occurs in the north of England. Besides special places in Cumberland and Westmoreland, it suddenly rushes from an immense cloud that gathers round the summit of Cross-Fell, covering it like a helmet. Its effects reach the sea-board. HELMY. Rainy [from an Anglo-Saxon phrase for rainy weather]. HELTER-SKELTER. Hurry and confusion. Defiance of good order. Privateerism. HELVE. The handle of the carpenter's mauls, axes, and adzes; also of an oar, &c. HELYER. _See_ HELIER. HEMISPHERE. Half the surface of a globe. The celestial equator divides the heavens into two hemispheres--the northern and the southern. HEMP. _Cannabis sativa._ A manufactorial plant of equal antiquity with flax. The produce of hemp in fibre varies from three to six hundred weight per acre, and forms the best of all cordage and ropes. It is mixed with opium in the preparation of those rich drugs called _hashishe_ in Cairo and Constantinople. Those who were in the constant use of them were called _hashishin_ (herb-eaters); and being often by their stimulative properties excited almost to frenzy and to murder, the word "assassin" is said to have been derived by the crusaders from this source. While the French army was in Egypt, Napoleon I. was obliged to prohibit, under the severest penalties, the sale and use of these pernicious substances. HENDECAGON. A right-lined figure with eleven sides; if it be regular, the sides and angles are all equal. HEN-FRIGATE. A ship wherein the captain's wife interfered in the duty or regulations. HEN'S-WARE. A name of the edible sea-weed _Fucus esculentus_. HEP-PAH, OR HIPPA. A New Zealand fort, or space surrounded with stout palisades; these rude defences have given our soldiers and sailors much trouble to reduce. (_See_ PAH.) HEPTAGON. A right-lined figure with seven sides; if it be regular, the sides and angles are all equal. HERCULES. The large mass of iron by the blows of which anchors are welded. HERE-AWAY. A term when a look-out man announces a rhumb or bearing of any object in this quarter. HERE-FARE [Anglo-Saxon]. An expedition; going to warfare. HERISSON. A balanced barrier to a passage in a fort, of the nature of a turnstile. HERLING. A congener of the salmon species found in Scotland; it is small, and shaped like a sea-trout. HERMAPHRODITE OR BRIG SCHOONER, is square-rigged, but without a top forward, and schooner-rigged abaft; carrying only fore-and-aft sails on the main-mast; in other phrase, she is a vessel with a brig's fore-mast and a schooner's main-mast. HERMIT-CRAB. A name applied to a group of crabs (family _Paguridae_), of which the hinder part of the body is soft, and which habitually lodge themselves in the empty shell of some mollusc. Also called _soldier-crabs_. HERMO. A Mediterranean term for the meteor called _corpo santo_. HERNE. A bight or corner, as Herne Bay, so called from lying in an angle. HERNSHAW AND HERNE. Old words for the heron. HERON. A large bird of the genus _Ardea_, which feeds on fish. HERRING. A common fish--the _Clupea harengus_; Anglo-Saxon _haering_ and _hering_. HERRING-BONING. A method of sewing up rents in a sail by small cross-stitches, by which the seam is kept flat. HERRING-BUSS. A peculiar boat of 10 or 15 tons, for the herring fishery. (_See_ BUSS.) HERRING-COB. A young herring. HERRING-GUTTED. _See_ SHOTTEN-HERRING. HERRING-HOG. A name for the porpoise. HERRING-POND. The Atlantic Ocean. HETERODROMOUS LEVERS. The windlass, capstan, crank, crane, &c. HETEROPLON. A kind of naval insurance, where the insurers only run the risk of the outward voyage; when both the going out and return of a vessel is insured, it is called amphoteroplon. HETTLE. A rocky fishing-ground in the Firth of Forth, which gives name to the fish called Hettle-codling. HEUGH. A craggy dry dell; a ravine without water. HEXAGON. A right-lined figure with six sides; if it be regular, the sides and angles are all equal. HEYS-AND-HOW. An ancient sea-cheer. HI! Often used for _hoy_; as, "Hi, you there!" Also, the old term for _they_, as in Sir Ferumbras-- "Costroye there was, the Admiral, With vitaile great plente, And the standard of the sowdon royal, Toward Mantrible ridden hi." HIDDEN HARBOUR. That of which the outer points so overlap as to cause the coast to appear to be continuous. HIDE, TO. To beat; to rope's-end or drub. Also, to secrete. HIE, TO. To flow quickly in a tide-way. HIE ALOFT. Away aloft. HIGH. In gunnery, signifies tightly fitting the bore; said of shot, wads, &c. Also, a gun is said to be laid high when too much elevated. HIGH-AND-DRY. The situation of a ship or other vessel which is aground, so as to be seen dry upon the strand when the tide ebbs from her. HIGH ENOUGH. Said in hoisting in goods, water, or masts. HIGH FLOOD. _See_ FLOOD. HIGH LATITUDES. Those regions far removed from the equator towards the poles of the earth above the 50th degree. HIGH TIDE, OR HIGH WATER. Figuratively, a full purse. Constance, in Shakspeare's _King John_, uses the term _high tides_ as denoting the gold-letter days or holidays of the calendar. HIGH-WATER. The greatest height of the flood-tide. (_See_ TIDE.) HIGH-WATER MARK. The line made by the water upon the shore, when at its greatest height; it is also designated the _flood-mark_ and _spring-tide mark_. This constitutes the boundary line of admiralty jurisdiction as to the soil. HIGH WIND. _See_ HEAVY GALE. HIGRE. _See_ BORE and EAGRE. HIKE. A brief equivalent to "Be off," "Go away." It is generally used in a contemptuous sense; as, he was "hiked off"--that is, dismissed at once, or in a hurry. To swing. HIKE UP, TO. To kidnap; to carry off by force. HILL. In use with the Anglo-Saxons. An insulated rise of the ground, usually applied to heights below 1000 feet, yet higher than a _hillock_ or _hummock_ (which see). HILLOCK. A small coast-hill, differing from a _hummock_ in having a peaked or pointed summit. HILT. The handle and guard of a sword. HIND-CASTLE. A word formerly used for the poop, as being opposed to _fore-castle_. HIPPAGINES, OR HIPPAGOGAE. Ancient transports for carrying cavalry. HIPPER, OR HIPPING-STONES. Large stones placed for crossing a brook. HIPPOCAMPUS. A small fish, so termed from the head resembling that of a horse. They live among reeds and long fuci, to which they cling with prehensile tails. HIPPODAMES. An old word for sea-horses. HIPSY. A drink compounded of wine, water, and brandy. HIRE, TO. To take vessel or men on service at a stipulated remuneration. HIRECANO. An old word for hurricane. HIRST. The roughest part of a river-ford. A bank. HITCH. A species of knot by which one rope is connected with another, or to some object. They are various; as, clove-hitch, racking-hitch, timber-hitch (stopped), rolling-hitch, running-hitch, half-hitch, blackwall-hitch, magnus-hitch, marline-spike hitch, harness-hitch, &c. (_See_ BEND and KNOT.) It also signifies motion by a jerk. Figuratively, it is applied to an impediment. A seaman often _hitches up_ his trowsers, which "have no lifts or braces."--_To hitch_ is to make fast a rope, &c., to catch with a hook. Thus of old, when a boat was to be hoisted in, they said--"Hitch the tackles into the rings of the boat." HITCHER. An old term for a boat-hook. HO! OR HAY! An exclamation derived from our Danish ancestors, and literally meaning _stop!_ HOAKY. A common petty oath--"By the hoaky!" by your hearth or fire. HOAM. The dried fat of the cod-fish. HOASTMEN. An ancient guild at Newcastle dealing in coals. HOAY, OR HOY! a word frequently added to an exclamation bespeaking attention, as "Main-top, hoay!" and is chiefly used to persons aloft or without the ship. HOB-A-NOB. To drink cosily; the act of touching glasses in pledging a health. An early and extensive custom falling into disuse. HOBBLE. A perplexity or difficulty.--_Hobbles_, irons or fetters. HOBBLER. A coast-man of Kent, a bit of a smuggler, and an unlicensed pilot, ever ready for a job in either of these occupations. Also, a man on land employed in towing a vessel by a rope. Also, a sentinel who kept watch at a beacon. HOBITS. Small mortars of 6 or 8 inches bore mounted on gun-carriages; in use before the howitzer. HOBRIN. A northern designation of the blue shark, _Squalus glaucus_. HOC. The picked dog-fish, _Squalus acanthias_. HOCK-SAW. A fermented drink along the coasts of China, partaking more of the nature of beer than of spirit, and therefore less injurious than _sam-tsin_. HOD. A hole under a bank or rock, forming a retreat for fish. HODDY-DODDY. A west-country name for a revolving light. HODMADODS. The name among early navigators for Hottentots. HODMANDODS. _See_ DODMAN. HODOMETRICAL. A method of finding the longitude at sea by dead-reckoning. HOE. _See_ HOWE. HOE-MOTHER, OR HOMER. The basking shark, _Squalus maximus_. HOE-TUSK. _Squalus mustela_, smooth hound-fish of the Shetlanders. HOG. A kind of rough, flat scrubbing broom, serving to scrape a ship's bottom under water, particularly in the act of _boot-topping_ (which see); formed by inclosing a multitude of short twigs of birch, or the like, between two pieces of plank, which are firmly attached to each other; the ends of the twigs are then cut off even, so as to form a brush of considerable extent. To this is fitted a long staff, together with two ropes, the former of which is used to thrust the hog under the ship's bottom, and the latter to guide and pull it up again close to the planks, so as to rub off all the dirt. This work is usually performed in the ship's boat. HOG-BOAT. _See_ HECK-BOAT. HOGGED. A significant word derived from the animal; it implies that the two ends of a ship's decks droop lower than the midship part, consequently, that her keel and bottom are so strained as to curve upwards. The term is therefore in opposition to that of _sagging_. HOG-IN-ARMOUR. Soubriquet for an iron-clad ship. HOGO. From the French _haut-gout_, a disagreeable smell, but rather applied to ill-ventilated berths than to bilge-water. HOISE. The old word for hoist. HOIST. The perpendicular height of a sail or flag; in the latter it is opposed to the fly, which implies its breadth from the staff to the outer edge: or that part to which the halliards are bent. HOIST, OR HOISE, TO. To raise anything; but the term is specially applied to the operation of swaying up a body by the assistance of tackles. It is also invariably used for the hauling up the sails along the masts or stays, and the displaying of flags and pendants, though by the help of a single block only. (_See_ SWAY, TRACING-UP, and WHIP.) HOISTING-TACKLE. A whip, a burton, or greater purchase, as yard-arm tackles, &c. HOISTING THE FLAG. An admiral assuming his command "hoists his flag," and is saluted with a definite number of guns by all vessels present. HOISTING THE PENDANT. Commissioning a ship. HOLD. The whole interior cavity of a ship, or all that part comprehended between the floor and the lower deck throughout her length.--_The after-hold_ lies abaft the main-mast, and is usually set apart for the provisions in ships of war.--_The fore-hold_ is situated about the fore-hatchway, in continuation with the main-hold, and serves the same purposes.--_The main-hold_ is just before the main-mast, and generally contains the fresh water and beer for the use of the ship's company.--_To rummage the hold_ is to examine its contents.--_To stow the hold_ is to arrange its contents in the most secure and commodious manner possible.--_To trim the hold_ (_see_ TRIM OF THE HOLD). Also, an Anglo-Saxon term for a fort, castle, or stronghold.--_Hold_ is also generally understood of a ship with regard to the land or to another ship; hence we say, "Keep a good hold of the land," or "Keep the land well aboard," which are synonymous phrases, implying to keep near the land; when applied to a ship, we say, "She holds her own;" _i.e._ goes as fast as the other ship; holds her wind, or way.--_To hold._ To assemble for public business; as, to hold a court-martial, a survey, &c.--_Hold!_ An authoritative way of separating combatants, according to the old military laws at tournaments, &c.; stand fast! HOLD A GOOD WIND, TO. To have weatherly qualities. HOLD-ALL. A portable case for holding small articles required by soldiers, marines, and small-arm men on service. HOLD-BEAMS. The lowest range of beams in a merchantman. In a man-of-war they support the orlop-deck. (_See_ ORLOP-BEAMS.) HOLDERS. The people employed in the hold duties of a ship. HOLD-FAST. A rope; also the order to the people aloft, when shaking out reefs, &c., to suspend the operation. In ship-building, it means a bolt going down through the rough tree rail, and the fore or after part of each stanchion. HOLDING-ON. The act of pulling back the hind part of any rope. HOLDING ON THE SLACK. Doing nothing. (_See_ EYELIDS.) HOLDING WATER. The act of checking the progress of a boat by holding the oar-blades in the water, and bearing the flat part strongly against the current alongside, so as to meet its resistance. (_See_ BACK ASTERN, OAR, and ROW.) HOLD OFF. The keeping the hove-in part of a cable or hawser clear of the capstan. HOLD ON. Keep all you have got in pulling a rope.--_Hold on a minute._ Wait or stop.--_Hold on with your nails and eyelids._ A derisive injunction to a timid climber. HOLD ON, GOOD STICKS! An apostrophe often made when the masts complain in a fresh squall, or are over-pressed, and it is unadvisable to shorten sail. HOLD-STANCHIONS. Those which support the hold-beams amidships, and rest on the kelson. HOLD UP, TO. In meteorological parlance, for the weather to clear up after a gale; to stop raining. HOLE. A clear open space amongst ice in the Arctic seas. HOLEBER. A kind of light horseman, who rode about from place to place in the night, to gain intelligence of the landing of boats, men, &c., on the Kentish coast. HOLES, EYELET OR [OE]ILLET. The holes in sails for points and rope-bands which are fenced round by stitching the edge to a small log-line grommet. In the drumhead of a capstan, the holes receive the capstan-bars. HOLIDAY. Any part left neglected or uncovered in paying or painting, blacking, or tarring. HOLLANDS. The spirit principally distilled in Holland. HOLLARDS. The dead branches and loppings of trees. HOLLEBUT. A spelling of _halibut_. HOLLOA, OR HOLLA. An answer to any person calling from a distance, to show they hear. Thus, if the master intends to give any order to the people in the main-top, he previously calls, "Main-top, hoay." It is also the first answer received when hailing a ship. (_See_ HAILING and HOAY.) HOLLOW. The bore of a rocket. In naval architecture, a name for the fifth or _top-timber-sweep_ (which see). Also, hollow or curved leeches of sails, in contradistinction to straight. HOLLOW BASTION. In fortification, a bastion of which the terreplein or interior terrace is not continued beyond a certain distance to the rear of the parapet, and thus leaves a central area at a lower level. HOLLOW-MOULD. The same as _floor-hollow_ (which see). HOLLOWS AND ROUNDS. Plane-tools used for making mouldings. HOLLOW SEA. The undulation of the waves after a gale; long hollow-jawed sea; ground-swell. HOLLOW SHOT. Introduced principally for naval use before the horizontal firing of shells from guns became general. Their weight was about two-thirds that of the solid shot; thus they required less charge of powder and weight of gun than the latter, whilst their smashing effect and first ranges were supposed to be greater. It is clear, however, that if filled with powder, their destructive effect must be immensely increased. HOLLOW SQUARE. The square generally used by British infantry; a formation to resist cavalry. Each side is composed of four ranks of men, the two foremost kneeling with bayonets forming a fence breast high; the inclosed central space affords shelter to officers, colours, &c. With breech-loading muskets this defence will become less necessary. (_See also_ RALLYING SQUARE.) HOLM. (_See_ CLETT.) A name both on the shores of Britain and Norway for a small uninhabited island used for pasture; yet in old writers it sometimes is applied to the sea, or a deep water. Also, an ill-defined name applied to a low islet in a river, as well as the flat land by the river side. HOLOMETRUM GEOMETRICUM. A nautical instrument of brass, one of which, price L4, was supplied to Martin Frobisher in 1576. HOLSOM. A term applied to a ship that rides without rolling or labouring. HOLSTER. A case or cover for a pistol, worn at the saddle-bow. HOLT [from the Anglo-Saxon]. A peaked hill covered with a wood. HOLUS-BOLUS. Altogether; all at once. HOLY-STONE. A sandstone for scrubbing decks, so called from being originally used for Sunday cleaning, or obtained by plundering churchyards of their tombstones, or because the seamen have to go on their knees to use it. HOME. The proper situation of any object, when it retains its full force of action, or when it is properly lodged for convenience. In the former sense it is applied to the sails; in the latter it usually refers to the stowage of the hold. The anchor is said _to come home_ when it loosens, or drags through the ground by the effort of the wind or current. (_See_ ANCHOR.)--_Home_ is the word given by the captain of the gun when, by the sense of his thumb on the touch-hole, he determines that the charge is home, and no air escapes by the touch-hole. It is the word given to denote the top-sail or other sheets being "home," or butting.--_Sheet home!_ The order to extend the clues of sails to the yard-arms.--_The wind blows home._ When it sets continuously over the sea and land with equal velocity. When opposed by vertical or high land, the breeze loses its force as the land is neared: then it does not blow home, as about Gibraltar and Toulon. HOME-SERVICE. The Channel service; any force, either naval or military, stationed in and about the United Kingdom. HOME-TRADERS. The contradistinction of foreign-going ships. HOMEWARD-BOUND. Said of a ship when returning from a voyage to the place whence she was fitted out; or the country to which she belongs. HOMEWARD-BOUNDER. A ship on her course home. HOMMELIN. The _Raia rubus_, or rough ray. HONEST-POUNDS. Used in contradistinction to "_purser's pounds_" (which see). HONEYCOMB. A spongy kind of flaw in the metal of ordnance, generally due to faulty casting. HONG. Mercantile houses in China, with convenient warehouses adjoining. Also, a society of the principal merchants of the place. HONOURS OF WAR. Favourable terms granted to a capitulating enemy on evacuating a fortress; they vary in degree, according to circumstances; generally understood to mean, to march out armed, colours flying, &c., but to pile arms at a given point, and leave them, and be sent home, or give parole not to serve until duly exchanged. HOO. _See_ HOWE. HOOD. A covering for a companion-hatch, skylight, &c. Also, the piece of tarred or painted canvas which used to cover the eyes of rigging to prevent water from damaging them; now seldom used. Also, the name given to the upper part of the galley chimney, made to turn round with the wind, that the smoke may always go to leeward.--_Naval hoods or whood._ Large thick pieces of timber which encircle the hawse-holes. HOOD-ENDS. The ends of the planks which fit into the rabbets of the stem and stern posts. HOOD OF A PUMP. A frame covering the upper wheel of a chain-pump. HOODS, OR HOODINGS. The foremost and aftermost planks of the bottom, within and without. Also, coverings to shelter the mortar in bomb-vessels. HOOK. There are several kinds used at sea, as boat-hooks, can-hooks, cat-hooks, fish-hooks, and the like. A name given to reaches, or angular points in rivers, such as Sandy Hook at New York.--_Laying-hook._ A winch used in rope-making.--_Loof-tackle hooks_, termed _luffs_. A tackle with two hooks, one to hitch into a cringle of the main or fore sail in the bolt-rope, and the other to hitch into a strap spliced to the chess-tree. They pull down the sail, and in a stiff gale help to hold it so that all the stress may not bear upon the tack. HOOK AND BUTT. The scarphing or laying two ends of planks over each other. (_See_ BUTT-AND-BUTT and HOOK-SCARPH.) HOOK-BLOCK. Any block, of iron or wood, strapped with a hook. HOOK-BOLTS. Those used to secure lower-deck ports. HOOKER, OR HOWKER. A coast or fishing vessel--a small hoy-built craft with one mast, intended for fishing. They are common on our coasts, and greatly used by pilots, especially off the Irish ports. Also, Jack's name for his vessel, the favourite "old hooker." Also, a term for a short pipe, probably derived from _hookah_. HOOKEY. _See_ HOAKY. HOOKING. In ship-carpentry this is the act of working the edge of one plank into that of another, in such a manner that they cannot be drawn asunder. HOOK OF THE DECKS. _See_ BREAST-HOOKS. HOOK-POTS. Tin cans fitted to hang on the bars of the galley range. HOOK-ROPES. A rope 6 or 8 fathoms long, with a hook and thimble spliced at one end, and whipped at the other: it is used in coiling hempen cables in the tiers, dragging chain, &c. HOOK-SCARPH. In ship-carpentry, the joining of two pieces of wood by a strong method of hook-butting, which mode of connecting is termed _hook and butt_. HOOP. The principal hoops of different kinds used for nautical purposes, are noticed under their several names, as mast-hoops, clasp-hoops, &c. In wind-bound ships in former times the left hands of several boys were tied to a hoop, and their right armed with a nettle, they being naked down to the waist. On the boatswain giving one a cut with his cat, the boy struck the one before him, and each one did the same, beginning gently, but, becoming irritated, they at last laid on in earnest. Also, a nautical punishment for quarrelsome fighters was, that two offenders, similarly fastened, thrashed each other until one gave in. The craven was usually additionally punished by the commander. HOOPS. The strong iron bindings of the anchor-stock to the shank, though square, are called hoops. HOPE. A small bay; it was an early term for valley, and is still used in Kent for a brook, and gives name to the adjacent anchorages. Johnson defines it to be any sloping plain between two ridges of hills. HOPPER-PUNT. A flat-floored lighter for carrying soil or mud, with a _hopper_ or receptacle in its centre, to contain the lading. HOPPO. The chief of the customs in China. HOPPO-MEN. Chinese custom-house officers. HORARY ANGLE. The apparent time by the sun, or the sidereal time of the moon, or planets, or stars, from the meridian. HORARY MOTION. The march or movement of any heavenly body in the space of an hour. HORARY TABLES. Tables for facilitating the determination of horary angles. HORIE-GOOSE. A northern name for the _Anser bernicla_, or brent-goose. HORIOLAE. Small fishing-boats of the ancients. HORIZON. The apparent or visible circle which bounds our vision at sea; it is that line which is described by the sky and water appearing to meet. This is designated as the _sensible_ horizon; the _rational_, or _true_ one, being a great circle of the heavens, parallel to the sensible horizon, but passing through the centre of the earth. HORIZON-GLASSES. Two small speculums on one of the radii of a quadrant or sextant; the one half of the fore horizon-glass is silvered, while the other half is transparent, in order that an object may be seen directly through it: the back horizon-glass is silvered above and below, but in the middle there is a transparent stripe through which the horizon can be seen. HORIZONTAL. A direction parallel to the horizon, or what is commonly termed lying flat. One of the greatest inconveniences navigators have to struggle with is the frequent want of a distinct sight of the horizon. To obviate this a _horizontal spinning speculum_ was adopted by Mr. Lerson, who was lost in the _Victory_ man-of-war, in which ship he was sent out to make trial of his instrument. This was afterwards improved by Smeaton, and consists of a well-polished metal speculum about 3-1/2 inches in diameter, inclosed within a circular rim of brass, so fitted that the centre of gravity of the whole shall fall near the point on which it spins. This is the end of a steel axis running through the centre of the speculum, above which it finishes in a square for the convenience of fitting a roller on it, bearing a piece of tape wound round it. The cup in which it spins is made of agate flint, or other hard substance. Sextants, with spirit-levels attached, have latterly been used, as well as Becher's horizon; but great dexterity is demanded for anything like an approximation to the truth; wherefore this continues to be a great desideratum in navigation. HORIZONTAL FIRE. From artillery, is that in which the piece is laid either direct on the object, or with but small elevation above it, the limit on land being 10 deg., and afloat still less. It is the most telling under ordinary circumstances, and includes all other varieties, with the exception of vertical fire, which has elevations of from 30 deg. and upwards; and, according to some few, curved fire, an intermediate kind, of limited application. HORIZONTAL PARALLAX. _See_ PARALLAX. HORIZONTAL PLAN. In ship-building, the draught of a proposed ship, showing the whole as if seen from above. HORIZONTAL RIBBAND LINES. A term given by shipwrights to those lines, or occult ribbands, by which the cant-timbers are laid off, and truly bevelled. HORN. The arm of a cleat or kevel. HORN-CARD. Transparent graduated horn-plates to use on charts, either as protractors or for meteorological purposes, to represent the direction of the wind in a cyclone. HORNED ANGLE. That which is made by a right line, whether tangent or secant, with the circumference of a circle. HORNEL. A northern term for the largest species of sand-launce or sand-eel. HORN-FISC. Anglo-Saxon for the sword-fish. HORN-FISTED. Having hands inured to hauling ropes. HORNING. In naval architecture, is the placing or proving anything to stand square from the middle line of the ship, by setting an equal distance thereon. HORN-KECK. An old term for the _green-back_ fish. HORNOTINAE. Ancient vessels which were built in a year. HORNS. The points of the jaws of the booms. Also, the outer ends of the cross-trees. Also, two extreme points of land inclosing a bay. HORNS OF THE MOON. The extremities of the lunar crescent, in which form she is said to be horned. HORNS OF THE RUDDER. _See_ RUDDER-HORN. HORNS OF THE TILLER. The pins at the extremity. HORN-WORK. In fortification, a form of outwork having for its head a bastioned front, and for its sides two long straight faces, which are flanked by the guns of the body of the place. Sometimes it is a detached outwork. HOROLOGIUM UNIVERSALE. An old brass nautical instrument, one of which was supplied to Martin Frobisher, at an expense of L2, 6_s._ 8_d._, when fitting out on his first voyage for the discovery of a north-west passage. HORS DE COMBAT. A term adopted from the French, signifying so far disabled as to be incapable of taking farther share in the action. HORSE. A foot-rope reaching from the opposite quarter of a yard to its arms or shoulders, and depending about two or three feet under the yard, for the sailors to tread on while they are loosing, reefing, or furling the sails, rigging out the studding-sail booms, &c. In order to keep the horse more parallel to the yard, it is usually attached thereto at proper distances, by certain ropes called stirrups, which have an eye spliced into their lower ends, through which the horse passes. (_See_ STIRRUPS and FOOT-ROPES.) Also, a rope formerly fast to the fore-mast fore-shrouds, with a dead-eye to receive the spritsail-sheet-pendant, and keep the spritsail-sheets clear of the flukes of the anchor. Also, the breast-rope which is made fast to the shrouds to protect the leadsman. Also, applied to any pendant and thimble through which running-rigging was led, now commonly called a lizard. Also, a thick rope, extending in a perpendicular direction near the fore or after side of a mast, for the purpose of hoisting some yard, or extending a sail thereon; when before the mast, it is used for the square-sail, whose yard is attached to the horse by means of a traveller or bull's-eye, which slides up and down. When it is abaft the mast, it is intended for the trysail of a snow; but is seldom used in this position, except in those sloops of war which occasionally assume the appearance of snows to deceive the enemy. Also, the name of the sawyer's frame or trestle. Also, the round iron bar formerly fixed to the main-rail at the head with stanchions; a fir rail is now used, and the head berthed up. Also, in cutters or schooners, one horse is a stout iron bar, with a large thimble, which spans the vessel from side to side close to the deck before the fore-mast. To this the forestaysail-sheet is hauled, and traverses. The other horse is a similar bar abaft, on which the main-boom sheet traverses. Also, cross-pieces on the tops of standards, on which the booms or spare-spars or boats are lashed between the fore and main masts. Horses are also termed jack-stays, on which sails are hauled out, as gaff-sails. Horse is a term of derision where an officer assumes the grandioso, demanding honour where honour is not his due. Also, a strict disciplinarian, in nautical parlance. Also, tough salt beef--_salt horse_.--_Flemish horse_ is the horse which has an iron thimble in one end, which goes over the iron point of the yard-arm before the studding-sail boom-iron is put on; in the other, a lashing eye, which is secured near the head earing of the top-sail. It is intended for the men at the earing in reefing, or when setting the top-gallant-studding-sails. HORSE-ARTILLERY. A branch of field artillery specially equipped to man[oe]uvre with cavalry, having lighter guns, and all its gunners mounted on horseback. Its service demands a rare combination of soldierly qualities. HORSE-BUCKETS. Covered buckets for carrying spirits or water in. HORSE-BUCKLE. The great whelk. HOUSE-COCKLE. _See_ GAWKY. HORSE-FOOT. A name of the _Limulus polyphemus_ of the shores of America, where from its shape it is called the horse-shoe or lantern crab. HORSE-LATITUDES. A space between the westerly winds of higher latitudes and the trade-winds, notorious for tedious calms. The name arose from our old navigators often throwing the horses overboard which they were transporting to America and the West Indies. HORSE-MACKEREL. A large and coarse member of the Scomber family, remarkably greedy, and therefore easily taken, but unwholesome. HORSE-MARINE. An awkward lubberly person. One out of place. HORSE-MUSSEL. _See_ DUCK-MUSSEL. HORSE-POTATOES. The old word for yams. HORSE-POWER. A comparative estimate of the capacity of steam-engines, by assuming a certain average effective pressure of steam, and a certain average linear velocity of the piston. The pressure multiplied by the velocity gives the effective force of the engine exerted through a given number of feet per minute; and since the force called a horse-power means 33,000 lbs. acting thus one foot per minute, it follows that the nominal power of the engine will be found by dividing the effective force exerted by the piston, multiplied by the number of feet per minute through which it acts by 33,000. HORSES. Blocks in whalers for cutting blubber on. (_See_ WHITE-HORSE.) HORSE-SHOE. In old fortification, a low work of this plan sometimes thrown up in ditches. HORSE-SHOE CLAMP. The iron or copper straps so shaped, used as the fastenings which connect the gripe with the fore-foot at the scarph of the keel and stem. HORSE-SHOE HINGES. Those by which side-scuttles or ventilators to the cabins are hung. HORSE-SHOE RACK. A sweep curving from the bitt-heads abaft the main-mast carrying a set of nine-pin swivel-blocks as the fair leaders of the light running gear, staysail, halliards, &c. HORSE-TONGUE. A name applied to a kind of sole. HORSE-UP. _See_ HORSING-IRON. HORSING-IRON. An iron fixed in a withy handle, sometimes only lashed to a stick or tree-nail, and used with a beetle by caulkers.--_To horse-up_, or harden in the oakum of a vessel's seams. HOSE (for watering, &c.) An elastic pipe. HOSE-FISH. A name for a kind of cuttle-fish. HOSPITAL. A place appointed for the reception of sick and wounded men, with a regular medical establishment. (_See_ NAVAL HOSPITALS.) HOSPITAL-SHIP. A vessel fitted to receive the sick, either remaining in port, or accompanying a fleet, as circumstance demands. She carries the chief surgeons, &c. The _Dreadnought_, off Greenwich, is a free hospital-ship for seamen of all nations. HOSTAGE. A person given up to an enemy as a pledge or security for the performance of the articles of a treaty. HOSTILE CHARACTER is legally constituted by having landed in an enemy's territory, and by residing there, temporary absence being immaterial; by permanent trade with an enemy; and by sailing under an enemy's flag. HOST-MEN. An ancient guild or fraternity at Newcastle, to whom we are indebted for the valuable sea-coal trade. (_See_ HOASTMEN.) HOT COPPERS. Dry fauces; morning thirst, but generally applied to those who were drinking hard over-night. HOT-PRESS. When the press-gangs were instructed, on imminent emergency, to impress seamen, regardless of the protections. HOT-SHOT. Balls made red-hot in a furnace. Amongst the savages in Bergou, the women are in the rear of the combatants, and they heat the heads of the spears, exchanging them for such as are cooled in the fight. HOT-WELL. In a steamer, a reservoir from whence to feed the boiler with the warm water received out of the condenser; it also forms part of the discharge passage from the air-pump into the sea. HOUND-FISH. The old Anglo-Saxon term for dog-fish--_hund-fisc_. HOUNDS. Those projections at the mast-head serving as supports for the trestle-trees of large and rigging of smaller masts to rest upon. With lower masts they are termed _cheeks_. HOUNSID. A rope bound round with service. HOUR-ANGLE. The angular distance of a heavenly body east or west of the meridian. HOUR-GLASS. The sand-glass: a measure of the hour. HOUSE, TO. To enter within board. To house a topgallant-mast, is to lower it so as to prevent the rigging resting or chafing on the cap, and securing its heel to the mast below it. This admits of double-reefed top-sails being set beneath. HOUSE-BOAT. One with a cabin; a _coche d'eau_. HOUSED. The situation of the great guns upon the lower gun-decks when they are run in clear of the port, and secured. The breech being let down, the muzzle rests against the side above the port; they are then secured by their tackles, muzzle-lashings, and breechings. Over the muzzle of every gun are two strong eye-bolts for the muzzle-lashings, which are 3-1/2-inch rope. When this operation is well performed, no accident is feared, as every act is one of mechanical skill. A gun is sometimes housed fore and aft to make room, as in the cabin, &c. Ships in ordinary, not in commission, are housed over by a substantial roofing. HOUSEHOLD TROOPS. A designation of the horse and foot guards, who enjoy many immunities and privileges for attending the sovereign. HOUSEWIFE. _See_ HUZ-ZIF. HOUSING, OR HOUSE-LINE. A small line formed of three fine strands, smaller than rope yarn; principally used for seizings of the block-strops, fastening the clues of sails to their bolt-ropes, and other purposes. (_See_ MARLINE, TWINE.) HOUSING-IN. After a ship in building is past the breadth of her bearing, and that she is brought in too narrow to her upper works, she is said to be _housed in_, or pinched. (_See_ TUMBLING HOME.) HOUSING OF A LOWER MAST. That part of a mast which is below deck to the step in the kelson; of a bowsprit, the portion within the _knight-heads_. HOUSING-RINGS. Ring-bolts over the lower deck-ports, through the beam-clamps, to which the muzzle-lashings of the guns are passed when housed. HOUVARI. A strong land wind of the West Indies, accompanied with rain, thunder, and lightning. HOUZING. A northern term for lading water. HOVE DOWN, properly _hove out_ or _careened_. The situation of a ship when heeled or placed thus for repairs.--_Hove off_, when removed from the ground.--_Hove up_, when brought into the slips or docks by cradles on the gridiron, &c. HOVE-IN-SIGHT. The anchor in view. Also, a sail just discovered. HOVE-IN-STAYS. The position of a ship in the act of going about. HOVE KEEL OUT. Hove so completely over the beam-ends that the keel is above the water. HOVELLERS. A Cinque-Port term for pilots and their boatmen; but colloquially, it is also applied to sturdy vagrants who infest the sea-coast in bad weather, in expectation of wreck and plunder. HOVERING, AND HOVERING ACTS. Said of smugglers of old. HOVE-SHORT. The ship with her cable hove taut towards her anchor, when the sails are usually loosed and braced for canting; sheeted home.--_Hove well short_, the position of the ship when she is drawn by the capstan nearly over her anchor. HOVE-TO. From the act of heaving-to; the motion of the ship stopped. It is curious to observe that seamen have retained an old word which has otherwise been long disused. It occurs in Grafton's _Chronicle_, where the mayor and aldermen of London, in 1256, understanding that Henry III. was coming to Westminster from Windsor, went to Knightsbridge, "and _hoved_ there to salute the king." HOW. An ancient term for the carina or hold of a ship. HOWE, HOE, OR HOO. A knoll, mound, or elevated hillock. HOW FARE YE? Are you all hearty? are you working together? a good old sea phrase not yet lost. HOWITZER. A piece of ordnance specially designed for the horizontal firing of shells, being shorter and much lighter than any gun of the same calibre. The rifled gun, however, throwing a shell of the same capacity from a smaller bore, and with much greater power, is superseding it for general purposes. HOWKER. _See_ HOOKER. HOWLE. An old English word for the hold of a ship. When the foot-hooks or futtocks of a ship are scarphed into the ground-timbers and bolted, and the plank laid up to the orlop-deck, then they say, "the ship begins to howle." HOY. A call to a man. Also, a small vessel, usually rigged as a sloop, and employed in carrying passengers and goods, particularly in short distances on the sea-coast; it acquired its name from stopping when called to from the shore, to take up goods or passengers. In Holland the hoy has two masts, in England but one, where the main-sail is sometimes extended by a boom, and sometimes without it. In the naval service there are _gun-hoy_, _powder-hoy_, _provision-hoy_, _anchor-hoy_, all rigged sloop-fashion. HOYSE. The old word for hoist. HUBBLE-BUBBLE. An eastern pipe for smoking tobacco through water, which makes a bubbling noise. HUDDOCK. The cabin of a keel or coal-barge. "'Twas between Ebbron and Yarrow, There cam on a varry strong gale; The skipper luicked out o' th' huddock, Crying, 'Smash, man, lower the sail!'" HUDDUM. The old northern term for a kind of whale. HUER. A man posted on an elevation near the sea, who, by concerted signals, directs the fishermen when a shoal of fish is in sight. Synonymous with _conder_ (which see). Also, the hot fountains in the sea near Iceland, where many of them issue from the land. HUFFED. Chagrined, offended, often needlessly. HUFFLER. One who carries off fresh provisions to a ship; a Kentish term. HUG, TO.--_To hug the land_, to sail as near it as possible, the land however being to windward.--_To hug the wind_, to keep the ship as close-hauled to the wind as possible. HUGGER-MUGGER. In its Shakspearian bearing may have meant secretly, or in a clandestine manner, but its nautical application is to express anything out of order or done in a slovenly way. HUISSIERS. The flat-bottomed transports in which horses were embarked in the Crusades. HULCOCK. A northern name for the _Squalus galeus_, or smooth hound-fish. HULK. Is generally applied to a vessel condemned as unfit for the risks of the sea, and used as a store-vessel and housing for crews while refitting the vessels they belong to. There are also hulks for convicts, and for masting, as _sheer-hulk_. (_See_ SHEERS.) HULL. The Gothic _hulga_ meant a husk or external covering, and hence the body of a ship, independent of masts, yards, sails, rigging, and other furniture, is so called.--_To hull_, signifies to hit with shot; to drive to and fro without rudder, sail, or oar; as Milton-- "He looked and saw the ark hull on the flood." --_To strike hull_ in a storm, is to take in her sails and lash the helm on the lee side of the ship, which is termed _to lie a-hull_. HULL-DOWN. Is said of a ship when at such a distance that, from the convexity of the globe, only her masts and sails are to be seen. HULLING. Lying in wait at sea without any sails set. Also, to hit with shot. HULLOCK OF A SAIL. A small part lowered in a gale. HULL-TO. The situation of a ship when she is lying a-hull, or with all her sails furled. HULLY. A long wicker-trap used for catching eels. HUMBER-KEEL. A particular clincher-built craft used on the Humber. HUMLA-BAND. A northern term for the grommet to an oar-pin or thole. HUMMOCK. A hill with a rounded summit or conical eminence on the sea-coast. When in pairs they are termed _paps_ by navigators (which see). HUMMOCKS OF ICE. Protuberant lumps of ice thrown up by some pressure upon a _field_ or _floe_, or any other frozen plane. The pieces which rise when large fragments come in contact, and bits of pack are frozen together and covered with snow. HUMMUMS. From the Arabic word _hammam_, a bagnio or bath. HUMP-BACKED WHALE. A species of whalebone whale, the _Megaptera longimana_, which attains to 45 or 50 feet in length, and is distinguished by its low rounded dorsal fin. HURD. The strand of a rope. HURDICES. Ramparts, scaffolds, fortifications, &c. HURDIGERS. Particular artificers employed in constructing the castles in our early ships. HURLEBLAST. An archaic term for _hurricane_. HURRICANE. _See_ TYPHOON. HURRICANE-DECK. A light deck over the saloon of some steamers. HURRICANE-HOUSE. Any building run up for temporary purposes; the name is occasionally given to the round-house on a vessel's deck. HURRICANO. Shakspeare evidently makes King Lear use this word as a water-spout. HURRY. A staith or wharf where coals are shipped in the north. HURST. Anglo-Saxon to express a wood. HURT. A wound or injury for which a compensation can be claimed. HURTLE, TO. To send bodily on by a swell or wind. HUSBAND, OR SHIP'S HUSBAND. An agent appointed by deed, executed by all the owners, with power to advance and lend, to make all payments, to receive the prices of freights, and to retain all claims. But this office gives him no authority to insure or to borrow money; and he is to render a full account to his employers. HUSH. A name of the lump-fish, denoting the female. HUSSAR, OR HUZZAR. A Hungarian term signifying "twentieth," as the first hussars were formed by selecting from various regiments the ablest man in every twenty; now generally a light-cavalry soldier equipped somewhat after the original Hungarian fashion. HUT. The same as _barrack_ (which see). HUTT. The breech-pin of a gun. HUZZA! This was originally the _hudsa_, or cry, of the Hungarian light horse, but is now also the national shout of the English in joy and triumph. HUZ-ZIF. A general corruption of _housewife_. A very useful contrivance for holding needles and thread, and the like. HYDRAULIC DOCK. _See_ CAISSON. HYDRAULIC PRESS. The simple yet powerful water-press invented by Bramah, without which it would have been a puzzle to float the enormous _Great Eastern_. HYDRAULIC PURCHASE. A machine for drawing up vessels on a slip, in which the pumping of water is used to multiply the force applied. HYDRAULICS. _See_ HYDROLOGY. HYDROGRAPHER. One who surveys coasts, &c., and constructs true maps and charts founded on astronomical observations. The hydrographer to the admiralty presides over the hydrographical office. HYDROGRAPHICAL CHARTS OR MAPS. Usually called _sea-charts_, are projections of some part of the sea and its neighbouring coast for the use of navigation, and therefore the depth of water and nature of the bottom are minutely noted. HYDROGRAPHICAL OFFICE. A department of the admiralty where the labours of the marine surveyors of the Royal Navy are collected and published. HYDROGRAPHY. The science of marine surveying, requiring the principal points to be astronomically fixed. HYDROLOGY. That part of physics which explains the properties of water, and is usually divided into hydrostatics and hydraulics. The former treats of weighing water and fluids in general, and of ascertaining their specific gravities; the latter shows the manner of conveying water from one place to another. HYDROMETER. An instrument constructed to measure the specific gravities of fluids. That used at sea for testing the amount of salt in the water is a glass tube containing a scale, the bottom of the tube swelling out into two bulbs, of which the lower is laden with shot, which causes the instrument to float perpendicularly, and as it displaces its own weight of water, of course it sinks deeper as the water is lighter, which is recorded by the scale. HYGRE. (_See_ BORE and EAGRE.) An effect of counter-currents. HYGROMETER. An instrument for ascertaining the quantity of moisture in the atmosphere. HYPERBOLA. One of the conic sections formed by cutting a cone by a plane which is so inclined to the axis, that when produced it cuts also the opposite cone, or the cone which is the continuation of the former, on the opposite side of the vertex. HYPOTHECA. A mortgage. In the civil law, was where the thing pledged remained with the debtor. HYPOTHECATION. An authority to the master, amounting almost to a power of the absolute disposal of the ship in a foreign country; he may hypothecate not only the hull, but his freight and cargo, for necessary and urgent repairs. HYTHE. A pier or wharf to lade or unlade wares at [from the Anglo-Saxon _hyd_, coast or haven]. I. I. The third class of rating on Lloyd's books, for the comparative excellence of merchant ships. (_See_ A.) ICE-ANCHOR. A bar of round iron tapered to a point, and bent as a pot-hook; a hole is cut in the ice, the point entered, and the hawser bent to the shorter hook; by this vessels ride safely till any motion of the ice capsizes it, and then it is hauled in. The ice is usually entered by a lance, which cuts its hole easily. ICE-BEAMS. Strengtheners for whalers. (_See_ FORTIFYING.) ICEBERG. An insulated mountain of ice, whether on Arctic lands or floating in the sea. Some have been known to be aground in 120 fathoms water, and rise to the height of 150 feet above it. Cook's obtaining fresh water from floating icebergs was not a new discovery. The Hudson's Bay ships had long made use of it; and in July, 1585, Captain Davis met with ice "which melted into very good fresh water." ICE-BIRDS. Small sea-fowl in the polar regions. ICE-BLINK. A streak or stratum of lucid whiteness which appears over the ice in that part of the atmosphere adjoining the horizon, and proceeds from an extensive aggregation of ice reflecting the rays of light into the circumambient air. ICE-BOAT. A peculiar track-schuyt for the Dutch canals in winter. ICE-BOUND. A vessel so surrounded by ice as to be prevented from proceeding on her voyage. ICE-CHISEL. A large socket-chisel into which a pole is inserted, used to cut holes in the ice. ICE-CLAWS. A flat claw with two prongs spread like a can-hook; the same as a single span or claw-dog. ICE-FENDERS. Fenders of any kind, used to protect a vessel from injury by ice; usually broken spars hanging vertically where the strain is expected. ICE LANE OR VEIN. A narrow temporary channel of water in the packs or other large collections of ice. ICE-MASTER. A pilot, or man of experience, for the Arctic Sea. ICE-PLANK. _See_ SPIKE-PLANK. ICE-QUAKE. The rending crash which accompanies the breaking of floes of ice. ICE-SAW. A huge saw for cutting through ice; it is made of 2/8 to 3/8 inch plates of iron, and varies in length from 10 to 24 feet. ICE-SLUDGE. Small comminuted ice, or bay-ice broken up by the wind. ICE-TONGUE. _See_ TONGUE. ICHNOGRAPHY. A ground plot or plan of a fortification, showing the details of the construction as if cut horizontally through. ICK. An Erse or Manx term for a creek or gullet. IDLER. A general designation for all those on board a ship-of-war, who, from being liable to constant day duty, are not subjected to keep the night-watch, but must go on deck if all hands are called during the night. Surgeons, marine-officers, paymasters, and the civil department, are also thus denominated. IDOLEERS. The name by which the Dutch authorities are known in their oriental colonies, the designation being a corruption of _edle herren_. IGNORANCE. If a loss happen through the ignorance of the master of a ship, it is not considered as a peril of the sea; consequently the assurers are not liable. Nor is his ignorance of admiralty-law admissible as an excuse. IGUANA. A large lizard used for food in tropical climates. ILAND. The Saxon _ealand_ (_See_ ISLAND.) ILDE, AND ILE. Archaic terms for _island_. ILET. Lacing holes. (_See_ EYELET-HOLES.) ILLEGAL VOYAGE. (_See_ VOYAGE.) IMMER. A water-fowl (_See_ EMBER-GOOSE). The _Colymbus immer_ of Linn., the great plunger of Buffon. IMMERSION. The prismatic solid carried under water on the lee-side of a ship by its inclination.--_Centre of immersion_, the mean centre of the part immersed. (_See_ CENTRE OF CAVITY.) Astronomically, immersion means the disappearance of a heavenly body when undergoing eclipse. IMP. One length of twisted hair in a fishing-line. IMPEDIMENTA. The ancient term for the baggage of an army. IMPORT, IMPORTATION, AND IMPORTER, being exactly the reverse of _export_, _exportation_, and _exporter_, refer to those terms, and take the opposite meaning. To import is therefore to bring commodities into a country for the purpose of traffic. IMPOSSIBLE. A hateful word, generally supplanted among good seamen by "we'll try." A thing which is impossible in law, is pronounced to be all one with a thing impossible in nature. IMPOST. The tax received for such foreign merchandises as are brought into any haven within a prince's dominions. IMPREGNABLE. Said of a fortress or position supposed to be proof against any attack. IMPRESS, TO. To compel to serve. IMPRESSION. The effect produced upon any ship, place, or body of troops, by a hostile attack. IMPRESSMENT. The system and act of pressing seamen, and compelling them--under plea of state necessity--to serve in our men-of-war. IMPREST. Charge on the pay of an officer. IMPREST-MONEY. That paid on the enlistment of soldiers. IN. The state of any sails in a ship when they are furled or stowed, in opposition to _out_, which implies that they are set, or extended to assist the ship's course. Hence, _in_ is also used as an order to shorten sail, as "In topgallant-sails." It was moreover an old word for embanking and inclosing; thus Sir Nicholas L'Estrange (_Harleian MS. 6395_) speaks of him who had "the patent for _inning_ the salt marshes." IN AND OUT. A term sometimes used for the scantling of timbers, the moulding way, and particularly for those bolts that are driven into the hanging and lodging knees, drawn through the ship's sides, and termed _in-and-out bolts_. IN-BOARD. Within the ship; the opposite of _out-board_. IN-BOATS! The order to hoist the boats in-board. IN-BOW! The order to the bowman to throw in his oar, and prepare his boat-hook, previous to getting alongside. INCH. The smallest lineal measure to which a name is given; but it has many subdivisions. Also, a general name for a small coast islet on the northern shores, from the old Gaelic word. INCIDENCE, ANGLE OF. That which the direction of a ray of light, &c., makes at the point where it strikes with a line drawn perpendicularly to the surface of that body. INCLINATION. In geometry, is the mutual tendency of two lines or planes towards each other, so as to form an angle. INCLINATION OF AN ORBIT. The angle which the path of a comet or planet makes with the plane of the ecliptic. INCLINATORY NEEDLE. An old term for the _dipping-needle_ (which see). INCLINOMETER. An invention by Wales in Cook's second voyage, where particulars are given. INCOMPETENCY, OR INSUFFICIENCY, OF A MERCHANTMAN'S CREW. A bar to any claim on warrantry; as it is an implied condition in the sea-worthiness of a ship, that at sailing she must have a master of competent skill, and a crew sufficient to navigate her on the voyage. INDEMNIFICATION. A stipulated compensation for damage done. INDEMNITY. Amnesty; security against punishment. INDENTED LINE. In fortification, a connected line of works composed of faces which offer a continued series of alternate salient and re-entering angles. It is conveniently applied on the banks of a river entering a town, and was to be seen on the James river in Virginia, near Richmond, in 1864. INDENTED PARAPET. One of which the interior slope is indented with a series of vertical cavities, enabling the men stationed within them to fire across the proper front. INDENTING FOR STORES. An indispensable duty to show that every article has been actually received. INDENTURES, PAIR OF. A term for _charter-party_. INDEX. The flat bar which carries the nonius scale and index-glass of a quadrant, octant, quintant, or sextant. INDEX-ERROR. The reading of the verniers of the above-named instruments. It is the correction to be applied to the + or - reading of a vernier when the horizon and index-glasses are parallel. INDEX-GLASS. A plane speculum, or mirror of quick-silvered glass, which moves with the index, and is designed to reflect the image of the sun or other object upon the horizon glass, whence it is again reflected to the eye of the observer. INDEX-ROD. A graduated indicator. INDIAMAN. A term occasionally applied to any ship in the East India trade, but in strict parlance the large ships formerly officered by the East India Company for that trade, and generally armed. INDIAN INK. Properly Chinese; compounded of a peculiar lamp-black and gum. INDIAN OCEAN. The great Oriental Ocean. INDRAUGHT. A particular flowing of the ocean towards any contracting part of a coast or coasts, as that which sets from the Atlantic into the Straits of Gibraltar, and on other coasts of Europe and Africa. It usually applies to a strong current, apt to engender a sort of vortex. INDUCED MAGNETISM. The magnetic action of the earth, whereby every particle of soft iron in certain positions is converted into a magnet. INDULTO. The duty formerly exacted by the crown of Spain upon colonial commodities. INEQUALITY, SECULAR. A small irregularity in the motions of planets, which becomes important only after a long lapse of years. The _great inequality_ of Jupiter and Saturn is a variation of their orbital positions, caused by the disturbing action of one planet on the other. INERTIA. The passive principle by which bodies persist in a state of motion or rest, and resist as much as they are resisted. (_See_ VIS INERTIAE.) INFANTRY. Foot soldiers of the regular army; so called throughout Europe after the original Spanish "infanteria," or troops of the infanta or queen of Spain, who first developed on a large scale the importance of the arm. INFERIOR CONJUNCTION. Mercury or Venus is said to be in inferior conjunction, when it is situated in the same longitude as the sun, and between that luminary and the earth. INFERIOR PLANETS. This name, the opposite of superior, is applied to Mercury and Venus, because they revolve in orbits interior to the earth's path. INFORMATION. In admiralty courts, implies a clause introduced into a citation, intimating that in the event of a party cited not appearing, the court will proceed in his absence. INGS. An old word said to be left here by the Danes; it signifies low grounds or springy meadows near a river, or creek, liable to occasional overflowings. IN-HAULER. The rope used for hauling in the clue of a boom-sail, or jib-traveller: it is the reverse of _out-hauler_. INITIAL VELOCITY. The velocity of a projectile at the moment of discharge from a gun. INJECTION-PIPE. This is fixed in the interior of a marine steam-engine, is fitted with a cock, and communicates with the water outside: it is for the purpose of playing into the condenser while the engine is working, and creating a vacuum. INLAND SEA. Mediterranean. Implies a very large gulf surrounded by land, except at the communication with the ocean, as the Baltic, Red, and Mediterranean Seas. INLAND TRADE. That which is wholly managed at home, and the term is in contradistinction to commerce. In China it is applied to canal-trade. INLET. A term in some cases synonymous with _cove_ and _creek_ (which see), in contradistinction to outlet, when speaking of the supply and discharge of lakes and broad waters, or an opening in the land, forming a passage to any inclosed water. INNER AND OUTER TURNS. Terms applied to the passing of the reef-earings, besides its over and under turns. INNER JIB-STAY. A temporary stay lashed half-way in, on the jib-boom; it sets up with lashing-eyes at the fore top-mast head. INNER POST, OR INNER STERN-POST. The post on which the transoms are seated. An oak timber brought on and fayed at the fore-edge of the main-post, and generally continued as high as the wing-transom, to seat the other transoms upon, and strengthen the whole. (_See_ STERN-POST.) It applies to the main stern-post in steamers, the screw acting between it and the outer, on which the rudder is hung. INNINGS. Coast lands recovered from the sea by draining. INNIS. An old Gaelic term for an island, still in use. INQUIRY, COURT OF, is assembled by order of a commanding officer to inquire into matters of an intricate nature, for his information; but has no power of adjudication whatever: but too like the Star Chamber. INSHORE. The opposite of _offing_.--_Inshore tack._ Standing in from sea-ward when working to windward on a coast. INSHORED. Come to shore. INSIDE MUSTER-PAPER. A description of paper supplied from the dockyards, ruled and headed, for making ships' books. INSPECTION. The mode of working up the dead-reckoning by computed nautical tables. Also, a general examination or survey of all parts of a sea or land force by an officer of competent authority. INSTALMENT. A partial payment. INSTANCE COURT. A department of the admiralty court, governed by the civil law, the laws of Oleron, and the customs of the admiralty, modified by statute law. INSTITUTION. An establishment founded partly with a view to instruction; as the Royal United Service Institution in London. INSTRUCTIONS. _See_ PRINTED INSTRUCTIONS. INSTRUMENT. A term of extensive application among tools and weapons; but it is here introduced as an official conveyance of some right, or the record of some fact. INSUFFICIENCY OF A MERCHANTMAN'S CREW. This bars the owner's claim on the sea-worthy warrant. (_See_ INCOMPETENCY.) INSURANCE. _See_ MARINE INSURANCE. INSURED. The party who obtains the policy and pays the premium. INSURER. The party taking the risk of a policy. (_See_ UNDERWRITERS.) INTACT. Unhurt; undamaged. INTENSITY OF LIGHT. The degree of brightness of a planet or comet, expressed as a number varying with the distance of the body from the sun and earth. INTERCALARY. Any period of time interpolated in the calendar for the purpose of accommodating the mode of reckoning with the course of the sun. INTEREST POLICY. _See_ POLICY. INTERLOPER. A smuggling or forced trade vessel. As a nautical phrase it was generally applied to the "letters of marque" on the coasts of South America, or a cruiser off her admiral's limits (poaching). INTERMEDIATE SHAFT. In a steamer, is the iron crank common to both engines. INTERNAL CONTACT. This, in a transit of Mercury or Venus across the solar disc, occurs when the planet is just within the sun's margin. INTERNAL PLANKING. This is termed _ceiling_ of the ship. INTERNAL SAFETY-VALVE. A valve opening from the outside of a steamer's boiler, in order to allow air to enter the boiler when the pressure becomes too weak within. INTERROGATORIES. The practice in the prize court is, on the breaking out of a war, to prepare standing commissions for the examination of witnesses, to which certain interrogatories are annexed; to these the examination is confined. Private interrogatories are inadmissible as evidence. INTERSECTION. The point in which one line crosses another. INTERTROPICAL. The space included between the tropics on each side of the equator, making a zone of nearly 47 deg. INTERVAL. In military affairs, the lateral space between works or bodies of troops, as distinguished from distance, which is the depth or measurement in a direction from front to rear. IN THE WIND. The state of a vessel when thrown with her head into the wind, but not quite _all in the wind_ (_see_ ALL). It is figuratively used for being nearly intoxicated. INTRENCHMENT. Any work made to fortify a post against an enemy, but usually implying a ditch or trench, with a parapet. INUNDATIONS. In ancient Egypt officers estimated the case of sufferers from the inundations of the Nile. The changes of property in Bengal, by alluvion, are equally attended to. _Inundation_ is also a method of impeding the approach of an enemy, by damming up the course of a brook or river, so as to intercept the water, and set the neighbourhood afloat. In Egypt the plan was diametrically opposite; for by flooding Lake Mareotis, our gunboats were enabled greatly to annoy the French garrison at Alexandria. INVALID. A maimed or sick soldier or sailor.--_To invalid_ is to cause to retire from active service from inability. INVER. A Gaelic name, still retained in Scotland, for the month of a river. INVESTMENT. The first process of a siege, in taking measures to seize all the avenues, blocking up the garrison, and preventing relief getting into the place before the arrival of the main army with the siege-train. INVINCIBLE. A name boastfully applied both to naval and military forces, which have nevertheless been utterly vanquished. INVOICE. An account from a merchant to his factor, containing the particulars and prices of each parcel of goods in the cargo, with the amount of the freight, duties, and other charges thereon. INWARD. The opposite of _outward_ (which see). INWARD CHARGES. Pilotage and other expenses incurred in entering any port. IODINE. A substance chiefly obtained from kelp or sea-weed, extensively employed in medicine and the arts. Its vapour has a beautiful violet colour. IRIS EARS. A name applied to the shells of the Haliotis--a univalve mollusc found clinging like limpets to rocks; very abundant in Guernsey. IRISH HORSE. Old salt beef: hence the sailor's address to his salt beef-- "Salt horse, salt horse, what brought you here? You've carried turf for many a year. From Dublin quay to Ballyack You've carried turf upon your back," &c. IRISH PENNANTS. Rope-yarns hanging about on the rigging. Loose reef-points or gaskets flying about, or fag-ends of ropes. IRON-BOUND. A coast where the shores are composed of rocks which mostly rise perpendicularly from the sea, and have no anchorage near to them, therefore dangerous for vessels to borrow upon. IRON-BOUND BLOCKS. Those which are fitted with iron strops. IRON-CLAD, CASED, COATED, OR PLATED VESSEL. One covered entirely, or in special parts, with iron plates intended to resist ordinary missiles. Where parts only are so protected, of course it may be done more effectually. IRON GARTERS. A cant word for bilboes, or fetters. IRON-HORSE. The iron rail of the head; the horse of the fore-sheet or boom-sheet traveller. IRON-PLATED SHIPS. _See_ ARMOUR-CLAD. IRONS. A ship is said to be in irons when, by mismanagement, she is permitted to come up in the wind and lose her _way_; so that, having no steerage, she must either be boxed off on the former tack, or fall off on the other; for she will not cast one way or the other, without bracing in the yards. Also, _bilboes_ (which see). Also, the tools used by the caulkers for driving oakum into the seams. (_See also_ BOOM-IRONS.) IRON-SICK. The condition of vessels when the iron work becomes loose in the timbers from corrosion by gallic acid, and the speeks or sheathing nails are eaten away by rust. IRON-SIDES. Formerly a sobriquet for favourite veteran men-of-war, but latterly applied to iron and iron-clad ships. IRON WEDGES. Tapered iron wedges on the well-known mechanical principle, for splitting out blocks and for other similar purposes. IRON-WORK. A general name for all pieces of iron, of whatever figure or size, which are used in the construction and equipment of ships. IRREGULAR BASTION. One whose opposite faces or flanks do not correspond; this, as well as the constant irregularity of most real fortification, is generally the result of the local features of the neighbourhood. ISLAND. May be simply described as a tract of land entirely surrounded with water; but the whole continuous land of the Old World forms one island, and the New World another; while canals across the isthmuses of Suez and Panama would make each into two. The term properly only applies to smaller portions of land; and Australia, Madagascar, Borneo, and Britain are among the larger examples. Their materials and form are equally various, and so is their origin; some having evidently been upheaved by volcanic eruption, others are the result of accretion, and still more revealing by their strata that they were formerly attached to a neighbouring land. The sudden emergence of Sabrina, in the Atlantic, has occasioned wonder in our own day. So has that of Graham's Island, near the south coast of Sicily; and the Archipelago is daily at work. ISLAND HARBOUR. That which is protected from the violence of the sea by one or more islands or islets screening its mouth. ISLAND OF ICE. A name given to a great quantity of ice collected into one solid mass and floating upon the sea; they are often met with on the coasts of Spitzbergen, to the great danger of the shipping employed in the Greenland fishery. ISLE. A colloquial abbreviation of _island_. ISLE OF WIGHT PARSON. A cormorant. ISLET, OR ISLOT. Smaller than an island, yet larger than a key; an insular spot about a couple of miles in circuit. ISOSCELES. A triangle with only two of its sides equal. ISSUE. The act of dispensing slops, tobacco, beds, &c., to the ship's company; a distribution. ISSUE-BOOK. That which contains the record of issues to the crew, and the charges made against them. ISTHMUS. A narrow neck of land which joins a peninsula to its continent, or two islands together, or two peninsulas, without reference to size. The Isthmus of Suez alone prevents Africa from being an island, as that of Darien connects the two Americas. IURRAM. A Gaelic word signifying a boat-song, intended to regulate the strokes of the oars. Also, a song sung during any kind of work. IVIGAR. A name in our northern isles for the sea-urchin, _Echinus marinus_. IVORY GULL, OR SNOW-BIRD. The _Larus eburneus_ of Arctic seas. It has a yellowish beak, jet black legs, and plumage of a dazzling white. J. JAB, TO. To pierce fish by prodding. JABART. A northern term for a fish out of season. JABB. A peculiar net used for catching the fry of the coal-fish. JACK. In the British navy the jack is a small _union_ flag, formed by the intersection of St. George's and St. Andrew's crosses (which see), usually displayed from a staff erected on the outer end of a ship's bowsprit. In merchant ships the union is bordered with white or red. (_See_ UNION-JACK.) Also, a common term for the jack or cross-trees. Also, a young male pike, _Esox lucius_, under a foot in length. Also, a drinking vessel of half-pint contents. (_See_ BLACK-JACK.)--_Jack_, or _Jack Tar_, a familiar term for a sailor. A fore-mast man and an able seaman. It was an early term for short coats, jackets, and a sort of coat-of-mail or defensive lorica, or upper garment. JACK ADAMS. A stubborn fool. JACK AFLOAT. A sailor. Euripides used almost the same term in _floater_, for a seaman. JACKASSES. Heavy rough boats used in Newfoundland. JACKASS PENGUIN. A bird, apt while on shore to throw its head backwards, and make a strange noise, somewhat resembling the braying of an ass. JACK-BARREL. A minnow. JACK-BLOCK. A block occasionally attached to the topgallant-tie, and through which the top-gallant top-rope is rove, to sway up or strike the yard. JACK-BOOTS. Large coverings for the feet and legs, outside all, worn by fishermen. JACK CROSS-TREES. Single iron cross-trees at the head of long topgallant-masts, to support royal and skysail masts. JACKEE-JA. A Greenland canoe. JACKET. A doublet; any kind of outer coat.--_Cork jacket_, is lined with cork in pieces, in order to give it buoyancy, and yet a degree of flexibility, that the activity of the wearer may not be impeded in swimming. JACKETS. The casings of the passages by which steam is delivered into the cylinders of steam-engines. They are non-conductors of heat to check its escape. JACKETTING. A starting, or infliction of the rope's-end. JACK-HERN. A name on our southern coasts for the heron. JACKING. Taking the skin off a seal. JACK IN OFFICE. An insolent fellow in authority. JACK IN THE BASKET. A sort of wooden cap or basket on the top of a pole, to mark a sand-bank or hidden danger. JACK IN THE BOX. A very handy engine, consisting of a large wooden male screw turning in a female one, which forms the upper part of a strong wooden box, shaped like the frustum of a pyramid. It is used by means of levers passing through holes in it as a press in packing, and for other purposes. JACK IN THE BREAD-ROOM, OR JACK IN THE DUST. The purser's steward's assistant in the bread and steward's room. JACK-KNIFE. A horn-handled clasp-knife with a laniard, worn by seamen. JACKMAN. A musketeer of former times, wearing a short mail jack or jacket. JACK NASTY-FACE. A cook's assistant. JACK OF DOVER. An old sea-dish, the composition of which is now lost. Chaucer's host in rallying the cook exclaims, "And many a _Jack of Dover_ hast thou sold, That hath been twies hot and twies cold." JACK O' LANTERN. The _corpo santo_, or St. Elmo's light, is sometimes so called. JACK-PINS. A name applied to the fife-rail pins, also called _Tack-pins_. JACK ROBINSON.--_Before you could say Jack Robinson_, is a very old expression for a short time,-- "A warke it ys as easie to be doone, As tys to saye Jacke Robyson." JACK'S ALIVE. A once popular sea-port dance. JACK-SCREW. A small machine used to cant or lift weighty substances, and in stowing cotton or other elastic goods. It consists of a wooden frame containing cogged iron wheels of increasing powers. The outer one, which moves the rest, is put in motion by a winch on the outside, and is called either single or double, according to its increasing force. The pinions act upon an iron bar called the _spear_. JACK-SHARK. A common sobriquet of the _Squalus_ tribe. JACK-SHARP. A small fresh-water fish, otherwise known as _prickly-back_. JACK'S QUARTER-DECK. The deck elevation forward in some vessels, often called a top-gallant forecastle. JACK-STAFF. A short staff raised at the bowsprit-cap, upon which the union-jack is hoisted. JACK-STAYS. Ropes, battens, or iron bars placed on a yard or spar and set taut, either for bending the head of a sail to, or acting as a traveller. Frequently resorted to for the staysails, square-sail yard, &c. JACOB'S LADDER. The assemblage of shakes and short fractures, rising one above another, in a defective single-tree spar. Also, short ladders made with wooden steps and rope sides for ascending the rigging. JACOB'S STAFF, OR CROSS-STAFF. A mathematical instrument to take altitudes, consisting of a brass circle, divided into four equal parts by two lines cutting each other in the centre; at each extremity of either line is fixed a sight perpendicularly over the lines, with holes below each slit for the better discovery of distant objects. The cross is mounted on a staff or stand for use. Sometimes, instead of four sights, there are eight. JACULATOR. A fish whose chief sustenance is flies, which it secures by shooting a drop of water at them from its mouth. JAG, TO. To notch an edge irregularly.--_Jagged_, a term applied to denticulated edges, as in jagged bolts to prevent their coming out. JAGARA, OR JOGGAREE. A coarse brown sugar of India. JAGS. Splinters to a shot-hole. JAIL-BIRD. One who has been confined in prison, from the old term of _cage_ for a prison; a felon absurdly (and injuriously to the country) sentenced to serve in the navy. JALIAS. Small craft on the Arracan and Pegu coasts. JAM, TO. Anything being confined, so that it cannot be freed without trouble and force; the term is also applied to the act of confining it. To squeeze, to wedge, to press against. (_See_ JAMBING.) JAMAICA DISCIPLINE. The buccaneer regulations respecting prize shares, insisting that all prizes be divided among the captors. JAMBEAUX. Armour to protect the legs. JAMBING, OR JAMMING. The act of inclosing any object between two bodies, so as to render it immovable while they continue in that position; usually applied to a running rope, when, from pressure, it cannot travel in the blocks; the opposite of _rendering_ (which see). JAMBS. Door-posts in general; but in particular thick broad pieces of oak, fixed up endways, between which the lights of the powder magazine are fitted. JAMMED IN A CLINCH. The same as _hard up in a clinch_ (which see).--_Jammed in a clinch like Jackson_, involved in difficulty of a secondary degree, as when Jackson, after feeding for a week in the bread-room, could not escape through the scuttle. JANGADA. A sort of fishing float, or rather raft, composed of three or four long pieces of wood lashed together, used on the coasts of Peru and Brazil. The owner is called a _jangadeira_, but the term is evidently an application of _jergado_ (which see). JANGAR. A kind of pontoon constructed of two boats with a platform laid across them, used by the natives in the East Indies to convey horses, cattle, &c., across rivers. JANISSARY. A term derived from _jeni cheri_, meaning _new soldiers_, in the Turkish service. JANTOOK, OR CHUNTOCK. A Chinese officer with vice-regal powers: he of Canton was called _John Tuck_ by our seamen. JANTY, OR JAUNTY. A vessel in showy condition; dressed in flags. JAPANESE WHALE-BOAT. A long, open, and sharp rowing-boat of Japan. JARGANEE. A Manx term for small worms on the sea-shore, and used as bait. JARRING. The vibrations and tremblings occasioned in some steam-vessels by the machinery. JAVA POT. A kind of sponge of the species _Alcyonium_. JAVELS. An old term for dirty, idle fellows, wandering about quays and docks. JAW. The inner, hollowed, semicircular end of a gaff or boom, which presses against the mast; the points of the jaw are called _horns_. Also, coarse and often petulant loquacity.--_Long-jawed_ applies to a rope or cable, when by great strain it untwists, and exhibits one revolution where four were before; similar to long and short threads of the screw. JAW-BREAKERS. Hard and infrequent words. JAWING-TACKS. When a person speaks with vociferous fluency, he is said to have hauled his jawing-tacks on board. JAW-ME-DOWN. An arrogant, overbearing, and unsound loud arguer. JAW OF A BLOCK. The space in the shell where the sheave revolves. JAW-ROPE. A line attached to the horns of the jaws to prevent the gaff from coming off the mast. It is usually furnished with bull's eyes (perforated balls) to make it shift easily up or down the mast. JAYLS. The cracks and fissures of timber in seasoning. JEER-BITTS. Those to which the jeers are fastened and belayed. JEER-BLOCKS. Are twofold or threefold blocks, through which the jeer-falls are rove, and applied to hoist, suspend, or lower the main and fore yards. JEER-CAPSTAN. One placed between the fore and main masts, serving to stretch a rope, heave upon the jeers, and take the viol to. Very seldom used. It is indeed deemed the spare capstan, and is frequently housed in by sheep-pens and fowl-racks. JEERS. Answer the same purpose to the main-sail, fore-sail, and mizen, as halliards do to all inferior sails. The tye, a sort of runner, or thick rope, is the upper part of the jeers. Also, an assemblage of strong tackles by which the lower yards are hoisted up along the mast, or lowered down, as occasion requires; the former of which operations is called _swaying_, and the latter _striking_ (both of which see). JEFFERY'S GLUE. _See_ MARINE GLUE. JELBA. A large coasting-boat of the Red Sea. JELLY-FISH. A common name for the _Medusae_, soft gelatinous marine animals, belonging to the class _Acalephae_. JEMMY. A finical fellow in the usual sense, but adopted as a nautical term by the mutineers of '97, to express the _nobs_, or _heads_ of officers. Also, a handy crow-bar or lever. JEMMY DUCKS. The ship's poulterer. A sobriquet which has universally obtained in a man-of-war. JERBE. _See_ JELBA. JERGADO, OR GINGADO. An early term for a light skiff (_circa_ 1550). JERK. A sudden snatch or drawing pull; particularly applied to that given to the trigger of a lock. (_See_ SACCADE.) JERKED BEEF. Charqui. Meat cured by drying in the open air, with or without salt. Also, the name of an American coin. JERKIN. An old name for a coatee, or skirted jacket. JERKING. A quick break in a heavy roll of the sea. JERME. A trading vessel of Egypt. JERQUER. A customs officer, whose duty is to examine the land-waiters' books, and check them. JERQUING A VESSEL. A search performed by the jerquer of the customs, after a vessel is unloaded, to see that no unentered goods have been concealed. JERSEY. Fine wool, formerly called gearnsey, ganzee, or guernsey.--_Jersey frocks_, woollen frocks supplied to seamen. JETSAM, OR JETSON. In legal parlance, is the place where goods thrown overboard sink, and remain under water. Also, the goods cast into the sea. JETTISON, OR JETSEN. The act of throwing goods overboard to lighten a ship in stress of weather. The loss forms a subject for general average. JETTY, JETTEE, OR JUTTY. A name given in the royal dockyards to that part of a wharf which projects beyond the rest, but more particularly the front of a wharf, the side of which forms one of the cheeks of a dry or wet dock. Such a projection, whether of wood or stone, from the outer end of a wharf, is called a _jetty-head_. JEW-BALANCE. A Mediterranean name of the _Zygaena malleus_, or hammer-headed shark. JEWEL. The starting of a wooden bridge. Also, the pivot of a watch-wheel. JEWEL-BLOCKS. Are attached to eye-bolts on those yards where studding-sails are hoisted, and carry these sails to the extreme ends of the yards. When these jewel-blocks are removed, it is understood that there is no intention to proceed to sea, and _vice versa_. The halliards, by which the studding-sails are hoisted, are passed through the jewel-block, whence, communicating with a block on the several mast-heads, they lead downwards to the top or decks, where they may be conveniently hoisted. (_See_ SAIL.) JEWELS. _See_ JOCALIA. JEW'S-HARP. The shackle for joining a chain-cable to the anchor-ring. JIB. A large triangular sail, set on a stay, forward. It extends from the outer end of the jib-boom towards the fore top-mast head; in cutters and sloops it is on the bowsprit, and extends towards the lower mast-head. (_See_ SAIL.) The jib is a sail of great command with any side wind, in turning her head to leeward. There are other jibs, as inner jib, standing-jib, flying-jib, spindle-jib, jib of jibs, jib-topsails, &c.--_Jib_ is also used for the expression of the face, as the _cut of his jib_. Also, the arm of a crane.--_To jib_, is when, before the wind, the sail takes over to the opposite quarter; dangerous in strong breezes. (_See_ GYBING.)--_Clear away the jib!_ The order to loose it, preparatory to its being set.--_Flying-jib._ A sail set upon the flying jib-boom.--_Middle or inner jib._ A sail sometimes set on a stay secured to the middle of the jib-boom. JIB AND STAYSAIL JACK. A designation of inexperienced officers, who are troublesome to the watch by constantly calling it unnecessarily to trim, make, or shorten sail. JIBBER THE KIBBER. A cant term for a diabolical trick for decoying vessels on shore for plunder, by tying a lantern to a horse's neck, one of whose legs is checked; so that at night the motion has somewhat the appearance of a ship's light.--_Jib_ or _jibber_ means a horse that starts or shrinks; and Shakspeare uses it in the sense of a worn-out horse. JIB-BOOM. A continuation of the bowsprit forward, being a spar run out from the extremity in a similar manner to a top-mast on a lower-mast, and serving to extend the foot of the jib and the stay of the foretop-gallant-mast, the tack of the jib being lashed to it. It is usually attached to the bowsprit by means of the cap and the saddle, where a strong lashing confines it.--_Flying jib-boom._ A boom extended beyond the preceding, to which it is secured by a boom-iron and heel-lashing; to the outer end of this boom the tack of the flying-jib is hauled out, and the fore-royal-stay passes through it. JIB-FORESAIL. In cutters, schooners, &c., it is the stay-foresail. JIB-GUYS. Stout ropes which act as backstays do to a mast, by supporting the jib-boom against the pressure of its sail and the ship's motion. JIBING, OR GYBING. A corruption of _jibbing_. The act of shifting over the boom of a fore-and-aft sail from one side of the vessel to the other. By a boom-sail is meant any sail the bottom of which is extended by a boom, which has its fore-end jawed or hooked to its respective mast, so as to swing occasionally on either side of the vessel, describing an arc, of which the mast will be the centre. As the wind or the course changes, the boom and its sail are jibed to the other side of the vessel, as a door turns on its hinges. JIB OF JIBS. A sixth jib on the bowsprit, only known to flying-kite-men: the sequence being--storm, inner, outer, flying, spindle, jib of jibs. JIB-STAY. The stay on which the jib is set. JIB-TOPSAIL. A light sail set on the topmost stay of a fore-and-aft rigged vessel. JIB-TRAVELLER. An iron ring fitted to run out and in on the jib-boom, for the purpose of bringing outwards or inwards the tack, or the outer corner of the sail; to this traveller the jib-guys are lashed. JIB-TYE. A rope rove through a sheave or block on the fore-topmast head, for hoisting the jib. JIFFY. A short space of time, a moment. "In a jiffy," in an instant; equivalent with crack, trice, &c. JIG. The weight furnished with hooks, used in _jigging_ (which see). JIGGAMAREE. A mongrel makeshift man[oe]uvre. Any absurd attempt to substitute a bad contrivance for what the custom of the sea may be. JIGGER. A light tackle used to hold on the cable when it is heaved into the ship. (_See_ HOLDING-ON.) Also, a small sail rigged out on a mast and boom from the stern of a cutter, boat, &c.--_Fleet-jigger._ A term used by the man who holds on the jigger, when by its distance from the windlass it becomes necessary to _fleet_, or replace it in a proper state for action. When the man gives the above notice, another at the windlass immediately fixes his handspike between the deck and the cable, so as to jam the latter to the windlass, and prevent it from running out till the jigger is replaced on the cable near the windlass. JIGGER, CHIGRE. A very teazing sand-flea, which penetrates and breeds under the skin of the feet, but particularly at the toes. It must be removed, or it occasions dreadful sores. The operation is effected by a needle; but the sac which contains the brood must not be broken, or the whole foot would be infected, if any remained in it. JIGGERED-UP. Done up; tired out. JIGGER-MAST. In large vessels it is an additional aftermost mast; thus any sail set on the ensign-staff would be a jigger. JIGGER-TACKLE. A small tackle consisting of a double and a single block, and used by seamen on sundry occasions about the decks or aloft. JIGGING. A mode of catching fish by dropping a weighted line with several hooks set back to back amongst them, and jerking it suddenly upwards; the weight is frequently cast in the form of a small fish. Also, short pulls at a tackle fall. JILALO. A large passage-boat of Manilla, fitted with out-riggers. JILL. A fourth part of a pint measure; a seaman's daily allowance of rum, which formerly was half a pint. JIMMAL, OR JIMBLE. _See_ GIMBALS. JINGAL. A kind of long heavy musket supported about the centre of its length on a pivot, carrying a ball of from a quarter to half a pound, and generally fired by a matchlock; much used in China and the Indies. It is charged by a separate chamber, dropped into the breech and keyed. JINNY-SPINNER. One of the names for the cockroach. JIRK, TO. To cut or score the flesh of the wild hog on the inner surface, as practised by the Maroons. It is then smoked and otherwise prepared in a manner that gives the meat a fine flavour. JOB. A stipulated work. JOBATION. A private but severe lecture and reprimand. JOB CAPTAIN. One who gets a temporary appointment to a ship, whose regular commander is a member of parliament, &c. JOB-WATCH, OR HACK-WATCH, for taking astronomical sights, which saves taking the chronometer on deck or on shore to note the time. JOCALIA. An Anglo-Norman law-term signifying jewels, which, with gold and silver, were exempted in our smuggling enactments. JOCKS. Scotch seamen. JOG. The shoulder or step of the rudder. JOGGING. A protuberance on the surface of sawn wood. JOGGLE. The cubic joints of stones on piers, quays, and docks. Also, notches at the ends of paddle-beam iron-knees outside, to act as a stop to the diagonal iron-stay, which is extended between the arms of each knee. (_See_ JUGLE.) JOG-THE-LOO! A command in small vessels to work the pump-brake, or to pump briskly. JOHN. A name given to dried fish. (_See_ POOR JOHN.) JOHN BULL. The origin of this nickname is traced to a satire written in the reign of Queen Anne, by Dr. Arbuthnot, to throw ridicule on the politics of the Spanish succession. JOHN COMPANY. The former board of directors for East India affairs. JOHN DORY. A corruption of _jaune dore_, which is the colour of this fish. It is one of the _Scombridae_, _Zeus faber_. John Dory was also the name of a celebrated French pirate. JOHNNY RAW, OR JOHNNY NEWCOME. An inexperienced youngster commencing his career; also applied to landsmen in general. (_See_ RAW.) JOHNNY SHARK. A common sobriquet of the _Squalus_ tribe. JOHN-O'-GROAT'S BUCKIE. A northern name for the _Cypraea pediculus_, a small shell found on our sea-coasts. JOHN TUCK. The galley corruption of _chantuck_, or _jantook_, a Chinese viceroy, specially meaning the viceroy of Canton. JOIN, TO. To repair to a ship, and personally to enter on an official position on board her. So also the junction of one or more ships with each other. JOINER. One who is a cabinet-maker, and performs neat work as captain's joiner. JOINT. The place where any two pieces of timber or plank are united. It is also used to express the lines which are laid down in the mould-loft for shaping the timbers. JOLLY. This term is usually applied to a comely and corpulent person, but afloat it is a familiar name for a soldier.--_Tame jolly_, a militiaman; _royal jolly_, a marine. JOLLY-BOAT. A smaller boat than the cutter, but likewise clincher-built. It is generally a hack boat for small work, being about 4 feet beam to 12 feet length, with a bluff bow and very wide transom; a kind of washing-tub. (_See_ GELLYWATTE and CUTTER.) JOLLY JUMPERS. Sails above the moon-rakers. JOLLY ROGER. A pirate's flag; a white skull in a black field. JONATHAN. A name often applied to Americans in general, but really appropriate to the Quakers in America, being a corruption of John Nathan. JONK. _See_ JUNK. JORUM, OF GROG, &c. A full bowl or jug. JOURNAL. Synonymous at sea with _log-book_; it is a daily register of the ship's course and distance, the winds and weather, and a general account of whatever is of importance. In sea-journals, the day, or twenty-four hours, used to terminate at noon, because the ship's position is then generally determined by observation; but the shore account of time is now adopted afloat. In machinery, _journal_ is the bearing part of a shaft, upon which it rests on its Y's or bearings. JOURNEY-WORK. Work performed by the day. JOVIALL. Relating to the system of the planet Jupiter. JOVICENTRIC. As seen from, or having relation to, the centre of Jupiter. JOWDER. A term on our western coasts to denote a retail dealer in fish. JOWL. The head of a fish. (Also, _see_ BLOCK.)--_Cheek by jowl._ Close together. JUAN-MOOAR. The Manx and Erse term for the black-backed gull. JUBALTARE. The early English word for Gibraltar. JUDGE-ADVOCATE OF THE FLEET, OR TO THE FORCES. A legal officer whose duty it is to investigate offences previous to determining on sending them before a court-martial, and then to report on the sentence awarded. He has civil deputies in Great Britain; but officers (generally secretaries to admirals, or pursers) are appointed by the courts abroad. JUDGE-ADVOCATE, DEPUTY. An officer appointed to assist the court upon some general courts-martial for the trial of officers, seamen, and marines, accused of a breach of the articles of war. JUDGMENT. In prize matters, the sentences of foreign courts, even though such decisions be manifestly unjust, are conclusive in ours by comity. The tribunals of France are not so complacent. JUFFER. _See_ UPHROE. JUGGLE-MEER. A west-country word for a coast quagmire. JUGLE, OR JOGGLE. In ship-building, a notch in the edge of a plank to admit the narrow butt of another, as of the narrow end of a steeling-strake. JULIAN PERIOD. A period of 7980 years, dating from B.C. 4713; being the product of the numbers 15, 19, and 28 multiplied into each other, they being respectively the lengths, in Julian years, of the Indiction, Metonic Cycle, and Solar Cycle. The Julian year was a period of 365-1/4 days, which was adopted as the length of the year after the reformation of the calendar by Julius Caesar. JULIO. An Italian coin, worth about sixpence. JUMPERS. The short external duck-frock worn by sail-makers, artificers, riggers, &c., to preserve the clothing beneath. JUMP-JOINTED. When the plates of an iron vessel are flush, as in those that are carvel-built. JUNCO. _See_ PURRE. JUNGADA. A balza, or simple kind of raft, of several logs of wood, fitted with a tilt, and used on the coasts of Peru. It has a mast and sails, and by means of a rudder, not unlike a sliding keel in principle, is capable of working to windward. (_See_ GUARA.) JUNGLE. A wilderness of wood; in Bengal the word is also applied to a tract covered with long grass, which grows to an extraordinary height. Jungles are dreaded for the fevers they engender. JUNK. The Chinese junk is the largest vessel built by that nation, and at one period exceeding in tonnage any war-vessels then possessed by England. The extreme beam is one-third from the stern; it shows no stem, it being chamfered off. The bow on deck is square, over which the anchors slide fore and aft. Having no keel, and being very full at the stern, a huge rudder is suspended, which at sea is lowered below the depth of the bottom. The masts are immense, in one piece. The cane sails are lug and heavy. The hull is divided into water-tight compartments, like tanks.--_Junk_ is also any remnants or pieces of old cable, or condemned rope, cut into small portions for the purpose of making _points_, _mats_, _swabs_, _gaskets_, _sinnet_, _oakum_, and the like (which see). Also, a dense cellular tissue in the head of the sperm-whale, infiltrated with spermaceti. Also, salt beef, as tough to the teeth as bits of rope, whence the epithet. JUNKET. A long basket for catching fish.--_Junketting_, good cheer and hearty jollification. JUPITER. The longest known of the superior planets, and the largest in the solar system; it is accompanied by four satellites. JURATORY CAUTION. A process in the instance court of the admiralty, to which a party is discretionally admitted on making oath that he is unable to find sureties. JUREBASSO. A rating in former times given to a handy man, who was partly interpreter and partly purchaser of stock. JURISDICTION. Right, power, or authority which magistrates or courts have to administer justice.--_Within jurisdiction of civil powers_, as regards naval matters, is within a line drawn from headland to headland in sight of each other, and forming part of the same county. The admiralty jurisdiction is confined to three miles from the coast in civil matters, but exists wherever the flag flies at sea in criminal. JURY-MAST. A temporary or occasional mast erected in a ship in the place of one which has been carried away in a gale, battle, &c. Jury-masts are sometimes erected in a new ship to navigate her down a river, or to a neighbouring port, where her proper masts are prepared for her. Such jury-masts are simply less in dimension for a light-trimmed vessel; as a frigate would have a brig's spars. JURY-RUDDER. A contrivance, of which there are several kinds, for supplying a vessel with the means of steering when an accident has befallen the rudder. JUS PISCANDI. The right of fishing. JUWAUR. The spring-flood of the Ganges and adjacent rivers. K. KAAG. A Manx or Gaelic term for a forelock, stopper, or linch-pin. KABBELOW. Cod-fish which has been salted and hung for a few days, but not thoroughly dried. Also, a dish of cod mashed. KABOZIR. A chief or governor on the African coast. KABURNS. The old name for nippers. KAFILA. A well-known Eastern word, meaning a party with camels travelling or sojourning; but it was also applied by our early voyagers to convoys of merchant ships. KAIA. An old term for a quay or wharf. KAIQUE. _See_ CAIQUE. KALBAZ, OR HALBAZ. Pronounced _kalva_; one of the best Turkish delicacies, composed of honey, must, and almonds, beat up together. KALENDAR. Time accommodated to the uses of life. (_See_ ALMANAC.) KALI. _Salsola kali_, a marine plant, generally burned to supply soda for the glass manufactories. Sub-carbonate of potass. KAMSIN. A south-westerly wind which blows over Egypt in March and April, generally not more than three successive days at a time. Its name signifies the wind of fifty days, not as blowing for such a period, but because it only occurs during fifty days of March and April. KANJIA. A passage-boat of the Nile. KANNA. A name for _ginseng_ (which see). KARAVALLA. _See_ CARAVEL. KARBATZ. A common boat of Lapland. KAT. A timber vessel used on the northern coasts of England. KATABATHRA. Subterraneous passages in certain mountains in Greece, through which the superfluous waters are discharged. KATAN. A Japanese sword, otherwise _cattan_. KATTAN. A corruption of _yataghan_ (which see). KATTY. _See_ CATTY. KAULE. A license for trade, given by the authorities in India to our early voyagers. KAVA. A beverage, in the South Sea Islands, made by steeping the _Piper inebrians_ in water. KAVER. A word used in the Hebrides for a gentle breeze. KAY, OR KEY [probably from the Dutch _kaayen_, to haul]. A place to which ships are hauled. Knoll or head of a shoal--_kaya_, Malay. KAYAK. A fishing-boat in all the north polar countries; most likely a corrupted form of the eastern _kaique_ by our early voyagers. KAYNARD. A term of reproach amongst our early voyagers, probably from _canis_. KAYU-PUTIH, OR CAJEPUTI OIL. From the Malay words _kayu_, wood; and _putih_, oil; the useful oil obtained from the _Melaleuca leucadendron_. KAZIE. A Shetland fishing-boat. K.C.B. Sigla of Knight Commander of the most honourable military order of the Bath. KEAVIE. A coast name for a species of crab that devours cuttle-fish greedily. KEAVIE-CLEEK. In the north a crooked piece of iron for catching crabs. KECKLING, OR CACKLING. Is covering a cable spirally (in opposition to _rounding_, which is close) with three-inch old rope to protect it from chafe in the hawse-hole. KEDELS. _See_ KIDDLES. KEDGE, OR KEDGER. A small anchor used to keep a ship steady and clear from her bower-anchor while she rides in harbour, particularly at the turn of the tide. The kedge-anchors are also used to warp a ship from one part of a harbour to another. They are generally furnished with an iron stock, which is easily displaced for the convenience of stowing. The old English word _kedge_ signified brisk, and they are generally run in to a quick step. (_See_ ANCHOR, WARP.)--_To kedge._ To warp a ship ahead, though the tide be contrary, by means of the kedge-anchor and hawser. KEDGER. A mean fellow, more properly _cadger_; one in everybody's mess, but in no one's watch. An old term for a fisherman. KEDGE-ROPE. The rope which belongs to the kedge-anchor, and restrains the vessel from driving over her bower-anchor. KEDGING. The operation of tide-working in a narrow channel or river, by kedge-hauling. KEEL. The lowest and principal timber of a ship, running fore and aft its whole length, and supporting the frame like the backbone in quadrupeds; it is usually first laid on the blocks in building, being the base of the superstructure. Accordingly, the stem and stern-posts are, in some measure, a continuation of the keel, and serve to connect the extremities of the sides by transoms, as the keel forms and unites the bottom by timbers. The keel is generally composed of several thick pieces placed lengthways, which, after being scarphed together, are bolted and clinched upon the upper side. In iron vessels the keel is formed of one or more plates of iron, having a concave curve, or limber channel, along its upper surface.--_To give the keel_, is to careen.--_Keel_ formerly meant a vessel; so many "keels struck the sands." Also, a low flat-bottomed vessel used on the Tyne to carry coals (21 tons 4 cwt.) down from Newcastle for loading the colliers; hence the latter are said to carry so many keels of coals. [Anglo-Saxon _ceol_, a small bark.]--_False keel._ A fir keel-piece bolted to the bottom of the keel, to assist stability and make a ship hold a better wind. It is temporary, being pinned by stake-bolts with spear-points; so when a vessel grounds, this frequently, being of fir or Canada elm, floats and comes up alongside.--_Rabbets of the keel._ The furrow, which is continued up stem and stern-post, into which the garboard and other streaks fay. The butts take into the gripe ahead, or after-deadwood and stern-post abaft.--_Rank keel._ A very deep keel, one calculated to keep the ship from rolling heavily.--_Upon an even keel._ The position of a ship when her keel is parallel to the plane of the horizon, so that she is equally deep in the water at both ends. KEELAGE. A local duty charged on all vessels coming into a harbour. KEEL-BLOCKS. Short log ends of timbers on which the keel of a vessel rests while building or repairing, affording access to work beneath. KEEL-DEETERS. The wives and daughters of keelmen, who sweep and clean the keels, having the sweepings of small coal for their trouble. KEEL-HAULING. A severe punishment formerly inflicted for various offences, especially in the Dutch navy. The culprit was suspended by a rope from one fore yard-arm attached to his back, with a weight upon his legs, and having another rope fastened to him, leading under the ship's bottom, and through a block at its opposite yard-arm; he was then let fall into the sea, when, passing under the ship's bottom, he was hoisted up on the opposite side of the vessel to the other yard-arm. Aptly described as "under-going a great hard-ship." KEELING. Rolling on her keel. Also, a sort of cod-fish; some restrict the term to the _Gadus morhua_, or large cod. KEEL LEG OR HOOK. Means any anchor; as, "she has come to a keelock." KEELMEN. A rough and hardy body of men, who work the _keels_ of Newcastle. Sometimes termed keel-bullies. They are recognized as mariners in various statutes. KEEL-PIECES. The parts of the keel which are of large timber. KEEL-RAKE. Synonymous with _keel-haul_. _See_ KEEL-HAULING. KEEL-ROPE. A coarse rope formerly used for cleaning the limber-holes. KEELS. An old British name for long vessels--formerly written _ceol_ and _cyulis_. Verstegan informs us that the Saxons came over in three large ships, styled by themselves _keeles_. KEELSON, OR KELSON. An internal keel, laid upon the middle of the floor-timbers, immediately over the keel, and serving to bind all together by means of long bolts driven from without, and clinched on the upper side of the keelson. The main keelson, in order to fit with more security upon the floor-timbers, is notched opposite to each of them, and there secured by spike-nails. The pieces of which it is formed are usually less in breadth and thickness than those of the keel. KEELSON-RIDER. _See_ FALSE KELSON. KEEL-STAPLES. Generally made of copper, from six to twelve inches long, with a jagged hook to each end. They are driven into the sides of the main and false keels to fasten them. KEEP. A strong donjon or tower in the middle of a castle, usually the last resort of its garrison in a siege. Also, a reservoir for fish by the side of a river.--_To keep_, a term used on several occasions in navigation; as, "_Keep her away_," alter the ship's course to leeward, by sailing further off the wind. The reverse is, "_Keep your wind, keep your luff_," close to the wind. KEEP A GOOD HOLD OF THE LAND. Is to hug it as near as it can safely be done. KEEP HER OWN. Not to fall off; not driven back by tide. KEEPING A GOOD OFFING. To keep well off shore while under sail, so as to be clear of danger should the wind suddenly shift and blow towards the shore. KEEPING A WATCH. To have charge of the deck. Also, the act of being on watch-duty. KEEPING FULL FOR STAYS. A necessary precaution to give the sails full force, in aid of the rudder when going about. KEEPING HER WAY. The force of steady motion through the water, continued after the power which gave it has varied or diminished. KEEPING THE SEA. The term formerly used when orders were issued for the array of the inhabitants of the sea-coasts. KEEP OFF. To fall to a distance from the shore, or a ship, &c. (_See_ OFFING.) KEEP THE LAND ABOARD. Is to sail along it, or within sight, as much as possible, or as close as danger will permit. KEEP YOUR LUFF. An order to the helmsman to keep the ship close to the wind, _i.e._ sailing with a course as near as possible to the direction from which the wind is coming. (_See_ CLOSE-HAULED.) KEG. A small cask, of no fixed contents. Used familiarly for taking offence, as _to keg_, is to irritate.--_To carry the keg._ To continue; originally a smuggler's phrase. KEGGED. Feeling affronted or jeered at. KELDS. The still parts of a river, which have an oily smoothness while the rest of the water is ruffled. KELF. The incision made in a tree by the axe when felling it. KELING. A large kind of cod. Thus in Havelok:-- "Keling he tok, and tumberel, Hering, and the makerel." KELKS. The milt or roe of fish. KELLAGH. The Erse term for a wooden anchor with a stone in it, but in later times is applied to any grapnel or small anchor. KELP. _Salsola kali_; the ashes produced by the combustion of various marine algae, and used in obtaining iodine, soda, &c. KELPIE. A mischievous sea-sprite, supposed to haunt the fords and ferries of the northern coasts of Great Britain, especially in storms. KELT. A salmon that has been spawning; a foul fish. KELTER. Ships and men are said to be in prime kelter when in fine order and well-rigged. KEMP. An old term for a soldier, camper, or camp man. Also a kind of eel. KEMSTOCK. An old term for capstan. KEN, TO. Ang.-Sax. descrying, as Shakspeare in _Henry VI._:-- "And far as I could ken thy chalky cliffs." --_Ken_, a speck, a striking object or mark. KENNETS. Large cleats. (_See_ KEVELS.) Also, a coarse Welsh cloth of commerce; see statute 33 Henry VIII. c. 3. KENNING BY KENNING. A mode of increasing wages formerly, according to whaling law, by seeing how a man performed his duty. KENNING-GLASS. A hand spy-glass or telescope. KEN-SPECKLED. Conspicuous; having distinct marks. KENTLEDGE. Pigs of iron cast for permanent ballast, laid over the kelson-plates, or if in the limbers, then called limber-kentledge. KENTLEDGE GOODS. In lieu of ballast. KENT-PURCHASE. A misspelling of _cant_-purchase, or one used to turn a whale round during the operation of _flensing_. KEPLER'S LAWS. Three famous laws of nature detected by Kepler early in the seventeenth century:--1. The primary planets revolve about the sun in ellipses, having that luminary in one of the foci. 2. The planets describe about the sun equal areas in equal times. 3. The squares of the periodic times of the planets are to each other as the cubes of their mean distances from the sun. KEPLING. _See_ CAPLIN. KERFE. The furrow or slit made by the saw in dividing timber. KERLANGUISHES. The swift-sailing boats of the Bosphorus. The name signifies swallows. KERMES. A little red gall, occasioned by the puncture of the _Coccus ilicis_ on the leaves of the _Quercus coccifera_, or Kermes oak; an article of commerce from Spain, used in dyeing. KERNEL. Corrupted from _crenelle_; the holes in a battlement made for the purpose of shooting arrows and small shot. KERNES. Light-armed Irish foot soldiers of low degree, who cleared the way for the heavy _gallow-glasses_. KERS. An Anglo-Saxon word for water-cresses. KERT. An old spelling for _chart_. KERVEL. _See_ CARVEL. KETCH. A vessel of the galliot order, equipped with two masts--viz. the main and mizen masts--usually from 100 to 250 tons burden. Ketches were principally used as yachts for conveying great personages from one place to another. The peculiarity of this rig, affording so much space before the main-mast, and at the greatest beam, caused them to be used for mortar-vessels, hence--_Bomb-ketches_, which are built remarkably strong, with a greater number of riders than any other vessel of war, as requisite to sustain the violent shock produced by the discharge of their mortars. (_See_ BOMB-VESSEL, MORTAR, and SHELL.) KETERINS. Marauders who formerly infested the Irish coast and channel. KETOS, OR CETUS. An ancient ship of large dimensions. KETTLE. The brass or metal box of a compass. KETTLE-BOTTOM. A name applied to a ship with a flat floor. KETTLE-NET. A net used in taking mackerel. KETTLE OF FISH. To have made a pretty kettle of fish of it, implies a perplexity in judgment. KEVEL-HEADS. The ends of the top timbers, which, rising above the gunwale, serve to belay the ropes, or to be used as kevels. KEVELING. A coast name for the skate. KEVELS, OR CAVILS. Large cleats, or also pieces of oak passing through a mortice in the rail, and answer the purpose of timber-heads for belaying ropes to. KEY. In ship-building, means a dry piece of oak or elm, cut tapering, to drive into scarphs that have hook-butts, to wedge deck-planks, or to join any pieces of wood tightly to each other. Iron forelocks. KEY, OR CAY [derived from the Spanish _cayos_, rocks]. What in later years have been so termed will be found in the old Spanish charts as cayos. The term was introduced to us by the buccaneers as small insular spots with a scant vegetation; without the latter they are merely termed sand-banks. Key is especially used in the West Indies, and often applied to the smaller coral shoals produced by zoophytes. KEY, OR QUAY. A long wharf, usually built of stone, by the side of a harbour, and having posts and rings, cranes, and store-houses, for the convenience of merchant ships. KEYAGE, OR QUAYAGE. Money paid for landing goods at a key or quay. The same as _wharfage_. KEYLE. (_See_ KEEL.) The vessel of that name. KEY-MODEL. In ship-building, a model formed by pieces of board laid on each other horizontally. These boards, being all shaped from the lines on the paper, when put together and fairly adjusted, present the true form of the proposed ship. KEY OF THE RUDDER. (_See_ WOOD-LOCKS.) In machinery, applies to wedges, forelocks, &c. KHALISHEES. Native Indian sailors. KHAVIAR. _See_ CAVIARE. KHIZR. The patron deity of the sea in the East Indies, to whom small boats, called _beera_, are annually sacrificed on the shores and rivers. KIBE. A flaw produced in the bore of a gun by a shot striking against it. KIBLINGS. Parts of a small fish used for bait on the banks of Newfoundland. KICK. The springing back of a musket when fired. Also, the violent recoil by which a carronade is often thrown off the slide of its carriage. A comparison of excellence or novelty; the very kick. KICKSHAW. Applied to French cookery, or unsubstantial trifles. KICK THE BUCKET, TO. To expire; an inconsiderate phrase for dying. KICK UP A DUST, TO. To create a row or disturbance. KID. A presuming man.--_Kiddy fellow_, neat in his dress. Also, a compartment in some fishing-vessels, wherein the fish are thrown as they are caught. Also, a small wooden tub for grog, with two ears; or generally for a mess utensil of that kind. (_See_ KIT.) KIDDLES. Stakes whereby the free passage of boats and vessels is hindered. Also, temporary open weirs for catching fish. KIDLEYWINK. A low beershop in our western ports. KIDNAP, TO. To crimp or carry off by artifice. KIDNEY. Men of the same kidney, _i.e._ of a similar disposition. KIFTIS. The large passage-boats of India, fitted with cabins on each side from stem to stern. KIHAIA. An officer of Turkish ports in superintendence of customs, &c.; often deputy-governor. KILDERKIN. A vessel containing the eighth part of a hogshead. KILE. _See_ KYLE. KILL. A channel or stream, as Cats-kill, Schuylkill, &c. KILL-DEVIL. New rum, from its pernicious effects. KILLER. A name for the grampus, _Orca gladiator_, given on account of the ferocity with which it attacks and destroys whales, seals, and other marine animals. (_See_ GRAMPUS.) KILLESE. The groove in a cross-bow. KILLING-OFF. Striking the names of dead officers from the navy list by a _coup de plume_. KILLOCK. A small anchor. Flue of an anchor. (_See_ KELLAGH.) KILLY-LEEPIE. A name on our northern shores for the _Tringa hypoleucos_ or common sand-piper. KILN. The dockyard building wherein planks are steamed for the purpose of bending them to round the extremities of a ship. KIN. _See_ KINN. KING ARTHUR. A game played on board ship in warm climates, in which a person, grotesquely personating King Arthur, is drenched with buckets of water until he can, by making one of his persecutors smile or laugh, change places with him. KING-CRAB. The _Limulus polyphemus_ of the West Indies. KING-FISH. The _Zeus luna_. Carteret took one at Masafuero 5-1/2 feet long, and weighing 87 lbs. Also, the _Scomber maximus_ of the West Indies. KING-FISHER. The _Alcedo ispida_; a small bird of brilliant plumage frequenting rivers and brooks, and feeding upon fish, which it catches with great dexterity. (_See_ HALCYON.) KING JOHN'S MEN. The Adullamites of the navy. KING'S BARGAIN: GOOD OR BAD; said of a seaman according to his activity and merit, or sloth and demerit. KING'S BENCHER. The busiest of the galley orators: also galley-skulkers. KING'S HARD BARGAIN. A useless fellow, who is not worth his hire. KING'S LETTER MEN. An extinct class of officers, of similar rank with midshipmen. The royal letter was a kind of promise that if they conducted themselves well, they should be promoted to the rank of lieutenant. KING'S OWN. All the articles supplied from the royal magazines, and marked with the broad arrow. Salt beef or junk. KING'S PARADE. A name given to the quarter-deck of a man-of-war, which is customarily saluted by touching the hat when stepping on it. KINK. An accidental curling, twist, or doubling turn in a cable or rope, occasioned by its being very stiff, or close laid, or by being drawn too hastily out of the coil or tier in which it was coiled. (_See_ COILING.)--_To kink._ To twist. KINKLINGS. A coast name for periwinkles. KINN. From the Gaelic word for head; meaning, in local names, a hill or promontory. KINTLE. A dozen of anything. Remotely corrupted from _quintal_. KINTLIDGE. A term for iron-ballast. (_See_ KENTLEDGE.) KIOCK, OR BLUE-BACK. An alosa fish, used by the American and other fishermen as a bait for mackerel. KIOSK. A pavilion on the poop of some Turkish vessels. KIPLIN. The more perishable parts of the cod-fish, cured separately from the body. KIPPAGE. An old term for equipage, or ship's company. KIPPER. Salmon in the act of spawning; also, the male fish, and especially beaked fish. Kipper is also applied to salmon which has undergone the process of _kippering_ (which see). KIPPERING. A method of curing fish in which salt is little used, but mainly sugar, pepper, and drying in the sun, and occasionally some smoke. Salmon thus treated is considered a dainty, though the cure is far less lasting than with salt. KIPPER-TIME. The time during which the statutes prohibit the taking of salmon. KISMISSES. The raisins issued in India, resembling the sultanas of the Levant. The word is derived from the Turkish. They seldom have seeds. KIST. A word still in use in the north for chest. KIT. A small wooden pail or bucket, wherewith boats are baled out; generally with an ear. (_See_ KID.) Also, a contemptuous term for total; as, the whole kit of them. KITT, OR KIT. An officer's outfit. Also, a term among soldiers and marines to express the complement of regimental necessaries, which they are obliged to keep in repair. Also, a seaman's _wardrobe_. KITTIWAKE. A species of gull of the northern seas; so called from its peculiar cry: the _Larus tridactylus_. KITTY-WITCH. A small kind of crab on the east coast. KLEG. The fish _Gadus barbatus_. KLEPTES. The pirates of the Archipelago; literally the Greek for robbers. KLICK-HOOKS. Large hooks for catching salmon in the daytime. KLINKER. A flat-bottomed lighter or praam of Sweden and Denmark. KLINKETS. Small grating-gates, made through palisades for sallies. KLIPPEN. The German for cliffs; in use in the Baltic.--_Blinde Klippen_, reefs of rocks under water. KLOSH. Seamen of Denmark, Norway, and Sweden. KNAGGY. Crotchety; sour-tempered. KNAGS. Points of rocks. Also, hard knots in wood. KNAP [from the Anglo-Saxon _cnaep_, a protuberance]. The top of a hill. Also, a blow or correction, as "you'll knap it," for some misdeed. KNAPSACK. A light water-proof case fitted to the back, in which the foot-soldier carries his necessaries on a march. KNARRS. Knots in spars. (_See_ GNARRE.) KNECK. The twisting of rope or cable as it is veering out. KNEE. Naturally grown timber, or bars of iron, bent to a right angle, or to fit the surfaces, and to secure bodies firmly together, as hanging knees secure the deck-beams to the sides. They are divided into _hanging-knees_, _diagonal hanging-knees_, _lodging-knees or deck-beam knees_, _transom-knees_, _helm-post transom-knees_, _wing transom-knees_ (which see). KNEE OF THE HEAD. A large flat piece of timber, fixed edgeways, and fayed upon the fore-part of a ship's stem, supporting the ornamental figure. (_See_ HEAD.) Besides which, this piece is otherwise useful as serving to secure the boom or bumkin, by which the fore-tack is extended to windward, and by its great breadth preventing the ship from falling to leeward, when close-hauled, so much as she would otherwise be liable to do. It also affords security to the bowsprit by increasing the angle of the bobstay, so as to make it act more perpendicularly on the bowsprit. The _knee of the head_ is a phrase peculiar to shipwrights; by seamen it is called the _cut-water_ (which see). KNEES. _Dagger-knees_ are those which are fixed rather obliquely to avoid an adjacent gun-port, or where, from the vicinity of the next beam, there is not space for the arms of two lodging-knees.--_Lodging-knees_ are fixed horizontally in the ship's frame, having one arm bolted to the beam, and the other across two or three of the timbers.--_Standard-knees_ are those which, being upon a deck, have one arm bolted down to it, and the other pointing upwards secured to the ship's side; such also, are the bits and channels. KNEE-TIMBER. That sort of crooked timber which forms at its back or elbow an angle of from 24 deg. to 45 deg.; but the more acute this angle is, the more valuable is the timber on that account. Used for knees, rising floors, and crutches. Same as _raking-knees_. KNETTAR. A string used to tie the mouth of a sack. KNIFE. An old name for a dagger: thus Lady Macbeth-- "That my keen knife see not the wound it makes." KNIGHT-HEADS. Two large oak timbers, one on each side of the stem, rising up sufficiently above it to support the bowsprit, which is fixed between them. The term is synonymous with _bollard timbers_.--_Knight-heads_ also formerly denoted in many merchant ships, two strong frames of timber fixed on the main-deck, a little behind the fore-mast, which supported the ends of the windlass. They were frequently called the _bitts_, and then their upper parts only were denominated the knight-heads, from having been embellished with a carved head. (_See_ WINDLASS.) Also, a name formerly given to the lower jear-blocks, which were then no other than bitts, containing several sheaves, and nearly resembling our present topsail-sheet bitts. KNIGHTHOOD. An institution by princes, either for the defence of religion, or as marks of honour on officers who have distinguished themselves by their valour and address. This dignity being personal, dies with the individual so honoured. The initials of our own orders are:--K.G., Knight of the Garter; K.T., Knight of the Thistle; K.S.P., Knight of St. Patrick; G.C.B., Grand Cross of the Bath; K.C.B., Knight Commander of the Bath; G.C.H., Knight Grand Cross of the Hanoverian Guelphic Order; K.H., Knight of the Hanoverian Guelphic Order; G.C.M.G., Grand Cross of St. Michael and George; E.S.I., Most Exalted Star of India. The principal foreign orders worn by our navy are those of Hanover, St. Ferdinand and Merit, the Tower and Sword, Legion of Honour, Maria Theresa, St. Bento d'Avis, Cross of Charles III., San Fernando, St. Louis, St. Vladimir, St. Anne of Russia, Red Eagle of Prussia, Redeemer of Greece, Medjidie of Turkey, Leopold of Austria, Iron Crown of Austria, William of the Netherlands. KNIGHTS. Two short thick pieces of wood, formerly carved like a man's head, having four sheaves in each, one of them abaft the fore-mast, called _fore-knight_, and the other abaft the main-mast, called _main-knight_. KNITTLE. _See_ NETTLES. KNOB, OR KNOBBE. An officer; perhaps from the Scotch term _knabbie_, the lower class of gentry. KNOCKER. A peculiar and fetid species of West Indian cockroach, so called on account of the knocking noise they make in the night. KNOCK OFF WORK AND CARRY DEALS. A term used to deride the idea of any work, however light, being relaxation; just as giving up taking in heavy beams of timber and being set to carry deals, is not really knocking off work. KNOLL. The top of a rounded hill; the head of a bank, or the most elevated part of a submarine shoal. [Perhaps derived from _nowl_, a provincialism for head.] KNOPP. _See_ KNAP. KNOT. A large knob formed on the extremity of a rope, generally by untwisting its ends, and interweaving them regularly among each other; of these there are several sorts, differing in form, size, and name, as diamond knot, kop knot, overhand knot, reef knot, shroud knot, stopper knot, single wall knot, double wall knot. The bowline knot is so firmly made, and fastened to the cringles of the sails, that they must break, or the sails split, before it will slip. (_See_ RUNNING BOWLINE.) The sheepshank knot serves to shorten a rope without cutting it, and may be presently loosened. The wall-knot is so made with the lays of a rope that it cannot slip, and serves for sheets, tacks, and stoppers. Knots are generally used to act as a button, in preventing the end of a rope from slipping through the hole of a dead-eye, or through the turns of a laniard, by which they are sometimes made fast to other ropes.--_Knot_ also implies a division on the log line, bearing a similar proportion to a mile, which half a minute does to an hour; that is, it is 1/120 of a mile; hence we say, the ship was going 8 knots, signifying 8 miles per hour. Indeed, in nautical parlance, the words knot and mile are synonyms, alluding to the geographical mile of 60' to a degree of latitude. KNOWL. A term commonly given to the summits of elevated lands in the west of England, therefore probably the same as _knoll_. KNOWLEDGE. In admiralty law, opposed to ignorance, and the want of which is liable to heavy penalty. KNUCKLE. A sudden angle made on some timbers by a quick reverse of shape, such as the knuckles of the counter-timbers. KNUCKLE-RAILS. Those mouldings which are placed at the knuckles of the stern-timbers. KNUCKLE-TIMBERS. The top-timbers in the fore-body, the heads of which stand perpendicular, and form an angle with the flare or hollow of the top-side. KNUCKLE-UNDER. Obey your superior's order; give way to circumstances. KNURRT. Stunted; not freely grown. KOFF. A large Dutch coasting trader, fitted with two masts, and sails set with sprits. KOMETA. A captain formerly elected in the Spanish navy by twelve experienced navigators. KOOLIE, OR COOLIE. An Indian day-labourer and porter. KOOND. A large cistern at a watering-place in India. KOPEK. A Russian copper coin, 100 of which make a rouble; in value nearly a halfpenny, and named from _kopea_, a spear, because formerly stamped with St. George spearing the dragon. KOROCORA. A broad-beamed Molucca vessel, with high stem and stern, and an out-rigger. It is common among the Malay islands. KOTA. An excellent turpentine procured in India. KOUPANG. A gold coin of Japan and the Moluccas, of various value, from 25 to 44 shillings. KOWDIE. The New Zealand pine spars. KRABLA. A Russian vessel, usually from Archangel, fitted for killing the whale, walrus, and other Arctic quarry. KRAKEN. The fictitious sea-monster of Norway. KRANG. The body of a whale when divested of its blubber, and therefore abandoned by the whalers. KRAYER. A small vessel, but perhaps larger than the cogge, being thus mentioned in the _Morte Arthure_-- "Be thanne cogge appone cogge, krayers and other." KREE, TO. A north-country word: to beat, or bruise. KREEL. A framework of timber for the catching of fish, especially salmon. Also a crab-pot, made of osiers, on the principal of a wire mouse-trap. Also, a sportsman's fishing basket. KRENNEL. The smaller cringle for bowline bridles, &c. KRINGLE, TO. To dry and shrivel up. Also a form of _cringle_ (which see). KRIS. The formidable dagger used by the Malays. KROO-MEN, OR CREW-MEN. Fishmen. A tribe of African negroes inhabiting Cape Palmas, Krou-settra, and Settra-krou, subjects of Great Britain, and cannot be made slaves; they are specially employed in wooding and watering where hazardous to European constitutions. KUB-HOUSE, OR CUBBOOS. _See_ CABOOSE. KYAR. Cordage made in India from the fibres which envelope the cocoa nut, and having the advantage of elasticity and buoyancy, makes capital cables for country ships. (_See_ COIR.) KYDLE. A dam in a river for taking fish-- "Fishes love soote smell; also it is trewe Thei love not old kydles as thei doe the newe." KYLE. A bay, or arm of the sea, on our northern shores, as the Kyles of Bute, &c. KYNTALL. An old form of _quintal_ (which see). L. L. The three L's were formerly vaunted by seamen who despised the use of nautical astronomy; viz. lead, latitude, and look-out, all of them admirable in their way. Dr. or Captain Halley added the fourth L--the greatly desired longitude. LAAS. An obsolete term for an illegal net or snare. LABARUM. A standard in early days. LABBER, TO. To struggle in water, as a fish when caught. To splash. LABOUR. In the relative mechanical efforts of the human body labouring in various posture, 682-1/3 have been given for the rowing effort, 476 for the effort at a winch, and 209-1/3 for the effort at a pump. LABOURING. The act of a ship's working, pitching, or rolling heavily, in a turbulent sea, by which the masts, and even the hull, are greatly endangered. LABOURSOME. Said of a ship which is subject to roll and pitch violently in a heavy sea, either from some defect in her construction, or improper stowage of her hold. LACE, TO. To apply a bonnet by lacing it to a sail. Also, to beat or punish with a rattan or rope's-end. Also, the trimmings of uniforms. LACHES. In law, loose practice, or where parties let matters sleep for above seven years, when by applying to the admiralty court they might have compelled the production of an account. LACING. Rope or cord used to lace a sail to a gaff, or a bonnet to a sail. Also, one of the principal pieces that compose the knee of the head, running up as high as the top of the hair-bracket. Also, a piece of compass or knee timber, fayed to the back of the figure-head and the knee of the head, and bolted to each. LACUSTRINE. Belonging or referring to a lake. LADDER. The _accommodation ladder_ is a sort of light staircase occasionally fixed on the gangway. It is furnished with rails and man-ropes; the lower end of it is kept at a proper distance from the ship's side by iron bars or braces to render it more convenient. (_See_ GANGWAY.)--_Forecastle-ladder_ and _hold-ladder_, for getting into or out of those parts of a ship.--_Jacob's ladder_, abaft top-gallant masts, where no ratlines are provided.--_Quarter_ or _stern ladders_. Two ladders of rope, suspended from the right and left side of a ship's stern, whereby to get into the boats which are moored astern. LADDER-WAYS. The hatchways, scuttles or other openings in the decks, wherein the ladders are placed. LADE. Anglo-Saxon _laedan_, to pour out. The mouth of a channel or drain. To _lade_ a boat, is to throw water out. LADE-GORN, OR LADE-PAIL. A bucket with a long handle to lade water with. LADEN. The state of a ship when charged with materials equal to her capacity. If the goods be heavy, her burden is determined by weight; but if light, she carries as much as she can conveniently stow. A ton in measure is estimated at 2000 lbs. in weight; a vessel of 200 tons ought therefore to carry a weight equal to 400,000 lbs.; but if she cannot float high enough with as great a quantity of it as her hold will contain, then a diminution of it becomes necessary. Vessels carry heavy goods by the ton of 20 cwt., but lighter goods by a ton of cubic feet, which varies according to the custom of the port; in London it is 40, in India from 50 to 52, depending on the goods. Vessels can carry (not safely) twice their tonnage. LADEN IN BULK. A cargo neither in casks, bales, nor cases, but lying loose in the hold, only defended from wet by mats and dunnage. Such are usually cargoes of salt, corn, &c. LADIA. An unwieldy boat in Russia, for transporting the produce of the interior. LADIE'S LADDER. Shrouds rattled too closely. LADING. A vessel's cargo. LADLE, FOR A GUN. An instrument for charging with loose powder; formed of a cylindrical sheet of copper-tube fitted to the end of a long staff.--_Paying-ladle._ An iron ladle with a long channelled spout opposite to the handle; it is used to pour melted pitch into the seams. LADRON. A term for thief, adopted from the Spanish. LADRONE SHIP. Literally a pirate, but it is the usual epithet applied by the Chinese to a man-of-war. LADY OF THE GUN-ROOM. A gunner's mate, who takes charge of the after-scuttle, where gunners' stores are kept. LAGAN, OR LAGAM. Anglo-Saxon _liggan_. A term in derelict law for goods which are sunk, with a buoy attached, that they may be recovered. Also, things found at the bottom of the sea. Ponderous articles which sink with the ship in wreck. LAGGERS. On canals, men who lie on their backs on the top of the lading, and pushing against the bridges and tunnels pass the boats through. Also, a transported convict; a lazy fellow.--_To lag._ To loiter. LAGGIN. The end of the stave outside a cask or tub. LAGOON. An inland broad expanse of salt water, usually shallow, and connected with the sea by one or more channels, or washes over the reef. LAGOON ISLANDS. Those produced by coral animals; they are of various shapes, belted with coral, frequently with channels by which ships may enter, and lie safely inside. They are often studded with the cocoa-nut palm. (_See_ ATOLLS.) LAGUNES. The shallows which extend round Venice; their depth between the city and the mainland is 3 to 6 feet in general; they are occasioned by the quantities of sand carried down by the rivers which descend from the Alps, and fall into the Adriatic along its north-western shores. LAG-WOOD. The larger sticks from the head of an oak-tree when felled. LAID. A fisherman's name for the pollack. Also, a term in rope-making, the twist being the lay; single-laid, is one strand; hawser-laid, three strands twisted into a rope; cablet-laid, three ropes laid together; this is also termed water-laid. LAID ABACK. _See_ ABACK. LAID TO. A term used sometimes for _hove to_, but when a vessel lays to the sails are kept full. As in a gale of wind, under staysails, or close reefs, &c. LAID UP. A vessel dismantled and moored in a harbour, either for want of employment, or as unfit for further service. LAKE. A large inland expanse of water, with or without communication with the sea. A lake, strictly considered, has no visible affluent or effluent; but many of the loughs of Ireland, and lochs of Scotland, partake of the nature of havens or gulfs. Moreover, some lakes have affluents without outlets, and others have an outlet without any visible affluent; therein differing from lagoons and ponds. The water of lakes entirely encompassed by land is sometimes _salt_; that communicating with the sea by means of rivers is fresh. LAKE-LAWYER. A voracious fish in the lakes of America, called also the _mud-fish_. LAMANTIN. A name used by the early voyagers for the manatee. LAMB'S-WOOL SKY. A collection of white orbicular masses of cloud. LAMBUSTING. A starting with a rope's-end. LAMPER-EEL. A common corruption of _lamprey_. LAMPREY. An eel-like cyclostomous fish, belonging to the genus _Petromyzon_. There are several species, some marine, others fluviatile. LAMPRON. The old name for the lamprey. LAMP-SHELLS. A name applied to the _Terebratulae_ of zoologists. LANCE-KNIGHT. A foot-soldier of old. LANCEPESADO. From Ital. _lancia spezzata_, or broken lance; originally a soldier who, having broken his lance on the enemy, and lost his horse in fight, was entertained as a volunteer till he could remount himself; hence _lance-corporal_, one doing corporal's duty, on the pay of a private. LANCHANG. A Malay proa, carrying twenty-five or thirty men. LAND. In a general sense denotes _terra firma_, as distinguished from sea; but, also, _land-laid_, or to _lay the land_, is just to lose sight of it.--_Land-locked_ is when land lies all round the ship.--_Land is shut in_, signifies that another point of land hides that from which the ship came.--_The ship lies land to_, implies so far from shore that it can only just be discerned.--_To set the land_, is to see by compass how it bears.--_To make the land._ To sight it after an absence.--_To land on deck._ A nautical anomaly, meaning to lower casks or weighty goods on deck from the tackles. LAND-BLINK. On Arctic voyages, a peculiar atmospheric brightness on approaching land covered with snow; usually more yellow than _ice-blink_. LAND-BREEZE. A current of air which, in the temperate zones, and still more within the tropics, regularly sets from the land towards the sea during the night, and this even on opposite points of the coast. It results from land losing its heat quicker than water; hence the air above it becomes heavier, and rushes towards the sea to establish equilibrium. LANDES. The heathy track between Bordeaux and the Basses Pyrenees; but also denoting uncultivated or unreclaimable spots. LAND-FALL. Making the land. "A good land-fall" signifies making the land at or near the place to which the course was intended, while "a bad land-fall" implies the contrary. LAND-FEATHER. A sea-cove. LAND HO! The cry when land is first seen. LAND-ICE. Flat ice connected with the shore, within which there is no channel. LANDING-STRAKE. In boats, the upper strake of plank but one. LANDING-SURVEYOR. The custom-house officer who appoints and superintends the landing-waiters. LANDING-WAITERS. Persons appointed from the custom-house to inspect goods discharged from foreign parts. LAND-LOUPER. [Dutch.] Meaning he who flies from this country for crime or debt, but not to be confounded with _land-lubber_ (which see). LAND-LUBBER. A useless longshorer; a vagrant stroller. Applied by sailors to the mass of landsmen, especially those without employment. LANDMARK. Any steeple, tree, windmill, or other object, serving to guide the seaman into port, or through a channel. LAND-SHARKS. Crimps, pettifogging attorneys, slopmongers, and the canaille infesting the slums of sea-port towns. LAND-SLIP. The fall of a quantity of land from a cliff or declivity; the land sliding away so as often to carry trees with it still standing upright. LANDSMEN. The rating formerly of those on board a ship who had never been at sea, and who were usually stationed among the waisters or after-guard. Some of those used to small craft are more ready about the decks than in going aloft. The rating is now Second-class Ordinary. LAND-TURN. A wind that blows in the night, at certain times, in most hot countries. LAND-WAITERS. _See_ LANDING-WAITERS. LANE. "Make a lane there!" An order for men to open a passage and allow a person to pass through. LANE OR VEIN OF ICE. A narrow channel between two fields. Any open cracks or separations of floe offering navigation. LANGREL, OR LANGRAGE. A villanous kind of shot, consisting of various fragments of iron bound together, so as to fit the bore of the cannon from which it is to be discharged. It is seldom used but by privateers. LANGUET. A small slip of metal on the hilt of a sword, which overhangs the scabbard; the ear of a sword. LANIARD, OR LANNIERS. A short piece of rope or line made fast to anything to secure it, or as a handle. Such are the laniards of the gun-locks, of the gun-ports, of the buoy, of the cat-hook, &c. The principal laniards are those which secure the shrouds and stays, termed laniards of lower, top-mast, or other rigging. (_See_ DEAD-EYE and HEART.) LANTCHA. A large Malay craft of the Indian Archipelago. LANTERN. Ships of war had formerly three poop-lanterns, and one in the main-top, to designate the admiral's ship; also deck-lanterns, fighting-lanterns, magazine-lanterns, &c. The signal-lanterns are peculiar. The great ship lantern, hanging to the poop, appears on the Trajan Column. LANTERN-BRACES. Iron bars to secure the lanterns. LANTERN-FISH. A west-country name for the smooth sole. LANTIONE. A Chinese rowing-boat. LANYARDS. _See_ LANIARD. LAP-JOINTED. The plates of an iron vessel overlapping each other, as in _clincher work_. LAPLAND WITCHES. People in Lapland who profess to sell fair winds, thus retaining a remnant of ancient classical superstition. LAP OVER OR UPON. The mast carlings are said to lap upon the beams by reason of their great depth, and head-ledges at the ends lap over the coamings. LAPPELLE, OR LAPEL. The facing of uniform coats. Until the introduction of epaulettes in 1812, the _white lapelle_ was used as synonymous with lieutenant's commission. Hence the brackish poet, in the craven midshipman's lament-- "If I had in my country staid, I then had learnt some useful trade, And scorned the white lapelle." LAPPING. The undulations occasioned in the waves by the paddle-wheels of a steam-boat. In the polar seas, lapping applies to the young or thin ice, one plate overlapping another, so dangerous to boats and their crews. Also, the overlaying of plank edges in working. LAPS. The remaining part of the ends of carlings, &c., which are to bear a great weight or pressure; such, for instance, as the capstan-step. LAP'S COURSE. One of the oldest and most savoury of the regular forecastle dishes. (_See_ LOBSCOUSE.) LARBOARD. The left side of a ship, when the spectator's face is towards the bow. The Italians derive starboard from _questa borda_, "this side," and larboard from, _quella borda_, "that side;" abbreviated into _sta borda_ and _la borda_. Their resemblance caused so many mistakes that, by order of the admiralty, larboard is now thrown overboard, and _port_ substituted. "Port the helm" is even mentioned in Arthur Pit's voyage in 1580. LARBOARD-WATCH. The old term for port-watch. The division of a ship's company called for duty, while the other, the starboard, is relieved from it. (_See_ WATCH.) LARBOLINS, OR LARBOLIANS. A cant term implying the larboard-watch, the opposite of starboard:-- "Larbolins stout, you must turn out, And sleep no more within; For if you do, we'll cut your clue, And let starbolins in." LARGE. Sailing large: going with the wind free when studding-sails will draw. LARK. A small boat. Also, frolicsome merriment. (_See_ SKY-LARKING.) LARRUP, TO. An old word meaning to beat with a rope's-end, strap, or colt. LASCAR. A native sailor in the East Indies; also, in a military sense, natives of India employed in pitching tents, or dragging artillery, as gun-lascars. LASH. A string, or small cord, forming the boatswain's cat.--_To lash_ or _lace_. To bind anything with a rope or line. LASH AND CARRY. The order given by the boatswain and his mates on piping up the hammocks, to accelerate the duty. LASH AWAY. A phrase to hasten the lashing of hammocks. LASHER. _See_ FATHER-LASHER. LASHER BULL-HEAD. A name for the fish _Cottus scorpius_. LASHING. A rope used to fasten any movable body in a ship, or about her masts, sails, and rigging. LASHING-EYES. Fittings for lower stays, block-strops, &c., by loops made in the ends of ropes, for a lashing to be rove through to secure them. LASK, TO. To go large.--_Lasking along._ Sailing away with a quartering wind. LASKETS. Small lines like hoops, sewed to the bonnets and drablers of a sail, to secure the bonnets to the courses, or the drablers to the bonnets. LAST. A dry measure containing 80 bushels of corn. A cargo. A weight of 4000 lbs. A last of cod or white herrings is 12 barrels. Last, or ship-last, a Swedish weight of 2 tons. LASTAGE. This is a commercial term for the general lading of a ship. It is also applied to that custom which is paid for wares sold by the last, as herrings, pitch, &c. LASTER. The coming in of the tide. LAST QUARTER. _See_ QUARTER, LAST. LATCH. An old term for a cross-bow; _temp._ Henry VII.--_Lee-latch._ Dropping to leeward of the course. LATCHES. The same as _laskets_ (which see; also _keys_). LATCHINGS KEYS. Loops on the head-rope of a bonnet, by which it is laced to the foot of the sail. LATEEN SAIL AND YARD. A long triangular sail, bent by its foremost leech to a lateen yard, which hoists obliquely to the mast; it is mostly used by xebecs, feluccas, &c., in the Mediterranean. A gaff-topsail, if triangular and set on a yard, is lateen. The term _lateen-rigged_, where sails have short tacks, is wrong. These latter are nothing more or less than clumsy lugs or quadrilaterals. The lateen tack is the yard-arm bowsed amidships. LATHE. A term for a sort of a cross-bow once used in the fleet. LATHER, TO. To beat or drub soundly. LATITUDE. In wide terms, the extent of the earth from one pole to the other; but strictly it is the distance of any place from the equator in degrees and their parts; or an arc of the meridian intercepted between the zenith of the place and the equinoctial. Geographical latitude is either northern or southern, according as the place spoken of is on this or that side of the equator. Geocentric latitude is the angular distance of a place from the equator, as corrected for the oblateness of the earth's form; in other words, it is the geographical latitude diminished by the angle of the vertical. LATITUDE BY ACCOUNT. That estimated by the log-board, and the last determined by observation. LATITUDE BY OBSERVATION. The latitude determined by observations of the sun, star, or moon, by meridional, as also by double altitudes. LATITUDE OF A CELESTIAL OBJECT. An arc of a circle of longitude between the centre of that object and the ecliptic, and is north or south according to its position. LAUNCE. A term when the pump sucks--from the Danish _l[oe]ns_, exhausted. Also, a west-country term for the sand-eel, a capital bait for mackerel. LAUNCE-GAY. An offensive weapon used of old, but prohibited by statute so far back as 7 Richard II. c. 13. LAUNCH. The largest or long boat of a ship of war. Others of greater size for gunboats are used by the French, Spaniards, Italians, &c., in the Mediterranean. A launch being proportionably longer, lower, and more flat-bottomed than the merchantman's long-boat, is in consequence less fit for sailing, but better calculated for rowing and approaching a flat shore. Its principal superiority consists in being much fitter to under-run the cable, lay out anchors, &c., which is a very necessary employment in the harbours of the Levant, where the cables of different ships are fastened across each other, and frequently render such operations necessary. LAUNCH, TO. To send a ship, craft, or boat off the slip on shore into the water, "her native element," as newspapers say. Also, to move things; as, _launch forward_, or _launch aft_. _Launch_ is also the movement by which the ship or boat descends into the water. LAUNCH-HO! The order to let go the top-rope after the top-mast has been swayed up and fidded. It is literally "high enough." So in pumping, when the spear sucks, this term is "Cease." LAUNCHING-WAYS. In ship-building, the bed of timber placed on the incline under the bottom of a ship; otherwise called _bilge-ways_. On this the cradles, which are movable vertical shores, to keep the ship upright, slide. Sometimes also termed _bilge-ways_. LAVEER, TO. An old sea-term for beating a ship to windward; to tack. LAVER. An edible sea-weed--the _Ulva lactuca_, anciently _lhavan_. From this a food is made, called _laver-bread_, on the shores of S. Wales. LAVY. A sea-bird nearly as large as a duck, held by the people of the Hebrides as a prognosticator of weather. LAW OF NATIONS. It was originally merely the necessary law of nature applied to nations, as in the instance of receiving distressed ships with humanity. By various conventional compacts, the Law of Nations became positive; thus flags of truce are respected, and prisoners are not put to death. One independent state is declared incompetent to prescribe to another, so long as that state is innoxious to its neighbours. The Law of Nations consists of those principles and regulations, founded in reason and general convenience, by which the mutual intercourse between independent states is everywhere conducted. LAX. A term for salmon when ascending a river, on the north coast of Scotland. LAX-FISHER. A taker of salmon in their passage from the sea. LAY, BY THE. When a man is paid in proportion to the success of the voyage, instead of by the month. This is common in whalers. LAY, TO. To come or go; as, _lay aloft_, _lay forward_, _lay aft_, _lay out_. This is not the neuter verb _lie_ mispronounced, but the active verb _lay_. (_See_ LIE OUT!) LAY A GUN, TO. So to direct it as that its shot may be expected to strike a given object; for which purpose its axis must be pointed above the latter, at an angle of elevation increasing according to its distance. LAY-DAYS. The time allowed for shipping or discharging a cargo; and if not done within the term, fair weather permitting, the vessel comes on demurrage. Thus Captain Cuttle-- "A rough hardy seaman, unus'd to shore ways, Knew little of ladies, but much of lay-days." LAY HER COURSE, TO. To be able to sail in the direction wished for, however barely the wind permits it. LAY IN. The opposite of _lay out_. The order for men to come in from the yards after reefing or furling. It also applies to manning, or _laying in_, to the capstan-bars. LAYING OR LYING OUT ON A YARD. To go out towards the yard-arms. LAYING OR LYING ALONG. Pressed down sideways by a stiff gale. LAYING A ROPE. Arranging the yarns for the strands, and then the strands for making a rope, or cable. LAYING DOWN, OR LAYING OFF. The act of delineating the various lines of a ship to the full size on the mould-loft floor, from the draught given. LAYINGS. A sort of pavement of culch, on the mud of estuaries, for forming a bed for oysters. LAYING-TOP. A conical piece of wood, having three or four scores or notches on its surface, used in rope-making to guide the lay. LAY IN SEA-STOCK, TO. To make provision for the voyage. LAY IN THE OARS. Unship them from the rowlocks, and place them fore and aft in the boat. LAY LORDS. The civil members of the admiralty board. LAY OF A ROPE. The direction in which its strands are twisted; hawser is right-handed; cablet left-handed. LAY OR LIE ON YOUR OARS! The order to desist rowing, without laying the oars in.--_Lay out on your oars!_ is the order to give way, or pull with greater force. LAY OUT. _See_ LIE OUT! LAY THE LAND, TO. Barely to lose sight of it. LAY-TO. To bring the weather-bow to the sea, with one sail set, and the helm lashed a-lee. (_See_ LIE-TO.) LAY UP A SHIP, TO. To dismantle her. LAZARETTO. A building or vessel appointed for the performance of quarantine, in which all persons are confined coming from places infected with the plague or other infectious diseases. Also, a place parted off at the fore part of the 'tween decks, in some merchantmen, for stowing provisions and stores in. LAZARUS. The game at cards, called also _blind-hookey_ and _snogo_. LAZY GUY. A small tackle or rope to prevent the spanker-boom from swaying about in fine weather. LAZY PAINTER. A small temporary rope to hold a boat in fine weather. LEAD, SOUNDING. An instrument for discovering the depth of water; it is a tapered cylinder of lead, of 7, 14, or 28 lbs. weight, and attached, by means of a strop, to the lead-line, which is marked at certain distances to ascertain the fathoms. (_See_ HAND-LINE.)--_Deep-sea lead._ A lead of a larger size, being from 28 to 56 lbs. in weight, and attached to a much longer line. (_See_ DEEP-SEA LINE.)--_To heave the lead._ To throw it into the sea as far ahead as possible, if the ship is under way. LEAD. The direction in which running ropes lead fair, and come down to the deck. Also, in Arctic seas, a channel through the ice; synonymous with _lane_. To lead into battle, or into harbour. LEADER. A chief. Also, the conducting ship, boat, or man in an enterprise. Also, the guide in firing rockets. LEADING-BLOCKS. The several blocks used for guiding the direction of any purchase, as hook, snatch, or tail blocks. LEADING-MARKS. Those objects which, kept in line or in transit, guide the pilot while working into port, as trees, spires, buoys, &c. LEADING-PART. The rope of a tackle which runs between the fall and the standing part. Generally confused with the fall. It is that part of the fall which is to be hauled on, or overhauled, to ease the purchase. LEADING-STRINGS. The yoke-lines for steering a boat. LEADING-WIND. Wind abeam or quartering; more particularly a free or fair wind, and is used in contradistinction to a scant wind. (_See_ WIND.) LEAD-LINE. A line attached to the upper end of the sounding-lead. (_See_ HAND-LINE and DEEP-SEA LINE.) LEAD-NAILS. Small round-headed composition nails for nailing lead. LEADSMAN. The man who heaves the hand-lead in the channels. In Calcutta the young gentlemen learning to be pilots are called leadsmen. LEAF. The side of a lock-gate. LEAGUE. A confederacy; an alliance. Also, a measure of length consisting of three nautical miles, much used in estimating sea-distances; = 3041 fathoms. LEAGUER. An old term for a camp. Also, _leaguers_, the longest water-casks, stowed next the kelson, of 159 English imperial gallons each. Before the invention of water-tanks, leaguers composed the whole ground tier of casks in men-of-war. LEAK [Anglo-Saxon _leccinc_]. A chink in the deck, sides, or bottom of a ship, through which the water gets into her hull. When a leak begins, a vessel is said to have _sprung_ a leak. LEAKAGE. Loss by the act of leaking out of a cask. Also, an allowance of 12 per cent., to merchants importing wine, by the customs. LEAKIES. Certain irregularities of tide in the Firth of Forth. LEAKY. The state of a ship admitting water, and a cask or other vessel letting out its contents. LEAN. Used in the same sense as _clean_ or sharp; the reverse of _full_ or bluff in the form of a ship. LEAN-BOW. Having a sharp entrance; a thin narrow bow being opposed to bold bow. _Fine forward_, very fine is _lean as a lizard_. LEAP. The sudden fall of a river in one sheet. Also, a weel, made of twigs, to catch fish in. LEAPER. _See_ LIPPER. LEAT. A canal leading from a pool to a mill-course. LEATHAG. A Celtic name for the plaice or flounder. LEATHER. _See_ LATHER. LEATHER-JACKET. A tropical fish with a very thick skin. LEAVE. Permission to be absent from the ship for the day. (_See_ ABSENCE, LIBERTY.)--_French leave._ Going on shore without permission.--_Long leave._ Permission to be absent for a number of days. LEAVE-BREAKING. A liberty man not being back to his time. LEAVE-TICKET. _See_ LIBERTY-TICKET. LEAX. _See_ LEX. LEDGE. A compact line of rocks running parallel to the coast, and which is not unfrequent opposite sandy beaches. The north coast of Africa, between the Nile and the Lesser Syrtis, is replete with them. LEDGES. The 'thwart-ship pieces from the waste-trees to the roof-trees in the framing of the decks, let into the carlings, to bear gratings, &c. Any cross-pieces of fir or scantling. LEDO. A barbarous Latin law-term (_ledo -onis_) for the rising water, or increase of the sea. LEE. From the Scandinavian word _l[oe]_ or _laa_, the sea; it is the side opposite to that from which the wind is blowing; as, if a vessel has the wind on her port side, that side will be the weather, and the starboard will be the lee side.--_Under the lee_, expresses the situation of a vessel anchored or sailing near the weather-shore, where there is always smoother water than at a great distance from it.--_To lay a ship by the lee_, or _to come up by the lee_, is to let her run off until the wind is brought on the lee-quarter, so that all her sails lie flat against the masts and shrouds. LEE-ANCHOR. The leeward one, if under weigh; or that to leeward to which a ship, when moored, is riding. LEE-BEAM. On the lee-side of the ship, at right angles with the keel. LEE-BOARDS. Wooden wings or strong frames of plank affixed to the sides of flat-bottomed vessels, such as Dutch schuyts, &c.; these traversing on a stout bolt, by being let down into the water, when the vessel is close-hauled, decrease her drifting to leeward. LEECHES. The borders or edges of a sail, which are either sloping or perpendicular; those of the square sails are denominated from the ship's side, as the starboard-leech of the main-sail, &c.; but the sails which are fixed obliquely on the masts have their leeches named from their situation with regard to the ship's length, as the hoist or luff, or fore-leech of the mizen, the after-leech of the jib, &c. LEECH-LINES. Ropes fastened to the leeches of the main-sail, fore-sail, and cross-jack, communicating with blocks under the tops, and serving to truss those sails up to the yards. (_See_ BRAILS.)--_Harbour leech-lines._ Ropes made fast at the middle of the topsail-yards, then passing round the leeches of the top-sails, and through blocks upon the topsail-tye, serving to truss the sails very close up to the yard, previous to their being furled in a body. LEECH-ROPE. A name given to that vertical part of the bolt-rope to which the border or edge of a sail is sewed. In all sails whose opposite leeches are of the same length, it is terminated above by the earing, and below by the clue. (_See_ BOLT-ROPE, CLUE, and EARINGS.) LEE-FANG. A rope rove through the cringle of a sail, for hauling in, so as to lace on a bonnet. LEE-FANGE. The iron bar upon which the sheets of fore-and-aft sails traverse, in small vessels. (_See_ HORSE.) LEE-GAUGE. Implies being farther from the point whence the wind blows, than another vessel in company. LEE-GUNWALE UNDER. A colloquial phrase for being sorely over-pressed, by canvas or other cause. LEE-HATCH, TAKE CARE OF THE! A word of caution to the helmsman, not to let the ship fall to leeward of her course. LEE-HITCH. The helmsman getting to leeward of the course. LEE-LURCHES. The sudden and violent rolls which a ship often takes to leeward when a large wave strikes her on the weather-side. LEE-SHORE. A ship is said to be on a lee-shore, when she is near it, with the wind blowing right on to it. LEE-SIDE. All that part of a ship or boat which lies between the mast and the side farthest from the wind, the other half being the weather-side. LEE-SIDE OF THE QUARTER-DECK. Colloquially called the midshipman's parade. LEE-TIDE. A tide running in the same direction as the wind, and forcing a ship to leeward of the line upon which she appears to sail. LEEWARD. The lee-side. (_See_ LEE.) The opposite of _lee_ is _weather_, and of _leeward_, _windward_. LEEWARDLY. Said of a ship or vessel which presents so little resistance to the water, when on a wind, as to bag away to leeward. It is the contrary to _weatherly_. LEE-WAY. What a vessel loses by drifting to leeward in her course. When she is sailing close-hauled in a smooth sea with all sail set, she should make little or no lee-way; but a proportionate allowance must be made under every reduction of sail or increase of sea, the amount depending on the seaman's skill, and his knowledge of the vessel's qualities. LEE-WHEEL. The assistant to the helmsman. LEG. The run made on a single tack. Long and short legs (_see_ TACK AND HALF-TACK). LEG ALONG. Ropes laid on end, ready for manning. LEG-BAIL. Dishonest desertion from duty. The phrase is not confined to its nautical bearing. LEGGERS. _See_ LEAGUER. LEGS. (_See_ ANGLE.) A fast-sailing vessel is said to have legs.--_Legs_ are used in cutters, yachts, &c., to shore them up in dry harbours when the tide leaves them. The leech-line cringles have also been called legs. Also, the parts of a point which hang on each side of the sail. LEGS OF THE MARTINETS. Small lines through the bolt-ropes of the courses, above a foot in length, and spliced at either end into themselves, making a small eye into which the martinets are hitched. LEGS AND WINGS. _See_ OVER-MASTED. LEISTER. A three-pronged dart for striking fish, used in the north of England. LEIT. A northern term for a snood or link of horse-hair for a fishing-line. LEITH. A channel on the coast of Sweden, like that round the point of Landfoort to Stockholm. LEMBUS. A light undecked vessel, used by ancient pirates. LEMING-STAR. An old name for a comet. LEMON-ROB. The inspissated juice of limes or lemons, a powerful anti-scorbutic. LEND A FIST OR A HAND. A request to another to help. LEND US YOUR POUND HERE! A phrase demanding assistance in man-weight; alluding to the daily allowance of beef. LENGTHENING. The operation of cutting a ship down across the middle, and adding a certain portion to her length. This is done by sawing her planks asunder in different parts of her length, on each side of the midship-frame, to prevent her from being weakened too much in one place. One end is then drawn apart to the required distance. An intermediate piece of timber is next added to the keel, and the vacancy filled up. The two parts of the keelson are afterwards united. Finally, the planks of the side are prolonged, so as to unite with each other, and those of the ceiling refitted. LENGTHENING-PIECE. The same as _short top-timber_ (which see). LENS. The glass of a telescope, or of a microscope, with curved surfaces like a lentil, whence the name. LENT. The spring fast, during which butchers were prohibited to kill flesh unless for victualling ships, except by special license. LENTRIAE. Ancient small vessels, used on rivers. LENUNCULI. Ancient fishing-boats. LEO. The fifth sign of the zodiac, which the sun enters about the 22d of July. It is one of the ancient constellations. LEPPO. A sort of chunam, used on the China station, for paying vessels. LERRICK. A name of the water-bird also called sand-lark or sand-piper. LESSER CIRCLE. One whose plane does not pass through the centre of the sphere, and therefore divides it unequally. (_See_ GREAT CIRCLE.) LET DRAW! The order to let the wind take the after-leeches of the jibs, &c., over to the lee-side, while tacking. LET DRIVE, TO. To slip or let fly. To discharge, as a shot from a gun. LET FALL! The order to drop a sail loosed from its gaskets, in order to set it. LET FLY, TO. To let go a rope at once, suddenly. LET GO AND HAUL! OR AFORE HAUL! The order to haul the head-yards round by the braces when the ship casts on the other tack. "Let go," alluding to the fore-bowline and lee head-braces. LET GO UNDER FOOT. _See_ UNDER FOOT. LET IN, TO. To fix or fit a diminished part of one plank or piece of timber into a score formed in another to receive it, as the ends of the carlings into the beams. LET OUT, OR SHAKE OUT, A REEF, TO. To increase the dimensions of a sail, by untying the points confining a reef in it. LET-PASS. Permission given by superior authority to a vessel, to be shown to ships of war, to allow it to proceed on its voyage. LET RUN, OR LET GO BY THE RUN. Cast off at once. LETTER-BOARD. Another term for _name-board_ (which see). LETTER-BOOK. A book wherein is preserved a copy of all letters and orders written by the captain of a ship on public service. LETTER MEN. _See_ KING'S LETTER MEN. LETTERS. _See_ CIRCULARS and OFFICIAL LETTERS. LETTERS OF MART OR MARQUE. A commission formerly granted by the lords of the admiralty, or by the admiral of any distant station, to a merchant-ship or privateer, to cruize against and make prizes of the enemy's ships. The ship so commissioned is also called a _letter of marque_. The act of parliament requires that on granting letters of marque and reprisal, the captain and two sureties shall appear and give security. In 1778 it was decided that all the ships taken from France by vessels having letters of marque only against the Americans, became droits of admiralty. This commission was forfeitable for acts of cruelty or misconduct. LETTERS OF REPRISAL. The same as _letters of marque_. LETTUCE-LAVER. The edible sea-weed _Ulva lactuca_. LEVANT. A wind coming from the east, which freshens as the sun rises, and subsides as it declines--_To levant_, to desert. LEVANTER. A strong and raw easterly wind in the Mediterranean. LEVANTS. Land-springs on the coasts of Sussex and Hampshire. LEVEE. A French word for a mole or causeway, adopted of late for river embankments of magnitude, as those of the Po, the Thames, and the Mississippi. LEVEL-ERROR. The microscopic deviation of the axis of a transit instrument from the horizontal position. LEVELING. The art of finding how much higher or lower horizontally any given point on the earth's surface is, than another point on the same; practised in various ways. LEVELLED OUT. Any line continued out from a given point, or intersection of an angle, in a horizontal direction. LEVEL-LINES. Lines determining the shape of a ship's body horizontally, or square from the middle line of the ship. LEVELS. Horizontal lines; or as a base square to a perpendicular bob. LEVER. In the marine steam-engine, the lever and counter-balance weight are fixed upon the wiper-shaft, to form an equipoise to the valves. There is one on each side of the cylinder. (_See_ SPANNER.)--Also, an inflexible bar of iron or wood to raise weights, which takes rank as the first and most simple of the mechanical powers.--_To lever._ An old word for unloading a ship. LEVERAGE. The amount of a lever power. LEVES. Very light open boats of the ancients. LEVET. The blast of a trumpet or horn. LEVIN. The old term for lightning. LEVY. An enrolment or conscription.--_To levy._ To raise recruits. LEWER. A provincialism for handspike; a corrupt form of _lever_. LEWIS-HOLES. Two holes in the surface of a mortar, superseding ears. LEWTH [from the Anglo-Saxon _lywd_]. A place of shelter from the wind. LEX, OR LEAX. The Anglo-Saxon term for salmon. L.G. These uncials on a powder-barrel mean large-grain powder. LIBERA PISCARIA. A law-term denoting a fishery free to any one. LIBERTY. Permission to go on shore or ship-visiting. LIBERTY-DAY. A day announced for permitting a part of the crew to go ashore. LIBERTY-LIQUOR. Spirits formerly allowed to be purchased when seamen had visitors; now forbidden. LIBERTY-MEN. Those on leave of absence. LIBERTY-TICKET. A document specifying the date and extent of the leave granted to a seaman or marine proceeding on his private affairs. LIBRA. The seventh sign of the zodiac, which the sun enters about the 21st of September; the commencement of this constellation, where the equator intersects the ecliptic, is called the _autumnal equinox_, from night and day being equal. LIBRATION OF THE MOON. _See_ EVECTION. LIBURNA, OR LIBURNICA. Light ancient galliots, both for sails and oars; of the latter from one rank to five; so called from the Liburni, pirates of the Adriatic. LICENSE. An official permission from the Board of Trade, to such persons as it thinks fit to supply seamen or apprentices for merchant-ships in the United Kingdom. (_See_ RUNNER, LICENSED.) LICK. In common parlance is a blow. To do anything partially, is to _give it a lick and a promise_, as in painting or blacking.--_To lick_, to surpass a rival, or excel him in anything.--_Lick of the tar-brush_, a seaman. LICORN. An old name for the howitzer of the last century, then but a kind of mortar fitted on a field-carriage to fire shells at low angles. LIDO. A borrowed term signifying the shore or margin of the sea. LIE A HULL. Synonymous with _hull to_, or _hulling_. LIE ALONG, TO. (_See_ ALONG.) A ship is said to lie along when she leans over with a side wind.--_To lie along the land_, is to keep a course parallel with it. LIE ATHWART, TO. When the tide slackens, and the wind is across tide, it makes a vessel ride athwart. LIE BY, TO. Dodging under small sail under the land. LIE IN! The order to come in from the yards when reefing, furling, or other duty is performed. LIEN. A claim to property, and a consequent right of retention. But ships cannot be the subjects of a specific lien to the creditors who supply them with necessaries, because a lien presumes possession by the creditor, and therein the power of holding it till his demands are satisfied. To prevent manifest impediment to commerce, the law of England rejects almost wholly the doctrine of lien as regards ships. LIE OFF! An order given to a boat to remain off on her oars till permission is given for her to come alongside. LIE OUT! The order to the men aloft to distribute themselves on the yards for loosing, reefing, or furling sails. LIE OVER. A ship heeling to it with the wind abeam. LIESTER. _See_ LISTER. LIE THE COURSE, TO. When the vessel's head is in the direction wished. LIE-TO, TO. To cause a vessel to keep her head steady as regards a gale, so that a heavy sea may not tumble into her. She has perhaps a main-topsail or trysails, and comes up to within six points, and falls off to wind abeam, forging rather ahead, but should not altogether fall too much to leeward. LIE UNDER ARMS, TO. To remain in a state of preparation for immediate action. LIEUTENANT, IN THE ROYAL NAVY. The officer next in rank and power below the commander. There are several lieutenants in a large ship, and they take precedence according to the dates of their commissions. The senior lieutenant, during the absence of the commander, is charged with the command of the ship, as also with the execution of whatever orders he may have received from the commander relating to the queen's service; holding another's place, as the name implies in French.--_Lieutenant in the army._ The subaltern officer next in rank below the captain. LIEUTENANT-AT-ARMS. Formerly the junior lieutenant, who, with the master-at-arms, was charged with the drilling of the small-arm men. LIEUTENANT-COLONEL. The next below the colonel, generally having the active command in the regiment, whether in cavalry, infantry, or artillery, the full colonels being mostly on staff employ, or even in retirement. LIEUTENANT-GENERAL. The officer taking the next place to a general, ranking with vice-admiral. LIEUTENANT'S STORE-ROOM. More commonly called the _ward-room store-room_ (which see). LIFE-BELT. An india-rubber or cork girdle round a person's waist to buoy him up in the water. LIFE-BOAT. One of such peculiar construction that it cannot sink or be swamped. It is equipped for attending wherever a wreck may happen, and saving the lives of the crew: really one of the greatest blessings conferred by civilization and humanity on mariners. Life-boats were invented by Admiral Samuel Graves, who died in 1787. The Royal National Life-boat Institution has saved by its boats, or by special exertions for which it has granted rewards, 14,980 lives, from the year of its establishment, 1824, to the end of 1865. LIFE-BUOYS. Are of various descriptions. A very useful one, patented by Cook, is supplied to all Her Majesty's ships. It is composed of two copper cylinders, and has a balanced stem carrying a fuse, burning twenty minutes. It is kept suspended on the quarter, can be let go, and ignited instantaneously, and will support two men for a considerable time. LIFE-GUARDS. A greatly-privileged body of cavalry, specially assigned to the guarding of the sovereign's person. LIFE-KITE. A contrivance for saving the lives of shipwrecked persons by forming a communication between the wreck and a lee-shore. LIFE-LINES. Stretched from gun to gun, and about the upper deck in bad weather, to prevent the men being washed away. The life-lines aloft are stretched from the lifts to the masts to enable seamen to stand securely when manning yards, as in a salute to admirals, &c. LIFE-PRESERVER. An air-tight apparatus for saving people in cases of wreck. LIFT. A term applied to the sails when the wind catches them on the leeches and causes them to ruffle slightly. Also implies help in work in hand, as "give us a lift." LIFT AN ANCHOR, TO. Either by the purchase; or a ship if she has not sufficient cable on a steep bank _lifts_, or shoulders, her anchor. LIFTED. Promoted somewhat unexpectedly. LIFTER. _See_ WIPER. LIFTING. The rising of fog or haze from the surface of the water. LIFTING-JACK. A portable machine for lifting heavy objects, acting by the power either of the lever, the tooth and pinion, or the screw. LIFTS. Ropes which reach from each mast-head to their respective yard-arms to steady and suspend the ends. Their use is to keep the yard in equilibrium, or to raise one of its extremities higher than the other if necessary, but particularly to support the weight when a number of men are employed on it, furling or reefing the sail. The yards are said to be squared by the lifts when they hang at right angles with the masts.--_Topping-lifts._ (_See_ TOPPING-LIFTS.) LIG. A fish-hook, with lead cast round its upper part in order to sink it. LIGAN. _See_ LAGAN. LIGGER. A line with a float and bait, used for catching pike. A night-hook laid for a pike or eel. LIGHT, TO. To move or lift anything along; as "light over to windward," the cry for helping the man at the weather-earing when taking in a reef. Each man holding by a reef-point helps it over, as the lee-earing cannot be passed until the man to windward calls out, "Haul out to leeward." LIGHT AIRS. Unsteady and faint flaws of wind. LIGHT ALONG! Lend assistance in hauling cables, hawsers, or large ropes along, and lifting some parts in a required direction. LIGHT-BALLS. Are thrown from mortars at night to discover the enemy's working parties, &c. They are composed of saltpetre, sulphur, resin, and linseed-oil, and burn with great brilliancy. The _parachute light-ball_, which suspends itself in the air by the action of the heated gas from the light against the parachute, is most convenient. LIGHT BOBS. The old soubriquet for _light infantry_ (which see). LIGHT BREEZES. When light airs have become steady. LIGHTEN, TO. To throw ballast, stores, cargo, or other things, overboard in stress of weather, to render the vessel more buoyant. LIGHTER. A large, open, flat-bottomed boat, with heavy bearings, employed to carry goods to or from ships.--_Ballast lighter._ A vessel fitted up to raise ballast from the bottom of a harbour.--_Covered or close lighter._ One furnished with a deck throughout her whole length, in order to secure such merchandise as might be damaged by wet, and to prevent pillage. LIGHTERAGE. The charge made for the hire of a lighter. LIGHTERMAN. A man employed in a lighter. LIGHT-HANDED. Short of the complement of men. LIGHT-HORSE. A name formerly given to all mounted men who were not encumbered with armour. LIGHT-HORSEMAN. An old name for the light boat, since called a gig. (_See_ WALLMIA.) LIGHTHOUSE. A sort of tower, erected upon a headland, islet, or rock, whose lights may be seen at a great distance from the land to warn shipping of their approach to these dangers.--A _floating light_, or _light vessel_, strongly moored, is used to mark dangers under water. Lights are variously distinguished, as by the number, colour, and continuity of their lights, whether flashing, revolving, &c. LIGHT ICE. That which has but little depth in the water; it is not considered dangerous to shipping, as not being heavy. LIGHT INFANTRY. Troops specially trained to the extended and rapid movements necessary to cover the man[oe]uvres of the main body. LIGHTNING-CONDUCTOR. The lightning-conductor (introduced by Sir Snow Harris) is a plate connected from the royal mast-head down to the deck, thence by the beams to the ship's copper into the sea. Another kind is a copper-wire chain or rope hoisted to the truck, then passing down by the backstays over the channels into the sea. LIGHT-PORT. A scuttle made for showing a light through. Also, a port in timber ships kept open until brought deep by cargo. It is then secured and caulked in. (_See_ RAFT-PORT.) LIGHT-ROOM. In a ship-of-war, a small space parted off from the magazine, having double-glass windows for more safely transmitting the light by which the gunner and his assistants fill their cartridges. Large ships generally have two light-rooms, the after and the fore. LIGHTS. In men-of-war, all the seamen's lights are extinguished by 8 P.M., the officers' at 10, unless the commanding officer gives his permission, through the master-at-arms, for a longer time, as occasion may require. LIGHT SAILS. All above the topgallant-sails; also the studding-sails and flying jib. Men-of-war carry topgallant-sails over double reef. LIGHT SHIP. In contradistinction to laden; a ship is said to be light when she has no cargo, or merely in ballast. When very crank, she is said to be _flying light_. Also, a vessel bearing a light as a guide to navigators. LIGHT WATER-DRAUGHT. The depth of water which a vessel draws when she is empty, or nearly so. LIGHT WATER-LINE. The line showing the depression of the ship's body in the water when just launched, or quite unladen. (_See_ WATER-LINE.) LIGNAMINA. Timber fit for building. LIGNUM VITAE. _Guaiacum officinale._ A West Indian tree, of the wood of which sheaves of blocks are made. It was allowed to be imported free of all duties. LIMB. The graduated arc of an astronomical or surveying instrument. In astronomy, it is the edge or border of the disc of the sun, moon, or one of the planets; in which sense we say the upper limb, the lower limb, the sun or moon's nearest limb, &c. LIMBER. In artillery, the two-wheeled carriage to which the trail of a field gun-carriage is attached for travel.--_Limber-boxes_ are the chests fitted above the axle-tree of the limber for ammunition.--_Limber up!_ is the command so to raise and attach. LIMBER BOARDS OR PLATES. Short movable pieces of plank; a part of the lining of a ship's floor, close to the keelson, and immediately above the limbers. They are occasionally removed to clear them of any rubbish by which they may be clogged, so as to interrupt the passage of water to the pump-well. LIMBER-BOX. Synonymous with _limber-trunk_. LIMBER-CLEARER. A small chain rove fore-and-aft through the limber-passage to clear it when necessary, by hauling backwards and forwards. LIMBER-PASSAGE. The line of limber-holes throughout the whole length of the floor, on each side of the keelson, for the water to have free access to the pumps. LIMBER-PLATES. _See_ LIMBER-BOARDS. LIMBER-STREAK. The streak of foot-waling nearest the keelson, wrought over the lower ends of the first futtocks. LIMBO. Restraint, durance, confinement under arrest, or in the bilboes. Dante uses this term for a division of the infernal regions. LIMB-TANGENT. The accurate touch of the edge of a celestial body to the horizon. LIME OR LEMON JUICE. A valuable anti-scorbutic, included by act of parliament in the scale of provisions for seamen. It has latterly been so much adulterated that scurvy has increased threefold in a few years. LIME-POTS. Formerly supplied among the munitions of war to ships. LIMITING PARALLELS. The parallels of latitude upon the earth's surface, within which occultations of stars or planets by the moon are possible. They are given in the _Nautical Almanac_ for each occultation. LIMMER. The side-rope to a poop or other ladder. LIMPET. A well-known shell-fish, giving rise to the brackish proverb, "Sticking fast like a limpet to a rock." LINCH OR LINS PIN. The iron pin which keeps the trucks of a gun-carriage confined to the axle-tree. LINE, TO. To cover one piece with another. Also, to mark out the work on a floor for determining the shape of a vessel's body.--_To line a ship_, is to strike off with a batten, or otherwise, the directional lines for painting her. (_See_ TOE A LINE.) LINE. The general appellation of a number of small ropes in a ship, as buntlines, clue-lines, bowlines, &c. Also, the term in common parlance for the equator. Also, in the army, distinguishes the regular numbered regiments of cavalry and infantry from the artillery and guards, to whom exceptional functions are assigned. In fortification, it means a trench, approaches, &c. In a geometrical sense, it signifies length without breadth; and in military parlance, it is drawing up a front of soldiers.--_Concluding line._ A small rope, which is hitched to the middle of every step of a stern-ladder.--_Deep-sea line._ A long line, marked at every five fathoms with small strands of line, knotted, and used with the deep-sea lead. The first 20 fathoms are marked as follows: 2 and 3 fathoms with black leather; 5 with white bunting; 7 with red; 10 with leather and a hole in it. Then 13, 15, and 17 repeat the previous marks of 3, 5, and 7. Two knots indicate 20, three knots 30, four knots 40 fathoms, and so on, with an additional knot for every ten. Meanwhile a single knot indicates the intermediate fives. Besides this system some pilots prefer their own marks, as in the Hooghly, where they always measure the line for themselves. The term "deep-sea line" must not now be confined to the use of the lead for the ordinary purposes of safe navigation; deep-sea soundings for scientific purposes are recorded in thousands of fathoms, in which case the line is sometimes made of silk, the object being to obtain the largest amount of strength with a small weight.--_Fishing-lines._ Particular kinds of lines, generally used for fishing snood, mackerel, whiting, cod, albacore, &c.--_Hand-line._ A line about 20 fathoms long, marked like the first 20 fathoms of the deep-sea line. It is made fast to a hand-lead of from 7 to 14 lbs., and used to determine the depth of water in going in or out of a harbour, river, channel, &c.--_Hauling-line._ Any rope let down out of a top, &c., to haul up some light body by hand.--_Knave-line._ A rope fastened to the cross-trees, under the main or fore top, whence it comes down by the ties to the ram-head, and there it is rove through a piece of wood about 2 feet long, and so is brought to the ship's side, and there hauled up taut to the rails.--_Life-line._ A rope occasionally extended in several situations for persons to lay hold of, to prevent their falling.--_Mar-line._ A particular kind of small line, composed of two strands very little twisted; there is both tarred and white mar-line. That supplied for the gunner and for bending light sails is untarred.--_Navel-line._ A rope depending from the heads of the main and fore masts, and passed round to the bight of the truss to keep it up, whilst the yard is being swayed up, or when the truss, in bracing sharp up, is overhauled to the full.--_Spilling-lines._ Ropes fixed occasionally to the square sails, particularly the main and fore courses in bad weather, for reefing or furling them more conveniently; they are rove through blocks upon the yard, whence leading round the sail they are fastened abaft the yard, so that the sail is very closely confined.--_White-line._ That which has not been tarred, in contradistinction to _tarred line_. LINE-BREADTH. _See_ BREADTH LINE. LINE OF BATTLE. A disposition of the fleet at the moment of engagement, by signal or previous order, on which occasion the vessels are usually drawn up as much as possible in a specified bearing, as well to gain and keep the advantage of the wind, as to run the same board, about 1 cable, or 100 fathoms distant from each other. The line-of-battle in sea-fights occurs both in Plutarch (_Themistocles_) and Froissart. LINE-OF-BATTLE SHIPS. Formerly those of 74 guns and upwards; or in these iron days, any vessel capable of giving and taking the tremendous blows of the larger ordnance. LINE OF BEARING. A previously determined bearing given out by a commander-in-chief, as well as line-of-battle. "From line of battle form line of bearing," or reverse. The line of bearing must be that point of the compass on which the ships bear from each other, and from which the line of battle can readily be formed without losing speed or ground. LINE OF COLLIMATION. _See_ COLLIMATION, LINE OF. LINE OF DEFENCE. In fortification, the face of a work receiving flank defence, together with its prolongation to the flanking work. LINE OF DEMARCATION. A line which is drawn by consent, to ascertain the limits of territories belonging to different powers. LINE OF LINE. _See_ GUNTER'S LINE. LINE-OF-METAL ELEVATION. That which the axis of a gun has above the object when its line of metal is pointed on the latter; it averages 1-1/2 deg. in guns of the old construction. LINE OF NODES. The imaginary line joining the ascending and descending nodes of the orbit of a planet or comet. LINE OF OPERATIONS. In strategy, the line an army follows to attain its objective point. LINE OUT STUFF. To mark timber for dressing to shape. LINERS. Line-of-battle ships. Also, a designation of such packet or passenger ships as trade periodically and regularly to and from ports beyond sea, in contradistinction to chance vessels. Also, a term applied by seamen to men-of-war and to their crews. LINES. With shipwrights, are the various plans for determining the shape and form of the ship's body on the mould-loft floor. Also, a species of field-works, consisting of a series of fronts, constructed in order to cover the front and form the immediate defence of an army or the frontiers of a state. LINES OF FLOTATION. Those horizontal marks supposed to be described by the surface of the water on the bottom of a ship, and which are exhibited at certain depths upon the sheer-draught. (_See_ LIGHT WATER-LINE, and LOAD WATER-LINE.) LING. A brushwood useful in breaming. Also, a fish, the _Lota molva_; it invariably inhabits the deep valleys of the sea, while the cod is always found on the banks. When sun-dried it is called stock-fish. LINGET. Small langridge; slugs. LINGO. A very old word for tongue or dialect, rather than language or speech. LININGS. The reef-bands, leech and top linings, buntline cloths, and other applied pieces, to prevent the chafing of the sails. In ship-building, the term means thin dressed board nailed over any rough surface to give it a finish. LINKISTER. An interpreter; linguist. LINKS. A northern phrase for the windings of a river; also for flat sands on the sea-shore, and low lands overflowed at spring tides. LINK WORMING. Guarding a cable from friction, by worming it with chains. LINNE. A Gaelic term for pool, pond, lake, or sea. LINSEY-WOLSEY. A stuff in extensive use commercially; it is a mixture of flax and wool. LINSTOCK. In olden times it was a staff about 3 feet long, having a sharp point at the foot to stick in the deck, and a forked head to hold a lighted match. It gave way to the less dangerous match-tub, and since that to gun-locks, friction-tubes, &c. Shakspeare in _Henry V._ says: "And the nimble gunner With _linstock_ now the devilish cannon touches, And down goes all before them." LINTRES. Ancient canoes capable of carrying three lintrarii. LIP. Insolence and bounce. LIPPER. A sea which washes over the weather chess-tree, perhaps _leaper_. Also, the spray from small waves breaking against a ship's bows. LIPPING. Making notches on the edge of a cutlass or sword. LIPS OF SCARPHS. The substance left at the ends, which would otherwise become sharp, and be liable to split. LIQUORS. A term applicable to all fluids, but at sea it is expressly applied to alcoholic spirits. LIRA. An Italian coin. A silver coin of about tenpence sterling. LISBONINE. A national denomination for the moidore. LISSOM. Active, supple. LIST, TO. To incline to one side; as "the ship has a list to port," _i.e._ leans over to that side. LIST. A roll of names, as the army and navy lists; but usually at sea it means the doctor's list. Also, the abbreviation for _enlist_. "Why did you list?" said when a man is grumbling who has entered a service voluntarily. LIST AND RECEIPT. The official document sent with officers or men of any description, discharged from one ship to another; it merely states the names and qualities, with the date of discharge. LISTER. A sort of three-pronged harpoon used in the salmon fisheries; also, a light spear for killing fish in general. LISTING. A narrow strip cut off the edge of a plank, in order to expose for examination, and get at, a vessel's timbers. LITTER. A sort of hurdle bed, on which to carry wounded men from the field to the boats. LITTORAL. Relating to a coast; often used as synonymous with sea-board. LITTORARIAE. Ancient coasting vessels. LIVE, TO. To be able to withstand the fury of the elements; said of a boat or ship, &c. LIVE-LUMBER. Passengers, _ladies_, landsmen, cattle, sheep, pigs, and poultry. LIVELY. To lift lightly to the sea; as a boat, &c. LIVER-FACED. Mean and cowardly, independent of complexion. LIVERY-ARROW. A missile formerly supplied to our ships of war. LIVE-SHELL. One filled with its charge of powder or other combustible. It is also called a _loaded shell_. LIVID SKY. That blackish red and blue which pervade the sky, previous to an easterly gale, at sea:-- "Deep midnight now involves the livid skies Where eastern breezes, yet enervate, rise."--_Falconer._ LIZARD. A piece of rope, sometimes with two legs, and one or more iron thimbles spliced into it. It is used for various purposes; one is often made fast to the topsail-tye, for the buntlines to reeve through, to confine them to the centre of the yard. A lizard with a tail and thimble is used as a fair lead, to lead out where the lift runs in a line with the object. The lower boom topping-lift is thus helped by carrying the lizard out to the fore-brace block. In yards sent aloft ready for crossing, the lizard confines the yard rope until the order is given, "Sway across," when, letting the lizard run, all cross simultaneously. LIZIERE. In fortification, a word sometimes used for _berm_ (which see). A narrow bank of earth supporting the parapet when deformed by fire. LLANOS [Sp. _plains_]. Immense plains in S. America, with alternate arid patches and verdure. LLOYD'S. An establishment which, from a subscription coffee-house, has grown to a society which has transacted the bulk of the British insurance business regularly since 1601; and even before that period assurers had met there "time out of mind." A register is kept of every ship, whether foreign or English, with the place where it was built, the materials used in its construction, its age, state of repair, and general character. LLOYD'S AGENTS. Persons appointed in all parts of the commercial world, to forward accounts of the arrivals and departures of vessels, or any information interesting to the underwriters. LLOYD'S LIST. A gazette, published formerly twice a week, but latterly daily, under the superintendence of a committee chosen by the subscribers, and transmitted over the whole world. LLOYD'S REGISTER. An annual list of British and foreign shipping, ranked by letter and number in different classes. LLOYD'S SURVEYORS. Practical persons specially appointed in London, and most of the out-ports of the United Kingdom, to investigate the state and condition of merchant-ships for the underwriters. LOADED-SHELL. A shell filled with lead, to be thrown from a mortar. The term is also used for _live-shells_. LOADING-CHAMBER. The paterero, or inserting piece in breech-loading. LOADING OF A SHIP. _See_ CARGO and LADING. LOADSMAN. A pilot, or person who conducts into or out of harbours. LOADSTONE. _See_ MAGNET and DIPPING-NEEDLE. LOAD WATER-LINE. The draught of water exhibited when the ship is properly loaded; in a word, her proper displacement, not always sufficiently considered. LOAD WATER-SECTION. A horizontal section at the load water-line in the ship-builder's draught. LOAFER. One who hangs about a dock, ready for every job except a hard one. LOATH TO DEPART. Probably the first line of some favourite song; formerly the air was sounded in men-of-war, when going foreign, for the women and children to quit the ship. LOB. A sluggish booby; whence _lubber_. Also, that part of a tree where it first divides into branches. LOBBY. A name sometimes given to an apartment close before the great cabin bulk-head. LOB-COCK. A lubber; an old term of utter contempt. LOBLOLLY. A name formerly applied to pottage, burgoo, or gruel. LOBLOLLY-BOY. A man who attended the surgeon and his assistants, to summon the sick, and attend on them. A man is now stationed in the bay, under the designation of _sick-berth attendant_. LOBSCOUSE. An olla-podrida of salt-meat, biscuit, potatoes, onions, spices, &c., minced small and stewed together. (_See_ LAP'S COURSE.) LOBSTER. A well-known marine crustacean, _Astacus marinus_. Also, red-coats of old; whence _lobster-box_, a colloquialism for barracks. LOBSTER-BOAT. A bluff, clincher-built vessel, fitted with a well, to preserve the lobsters alive. LOBSTER-TOAD. _See_ DEEP-SEA CRAB. LOB-TAILING. The act of the sperm whale in violently beating the water with its tail. LOB-WORM. A worm found at low-water in sand, esteemed for bait. LOCAL ATTRACTION. The effect of the iron in a ship on her compasses; it varies with the position of a compass in a ship, also with that of a ship on the earth's surface, and with the direction of the ship's head. In iron ships it is affected by the line of direction in which they are built. Its detection and remedies are amongst the most important studies of navigators of iron ships and steamers. LOCAL MARINE-BOARD. _See_ MARINE BOARDS. LOCH. Gaelic for lake, in Scotland and Ireland. In Scotland also an arm of the sea, where the tides ebb and flow; on the east coast called a _firth_, though on the west mostly termed a _loch_. LOCHABER AXE. A formidable weapon once used by the Highlanders. LOCK. The striking instrument by which fire is produced for the discharge of a gun, containing the cock, the hammer, the pan, &c. It was first introduced in naval ordnance by Sir Charles Douglas, and has now given way to the _detonating hammer_ and friction-tube, as the old match and the salamander did to the lock. LOCK. A spelling of _loch_ (which see). Also, the general name for any works made to confine or raise the water of a river; a canal inclosed between the sluice-gate above and the flood-gate below. LOCK, TO. To entangle the lower yards when tacking. LOCKAGE. The cost of passing vessels through canal-locks. LOCKER. Divisions in cabins and store-rooms.--_Boatswain's locker._ A chest in small craft wherein material for working upon rigging is kept.--_Chain-locker_ or _chain-well_, where the chain-cables are kept; best abreast the main-mast, as central weight, but often before the fore-mast.--_Davy Jones' locker._ The bottom of the sea, where nothing is lost, because you know where it is.--_Shot-lockers_, near the pump-well in the hold. Also, the receptacle round the coamings of hatchways. LOCKET. The chape of a sword-scabbard. LOCK-FAST. A modified principle in the breech-loading of fire-arms. LOCKING-IN. The alternate clues and bodies of the hammocks when hung up. LOCK, STOCK, AND BARREL. An expression derived from fire-arms, and meaning the whole. LOC-MEN, OR LOCO-MEN. An old term for pilots. LOCOMOTIVE-POWER. The force of sails and wind, or steam. LODE-MANAGE, OR LODEMANSHIP. The hire of a pilot. It also meant both pilotage and seamanship; whence Chaucer-- "His herborough, his moone, and his lodemanage, There was none such from Hull to Cartage." LODE-MEREGE. In the laws of Oleron, seems identical with _lode-manage_. LODE-SHIP. A pilot boat, which was also employed in fishing; it is mentioned in statute 31 Edward III. c. 2. LODESMEN. An Anglo-Saxon word for pilots. LODE-STAR. The north star. But Spenser alludes to any star as a guide to mariners:-- "Like as a ship, whose lode-star, suddenly Cover'd with clouds, her pilot hath dismay'd." Shakspeare coincides with this, in comparing Hermia's eyes to lode-stars. LODGE ARMS. The word of command to an armed party preparatory to their breaking off. LODGEMENT. In fortification, an established footing, such as a besieger makes by throwing up hasty cover, against the fire of the defenders, on any freshly gained post. LODGING-KNEES, OR DECK-BEAM KNEES. Those riding on the hanging or dagger-knees, and fixed horizontally in the ship's frame. LODIA. A large trading boat of the White Sea. LOE, OR LAWE. An eminence, whether natural or artificial. LOFTY SHIPS. Once a general name for square-rigged vessels:-- "A mackerel sky and mares' tails Make lofty ships carry low sails." LOG-BOARD. Two boards shutting together like a book, and divided into several columns, in which to record, through the hours of the day and night, the direction of the wind and the course of the ship, with all the material occurrences, together with the latitude by observation. From this table the officers work the ship's way, and compile their journals. The whole being written by the mate of the watch with chalk, is rubbed out every day at noon. Now a slate is more generally used. LOG-BOOK. Mostly called the log, is a journal into which the log-board is daily transcribed, together with any other circumstance deserving notice. The intermediate divisions or watches are usually signed by the commanding officer. It is also divided into _harbour-log_ and _sea-log_. LOG-CANOE. One hollowed out of a single log. (_See_ CANOE.) LOGGED. Entered in the log. A very serious punishment, not long disused, as a mark of disgrace, by recording the omissions of an officer. It may yet be demanded if arrest ensues. LOGGED. When a ship is on her beam ends, or in that state in which she is unmanageable at sea. (_See_ WATER-LOGGED.) LOGGERHEAD, OR LOGGER-HEAT. A round ball of iron attached to a long handle with a hook at the end of it. It heats tar by being made hot in the fire, and then plunged into the tar-bucket. It was also used to pound cocoa before chocolate was supplied. Also, an upright rounded piece of wood, near the stern of a whale-boat, for catching a turn of the line to. Also, a name given to a well-known turtle, _Chelonia caouana_, from its having a great head; it is sometimes called the _whooper_ or _whapper_. (_See_ TURTLE.) LOG-GLASS. The sand-glass used at heaving the log to obtain the rate of sailing. It is a 28 seconds glass for slow sailing, and 14 seconds for fast sailing. LOG-LINE AND LOG-SHIP. A small line about 100 fathoms long, fastened to the log-ship by means of two legs, one of which passes through a hole at the corner, and is knotted on the opposite side, while the other leg is attached by a pin fixed into another hole so as to draw out when _stop_ is called, _i.e._ when the glass has run out. This line, from the distance of 10, 12, or 15 fathoms of the log-ship, has certain knots or divisions, which ought to be 47 feet 4 inches from each other, though it was the common practice at sea not to have them above 42 feet. The estimate of the ship's way or distance run is done by observing the length of the line unwound whilst the glass is running; for so many knots as run out in that time, so many miles the ship sails in an hour.--_To heave the log_ is to throw it into the water on the lee-side, well out of the wake, letting it run until it gets beyond the eddies, then a person holding the glass turns it up just as the first mark, or stray-line, goes out, from which the knots begin to be reckoned. The log is, however, at best, a precarious way of computing, and must be corrected by experience. The inventor of it is not known, and no mention is made of it till the year 1607, in an East India voyage, published by Purchas. The mode before, and even now in some colliers, and in native craft in the East Indies, is to throw a _log_ or chip overboard at the foremost channel-plate, and to walk aft, keeping up with it until it passes the stern, thus estimating (and closely too by practice) the rate of motion. Other methods have been invented by various people, but _Massey's Patent Log_ gives the most accurate measurement. The same principle is also applied to the deep-sea sounding-lead. LOGWOOD. Dyewood, _Haematoxylon campechianum_. It occurs on both sides of the American coasts near the Isthmus of Darien, and is a great article of trade, varying from L5 to L10 per ton. Recent discoveries of the products of coal have reduced the price. LOICH. A statute term, comprehending the fishes lobbe, ling, and cod. LONDAGE. An old term for landing from a boat. LONDON WAGGON. The tender which carried the impressed men from off the tower to the receiving-ship at the Nore. LONGAE. Roman row-boats built to carry a large number of men. LONG AND SHORT BOARDS. _See_ TACK AND HALF-TACK. LONG BALLS. Engaging beyond the reach of carronades. LONG BOAT. Is carvel-built, full, flat, and high, and is usually the largest boat belonging to a ship, furnished with spars and sails, and may be armed and equipped for cruizing short distances; her principal employ, however, is to bring heavy stores on board, and also to go up small rivers to fetch water, wood, &c. At sea it is stowed between the fore and main masts. Not used in the navy. (_See_ LAUNCH.) LONG-BOW. A noted weapon formerly supplied to our men-of-war. LONG CHALKS. Great strides. (_See_ CHALKS.) LONGER. Each row of casks in the hold, athwart. Also, the fore and aft space allotted to a hammock; the longers reckoned similarly to last. LONG-GASKETS. Those used for sea service; the opposite of _harbour-gaskets_ (which see). LONGIE. A name of the foolish guillemot, _Uria troile_, in the north. LONGITUDE. Is an arc of the equator, or any parallel of latitude, contained between the meridian of a place and that of Greenwich, or any other first meridian. These arcs being similar, are expressed by the same number of degrees and miles, though the absolute distance on the earth's surface decreases as the latitude increases, for which see DEPARTURE. East longitude extends 180 degrees to the right, when looking north, and west longitude as many to the left of the first meridian. LONGITUDE, GEOCENTRIC. The angular distance of a heavenly body from the first point of Aries, measured upon the ecliptic, as viewed from the earth. LONGITUDE, HELIOCENTRIC. The angular distance of a body from the first point of Aries, measured upon the ecliptic, as viewed from the sun. LONGITUDE BY ACCOUNT. The distance east and west, as computed from the ship's course and distance run, carried forward from the last astronomical determination. LONGITUDE BY CHRONOMETER. Is estimated by the difference between the time at the place, and the time indicated by chronometer. LONGITUDE BY LUNAR OBSERVATION. The longitude calculated by observing the moon's angular distance from the sun or a fixed star. It is the only check on chronometers, and very valuable in long voyages, though now much neglected, since the establishment of compulsory examination in the merchant service, which does not require lunars. LONGITUDE OF A CELESTIAL BODY. An arc of the ecliptic, contained between the first point of Aries and a circle of longitude passing through the centre of the body. LONGITUDINAL SECTION. In ship-building, a line which cuts the draught of a vessel lengthwise. LONG-JAWED. The state of rope when its strands are straightened by being much strained and untwisted, and from its pliability will coil both ways. LONG-LEAVE. Permission to visit friends at a distance. LONG-LEGGED. Said of a vessel drawing much water.--_Long leggers_, lean schooners. Longer than ordinary proportion to breadth. Swift. LONG OYSTER. A name of the sea cray-fish. LONG-SERVICE. A cable properly served to prevent chafing under particular use. 'LONGSHORE. A word used rather contemptuously for _alongshore_; land usage.--_'Longshore fellows_, landsmen pretenders.--_'Longshore owners_, those merchants who become notorious for sending their ships to sea scantily provided with stores and provisions. LONG-SHOT. A distant range. It is also used to express a long way; a far-fetched explanation; something incredible. LONG STERN-TIMBERS. _See_ STERN-TIMBERS. LONG STROKE. The order to a boat's crew to stretch out and hang on her. LONG-TACKLES. Those overhauled down for hoisting up top-sails to be bent. Long-tackle blocks have two sheaves of different sizes placed one above the other, as in fiddle-blocks. LONG-TAILS. A sobriquet for the Chinese. LONG TIMBERS, OR LONG TOP-TIMBERS. Synonymous with _double futtocks_. Timbers in the cant-bodies, reaching from the dead-wood to the head of the second futtock, and forming a floor. LONG TOGS. Landsman's clothes. LONG TOM, OR LONG TOM TURKS. Pieces of lengthy ordnance for chasers, &c. LONG VOYAGE. One in which the Atlantic Ocean is crossed. LONG-WINDED WHISTLERS. Chase-guns. LOO, OR LOE. A little round hill or heap of stones.--_Under the loo_, is shelter from the wind; to leeward. LOOF. The after part of a ship's bow, before the chess-tree, or that where the planks begin to be incurvated as they approach the stem. Hence, the guns which lie here are called _loof-pieces_. LOOF. Usually pronounced and spelled _luff_ (which see). LOOK, TO. The bearing or direction, as, _she looks up_, is approaching her course.--_A plank looks fore and aft_, means, is placed in that direction. LOOK-OUT. Watchful attention; there is always a look-out kept from the forecastle, foretopsail-yard, or above, to watch for any dangerous object lying near a ship's track, for any strange sail heaving in sight, &c.; the officer of the watch accordingly calls frequently from the quarter-deck to the mast-head-man appointed for this service, "Look out afore there." LOOK OUT FOR SQUALLS. Beware; cautionary. LOOM. The handle of an oar. Also, the track of a fish. LOOM, TO. An indistinct enlarged appearance of any distant object in light fogs, as the coast, ships, &c.; "that land looms high," "that ship looms large." The effect of refraction. LOOM-GALE. An easy gale of wind, in which a ship can carry her whole top-sails a-trip. LOON, OR LUNDE. The great northern diver, _Colymbus glacialis_. A bird about the size of a goose, which frequents the northern seas, where "as straight as a loon's leg," is a common comparison. LOOP. A bight or bend. The winding of a river. LOOP-HOLES. Small openings made in the walls of a castle, or a fortification, for musketry to fire through. Also, certain apertures formed in the bulk-heads, hatches, and other parts of a merchant-ship, through which small arms might be fired on an enemy who boarded her, and for close fight. They were formerly called _meurtrieres_, and were introduced in British slave-vessels. LOOPS OF A GUN-CARRIAGE. The iron eye-bolts to which the tackles are hooked. LOOSE, TO. To unfurl or cast loose any sail, in order to its being set, or dried after rain. LOOSE A ROPE, TO. To cast it off, or let it go. LOOSE FALL. The losing of a whale after an apparently good opportunity for striking it. LOOSE ICE. A number of pieces near each other, but through which the ship can make her way. LOOSERS. Men appointed to loose the sails. LOOSING FOR SEA. Weighing the anchor. LOOT. Plunder, or pillage; a term adopted from China. LOOVERED BATTENS. The battens that inclose the upper part of the well. (_See_ LOOVER-WAYS.) LOOVER-WAYS. Battens or boards placed at a certain angle, so as to admit air, but not wet; a kind of Venetian-blind. LOP AND TOP. The top and branches of a felled tree. LOP-SIDED. Uneven; one side larger than the other. LORCHA. A swift Chinese sailing vessel carrying guns. LORD OF MISRULE. _See_ MASTER OF MISRULE. LORDS COMMISSIONERS. _See_ COMMISSIONERS. LORD WARDEN OF THE CINQUE PORTS. A magistrate who has the jurisdiction of the ports or havens so called. Generally held by one high in office, or an old minister. LORICA. A defensive coat-armour made of leather; when iron plates were applied, it became a _jack_. LORN. A northern name for the crested cormorant, _Phalacrocorax cristatus_. LORRELL. An old term for a lubberly fellow. LOSE WAY, TO. When a ship slackens her progress in the water. LOSING THE NUMBER OF THE MESS. Dead, drowned, or killed. (_See_ NUMBER.) LOSING GROUND. Dropping to leeward while working; the driftage. LOSS. Total loss is the insurance recovered under peril, according to the invoice price of the goods when embarked, together with the premium of insurance. Partial loss upon either ship or goods, is that proportion of the prime cost which is equal to the diminution in value occasioned by the damage. (_See_ INSURANCE.) LOSSAN. A Manx or Erse term for the luminosity of the sea. LOST. The state of being foundered or cast away; said of a ship when she has either sunk, or been beat to pieces by the violence of the sea. LOST DAY. The day which is lost in circumnavigating the globe to the westward, by making each day a little more than twenty-four hours long. (_See_ GAINED DAY.) LOST HER WAY. When the buoy is streamed, and all is ready for dropping the anchor. LOST! LOST! When a whale _flukes_, _dives_, or takes tail up to "_running_," and the boats have no chance in chasing. LOST OR NOT LOST. A phrase originally inserted in English policies of insurance, in cases where a loss was already apprehended. It is now continued by usage, and is held not to make the contract a wager, nor more hazardous. LOT. The abbreviation of allotment, or allowance to wife or mother. (_See_ ALLOTMENT.) LOTMAN. An old term for pirate. LOUGH. _See_ LOCH. LOUND. Calm, out of wind. LOW. An old term for a small hill or eminence. LOW AND ALOFT. Sail from deck to truck: "every stitch on her." LOWE. A flame, blaze. The torch used in the north by fish-poachers. LOWER, TO. The atmosphere to become cloudy. Also, to ease down gradually, expressed of some weighty body suspended by tackles or ropes, which, being slackened, suffer the said body to descend as slowly, or expeditiously, as occasion requires. LOWER-BREADTH-SWEEP. The second on the builder's draught, representing the lower height of breadth, on which line is set off the main half-breadth of the ship at its corresponding timber. LOWER COUNTER. The counter between the upper counter and the rail under the lights. LOWER-DECKERS. The heaviest armament, usually on the lower deck. LOWER-FINISHING. _See_ FINISHINGS. LOWER HANDSOMELY, LOWER CHEERLY. Are opposed to each other; the former being the order to lower gradually, and the latter to lower expeditiously. LOWER-HEIGHT. _See_ MAIN-BREADTH. LOWER-HOLD. The space for cargo in a merchant-vessel, fitted with 'tween-decks. LOWER-HOLD-BEAMS. The lowest range of beams in a merchantman. LOWER-HOPE. A well-known reach in the Thames where ships wait for the turn of the tide. LOWER-LIFTS. The lifts of the fore, main, and crossjack-yards. LOWER MASTS. _See_ MAST. LOWER TRANSIT. The opposite to the upper transit of a circumpolar star: the passage _sub polo_. LOW LATITUDES. Those regions far removed from the poles of the earth towards the equator, 10 deg. south or north of it. LOW SAILS. The courses and close-reefed top-sails. LOW WATER. The lowest point to which the tide ebbs. (_See_ TIDE.) Also, used figuratively for being in distress, without money. LOXODROMIC. The line of a ship's way when sailing oblique to the meridian. LOXODRONIUS. The _traverse table_. LOZENGE. The diamond-cut figure. (_See_ RHOMBUS.) LUBBER, OR LUBBART. An awkward unseamanlike fellow; from a northern word implying a clownish dolt. A boatswain defined them as "fellows fitted with teeth longer than their hair," alluding to their appetites. LUBBER-LAND. A kind of El Dorado in sea-story, or country of pleasure without work, all sharing alike. LUBBER'S HOLE. The vacant space between the head of a lower-mast and the edge of the top, so termed from timid climbers preferring that as an easier way for getting into the top than trusting themselves to the futtock-shrouds. The term has been used for any cowardly evasion of duty. LUBBER'S POINT. A black vertical line or mark in the compass-bowl in the direction of the ship's head, by which the angle between the magnetic meridian and the ship's line of course is shown. LUBRICATOR. The oil or similar material applied to the bearings of machinery to obviate friction. Also, special preparations of the same included in cartridges for rifled fire-arms, to prevent the fouling from the burnt powder adhering to the interior of the bore. LUCE. The old word for a full-grown pike or jack, immortalized by Shakspeare. LUCIDA. The bright star or {a} of each constellation. LUCKEN. An unsplit haddock half-dry. LUCKY MINIE'S LINES. The long stems of the sea-plant _Chorda filum_. LUCKY-PROACH. A northern term for father-lasher, _Cottus scorpius_. LUFF, OR LOOFE. The order to the helmsman, so as to bring the ship's head up more to windward. Sometimes called springing a luff. Also, the air or wind. Also, an old familiar term for lieutenant. Also, the fullest or roundest part of a ship's bows. Also, the weather-leech of a sail. LUFF AND LIE. A very old sea-term for hugging the wind closely. LUFF AND TOUCH HER! Try how near the wind she will come. (_See_ TOUCHING.) LUFF INTO A HARBOUR, TO. To sail into it, shooting head to wind, gradually. A ship is accordingly said to spring her luff when she yields to the effort of the helm, by sailing nearer to the wind, or coming to, and does not shake the wind out of her sails until, by shortening all, she reaches her anchorage. LUFF ROUND, OR LUFF A-LEE. The extreme of the movement, by which it is intended to throw the ship's head up suddenly into the wind, in order to go about, or to lessen her way to avoid danger. LUFF-TACKLE. A purchase composed of a double and single block, the standing end of the rope being fast to the single block, and the fall coming from the double. This name is given to any large tackle not destined for any particular place, but to be variously used as occasion may require. It is larger than the jigger-tackle, but smaller than the fore and main yard-tackles or the stay-tackles. (_See_ LUFF UPON LUFF.) LUFF UPON LUFF. One luff-tackle applied to the fall of another, to afford an increase of purchase. LUG. The _Arenicola piscatorum_, a sand-worm much used for bait. Also, of old, the term for a perch or rod used in land-measuring, containing 16-1/2 feet, and which may have originated the word _log_. LUGAR [Sp.] A name for watering-places on the Spanish coast. LUG-BOAT. The fine Deal boats which brave the severest weather; they are rigged as luggers, and dip the yards in tacking. They really constitute a large description of life-boat. LUGGER. A small vessel with quadrilateral or four-cornered cut sails, set fore-and-aft, and may have two or three masts. French coasters usually rig thus, and are called _chasse marees_; but with us it is confined to fishing craft and ships' boats; some carry top-sails. During the war of 1810 to 1814 French luggers, as well as Guernsey privateers, were as large as 300 tons, and carried 18 guns. One captured inside the Needles in 1814, carried a mizen-topsail. The _Long Bet_ of Plymouth, a well-known smuggler, long defied the Channel gropers, but was taken in 1816. LUGS. The ears of a bomb-shell, to which the hooks are applied in lifting it. LUG-SAIL. A sail used in boats and small vessels. It is in form like a gaff-sail, but depends entirely on the rope of the luff for its stability. The yard is two-thirds of the breadth at foot, and is slung at one-fourth from the luff. On the mast is an iron hoop or traveller, to which it is hoisted. The tack may be to windward, or at the heel of the mast amidships. It is powerful, but has the inconvenience of requiring to be lowered and shifted on the mast at every tack, unless the tack be secured amidships. Much used in the barca-longa, navigated by the Spaniards. LULL. The brief interval of moderate weather between the gusts of wind in a gale. Also, an abatement in the violence of surf. LULL-BAG. A wide canvas hose in whalers for conducting blubber into the casks, as it is "made off." LUMBER. Logs as they arrive at the mills. Also, timber of any size, sawed or split for use. Also, things stowed without order. LUMBERER. One who cuts timber (generally in gangs) in the forests of North America during the winter, and, on the melting of the snow, navigates it, first by stream-driving the separate logs down the spring torrents, then in bays or small rafts down the wider streams, and finally in rafts of thousands of square yards of surface down the navigable rivers, to the mills or to the port of shipment. LUMIERE CENDREE. A term adopted from the French to signify the ash-coloured faint illumination of the dark part of the moon's surface about the time of new moon, caused by sunlight reflected from the earth. LUMP. A stout heavy lighter used in our dockyards for carrying anchors, chains, or heavy stores to or from vessels. Also, the trivial name of the baggety, an ugly fish, likewise called the sea-owl, _Cyclopterus lumpus_. Also, undertaking any work by the lump or whole.--_By the lump_, a sudden fall out of the slings or out of a top; altogether. LUMPERS. So named from labouring at lump or task work. Labourers employed to load and unload a merchant ship when in harbour. In the north the term is applied to those who furnish ballast to ships. LUMP SUM. A full payment of arrears, and not by periodical instalments of money. LUNAR. The brief epithet for the method of finding the longitude by the moon and sun or moon and stars. (_See_ WORKING A LUNAR.) LUNAR DAY. The interval between a departure and return of the moon to the meridian. LUNAR DISTANCES. An important element in finding the longitude at sea, by what is termed nautical astronomy. It is effected by measuring the apparent distance of the moon from the sun, planet, or certain bright stars, and comparing it with that given in the nautical almanac, for every third hour of Greenwich time. LUNAR INEQUALITY. _See_ VARIATION OF THE MOON. LUNAR OBSERVATIONS. The method of observing the apparent distances between given celestial objects, and then clearing the angles from the effects of parallax and refraction. LUNAR TABLES. The tabulated logarithmic aid for correcting the apparent distance, and facilitating the reduction of the observations. LUNATION. The period in which the moon goes through every variety of phase; that is, one synodical revolution. LUNETTE. In fortification, a work composed of two faces meeting in a salient angle, from the inner extremities of which two short flanks run towards the rear, leaving an open gorge; it is generally applied only in connection with other works. Prize-masters will recollect that _lunette_ is also the French name for a spy-glass or telescope. LUNGE [a corruption of _allonge_]. A pass or thrust with a sword; a shove with a boarding-pike. LUNI-SOLAR. A chronological term; it is the moon's cycle multiplied into that of the sun. LUNI-SOLAR PRECESSION. _See_ PRECESSION. LUNT. A match-cord to fire great guns--a match for a linstock. LUNTRA. _See_ FELUCCA. LURCA. An old term for a small Mediterranean coaster. LURCH. A heavy roll, weather or lee, as occasioned by a sea suddenly striking or receding from the weather-bilge of the vessel.--_To be left in the lurch_ is to be left behind in a case where others make their escape. LUSH. Intoxicating fluids of any kind. Also, a northern term for splashing in water. LUSORIAE. Ancient vessels of observation or pleasure. LUST. An archaism of _list_. (_See_ LIST.) LUTE-STERN. Synonymous with _pink-stern_. LUTINGS. The dough stoppages to the seams of the coppers, &c., when distilling sea water. LYING. The situation of a whale when favourable for sticking--the "lie" usually occurs after feeding. LYING ALONG. _See_ LAYING ALONG. LYING ON HIS OARS. Taking a rest; at ease. LYING-TO. _See_ LIE-TO. LYM. From the Celtic _leim_, a port; as Lyme and Lymington. LYMPHAD. The heraldic term for an old-fashioned ship or galley. LYNCH-LAW. A word recently imported into our parlance from America, signifying illegal and revengeful execution at the wish of a tumultuous mob. LYRA. One of the ancient northern constellations. Also, a name of the gray gurnard, or _crooner_ (which see). LYRIE. The name in the Firth of Forth for the _Cottus cataphractus_, or armed bull-head. LYTER. The old orthography for _lighter_ (which see). LYTHE. A name for the pollack, _Gadus pollachius_. Also, the coal-fish in its fourth year. M. MAASH. A large trading vessel of the Nile. MACE. A war-club of old. MACHICOULIS. A projecting gallery over gateways, or walls insufficiently flanked: being open at the bottom between its supporting corbels, it allows of defending the foot of the wall. MACKEREL. The _Scomber vulgaris_, a well-known sea-fish. MACKEREL-BOAT. A stout clinch-worked vessel, with a large fore-sail, sprit-sail, and mizen. MACKEREL-SKY. _See_ CIRRO-CUMULUS. MACKEREL-STURE. A northern name for the tunny, _Scomber thynnus_. MACULAE. Dark temporary spots which are very frequently observed upon the sun's disc: they are of various forms, surrounded by a lighter shade or penumbra. MAD. The state of a compass needle, the polarity of which has been injured. MADDY, OR MADDIE. A large species of mussel abundant among the rocks of the western islands of Scotland and Wales. MADE. A professional term for having obtained a commission, or being promoted. Also, in some points synonymous with _built_. (_See_ MADE MASTS, &c.) MADE-EYE. Synonymous with _Flemish eye_ (which see). MADE MASTS. The large masts made in several pieces. A ship's lower mast is a made spar; her top-mast is a whole spar.--_Made block_ is one having its shell composed of different pieces. MADRIERS. Long and broad planks, used for supporting the earth in mining. Also, an old term for sheathing. MAGAZINE. A place built for the safe-keeping of ammunition; afloat it is confined to a close room, in the fore or after part, or both, of a ship's hold, as low down as possible; it is lighted occasionally by means of candles fixed in the light-room adjoining it, and no person is allowed to enter it with a lamp or candle. (_See_ LIGHT-ROOM.) MAGELLANIC CLOUDS. A popular term for the two _Nubeculae_, or great cloudy-looking spots in the southern heavens, which are found to consist of a vast number of nebulae and clusters of stars. MAGELLAN JACKET. A name given to a watch-coat with a hood, worn in high latitudes--first used by Cook's people. MAGGED. Worn, fretted, and stretched rope, as a magged brace. Also, reproved. MAGNET. _See_ COMPASS. MAGNETIC AMPLITUDE. The angle between the east or west point of a compass and any heavenly body at its rising or setting. MAGNETIC AZIMUTH. An arc of the horizon intercepted between the azimuth circle of a celestial object and the magnetic meridian. MAGNETIC COMPENSATOR. An iron plate fixed near the compass, to neutralize the effect of local attraction upon the needle. MAGNETIC NEEDLE. Applied to theodolites, ships' compasses, &c. A balanced needle, highly magnetized, which points to the magnetic pole, when not influenced by the local attraction of neighbouring iron. The magnetism may be discharged by blows, or a fall; hence, after an action at sea, the needles are often found to be useless, until re-magnetized. MAGNETIC STORM. An extraordinary magnetic action indicated by delicate magnetometers in a magnetic observatory, not perceptible on ordinary magnets. MAGNETIC TELEGRAPH. An instrument for communicating messages by means of magnetism. MAGNITUDE OF AN ECLIPSE. The proportion which the eclipsed part of the surface of the sun or moon bears to the diameter; it is sometimes expressed in digits, but more frequently as a decimal, the diameter being taken as unity. MAGNITUDES OF STARS. The relative degrees of apparent size in which the fixed stars are arranged, and classed according to the intensity of their light. The first six classes, designated by Greek letters, include all those which are distinctly visible to the naked eye. MAHONE, MAHONNA, OR MAON. A former Turkish flat-bottomed vessel of burden, mentioned among the ships of Soliman Pasha, in the siege of Diu. MAID. A coast name of the skate. MAIDEN. A fortress which has never been taken. MAIL. A coat of armour. Also, a number of rings interwoven net-wise, and used for rubbing off the loose hemp from white cordage after it is made. MAIL-SHELL. A name for the chiton. MAIN. A continent or mainland. Also, figuratively, the ocean. MAIN-BODY. The body of troops that marches between the advance-guard and the rear-guard of an army. MAIN-BOOM. The spar which stretches the foot of the boom-mainsail in a fore-and-aft rigged vessel. MAIN-BRACE. A purchase attached to the main-yard for trimming it to the wind. MAIN-BREADTH. The broadest part of a ship at any particular timber or frame, distinguished by upper and lower heights of breadth lines. MAIN-CAPSTAN. The after one, as distinguished from the jeer-capstan. MAIN-COURSE. The main-sail. MAIN-GUARD. The principal guard of a garrison town, usually posted in the place-of-arms, or the market-place. MAIN-HOLD. That part of a ship's hold which lies near the main-hatch. MAIN-ICE. A body of impenetrable ice apparently detached from the land, but immovable; between which and the land are lanes of water. MAIN-JEERS. Jeers for swaying up the main-yard. MAIN-KEEL. The principal keel, as distinguished from the false-keel and the keelson. MAIN-PIECE. The strong horizontal beam of the windlass, supported at the ends by iron spindles in the _windlass-bitts_. MAIN-PIECE OF THE RUDDER. The _rudder-stock_, or piece which is connected by the _rudder-bands_ to the stern-post. MAIN-POST. The stern-post, as distinguished from the false-post and inner-post. MAIN ROYAL-MAST. That above the main topgallant-mast. MAIN-SAIL. This, in a square-rigged vessel, is distinguished by the so-termed _square main-sail_; in a fore-and-aft rigged vessel it obtains the name of _boom main-sail_. Brigs carry both. MAIN-SAIL HAUL! The order given to haul the after-yards round when the ship is nearly head to wind in tacking. MAIN-SHAFT. The principal shaft in machinery. MAINSHEET-HORSE. A kind of iron dog fixed at the middle of a wooden beam, stretching across a craft's stern, from one quarter stanchion to the other; on it the mainsheet-block travels. MAIN-SPRING. The source of continuous motion in a time-keeper. Also, that part of a musket-lock which is sunk into the stock. MAIN-STAYSAIL. A storm-sail set between the fore and main masts. MAIN-TACK BLOCK. A block forming part of the purchase used for hauling the main-tack down to. MAIN-TACKLE. A large and strong tackle, hooked occasionally upon the main pendant, and used for various purposes, particularly in securing the mast, by setting up the rigging, stays, &c. MAIN-TACKLE PENDANT. A stout piece of rope with a hook in one end, and a thimble in the other, sometimes used for hauling the main-tackle down. MAIN-TOP BOWLINE. The bowline of the main-topsail. It is used to haul the weather-leech forward when on a wind, which makes the sail stand better. MAIN-TOPSAIL HAUL! The order used instead of _main-sail haul_, when the main-sail is not set. MAIN-TRANSOM. A term often applied to the _wing-transom_ (which see). MAIN-WALES. The lower wales, which are generally placed on the lower breadth, and so that the main-deck knee-bolts may come into them. MAIN-YARD MEN. Those in the doctor's list. MAISTER. _See_ MASTER. MAIZE. Indian corn, an article of extensive commerce in many countries. In Italy it is called _Turkey grain_ and _grano d'India_; in America simply _corn_, all other grains retaining their distinctive names. MAJOR. The next rank below that of lieutenant-colonel; the junior field-officer. MAJOR AXIS. In the orbit of a planet, means the line joining its aphelion and perihelion. MAJOR-GENERAL. The next in rank below the lieutenant-general. MAJOR OF BRIGADE. _See_ BRIGADE-MAJOR. MAKE, TO. Is variously applied in sea-language. MAKE A GOOD BOARD. _See_ BOARD. MAKE A LANE THERE! The order of the boatswain for the crew to separate at muster, to facilitate the approach of any one whose name is called. (_See_ LANE.) MAKE BAD WEATHER, TO. A ship rolling, pitching, or leaking violently in a gale. MAKE FAST. A word generally used for tying or securing ropes. To fasten. MAKE FREE WITH THE LAND, TO. To approach the shore closely. MAKE HEAD-WAY. A ship makes head-way when she advances through the water. MAKE IT SO. The order of a commander to confirm the time, sunrise, noon, or sunset, reported to him by the officer of the watch. MAKE LEE-WAY, TO. To drift to leeward of the course. MAKE READY! Be prepared. MAKES. This expresses coming on; as, the tide makes, &c. MAKE SAIL, TO. To increase the quantity of sail already set, either by letting out reefs, or by setting additional sails. MAKE STERN-WAY, TO. To retreat, or move stern foremost. MAKE THE LAND, TO. To see it from a distance after a voyage. MAKE WATER, TO. Usually signifies the act of a ship leaking, unless the epithet _foul_ be added. (_See_ FOUL WATER.) MAKING IRON. One of the caulker's tools; it has a groove in it, and is used after the caulking iron to finish off the seam. (_See_ MEAKING.) MAKING OFF. Cutting the flensed blubber of a whale into pieces, fitted to pass in at the bilge-holes of the butts which receive it. MALA FIDES. In admiralty law, not to be presumed, even under concealment of letters, or deviation from truth in formal papers. MALDUCK. One of the names given to the fulmar, _Procellaria glacialis_. MALKIN. A joint-staff sponge, for cleaning out a piece of ordnance. MALINGERER [Fr. _malingre_]. One who counterfeits illness for the purpose of avoiding duty. MALLARD. The male of the wild duck (_Anas boschas_). MALLEMAK, OR MOLLYMAUK. A sea-bird; the _Procellaria glacialis_, called also _fulmar_ (which see). MALLEMAROKING. The visiting and carousing of seamen in the Greenland ships. MALLET. A wooden hammer, of which there are several sorts.--_A caulking mallet_ is employed to drive the oakum into the seams of a ship. The head of this mallet is long, cylindrical, and hooped with iron.--_Serving mallet._ A cylindrical piece of wood with a groove on one side and a handle on the other. It is used in serving the rigging, binding the spun yarn more firmly about it than could be done by hand. MALLOW. A northern name for the sea-plant _Zostera marina_. MALTHA. Mineral pitch. MAN. A ship is frequently spoken of as _man_; as man-of-war, merchantman, Guineaman, East or West Indiaman, Greenlandman, &c. MAN, TO. To provide a competent number of hands for working and fighting a ship; to place people for duty, as "Man the barge;" "Man the capstan;" "Man the yards," &c. MAN, ISLE OF, BATTERY. A name given to the three guns mounted on ships' turrets. MANACLE. A handcuff. MANARVEL, TO. To pilfer small stores. MANATEE, MANATI, OR SEA-COW (_Manatus americanus_). A herbivorous aquatic animal of the order _Sirenia_, found in the West Indies and South American rivers. Another species (_Manatus senegalensis_) inhabits the west coast of Africa. MAN-BOUND. Detained in port in consequence of being short of complement. MAN-BROKER. Synonymous with _crimp_ (which see). MANBY'S MORTAR. An efficient apparatus for throwing a shell with a line and chain attached to it, over a stranded vessel, and thereby opening a communication between the wreck and the shore. MANCHE OF MANGALORE. A flat-bottomed boat of burden, about 25 to 35 feet long, 6 or 7 feet broad, and 4 or 5 feet deep, for landing the cargoes of the _patamars_, which are discharged and loaded at the mouth of the river. These boats are sewed together like the Masulah boats of Madras.--The _Manche of Calicut_ is very similar to the foregoing, with the exception of a raking stem for the purpose of taking the beach. MANCHINEEL. _Hippomane mancinella_, a tree which grows to a vast size on the coasts of the Caribbee Isles and neighbouring continent. The fruit and sap are highly poisonous; but sleeping beneath the branches does not cause death, as was erroneously supposed. MANDARIN. A Portuguese word derived from _mandare_, "to command." It is unknown to the Chinese and Tonquinese, who style their dignitaries "quahn." MANDILION. A loose boat-cloak of former times. MANDRIL. A wooden cylinder for forming paper cartridges. MANGER. A small berthing in the bows, extending athwart the deck of a ship-of-war immediately within the hawse-holes, and separated on the after-part from the rest of the deck by the _manger-board_, a strong coaming rather higher than the hawse-holes, serving to prevent the ingress of the sea when the cables are bent; this water is returned to the sea through the manger-scuppers, which are made large for that purpose. MANGONEL. An ancient military engine in the form of a gigantic cross-bow, discharging large darts and stones, used in battering fortified places: a kind of ballista. MANGONIZE, TO. To traffic in slaves. MAN-HANDLE, TO. To move by force of men, without levers or tackles. MAN-HOLE. The aperture, secured by a door, in the upper part of a steam-boiler, which allows a person to enter for repairing it or removing the deposit or crust of salt. MAN-HUNTING. The impress service. MANIFEST. An official inventory of the cargo of a merchant ship, specifying the name and tonnage of the vessel, the description of goods, the names of shippers and consignees, and the marks of each package. MANILLA ROPE. A valuable cordage made in the Philippines, which, not being subject to rot, does not require to be tarred. MANIPLE. A small armed party; a term derived from the subdivision of a Roman cohort. MAN[OE]UVRE. A dexterous management of anything connected with the ship. MAN-OF-WAR. Any vessel in the royal navy. MAN-OF-WAR BIRD, OR FRIGATE BIRD. _Fregata aquila_, a sea-bird of the family _Pelecanidae_, found in the tropics, remarkable for the length of its wings and rapidity of its flight. MAN-OF-WAR FASHION. A state of order, tidiness, and good discipline. MAN-OF-WAR'S MAN. A seaman belonging to the royal navy. MANOMETER. A steam-gauge. MAN OVERBOARD! A cry which excites greater activity in a ship than any other, from the anxious desire to render assistance. MAN SHIP! Is to range the people on the yards and rigging in readiness to give three cheers, as a salute on meeting, parting company, or other occasions; a good old custom now slackening. In war, as instanced by the _Nymphe_ and _Cleopatra_, the meeting of enemies was truly chivalrous; though there was a case where the response was so moderated as to be laughed at as "a cheer with the chill on." MANSIONS OF THE MOON. _See_ LUNAR MANSIONS. MANTILLIS. A kind of shield anciently fixed upon the tops of ships as a cover for archers. MANTLETS. Large movable musket-proof blinds used by besiegers at the head of a sap, now mostly fitted to embrasures to protect the gunners from sharpshooters: they are best when made of plaited rope. MANUAL-EXERCISE. The regulated series of motions for handling and carrying the musket, except what is connected with firing it. MANUBALIST. A stout cross-bow. MANXMAN. A seaman or native of the Isle of Man. MANZERA. A vessel used in the Adriatic for carrying cattle. MAON. _See_ MAHONE. MAR. Latin _mare_, the sea: a prefix, as Margate, the sea-way, &c. MARABUT. A sail which galleys hoisted in bad weather. Also, small edifices on Barbary headlands, occupied by a priest. MARCHES. Borders or confines of a country, as the marches of Ancona, &c. MARCHING ORDER. A soldier fully equipped with arms, ammunition, and a portion of his kit, carries from 30 to 35 lbs. In _service marching_ order, by the addition of provisions and some campaigning necessaries, he carries nearly 50 lbs. But _heavy marching_ order, which was yet heavier, is now happily abolished. MARCO-BANCO. An imaginary coin of Hamburg commerce, equal to 1_s._ 5-3/4_d._ sterling. MARE'S TAILS. A peculiar modification of the cirrus, indicating wind. MARGIN LINE. A line or edge parallel to the upper side of the wing transom, and just below it, where the butts of the after bottom planks terminate. MARINARIUS. An old statute term for a mariner or seaman. MARINATE, TO. To salt fish, and afterwards preserve it in oil or vinegar. MARINE. Belonging to the sea. It is a general name for the royal or mercantile navy of any state; also the whole economy of nautical affairs. MARINE BAROMETER. A barometer, the tube of which is contracted in one part to prevent the sudden oscillations of the mercury by the ship's motion. MARINE BOARDS. Establishments at our different ports for carrying into effect the provisions of the Merchant Shipping Act. MARINE BUILDINGS. Those constructed for making or preserving ships, as docks, arsenals, store-houses, &c. MARINE CLOTHING-ROOM. A compartment of the after-platform, to receive the clothes and stores of the royal marines. MARINE ENGINES. Those steam engines which are used to propel ships, whether on the ocean or in rivers, in contradistinction to locomotives on shore. MARINE GLUE, OR JEFFREY'S GLUE. A well-known adhesive composition of great importance in ship carpentry, and in various nautical uses. The substance is said to consist of caoutchouc, gum, and mineral oil. MARINE INSURANCE. A contract by which an individual or a company agree to indemnify the losses or damages happening to a ship or cargo during a voyage. For this agreement the ship-owner pays a sum in advance, called the premium, which falls to the insurer in case the ship arrives safe in a specified harbour. If the ship or cargo, however, be lost by default of the person insured, the insurer shall not be accountable. Among the Romans, the state made good losses by shipwreck, which occasioned many frauds. It is mentioned in the laws of Oleron, but was regulated under its present bearings in England in 1601. MARINE LAGOON. A lake or inlet formed by the encroachments of the sea, and the deposits of fluviatile action. MARINE OFFICER. An officer of the Royal Marines. Jocularly and witlessly applied to an empty bottle, as being "useless;" but better rendered as having "done its duty, and ready to do it again." MARINER. One who obtains his living on the sea, in whatever rank. But with our old voyagers mariners were able seamen, and sailors only _ordinary_ seamen. Thus, Middleton's ship sailed from Bantam in 1605, leaving 18 men behind, "of whom 5 were mariners, and 13 sailors." MARINE RAILWAY. A term which has been applied to a slip for hauling vessels on to repair. MARINER'S COMPASS. _See_ COMPASS. MARINER'S NEEDLE. The magnetized bar of a mariner's compass. MARINES, THE ROYAL. A body of officers and soldiers raised to serve on board men-of-war, and trained to fight either at sea or on shore: their chosen body of artillery was esteemed one of the best under the crown. (_See_ ARTILLERY.) "Tell that to the marines" was a common rejoinder to any improbable assertion, when those fine fellows had not acquired their present high estimation. MARINE STORES. A general term for the iron-work, cordage, sails, provisions, and other outfit, with which a vessel is supplied. MARITIMA ANGLIAE. The profit and emolument formerly arising to the king from the sea, but which was afterwards granted to the lord high admiral. MARITIME. Pertaining to sea affairs: all but synonymous with _marine_ (which see.) MARITIME COUNTRY. A country which has its shores washed by the sea. MARITIME INTEREST. _See_ BOTTOMRY. MARITIME LAW. That branch of international law, or the law of nations, which consists of general principles, chiefly derived from ancient codes of law, and admitted by civilized nations, as to commercial intercourse with enemies and neutrals. MARITIME LIEN. A privileged claim in respect of service done to, or injury caused by, a ship, to be carried into effect by legal process. MARITIME POSITIONS. The intersection of the geographical co-ordinates of the latitudes and longitudes of places on the globe. MARITIME POWERS. Those states which possess harbours, &c., on the coasts, and a powerful navy to defend them. MARK. A certain regulated length for Spanish sword-blades, under penalty of fine, and the weapon to seizure. Also, any object serving for the guidance of ships, as sea-marks, land-marks, leading-marks, &c. Also, a piece of twine on a running rope, as a brace, &c., to show when, by being near the belaying pin or the bitts, it has been sufficiently hauled in. "Mark of the fore-brace down, sir;"--answer, "Belay, oh." MARKAB. The lucida, or chief star, in the ancient constellation _Pegasus_. MARKS AND DEEPS. Marks are the measured notifications on the hand lead-line, with white, blue, and red bunting, leather, and knots; deeps are the estimated fathoms between these marks. They are thus noted: mark 2 leather; mark 3 blue; deep 4; mark 5 white; deep 6; mark 7 red; deep 8; deep 9; mark 10 leather; deep 11; deep 12; mark 13 blue; deep 14; mark 15 white; deep 16; mark 17 red; deep 18; deep 19; mark 20 two knots. MARL, TO. To souse fish in vinegar to be eaten cold. _See_ SOUSE. MARLE, TO. To wind marline, spun-yarn, twine, &c., about a rope, so that every turn is secured by a kind of knot, and remains fixed, in case the rest should be cut through by friction. It is commonly used to fasten slips of canvas, called parsling, upon the surface of a rope, to prevent its being galled, or to attach the foot of a sail to its bolt-rope, &c., with marling hitches, instead of sewing it. MARLINE. _See_ LINE. MARLINE-HOLES. Holes made for marling, or lacing the foot-rope and clues in courses and top-sails. MARLINE-SPIKE. An iron pin tapering to a point, and principally used to separate the strands of a rope, in order to introduce the ends of some other through the intervals in the act of knotting or splicing; it is also used as a lever in marling, fixing seizings, &c. (_See_ FID.) MARLINE-SPIKE HITCH. A peculiar hitch in marling, made by laying the marline-spike upon the seizing stuff, and then bringing the end of that seizing over the standing part, so as to form a jamming bight. MARMIT. A pot fitted with a hook for hanging it to the bars of the galley-range. MAROON. A name for a bright light of that colour used for signals; and also for an explosive ball of prepared paste-board. MAROONING. A custom among former pirates, of putting an offender on shore on some desolate cape or island, with a gun, a few shot, a flask of powder, and a bottle of water. MARQUE. _See_ LETTERS OF MARQUE. MARQUEE. An officer's oblong tent; has two poles, and curtains all round; it is often assigned to various staff purposes. MARROT. A name for the guillemot. MARRY, TO, THE ROPES, BRACES, OR FALLS. To hold both together, and by pressure haul in both equally. Also so to join the ends of two ropes, that they will pass through a block. MARS. One of the ancient superior planets, the next to the earth in order of distance from the sun. MARSH [Anglo-Saxon _mersc_, a fen]. Low land often under water, and producing aquatic vegetation. Those levels near the sea coast are usually saturated with salt water. MARSILIANA. A Venetian ship of burden, square-sterned. MART. A commercial market. Also a colloquialism for marque, as a letter of _mart_ or _marque_. MARTELLO TOWER. So named from a tower in the Bay of Mortella, in Corsica, which, in 1794, maintained a very determined resistance against the English. A martello tower at the entrance of the bay of Gaeta beat off H.M.S. _Pompee_, of 80 guns. A martello is built circular, and thus difficult to hit, with walls of vast thickness, pierced by loop-holes, and the bomb-proof roof is armed with one heavy traversing gun. They are 30 to 40 feet high, surrounded by a dry fosse, and the entrance is by a ladder at a door several feet from the ground. MARTIAL LAW. The law of war, obtaining between hostile forces, or proclaimed in rebellious districts; it rests mainly on necessity, custom in like cases, and the will of the commander of the forces; thus differing from _military law_ (which see). Martial law is proclaimed when the civil law is found to be insufficient to preserve the peace; in the case of insurrection, mutiny, &c., the will and judgment of the officer in command becomes law. MARTIN. A cat-sized creature with a valuable fur imported from Hudson's Bay and Canada in prodigious numbers.--"_My eye and Betty Martin_," is a common expression implying disbelief; a corruption of the Romish _mihi, beate Martine!_ MARTINET. A rigid disciplinarian; but one who, in matters of inferior moment, harasses all under him. MARTINGALE. A rope extending downwards from the jib-boom end to a kind of short gaff-shaped spar, fixed perpendicularly under the cap of the bowsprit; its use is to guy the jib-boom down in the same manner as the bobstays retain the bowsprit. The spar is usually termed the _dolphin-striker_, from its handy position whence to strike fish. MARTNETS. The leech-lines of a sail--they were said to be _topped_ when the leech was hauled by them close to the yard. MARYN [Anglo-Nor.] The sea-coast. MARYNAL. An ancient term for mariner. MASCARET. A peculiar movement of the sea near Bordeaux in summer, at low water. MASK. A cruive or crib for catching fish. A battery is said to be masked when its external appearance misleads the enemy. MAST [Anglo-Saxon _maest_, also meant chief or greatest]. A long cylindrical piece of timber elevated perpendicularly upon the keel of a ship, to which are attached the yards, the rigging, and the sails. It is either formed of one piece, and called a pole-mast, or composed of several pieces joined together and termed a made mast. A lower mast is fixed in the ship by _sheers_ (which see), and the foot or keel of it rests in a block of timber called the step, which is fixed upon the keelson.--_Expending a mast_, or carrying it away, is said, when it is broken by foul weather.--_Fore-mast._ That which stands near the stem, and is next in size to the main-mast.--_Jury-mast._ (_See_ JURY-MAST.)--_Main-mast._ The largest mast in a ship.--_Mizen-mast._ The smallest mast, standing between the main-mast and the stern.--_Over-masted_, or _taunt-masted_. The state of a ship whose masts are too tall or too heavy.--_Rough-mast_, or _rough-tree_. A spar fit for making a mast. (_See_ BOWSPRIT and JIB-BOOM.)--_Springing a mast._ When it is cracked horizontally in any place.--_Top-mast._ A top-mast is raised at the head or top of the lower-mast through a cap, and supported by the trestle-trees.--_Topgallant-mast._ A mast smaller than the preceding, raised and secured to its head in the same manner.--_Royal-mast._ A yet smaller mast, elevated through irons at the head of the topgallant-mast; but more generally the two are formed of one spar.--_Under-masted_ or _low-masted ships_. Vessels whose masts are small and short for their size.--_To mast a ship._ The act of placing a ship's masts. MAST-CARLINGS. Those large carlings which are placed at the sides of the masts from beam to beam, to frame the partners and give support. MAST-COAT. A conical canvas fitted over the wedges round the mast, to prevent water oozing down from the decks. MASTER. The epithet for the captain or commander of a merchant vessel. When England first became a maritime power, ships with sailors, and a master to navigate, were furnished by the Cinque Ports, &c., and the fighting part of the men was composed of soldiers sent on board, commanded by generals, &c. Among the early voyagers there was a distinction between _master_ and _maister_, the latter being the office; as, "we spoke the _Dragon_, whereof Master Ivie was maister," in Welsh's _Voyage to Benin_, A.D. 1590. In most applications, _master_ denotes chief; as master boat-builder, master caulker, master sail-maker, &c. MASTER OF A SHIP-OF-WAR. An officer appointed by the commissioners of the navy to attend to the navigating a ship under the direction of the captain, the working of a ship into her station in the order of battle, and in other circumstances of danger, but he reports to the first lieutenant, who carries out any necessary evolution. It is likewise his duty, in concert with lieutenants on surveys, to examine and report on the provisions. He is moreover charged with their stowage. For the performance of these services he is allowed several assistants, who are termed second-masters, master's assistants, &c. This officer's station has been termed the meridional altitude of the lower order of midshipmen, but it is requisite that he be both a good officer and a seaman. He ranks after lieutenants according to date, but is subordinate in command to all lieutenants. MASTER AND COMMANDER. A title which, in 1814, was simplified to commander, the next degree above lieutenant; he ranks with, but after, a lieutenant-colonel. MASTER-AT-ARMS. In former times was an officer appointed to command the police-duty of a ship, to teach the crew the exercise of small arms, to confine by order of superiors any prisoners, and to superintend their confinement. Also, to take care that fires and lights were put out at the proper hour, and no spirituous liquors brought on board. He was assisted by _ship's corporals_, who also attended the gangway with the sentinels. Until 1816, the junior lieutenant was nominally lieutenant-at-arms, and drilled the seamen, assisted by the serjeant of marines. MASTER-ATTENDANT. An officer in the royal dockyards appointed to assist in the fitting or dismantling, removing or securing vessels of war, &c., at the port where he resides; to inspect the moorings in the harbour, to visit all the ships in ordinary, and to attend at the general musters in the dockyard, taking care that all the individuals registered in the navy-book are present at their duty. MASTER MARINER. Shipmaster or captain of a merchant vessel. MASTER OF MISRULE. An officer of an hour or two, when the hands were piped "to mischief." The lord or abbot of misrule on shore has immemorially been a person selected to superintend the diversions of Christmas. In these larks, however, malicious mischief was unknown. MASTER OF THE FLEET. A master on board the commander-in-chief's ship, who has a general superintendence of the stores issued to the fleet, and reports to the flag-captain any deviations from rule which he may observe. MASTER-SHIPWRIGHT. The chief superintendent in the building and repairing of ships in the royal dockyards. MAST-HEAD. The upper part of a mast above the rigging. MAST-HEADING. A well-known marine punishment, said to give midshipmen the best time for reading. A court-martial, as a substitute, punishes the parents as well as the thoughtless youth. MAST-HEAD MEN. The men stationed aloft to keep a look-out. MAST-HEAD PENDANTS. _See_ PENDANT. MAST-HIGH. A figurative expression of height. MAST-HOLES. The apertures in the deck-partners for stepping the masts. MAST-HOOPS. The iron hoops on made or built masts. MAST-HOUSE. In dockyards, where masts are made. MASTIC. An excellent cement latterly introduced into ship-building, instead of putty and other appliances, to protect the heads of bolts. MAST-ROPE [Anglo-Saxon _maest-rap_]. That which is used for sending masts up or down. MASULAH OR MASSOOLAH BOATS. Madras boats, of which the planks are sewed together with coir yarn, crossing the stitches over a wadding of coir or straw, which presses on the joints, and prevents much leakage. The vessel is thus rendered pliable, and yields to the shock on taking the ground in the surf, which at times runs from 10 to 16 feet high. They are rowed by twelve men, in double banks, with oars formed by an oval piece of board lashed to the end of a rough piece of wood. They are guided by one man with a long steer-oar, who stamps and yells with excitement as he urges the men to pull when a rolling surf is coming up astern. These boats are from 30 to 35 feet in length, 10 to 11 feet in breadth, and 7 to 8 feet in depth. MAT. To prevent chafing, a thick mat is woven from strands of old rope, spun yarn, or foxes, containing each a greater or lesser number of rope-yarns, in proportion to the intended mat to be made. The largest and strongest kinds are called _paunch-mats_. The _thrum-mat_ is precisely similar to the present cocoa-nut fibre door-mats. Where it is possible, rounding is now used instead of mats, it being neater and holding less water. MATCH. A wager of emulation by rowing, sailing, man[oe]uvring, &c. (_See_ QUICK MATCH.)--_Slow match_, used by artillerymen, is a very loose rope steeped in a solution of nitre, and burns at the rate of about one inch an hour, and is either used alone, or for lighting the port-fires, by which guns are yet fired for salutes on shore. MATCHLOCK. A musket fired with a match fixed on the cock opening the pan; long out of use, except in China and some parts of India. MATCH-TUBS. Conical tubs about 18 inches in height, which have a sunken head perforated with holes, to admit the slow match to hang with the lighted end downwards. MATE. Generally implies adjunct or assistant. MATE OF A MERCHANT-SHIP. The officer who commands in the absence of the master, and shares the duty with him at sea. (_See_ CHIEF MATE or OFFICER.) There are first, second, third, and fourth mates. MATE OF A WATCH. The senior or passed midshipman is responsible to the officer of the watch. He heaves the log, inserts on the log-board all incidents occurring during his watch, musters the men of the watch, and reports to the officer in charge, who, when he is relieved, writes his initials on the log-board. MATE OF THE LOWER-DECK. An officer of considerable importance in former times in ships of the line; he was responsible for the state and condition of the lower deck, and the residents there. MATE OF THE MAIN-DECK. The officer appointed to superintend all the duties to be executed upon the main-deck during the day. MATERIAL MEN. The persons who furnish all tackles and stores, &c., to repair or fit out ships. The high court of Admiralty allows material men to sue against remaining proceeds in the registry, notwithstanding past prohibitions. MATERIEL. A French word that has been naturalized in speaking of naval or military stores. MATHEMATICS. The science which treats of every kind of quantity that can be numbered or measured. MATIES, OR MATEYS. Dockyard artificers, shipwrights, carpenters, &c. MATO. A shell formerly of some commercial value on the west coast of Africa. MATRASS. The square head of an arrow called _quarril_. In chemistry it is the Florence oil flask used for evaporation. From its thinness it will stand great gradual heat. MATROSS. Formerly an assistant gunner in the artillery. MATTHEW WALKER. A knot, so termed from the originator. It is formed by a half hitch on each strand in the direction of the lay, so that the rope can be continued after the knot is formed, which shows as a transverse collar of three strands. It is the knot used on the end of the laniards of rigging, where dead-eyes are employed. MAUD. A salmon-net fixed in a square form by four stakes. MAUL. A heavy iron hammer, used for driving tree-nails or bolts; it has one end faced, and the opposite pointed, whence it is often called a pin-maul.--_Top-maul_ is distinguished by having an iron handle, with an eye at the end, by which it is tied fast to the mast-head. It is kept aloft for driving the iron fid in or out of the top-mast. MAUND. An Indian weight, which varies in amount depending on the part of the country. Also, a basket used by fishermen; a measure of small fish. MAUNJEE. The native boatmen of the river Hooghly. MAVIS-SKATE. The sharp-nosed ray. (_See_ FRIAR-SKATE.) MAW, OR SEA-MAW. The common gull, _Larus canus_. MAY. _See_ VENDAVAL. MAYHEM, OR MAHIM. The law-term for maim. MAZE. In the herring trade, 500 fishes. MAZOLET. An Indian bark boat, caulked with moss. MEAKER. A west-country term for a minnow. MEAKING IRON. The tool used by caulkers to run old oakum out of the seams before inserting new. MEALED. Mixed or compounded.--_Mealed powder_, gunpowder pulverized by treating with spirits of wine. MEALES, OR MIOLS. Immense sand-banks thrown up by the sea on the coasts of Norfolk, Lancashire, &c. MEAN. As a general term implies the medium, but a mean of bad observations can never make a good one. MEAN ANOMALY. _See_ ANOMALY. MEAN DISTANCE. The average distance of a planet from the sun; it is equal to half the longer axis of the ellipse, and hence is frequently termed the semi-axis major. MEAN EQUINOX. The position of the equinox independent of the effects of nutation. MEAN MOTION. The rate at which a body moving in an elliptic orbit would proceed at an equal velocity throughout. MEAN NOON. The noon of a mean day supposing the year to be divided into days of equal length. It differs from _apparent noon_ by the amount of the equation of time for that date. MEAN OBLIQUITY. The obliquity of the ecliptic, unaffected with nutation. MEAN PLACE OF A STAR. Its position at a given time, independent of aberration and nutation. MEAN SUN. _See_ TIME. MEAN TIME. _See_ TIME. MEASURE. A comprehensive term including length, surface, time, weight, solidity, capacity, and force of gravity. MEASURING LINE. The old term for the first meridian reckoned off from a ship's longitude. Also, the five-fathom line used by the boatswain. MECHANICS. The science which explains the properties of moving bodies, and of the machines from which they receive their impetus. The mechanical powers consist of six primary instruments, the lever, the balance, the pulley, the wheel, the screw, and the wedge: to which is sometimes added the inclined plane; and of some, or all of these, every compound machine consists. MECK. A notched staff in a whale-boat on which the harpoon rests. MEDICAL BOARD. A number of medical officers convened to examine sick and wounded officers and men, for invaliding or discharge. MEDICINE-CHEST. A large chest containing the medical necessaries that may be required for 100 men during the cruize. Several chests are thus fitted and supplied in proportion to the ship's crew, ready for detached service. MEDICINES. Merchantmen are legally bound to carry medicines in proportion to their crew, with instructions for their use if there be no surgeon on board. MEDICO. A familiar appellation for the ship's surgeon. MEDITERRANEAN OR INLAND SEA. A term applied to a sea surrounded on all sides, except its immediate entrance, by land; as the Mediterranean, so styled _par excellence_; also, the Baltic, the Red Sea, &c. MEDITERRANEAN PASS. A document formerly granted by the Lords of the Admiralty to registered vessels, which was valuable when the Barbary powers were unchecked. (_See_ PASS.) MEDIUM. _See_ RESISTING MEDIUM. MEERMAID. A name given by our northern fishermen to the _Lophius piscatorius_, or frog-fish, without reference to the _mermaid_ (which see). MEER-SWINE. The porpoise [from the German _meerschwein_]. MEET HER! The order to adjust the helm, so as to check any further movement of the ship's head in a given direction. MEGANESE [Gr.] A large portion of land, inferior in extent to a continent, but which, though insular, is too large to be termed an island, as New Holland. MEMORIAL. An official petition on account of services performed. MEN. The ship's company in general. MEND SAILS, TO. To loose and skin them afresh on the yards. MEND THE SERVICE. Put on more service to the cable, or any part of the rigging chafed. MERCANTILE MARINE. _See_ MARINE. MERCANTILE MARINE FUND. A public fund accumulated by fees payable to the Board of Trade on account of the merchant shipping. MERCATOR'S CHART OR PROJECTION. Introduced by Gerard Mercator, _circa_ 1556: it is a projection of the surface of the earth in the plane, with all the meridians made parallel with each other, consequently the degrees of longitude all equal, the degrees of latitude increasing in a corresponding ratio towards the poles. This is the chart most commonly used in navigation; and its use appears to have obtained quickly, for in 1576, among the items of Martin Frobisher's outfit, we find, "For a greate Mappe Universall of Mercator, in prente, L1, 6_s._ 8_d._" MERCATOR'S SAILING. Performed loxodromically, by means of Mercator's charts. MERCHANTMAN. A trading vessel employed in importing and exporting goods to and from any quarter of the globe. MERCHANT SERVICE. The mercantile marine. MERCHANT-VENTURERS. A company of merchants who traded with Russia, Turkey, and other distant parts. In the _Affectionate Shepheard_, 1594, we find-- "Well is he tearm'd a merchant venturer, Since he doth venter lands, and goods, and all; When he doth travell for his traffique far, Little he knowes what fortune may befall." MERCURIAL GAUGE. A curved tube partly filled with mercury, to show the pressure of steam in an engine. MERCURY. One of the ancient inferior planets, and the nearest to the sun, as far as we yet know. (_See_ TRANSIT OF.) Also, a name for quicksilver; the fluid metal so useful in the construction of the marine barometer, thermometer, and artificial horizon. MERE. An Anglo-Saxon word still in use, sometimes meaning a lake, and generally the sea itself. MERIDIAN, OF THE EARTH. Is an imaginary great circle passing through the zenith and the poles, and cutting the equator at right angles. When the sun is on the meridian of any place, it is mid-day there, and at all places situated under the same meridian.--_First meridian_ is that from which the longitude is reckoned. Magnetic meridian is not a great circle but a wavy line uniting those poles. In common acceptation, a meridian is any line supposed to be drawn from the north to the south pole; therefore a place being under the same meridian as another place, is either due north or south of it.--_Plane of the meridian_ is the plane of this great circle, and its intersection with the sensible horizon is called the _meridian line_.--The _meridian transit_ of a heavenly body is the act of passing over the said plane, when it is either due north or south of the spectator.--_Ante meridiem_, or A.M., before noon.--_Post meridiem_, or P.M., after noon. MERIDIAN ERROR. The deviation of a transit-instrument from the plane of the meridian at the horizon; it is also termed the _azimuthal error_. MERLON. That part of the parapet of a battery between two adjacent embrasures, 15 or 20 feet long in general. MERMAID. A fabulous sea-creature of which the upper half was said to resemble a woman, the lower half a fish. MERMAID'S GLOVE. The name of a peculiar sponge, _Spongia palmata_, abundant at Bermuda. MERMAID'S PURSE. The oblong horny cases with long filiform appendages developed from each of the four corners, found on the sea-shore, being the outer covering of the eggs of several species of rays and sharks. Also, the hollow root of the sea-weed _Fucus polyschides_. MERRY DANCERS. The glancings and coruscations of the _aurora borealis_, or northern lights. MERRY MEN OF MAY. Dangerous currents formed by the ebb-tides. MESON. A very old form of spelling _mizen_. MESS. Any company of the officers or crew of a ship, who eat, drink, and associate together. (_See_ NUMBER.) Also, the state of a ship in a sudden squall, when everything is let go and flying, and nothing hauled in. MESS-DECK. The place where a ship's crew mess. MESSENGER. A large cable-laid rope, used to unmoor or heave up the anchor of a ship, by the aid of the capstan. This is done by binding a part of the messenger to the cable by which the ship rides, in several places, with pliant nippers, and by winding another part of it about the capstan. The messenger has an eye-splice at each end, through which several turns of a strong lashing are passed, forming an endless rope. So that by putting on fresh nippers forward, and taking them off as they are hove aft, the capstan may be kept constantly going, and the cable is walked in without stopping. (_See_ VIOL.) A superior plan is now adopted, in which the messenger, consisting of a pitch chain which has a double and single link alternately, works in iron spurs fastened above the lower rim of the capstan. This avoids the trouble of shifting or fleeting the messenger while heaving in. Again, the cable itself is commonly brought to the capstan.--_Light forward the messenger!_ is the order to pull the slack of it towards the hawse holes, on the slack or opposite side, so as to be ready to fasten upon the cable which is being hove in, as it comes off the manger-roller at the bows. MESSENGERS. Boys appointed to carry orders from the quarter-deck. In some ships they wore winged caps of the Mercury type. MESS-KID. A wooden tub for holding cooked victuals or cocoa. MESSMATE. A companion of the same mess-table, hence comrades in many ways; whence the _saw_: "Messmate before a shipmate, shipmate before a stranger, stranger before a dog." MESS-TRAPS. The kids, crockery, bowls, spoons, and other articles of mess service. META-CENTRE. That point in a ship where a vertical line drawn from the centre of cavity cuts a line perpendicular to the keel, passing through the centre of gravity. As this depends upon the situation of the centre of cavity, the meta-centre is often called the _shifting-centre_. Safety requires this point to be above the centre of gravity. METAL. A word comprehending the great guns, or ordnance generally, of a ship or battery. METEINGS. The measurement and estimate of timber. METEOR. _See_ COMPASANT, WATER-SPOUT, &c. METEORITES. Meteoric stones which fall from the atmosphere, composed of earthy and metallic substances, in which iron, nickel, &c., enter largely. METEOROLOGIC TELEGRAPHY. The sending of telegrams to various stations at home and abroad, with the object of improving the science of meteorology, and issuing storm warnings, &c. METONIC CYCLE. A cycle of 19 years, which contains 235 lunations, and results in a correspondence of the solar and lunar years. The discovery of this astronomical period may be safely assigned to Meton in 432 B.C. MEW [Anglo-Saxon _maew_]. A name for the sea-gull. MIASMA. An impure effluvium in the air--proceeding from marshes or moist ground acted upon by solar heat--by which malaria fevers, particularly intermittents, are produced. MICROMETER. An instrument used to measure small angles, diameters, and distances of heavenly bodies. MID. The intermediate or middle part of anything. Also, _per contractionem_, a midshipman. MID-CHANNEL. Implies half way across any river, channel, &c. MIDDLE BAND. One of the bands of a sail, to give additional strength. MIDDLE-LATITUDE SAILING. A method of converting departure in difference of longitude, and _vice versa_, by using the middle latitude instead of the meridional parts, as in Mercator's sailing. MIDDLE-TIMBER. That timber in the stern which is placed amidships. MIDDLE-TOPSAIL. A deep-roached sail, set in some schooners and sloops on the heel of their top-masts between the top and the cap. A modification of this, under the name of a lower top-sail, is now very common in double-topsail-yarded ships. (Cunningham's top-sails.) MIDDLE-WALES. The three or four thick strakes worked along each side between the lower and middle-deck-ports in three-deckers. MIDDLE-WATCH. The portion of the crew on deck-duty from midnight to 4 A.M. MIDDLE-WATCHER. The slight meal snatched by officers of the middle-watch about five bells (or 2.30 A.M.) MIDDLING A SAIL. Arranging it for bending to the yard. MIDDY. An abbreviation for the younger midshipmen, synonymous with _mid_. MIDRIB. A narrow canal or culvert. MIDSHIPMAN. A naval cadet appointed by the admiralty, with the exception of one in each ship appointed by the captain. No person can be appointed midshipman until he has served one year, and passed his examinations; nor a lieutenant without having previously served six years in the royal navy as midshipman, and having further passed two severe examinations--one in seamanship and one in gunnery. A midshipman is then the station in which a young volunteer is trained in the several exercises necessary to attain a knowledge of steam, machinery, discipline, the general movements and operations of a ship, and qualify him to command. MIDSHIPMAN'S NUTS. Broken pieces of biscuit as dessert. MIDSHIPMAN'S ROLL. A slovenly method of rolling up a hammock transversely, and lashing it endways by one clue. MIDSHIPS. The middle part of the vessel, either with regard to her length or breadth. (_See_ AMIDSHIPS.) MILDERNIX. A strong canvas of which courses were formerly made; it appears in old statutes. MILE. The statute mile is 5280 feet; but that used at sea, termed the mean nautic mile, consists of 6075.6 feet, or 60 to a degree. MILITARY EXECUTION. The levying contributions from a country by military occupation and force. MILITARY LAW. That under which soldiers and sailors are governed, founded on the acts of parliament passed to that end. MILITIA. A military force raised by ballot. MILKY WAY. _See_ VIA LACTEA. MILL. A boxing match, whether standing up or nailed to a chest. MILLAR'S SIGHT. General Millar's simple dispart--a sliding pillar bearing a scale graduated to tangents of degrees for setting the gun by. MILLED LEAD. Sheet lead. MILLER, TO DROWN THE. To put an overdose of water to grog. MILLER'S THUMB. A fresh-water fish, the _Cottus cataphractus_. MILT. The soft roe, or spermatic part, of the male fish. MINE. A passage made under ground, with a chamber at the end, under the place intended to be blown up; it is entered by the shaft, which leads through the gallery to the chamber. MINERAL OIL. _See_ PETROLEUM. MINIE RIFLE. This has acquired a great name, though not yet in general use. MINION. An old four-pounder gun about 7 feet long. Its point-blank range was 120 paces, with a random one of 1500. Bourne, in 1578, mentions the minion as requiring shot 3 inches in diameter. MINISTER. A minister, though termed plenipotentiary, has no power to grant protection to vessels or cargoes otherwise subject to the operations and laws of hostilities. MINNIS. An old British word for a rock or piece of rising ground. MINNOW. A small fresh-water fish--the _Leuciscus phoxinus_. The term was used in contempt by Shakspeare and the elders. MINOR AXIS. In a planetary orbit, signifies the line perpendicular to the major axis, and passing through the centre of the ellipse. MINOR PLANETS. _See_ ASTEROIDS. MINUTE MILE. The sixtieth part of a degree of longitude or latitude; in the latter case it is the sixtieth part of a degree of a great circle, in the former it decreases in length as the latitude increases. MINUTE AND HALF-MINUTE GLASSES. _See_ GLASS. MINUTE-GUNS. Fired at intervals of a minute each during the progress of important funerals. MINUTES. Short notices taken in writing of any important proceedings. MIRA. A remarkable variable star in Cetus. MIRACH. One of the bright stars in Andromeda. MIRAGE, OR LOOM. A word, which has crept into use since the French expedition to Egypt, to express the extraordinary refraction which light undergoes when strata of air, of different densities, extend above each other. The mirage, reflecting objects at a great height, inverts and doubles the image. MIRE-BUMPER AND MIRE-DRUM. North-country names of the bittern. MIRKLES. The radicle leaves of the _Fucus esculentus_, a sea-weed eaten on our northern coasts. MIRROR. The speculum of a quadrant, or any silvered or polished reflecting surface. MISCHIEF. _See_ MASTER OF MISRULE. MISREPRESENTATION TO THE UNDERWRITERS, of any fact or circumstance material to the risk of insuring, whether by the insured or his agent, and whether fraudulent or innocent, renders the contract null and void. (_See_ REPRESENTATION.) MISSILES. Projectiles of every kind propelled by force. MISSING. If a vessel is not heard of within six months after her departure (or after the last intelligence of her) from any port in Europe, and within twelve months from other parts of the world, she is deemed to be lost. Presumptive proof will suffice if none of her crew appear. MISSING STAYS. To fail in going about from one tack to another; when, after a ship gets her head to the wind, she comes to a stand, and begins to fall off on the same tack. MIST [Anglo-Saxon]. A thin vapour, between a _fog_ and _haze_, and is generally wet. MISTICO. Equivalent to our _hermaphrodite_, being a small Mediterranean vessel, between a xebec and a felucca. (_See_ XEBEC.) MISTRAL. A cold N.W. wind experienced on the Mediterranean shores of France. [Corrupted from _maestrale_.] MITTS. A protection for the hand, covering the thumb in one space and the fingers in another, so that men wearing them can still handle ropes. MIXED MATHEMATICS. Pure mathematics when applied to practical subjects, as astronomy, optics, hydrography, gunnery, engineering, and the like. MIZAR. The star {z} in Ursa Major; the middle one in the tail. MIZEN. The spanker or driver is often so named. MIZEN-MAST. The aftermost mast of a ship (_see_ SHROUDS, STAY, YARD, &c.), observing only that the epithet of fore, main, or mizen, is added to each term, to distinguish them from each other. (_See_ BONAVENTURE.) MIZEN MAST-HEAD. Rear-admirals carry their flag at their mizen. MIZEN STAYSAIL. A fore-and-aft sail of various shapes set on the mizen stay. MOAT. Synonymous with _ditch_ (which see). MOBILIZATION. The organizing a body of men for active service. Also, a term in naval tactics, applied to the movement of fleets. MOCCASIN. A slipper made of green hide, and worn in cases of necessity; a term derived from the North American Indians. MODERATE BREEZE. When all the flying kites may be pleasantly carried. MODERATE GALE. In which a ship carries double reefs in her top-sails. MOHUR. A gold coin in the East Indies, value 30_s._ to 32_s._ MOIDORE. A Portuguese gold coin, the sterling value of which is L1, 7_s._ MOINEAU. A little flat bastion formerly raised before a curtain, otherwise too long. MOIST DAUGHTERS. Spenser's term for the Hyades, a group of seven stars in the head of the Bull. MOKES. The meshes of a fishing-net. MOLE. A long pier of massy masonry, covering the entrance of a harbour. Also applied to the harbours formed by them, as those of Genoa, Marseilles, Naples, &c. MOLLY-MAWK. A bird which follows in the wake of a ship rounding the Cape. It is a small kind of albatross. MOMENTUM. Is the product of a weight multiplied by its velocity; that is, in marine dynamics, by its distance from a point determined as the centre of momentum; or from a line called the axis of the momentum. MONERES, OR MONOCRATA. Galleys with only one rank of oars. MONEY-BOUND. A phrase expressive of such passengers as are detained on board till a remittance arrives for paying the passage made. MONGER. A trader. (_See_ MONKEY.) MONITION. Legal notice or warning. MONITOR. A very shallow, semi-submerged, heavily-armoured steamer, carrying on her open deck either one or two plated revolving turrets, each containing either one or two enormous guns: originally designed by Ericson in the United States during the recent war, to combine the maximum of gun power with the minimum of exposure; they have been very formidable in sheltered and intricate waters, but it remains yet to be shown that they would be effective on the open sea. MONKEY. A machine composed of a long pig of iron, traversing in a groove, which is raised by a pulley, and let fall suddenly on the head of large bolts for driving them. A larger kind is used in _pile-driving_. Also, a kind of wooden kid for grog. Also, in Queen Elizabeth's reign, a small trading vessel. Also, passion; as a man's "monkey is up." Also, a machine with which the _hercules_ facilitates the welding of anchors. MONKEY-BLOCK. A small single block strapped with a swivel. Also, those nailed on the topsail-yards of some merchantmen, to lead the buntlines through. MONKEY-BOAT. A half-decked boat above-bridge on the Thames. MONKEY-JACKET. A warm jacket for night-watches, &c. MONKEY-PUMP. Straws or quills for sucking the liquid from a cask, through a gimlet-hole made for the purpose--a practice as old as the time of Xenophon, who describes this mode of drinking from the prize jars of Armenia. MONKEY-SPARS. Reduced masts and yards for a vessel devoted to the instruction and exercise of boys. MONKEY-TAIL. A lever for training a carronade. MONK-FISH. The _Squatina angelus_. (_See_ DEVIL-FISH.) MONK'S SEAM. That made after sewing the edges of sails together, one over the other, by stitching through the centre of the seam. Also, the fash left at the junction of the moulds when a ball is cast. MONMOUTH CAP. A flat worsted cap formerly worn by soldiers and sailors. In the old play _Eastward Ho_, it is said, "Hurl away a dozen of Monmouth caps or so, in sea ceremony to your bon voyage." MONOXYLON [Gr.] Boats in the Ionian Isles propelled with one oar. MONSOON [from the Persian _monsum_, season]. The periodical winds in certain latitudes of India and the Indian Ocean. They continue five or six months from one direction, and then alter their course, and blow (after the tempestuous tumult of their shifting has subsided) during an equal space of time from an opposite point of the compass, with the same uniformity. They are caused by the unequal heating of land and water, and occur in the tropics, where the "trade" would constantly blow if it were not for the presence of land. (_See_ WINDS.) The south-west monsoon is called by the Arabs _khumseen_, denoting fifty, as they suppose it to precede the overflowing of the Nile by fifty days. (_See_ KAMSIN.) MONTE PAGNOTE. In former days an eminence out of cannon shot of operations, where spectators were not exposed to danger. MONTERO. A military cap and hood formerly worn in camp. MONTHLY ALLOWANCE. A sum paid monthly to warrant and petty officers not allowed to draw bills; and to seamen, marines, and boys serving on board. Wages are now paid regularly. MONTHLY NOTES. _See_ ALLOTMENT. MOON. Our satellite; she performs her revolution in 27 days, 7 hours, 43 minutes. (_See_ FULL MOON and NEW MOON.) A hazy or pale colour of the moon, revealing the state of our atmosphere, is supposed to forebode rain, and a red or copper colour to forebode wind. MOON-BLINK. A temporary evening blindness occasioned by sleeping in the moonshine in tropical climates; it is technically designated _nyctalopia_. MOON-CULMINATORS. Certain stars near the same parallel of declination as the moon, and not differing greatly from her in right ascension, given in the Ephemeris as proper objects for comparison with her, to determine the longitudes of places. MOONEY. Not quite intoxicated, but unfitted for duty. MOON IN DISTANCE. When the angle between her and the sun, or a star, admits of measurement for lunar observation. MOONISH. Variable, as with Shakspeare's Rosalind. MOON-RAKERS. Sails above the skysails. They are usually designated moon-sails. MOON-SHEERED. A ship the upper works of which rise very high, fore and aft. MOONSHINE. Illicit hollands, schiedam, and indeed smuggling in general; excused as a _matter of moonshine_. A mere nothing. MOON-STRUCK. An influence imputed to the moon in the tropics, by which fish, particularly of the _Scomber_ class, though recently taken, become intenerated, and even spoiled; while some attribute poisonous qualities to them in this state. Human beings are also said to be injured by sleeping in the moon's rays. MOOR. An upland swamp, boggy, with fresh water. Also, an open common. MOOR, TO. To secure a ship with anchors, or to confine her in a particular station by two chains or cables, either fastened to the mooring chains or to the bottom; a ship is moored when she rides by two anchors. MOOR A CABLE EACH WAY, TO. Is dropping one anchor, veering out two cables' lengths, and letting go another anchor from the opposite bow; the first is then hove in to one cable, or less according to circumstances, while the latter is veered out as much, whereby the ship rides between the two anchors, equally distant from both. This is usually practised in a tide-way, in such manner that the ship rides by one during the flood, and by the other during the ebb. MOOR ACROSS, TO. To lay out one of the anchors across stream. MOOR ALONG, TO. To anchor in a river with a hawser on shore to steady her. MOOR-GALLOP. A west-country term for a sudden squall coming across the moors. MOORING-BRIDLE. The fasts attached to moorings, one taken into each hawse-hole, or bridle-port. MOORING-CHOCKS. Large pieces of hard wood with a hole in the centre, shod with iron collars, and fastened between two stanchions in large ships, for the moorings to pass through. MOORING POSTS OR PALLS. Strong upright posts fixed into the ground, for securing vessels to the landing-place by hawsers or chains. Also, strong pieces of oak inserted into the deck of a large ship for fastening the moorings to when alongside a quay. MOORING-RINGS. Iron swivel rings fixed on piers or buoys, &c., for securing vessels to. MOORINGS. Indicated by buoys to which ships are fastened; they are attached by bridles to heavy anchors and cables laid down in the most convenient parts of rivers and harbours. They are termed "_swinging_," or "_all fours_," depending on whether the ship is secured by the bow only, or by bow and stern. By their means many more ships are secured in a certain space than would be possible if they used their own anchors. MOOR QUARTER-SHOT, TO. To moor quartering, between the two ways of across and along. MOOR THE BOAT, TO. To fasten her with two ropes, so that the one shall counteract the other, and keep her in a steady position. MOOR WITH A SPRING ON THE CABLE, TO. _See_ SPRING. MOOTER. A spike, bolt, tree-nail. MOOTING. In ship-building, making a tree-nail exactly cylindrical to a given size or diameter, called the _moot_. MOP. A young whiting. MOPPAT. An early name for the sponge of a cannon. MOPUSSES. A cant term for money in general. MORASS. Nearly the same thing as a marsh or swamp. In tropical regions they are often overflowed with salt water, yet covered with mangrove and many aquatic plants. MORGLAY. A great sword, alluded to formerly. MORION. An ancient steel casque or helmet, without beaver or visor. According to Chaucer it was of more uses than one:-- "Their beef they often in their morion stewed." MORNING GUN. The gun fired from the admiral's or senior officer's ship, to announce day-break, which is answered by the muskets of the sentries in the other ships. MORNING STAR. An offensive weapon of the mediaeval times, consisting of a staff, to which was attached an iron ball covered with spikes. Also, the planet which is near the meridian at day-dawn. MORNING WATCH. Those of the crew on watch from 4 to 8 A.M. MORRA. An ancient game still played in Italy with extraordinary zest, by two persons raising the right hand, and suddenly and contemporaneously throwing it down with only some of the fingers extended, when the aim is to guess what they unitedly amount to. Also, a term for a headland or promontory on the coasts of Chili and Peru. Also, a round tower or fort, as at Havana [from the Spanish _morro_, round]. MORRIS-PIKE. A formidable Moorish weapon, the precursor of the boarding-pike. MORSE. _See_ WALRUS. MORSING POWDER. An old term for priming powder. MORTAR. A short piece of ordnance used for throwing shells, so that they may fall nearly vertical; they thus acquire force for breaking through roofs, decks, &c. It is fired at a fixed angle of elevation, generally at 45 deg., the charge of powder varying according to the range required. MORTAR-BED AND BED-BEAMS. _See_ BOMB-BEDS, &c. MORTAR-VESSEL. _See_ BOMB-VESSEL. MORTGAGE. A registered ship, or share therein, which has been made a security for a money-loan, or other valuable consideration, is termed a mortgage in the Merchant Shipping Act. MORTICE. A morticed block is one made out of a single block of wood, chiselled for one or more sheaves; in distinction from a _made block_. The chisel used for morticing is peculiar to that purpose. MORUACH. A peculiar seal, which has been frequently mistaken on our northern shores for a mermaid. MOSES. A flat-bottomed boat used in the West Indies for bringing off hogsheads of sugar; it is termed single or double, according to its size. MOSES' LAW. The term among pirates for inflicting thirty-nine lashes on the bare back--forty save one. MOSQUITO. A term applied to a gnat-like species of stinging insects, found chiefly in low marshy places and the neighbourhood of rivers. MOSQUITO FLEET. An assemblage of small craft. MOSQUITO NET. A light curtain spread over a cot or bed in warm climates, to protect the sleeper from mosquitoes. MOSS-BONKER. The name given by American fishermen to the _hard-head_ (which see). MOTHER CARY'S CHICKEN. The stormy petrel, _Procellaria pelagica_. MOTHER CARY'S GOOSE. The name given by Captain Cook's people to an oceanic brown bird, _Procellaria gigantea_, which Pernety calls _Quebranta huesos_ (bone-breaker). MOTHER-OF-PEARL. The iridescent nacreous inner layer of several species of shells, especially the "pearl-oyster" (_Meleagrina margaritifera_). MOTHERY [probably from the Dutch _m[oe]der_, mud]. Thick and mouldy; generally applied to decomposing liquors. MOTION. Change of place; it is termed _direct_, in the sky, when it is in the direction of the earth's annual revolution; _retrograde_, when it proceeds contrary to these conditions; by _sidereal_ is meant the motion of a body with respect to the fixed stars.--_Tropical motion_ is the movement of a body in respect to the equinox or tropic, which has itself a slow motion among the stars, as shown under precession. (_See_ PROPER MOTION.)--_Motion_, in mechanics, is either simple or compound, as one or more powers are used. The momentum of a moving body, or quantity of motion, arises from its velocity multiplied into the quantity of matter it contains. MOTION, CENTRE OF. That point of a body which remains at rest whilst all the other parts are in motion about it: as the mathematical centre of a revolving sphere. MOTOR. The prime mover in machinery. MOULDED. The size of the timber, the way the mould is laid; cut to the mould. MOULDED BREADTH. The measure of beam from outside to outside of the timbers, without the thickness of the plank. MOULDING DIMENSION. In ship-building, implies the depth or thickness of any piece of timber. MOULDING EDGE. That edge of a timber to which, in shaping it, the mould is applied. MOULDINGS OF A GUN. The several rings and ornaments. MOULD-LOFT. A long building, on the floor of which the intended vessel is laid off from the several draughts in full dimensions. MOULDS. In naval architecture, are thin flexible pieces of board used on the mould-loft floors as patterns. MOUNT, OR MOUNTAIN. An Anglo-Saxon term still in use, usually held to mean eminences above 1000 feet in height. In a fort it means the _cavalier_ (which see). MOUNT, TO. When said of a ship-of-war, implies the number of guns she carries.--_To mount_, in a military sense, is also to furnish with horses. MOUNT A GUN, TO. To place it on its carriage. MOUNT AREEVO! [Sp. _montar arriba_]. Mount aloft; jump up quickly. MOUNTEBANK. The _Gammarus arcticus_, or arctic shrimp. MOURNING. A ship is in mourning with her, ensign and pennant half-mast, her yards topped awry, or apeek, or alternately topped an-end. If the sides are painted blue instead of white, it denotes deep mourning; this latter, however, is only done on the ship where the admiral or captain was borne, and in the case of merchant ships on the death of the owner. MOUSE. A kind of ball or knob, wrought on the collars of stays by means of spun-yarn, higher parcelling, &c. The mouse prevents the running eye from slipping. (_See_ PUDDENING.) Also, a match used in firing a mine. Also, a mark made upon braces and other ropes, to show their squaring or tallying home.--_To mouse a hook_, to put a turn or two of rope-yarn round the point of a tackle-hook and its neck to prevent its unhooking.--_To raise a mouse_, to strike a blow which produces a lump. MOUTH [the Anglo-Saxon _muda_]. The embouchure opening of a port or outlet of a river, as Yarmouth, Tynemouth, Exmouth, &c. MOVE OFF, TO. To defile. MOVER. Synonymous with _motor_. MOVING SANDS. Synonymous with _quicksands_. MOWELL. The old English name for _mullet_. MOYAN. A species of early artillery. MOYLE, TO. To defile; an old term. MUCK. _See_ AMOK. MUD-DRAGS. Implements and machines for clearing rivers and docks. MUD OR BALLAST DREDGER. A vessel of 300 tons or more, fitted with steam-engine beams and metal buckets. By this powerful machine for cutting or scraping, loose gravel banks, &c., are removed from the entrances to docks and rivers. MUD-FISH. The _Lepidosiren_, a very remarkable fish of the Gambia and other African rivers. MUD-HOLE. An orifice with steam-tight doors in a marine engine, through which the deposit is removed from the boilers. 'MUDIAN, 'MUGIAN, OR BERMUDIAN. A boat special to the Bermuda Islands, usually decked, with the exception of a hatch; from two to twenty tons burden; it is short, of good beam, and great draft of water abaft, the stem and keel forming a curved line. It carries an immense quantity of iron, or even lead, ballast. Besides a long main and short jib-boom, it has a long, tapering, raking mast, stepped just over the fore-foot, generally unsupported by shrouds or stays; on it a jib-headed main-sail is hoisted to a height of twice, and sometimes three times, the length of the keel. This sail is triangular, stretched at its foot by a long boom. The only other sail is a small fore-sail or jib. They claim to be the fastest craft in the world for working to windward in smooth water, it being recorded of one that she made five miles dead to windward in the hour during a race; and though they may be laid over until they fill with water, they will not capsize. MUD-LANDS. The extensive marshes left dry by the retiring tide in estuaries and river mouths. MUD-LARKS. People who grovel about bays and harbours at low water for anything they can find. MUD-LIGHTER. Large heavy punts which receive the mud or other matter from a dredging vessel. It is the _Marie Salope_ of the French. (_See_ HOPPER-PUNT.) MUD-PATTENS. Broad clogs used for crossing mud-lands in the south of England by those who take sea-fowl. MUD-SHORES. Are not unfrequent on an open coast. The most remarkable instance, perhaps, is that of the Guiana; the mud brought down by the river being thrown up by the current, and silted, with belts of mangroves in patches. MUFFLED DRUM. The sound is thus damped at funerals: passing the spare cord, which is made of drummer's plait (to carry the drum over the shoulder), twice through the snares or cords which cross the lower diameter of the drum. MUFFLE THE OARS, TO. To put some matting or canvas round the loom when rowing, to prevent its making a noise against the tholes, or in the rowlocks. For this service thole-pins are best. In war time, rowing guard near the ships or batteries of the enemy, or cutting out, many a pea-jacket has been sacrificed for this purpose. Whale-boats have their oars muffled to prevent frightening the whales. MUFTI. Plain clothes. The civilian dress of a naval or military officer when off duty. This, though not quite commendable, is better than the half and half system, for a good officer should be either in uniform or out of it. MUGGY. Half intoxicated. A sheet in the wind. Also used to express damp, oppressive weather. MULCT. A fine in money for some fault or misdemeanour. Also, fines formerly laid on ships by a trading company, to raise money for the maintenance of consuls, &c. MULET. A Portuguese craft, with three lateen sails. MULL. Derived from the Gaelic _mullach_, a promontory or island; as Mull of Galloway, Mull of Cantyre, Isle of Mull. Also, when things are mismanaged; "we have made a mull of it." MULLET. A well-known fish, of which there are several species. The gray mullet, _Mugil capito_, and the red mullet, _Mullus surmuletus_, are the most common on the British coast. MULLS. The nickname of the English in Madras, from mulligatawney having been a standard dish amongst them. MULREIN. A name in the Firth of Forth for the frog-fish, _Lophius piscatorius_. MULTIPLE STARS. When several stars appear in close proximity to each other, they are spoken of, collectively, as a multiple star. MUMBO JUMBO. A strange minister of so-called justice on the Gold Coast, who is usually dressed up for the purpose of frightening women and children. He is the arbiter of domestic strife. MUNDUC. A sailor employed at the pearl-fishery, to haul up the diver and oysters. MUNDUNGUS [from the Spanish _mondongo_, refuse, offal]. Bad, rank, and dirty tobacco. MUN-FISH. Rotten fish, used in Cornwall for manure. MUNITION BREAD. Contract or commissariat bread; _Brown George_. MUNITIONS. Provisions; naval and military stores. MUNITION SHIPS. Those which carry the naval stores for a fleet, as distinguished from the victuallers. MUNJAK. A kind of pitch used in the Bay of Honduras for vessels' bottoms. MUNNIONS, OR MUNTINS. The divisional pieces of the stern-lights; the pieces that separate the lights in the galleries. MURAENA. An eel-like fish, very highly esteemed by the ancient Romans. MURDERER. The name formerly used for large blunderbusses, as well as for those small pieces of ordnance which were loaded by shifting metal chambers placed in the breech. MURLOCH. The young pickled dog-fish. MURRE. The Cornish name for the razor-bill, _Alca torda_. MURROCH. A term for shell-fish in general on the west coast of Scotland. MUSKET. The regulation fire-arm for infantry and small-arm men. That of the English service, when a smooth bore, threw its bullet of about an ounce 250 yards with good effect; now, rifling has trebled its range, whilst breech-loading has done at least as much by its rapidity of fire. MUSKET-ARROWS. Used in our early fleets, and for conveying notices in 1815. MUSKETEERS. An early name for those soldiers who were armed with muskets. MUSKETOON. A short kind of blunderbuss with a large bore, to carry several musket or pistol bullets; it was much used on boat service. They were mounted on swivel crutches, and termed top-pieces; quarter pieces in barges and pinnaces, where timbers were especially fitted for them. MUSKET-PROOF. Any bulk-head, parapet, or substance which effectually resists the force of a musket-ball. MUSKET-SHOT. Was the computed distance of 400 yards, now undergoing change. MUSLIN, OR DIMITY. The flying kites of a ship. "Give her the muslin," or "Spare not the dimity," frequently used in tropical chase of slavers. MUSTER, TO. To assemble in order that the state and condition of the men may be seen, and also at times to inspect their arms and clothing. MUSTER-BOOK. A copy of a ship of war's open list, drawn up for the use of the clerk of the check, in calling over the crew. A copy of the muster-book is to be transmitted every two months to the admiralty. MUSTER-PAPER. A description of paper supplied from the dockyards, ruled and headed, for making ships' books. MUSTER-ROLL. A document kept by the master of every British vessel, specifying the name, age, quality, and country of every person of the ship's company; even neutrals are compelled to produce such a paper in time of war. MUSTER THE WATCH. A duty performed nightly at 8 P.M., and repeated when the watch is relieved up to 4 A.M. MUTCHKIN. A pint measure. MUTILATION. The crime of self-maiming to avoid serving. MUTINOUS. Showing symptoms of sedition. MUTINY. Revolt or determined disobedience of regular authority by soldiers or sailors, and punishable with death. Shakspeare makes Hamlet sleep "Worse than the _mutines_ in the bilboes." MUTINY-ACT. On this document the Articles of War are founded. MUTTON-SNAPPER. A large fish of the _Mesoprion_ genus, frequenting tropical seas, and prized in the Jamaica markets. (_See_ SNAPPER.) MUZZLE OF A PIECE OF ORDNANCE. The forward extremity of the cylinder, and the metal which surrounds it, extending back to the neck, where it meets the chase, marked by a moulded ring in old guns. MUZZLE-LASHINGS. The ropes which confine the muzzles of lower-deck guns to the housing bolts. MUZZLE-RING. That which encompassed and strengthened the muzzle or mouth of a cannon; now disused. MUZZLE TO THE RIGHT, OR MUZZLE TO THE LEFT! The order given to trim the gun to the object. MUZZY. Half-drunk. MYLKERE. The old English name for the milt of a fish. MYOPARA. An ancient corsair's vessel. MYRMIDON [from _mur-medon_, a sea-captain]. The Myrmidons were a people of Thessaly, said to have first constructed ships. MYSERECORD. A thin-bladed dagger with which a grievously wounded warrior was despatched as an act of mercy. MYTH. Obelisk, tower, land, or anything for directing the course by sight. N. NAB. The bolt-toe, or cock of a gun-lock. NABB. A cant term for the head. Also, a protuberance on the rocky summit of a hill; a rocky ledge below water. NACA, OR NACELLE. A French boat without mast or sail, used as early as the twelfth century. NACRE. The mother-of-pearl which lines some shells, both univalve and bivalve. NACTA. A small transport vessel of early times. NADIR. The lower pole of the rational horizon, the other being the zenith. NAID. A northern term for a lamprey, or large eel. NAIL, TO. Is colloquially used for binding a person to a bargain. In weighing articles of food, a nail is 8 lbs. NAILING A GUN. Synonymous with _cloying_ or _spiking_. When necessary to abandon cannon, or when the enemy's artillery, though seized, cannot be taken away, it is proper to spike it, which is done by driving a steel or other spike into the vent. The best method sometimes to render a gun serviceable again is to drill a new vent. (_See_ SPIKING.) NAILS OF SORTS. Nails used in carpentry under the denominations of 4, 6, 8, 10, 24, 30, and 40 penny-nails, all of different lengths. NAKE! The old word to unsheath swords, or make them naked. NAKED. State of a ship's bottom without sheathing. Also, a place without means of defence. NAKHADAH, OR NACODAH. An Arab sea-captain. NAME. The name of a merchant ship, as well as the port to which she belongs, must be painted in a conspicuous manner on her stern. If changed, she must be registered _de novo_, and the old certificate cancelled. NAME-BOARD. The arch-board, or part whereon the ship's name and port are painted. NAME-BOOK. The Anglo-Saxon _nom-boc_, a mustering list. NANCY. An east-country term for a small lobster. NANCY DAWSON. A popular air by which seamen were summoned to grog. NANKIN. A light fawn-coloured or white cotton cloth, almost exclusively worn at one time in our ships on the India station. It was supplied from China, but is now manufactured in England, Malta, and the United States. NANT. A brook, or small river, on the coasts of Wales. NAPHTHA. A very inflammable, fiercely burning fluid, which oozes from the ground or rock in many different localities, and may be obtained by the distillation of coal, cannel, and other substances. It is nearly related to _petroleum_ (which see), and is used for lighting, combustible, and various other purposes. NAPIER'S BONES. Small rods, arranged by Lord Napier to expedite arithmetical calculations. In _Hudibras_: "A moon-dial, with Napier's bones, And several constellation stones." NARKE. A ray of very wonderful electric powers. NARROWING OF THE FLOOR-SWEEP. For this peculiar curve, _see_ HALF-BREADTH OF THE RISING. NARROWS. The most confined part of a channel between two lands, or any contracted part of a navigable river. NARWHAL. The _Monodon monoceros_, an animal of the cetacean order, found in the Arctic seas, and distinguished by the single long pointed tusk projecting straight forward from its upper jaw, whence it is also termed sea-unicorn. NATURAL FORTIFICATION. Those obstacles, in the form or nature of the country, which impede the approaches of an enemy. NATURAL MOTION. A term applied to the descending parabolic curve of a shot or shell in falling. NAUFRAGIATE, TO. An old expression, meaning to suffer shipwreck. It occurs in Lithgow's _Pilgrime's Farewell_, 1618. NAULAGE. A freight or fare. NAUMACHIA. An artificial piece of water whereon the ancient Romans represented a sea-fight, supposed to have originated in the first Punic war. NAUROPOMETER. An instrument for measuring the amount of a ship's heel or inclination at sea. NAUSCOPY. The tact of discovering ships or land at considerable distances. NAUTICAL. Relating to navigation, sailors, or maritime affairs in general. NAUTICAL ALMANAC. A book of the first necessity to navigators. (_See_ EPHEMERIS.) NAUTICAL ASSESSORS. Persons of nautical experience appointed to assist the judge of the admiralty and other courts in technical difficulties. NAUTICAL ASTRONOMY. That part of the celestial science which treats of the planets and stars so far as relates to the purposes of navigation. NAUTICAL DAY. This day commences at noon, twelve hours before the civil day, and ends at noon of the day following. (_See_ DAY.) NAUTICAL MILE (MEAN) = 6075.6 feet. NAUTICAL STARS. About 72 of the brightest, which have been selected for determining the latitude or the longitude, by lunar distances, and inserted, corrected to the year, in the Nautical Ephemeris. NAUTICAL TABLES. Those especially computed for resolution of matters dependent on nautical astronomy, and navigation generally. NAUTICUM F[OE]NUS. Marine usury; bottomry. NAUTILUS. The pearly nautilus, _N. pompilius_, is a marine animal, belonging to the same class (_Cephalopoda_) as the cuttle-fish, but protected by a beautiful, chambered, discoid shell. The paper-nautilus (_Argonauta argo_) belongs to a different family of the same class, and has a simple, delicate, boat-like shell. NAVAL. Of or belonging to a ship, or, as now commonly adopted, to the royal navy; hence, naval stores, naval officers, &c. NAVAL ARCHITECTURE. The construction, or art and science, of building ships. NAVAL ARMAMENT. A fleet or squadron of ships of war, fitted out for a particular service. NAVAL CADET. _See_ CADET. NAVAL HOSPITALS. Greenwich is styled by eminence _the Royal Hospital_, yet the naval medical establishments in England and the colonies are all royal. At home they are Haslar, Plymouth, Yarmouth, Haulbowline, Chatham, and Woolwich; abroad, Malta, Jamaica, Halifax, Bermuda, Cape of Good Hope, and Hong Kong. Besides these useful hospitals, there are other stations of relief around the coasts. NAVAL OFFICER. One belonging to the royal navy. Also, the person in charge of the stores in a royal dockyard abroad. NAVAL RESERVE. A body of volunteers, consisting of coasters and able merchant seamen, who are drilled for serving on board our ships of war in case of need. They receive a fixed rate of compensation, become entitled to a pension, and enjoy other privileges. They are largely officered from their own body. NAVAL SCIENCE. A knowledge of the theory of ship-building, seamanship, navigation, nautical astronomy, and tactics. NAVAL STORES. All those particulars which are made use of, not only in the royal navy, but in every other kind of navigation. There are various statutes against stealing or embezzling them. NAVAL STORE-SHIP. A government vessel, appropriated to carrying stores and munitions of war to different stations. NAVAL TACTICS. The warlike evolutions of fleets, including such man[oe]uvres as may be judged most suitable for attack, defence, or retreat, with precision. The science of tactics happens never to have proceeded from naval men. Thus Pere la Hoste among the French, and a lawyer among the English, are the prime authorities. Moreover, it is a fact well known to those who served half a century back, when Lord Keith, Sir P. Durham, Sir P. Malcolm, and B. Hallowell practised their squadrons, that questions remained in dispute and undecided for at least sixteen years. NAVE-HOLE. The hole in the centre of a gun-truck for receiving the end of the axle-tree. NAVEL HOODS. Those hoods wrought above and below the hawse-holes, outside a ship, where there are no cheeks to support a bolster. NAVEL LAVER. The sea-weed _Ulva umbilicus_. NAVEL LINE. _See_ LINE. NAVIGABLE. Any channel capable of being passed by ships or boats. NAVIGANT. An old word for sailor. NAVIGATION. The art of conducting vessels on the sea, not only by the peculiar knowledge of seamanship in all its intricate details, but also by such a knowledge of the higher branches of nautical astronomy as enables the commander to hit his port, after a long succession of bad weather, and an absence of three or four months from all land. Any man without science may navigate the entire canals of Great Britain, but may be unable to pass from Plymouth to Guernsey. NAVIGATION ACTS. Various statutes by which the legislature of Great Britain has in a certain degree restricted the intercourse of foreign vessels with her own ports, or those of her dependent possessions; the object being to promote the increase of British shipping. NAVIGATOR. A person skilled in the art of navigation. In old times, the ship's _artist_. Also, one who plies merely on canals. Also, the _navvy_ who works on embankments, cuttings, &c. NAVITHALAMUS. A word in Law-Latin signifying a yacht. NAVVIES. The vigorous labourers employed in cutting canals, railroads, or river works in temporary gangs. NAVY. Any assembly of ships, whether for commerce or war. More particularly the vessels of war which, belonging to the government of any state, constitute its maritime force. The Royal Navy of Great Britain is conducted under the direction of the lords-commissioners for executing the office of lord high-admiral, and by the following principal officers under them:--the controller of the navy, controlling dockyards, building, &c., with his staff; the accountant-general, store-keeper general, and controller of victualling. These several lords meet as a board at Somerset House on special days to give the affairs the force of the board of admiralty. NAVY AGENTS. Selected mercantile houses, about fourteen, who manage the affairs of officers' pay, prizes, &c., for which the law authorizes a certain percentage. They hold powers of attorney to watch the interests of their clients. NAVY BILLS. Bills of removal, transfer, &c., are not negotiable, nor can they be made other use of. NAVY BOARD. The commissioners of the navy collectively considered, but long since abolished. NAVY TRANSPORT. _See_ TRANSPORT. NAVY-YARD. A royal arsenal for the navy. NAY-WORD. The old term for the watch-word, parole, or countersign. NAZE. _See_ NESS. NEALED. _See_ ARMING. NEALED-TO. A shore, with deep soundings close in. NEAPED. The situation of a ship which, within a bar-harbour, is left aground on the spring-tides so that she cannot go to sea or be floated off till the return of the next spring-tides. NEAP-TIDES. A term from the Ang.-Sax. _nepflods_. They are but medium tides, in respect to their opposites, the springs, being neither so high, so low, nor so rapid. The phenomenon is owing to the attractions of the sun and moon then partly counteracting each other. NEAR, AND NO NEAR. Synonymous terms used as a warning to the helmsman when too near the wind, not to come closer to it, but to keep the weather-helm in hand. NEAT. _See_ NET, as commercial weight. NEB. This word, the Ang.-Sax. _nebb_, face as well as nose, is sometimes used for _ness_ (which see). Also, a bird's beak. NEBULA. An old term for a cluster of stars looking like a cloudy spot till separated by telescopic power; but the term is also now correctly applied to masses of nebulous matter only. NECESSARIES. Minor articles of clothing or equipment, prescribed by regulation, but provided by the men out of their own pay. NECESSARY MONEY. An extra allowance formerly allowed to pursers for the coals, wood, turnery-ware, candles, and other necessaries provided by them. NECESSITY. If a ship be compelled by necessity to change the order of the places to which she is insured, this is not deemed deviation, and the underwriters are still liable. NECK. The elbow or part connecting the blade and socket of a bayonet. _Goose-neck_, at the ends of booms, to connect them with the sides, or at the yard-arm for the studding-sail boom-iron. NECK OF A GUN. The narrow part where the chase meets the swell of the muzzle. NECKED. Tree-nails are said to be necked where they are cracked, bent, or nipped between the outside skin and the timbers of a vessel, whether from bad driving or severe straining. NECKING. A small neat moulding at the foot of the taffrail over the light. NECKLACE. A ring of wads placed round a gun, as sometimes practised, for readiness and stowage. Also, a strop round a lower mast carrying leading-blocks. Also, the chain necklace, to which the futtock-shrouds are secured in some vessels. NECK OF LAND. Dividing two portions of water, or it may be the neck of a peninsula. NECK OF THE CASCABLE. The part between the swell of the breech of a gun and the button. Its narrowest part within the button. NECKUR. A Scandinavian sea-sprite, whence some derive our "Old Nick" in preference to St. Nicholas, the modern patron of sailors. NEEDLE. The Ang.-Sax. _naedl_. (_See also_ MAGNETIC NEEDLE.) NEEDLE-FISH. The shorter pipe-fish, stang, or sting, _Sygnathus acus_. NEEDLE-GUN. One wherein the ignition for the cartridge is produced by the penetration of the detonating priming by a steel spike working in the lock. It is the Prussian musket. NEEDLES. Used by sail-makers, are _seaming_, _bolt-rope_, or _roping_ needles, all three-sided, and of very fine steel.--The _Needles_ of the Isle of Wight are the result of cracks in the rocks, through which the sea has worn its way, as also at Old Harry, Swanage Bay. As the chalk formation stretches westward, the structure changes in hardness until at Portland we meet with Portland stone. In California many of the needle rocks are of volcanic origin; others again are basaltic columns. NEGLECT. A charge not exceeding L3, from the wages of a seaman, in the Complete Book, for any part of the ship's stores lost overboard, or damaged, from his gross carelessness. NEGLIGENCE. If agent or broker engages to do an act for another, and he either wholly neglects it, or does it unskilfully, an action on the case will lie against him. NEGOTIATE, TO. The duty of a diplomatist; the last resource and best argument being now 12-ton guns. NEGRO-BOAT. _See_ ALMADIA. NEGROHEAD. Hard-rolled tobacco. NEGRO-HEADS. The brown loaves issued to ships in ordinary. NELLY. _Diomedea spadicea_, a sea-bird of the family _Procellaridae_, which follows in the wake of a ship when rounding the Cape of Good Hope: it is very voracious of fat blubber. NEPTUNE. A superior planet, recently discovered; it is the most distant member of the solar system yet known, and was revealed by the effect which its attraction had produced upon the movements of Uranus; this was one of the most admirable solutions in modern mathematical science. Neptune, so far as is yet known, has no satellites. NEPTUNES. Large brass pans used in the Bight of Biafra for obtaining salt. NEPTUNE'S GOBLETS. The large cup-shaped sponges found in the eastern seas; _Raphyrus patera_. NEPTUNE'S SHEEP. Waves breaking into foam, called white horses. NESS [Ang.-Sax. _naes_]. A projection of land, as Dungeness, Sheerness, &c. It is common in other European languages, as the French _nez_, Italian _naso_, Russian _noss_, Norwegian _naze_, &c. Our Dunnose is an example. NEST. _See_ CROW'S NEST. NET. In commerce, is the weight of a commodity alone, without the package. NET AND COBLE. The means by which sasses or flood-gates are allowed in fishings on navigable rivers. NETTING. Network of rope or small line for the purpose of securing hammocks, sails, &c.--_Boarding netting._ A stout netting formerly extended fore and aft from the gunwale to a proper height up the rigging. Its use was to prevent an enemy from jumping on board.--_Splinter netting._ Is stretched from the main-mast aft to the mizen-mast, in a horizontal position, about 12 feet above the quarter-deck. It secures those engaged there from injury by the fall of any objects from the mast-heads during an action: "And has saved the lives of many men Who have fallen from aloft." NETTLES. Small line used for seizings, and for hammock-clues. (_See_ KNITTLE.)--_To nettle_, is to provoke. NEUTRALS. Those who do not by treaty owe anything to either party in war; for if they do they are confederates. They are not to interfere between contending powers; and the right of security justifies a belligerent in enforcing the conditions. They are not allowed to trade from one port of the enemy to another, nor to be habitually employed in his coasting trade. Indeed the simple conveyance of any article to the opponent of the blockading squadron, at once settles the non-admission, or even hovering. NEVER SAY DIE! An expressive phrase, meaning do not despair, there is hope yet.--_Nil desperandum!_ As Cowper says, "Beware of desperate steps. The darkest day, Wait till to-morrow, will have passed away." NEW ACT. The going on shore without leave, and which though thus termed new, is an old trick. NEWCOME. An officer commencing his career. Any stranger or fresh hand newly arrived. NEWELL. An upright piece of timber to receive the tenon of the rails that lead from the breast-hook to the gangway. NEWGATE BIRDS. The men sent on board ship from prisons; but the term has also been immemorially used, as applied to some of the _Dragon's_ men in the voyage of Sir Thomas Roe to Surat, 1615. NEW MOON. The moon is said to be new when she is in conjunction with the sun, or between that luminary and the earth. NEWS. "Do you hear the news?" A formula used in turning up the relief watch. NICE STEERAGE. That which is required in tide-ways and intricate channels, chasing or chased. NIDGET. A coward. A term used in old times for those who refused to join the royal standard. NIGHT-CAP. Warm grog taken just before turning in. NIGHTINGALES. _See_ SPITHEAD NIGHTINGALES. NIGHT ORDER-BOOK. A document of some moment, as it contains the captain's behests about change of course, &c., and ought to be legibly written. NIGHT-WALKER. A fish of a reddish colour, about the size of a haddock, so named by Cook's people from the greatest number being caught in the night; probably red-snapper. NIGHT WARD. The night-watch. NILL. Scales of hot iron at the armourer's forge. Also, the stars of rockets. NIMBUS. Ragged and hanging clouds resolving into rain. (_See_ CUMULO-CIRRO-STRATUS.) NINE-PIN BLOCK. A block in that form, mostly used for a _fair-leader_ under the cross-pieces of the forecastle and quarter-deck bitts. NINES, TO THE. An expression to denote complete. NINGIM. A corruption of _ginseng_ (which see). NIP. A short turn in a rope. Also, a fishing term for a bite. In Arctic parlance, a nip is when two floes in motion crush by their opposite edges a vessel unhappily entrapped. Also, the parts of a rope at the place bound by the seizing, or caught by jambing. Also, _Nip in the hawse_; hence "freshen the nip," by veering a few feet of the service into the hawse. NIPCHEESE. The sailor's name for a purser's steward. NIPPER. The armourer's pincers or tongs. Also, a hammock with so little bedding as to be unfit for stowing in the nettings. NIPPERING. Fastening nippers by taking turns crosswise between the parts to jam them; and sometimes with a round turn before each cross. These are called racking-turns. NIPPER-MEN. Foretop-men employed to bind the nippers about the cables and messenger, and to whom the boys return them when they are taken off. NIPPERS. Are formed of clean, unchafed yarns, drawn from condemned rope, unlaid. The yarns are stretched either over two bolts, or cleats, and a fair strain brought on each part. They are then "marled" from end to end, and used in various ways, viz. to bind the messenger to the cable, and to form slings for wet spars, &c. The nipper is passed at the manger-board, the fore-end pressing itself against the cable; after passing it round cable and messenger spirally, the end is passed twice round the messenger, and a foretop-man holds the end until it reaches the fore-hatchway, when a maintop-man takes it up, and at the main-hatchway it is taken off, a boy carrying it forward ready coiled for further use.--_Selvagee nippers_ are used when from a very great strain the common nippers are not found sufficiently secure; selvagees are then put on, and held fast by means of tree-nails. (_See_ SELVAGEE and TREE-NAILS.)--_Buoy and nipper._ Burt's patent for sounding. By this contrivance any amount of line is loosely veered. So long as the lead descends, the line runs through the nipper attached to a canvas inflated buoy. The instant it is checked or the lead touches bottom, the back strain nips the line, and indicates the vertical depth that the lead has descended. NIPPLE. In ship-building. Another name for _knuckle_ (which see). Also, the nipple of a gun or musket lock; the perforated projection which receives the percussion-cap. NISSAK. The Shetland name for a small porpoise. NITRE. _Potassae nitras_, a salt formed by the union of nitric acid with potash; the main agent in gunpowder. NITTY. A troublesome noise; a squabble. NOAH'S ARK. Certain clouds elliptically parted, considered a sign of fine weather after rain. NOB. The head; therefore applied to a person in a high station of life. (_See_ KNOB.) NOCK. The forward upper end of a sail that sets with a boom. Also, a term used for _notch_. NOCTURNAL, NOCTURLABIUM. An instrument chiefly used at sea, to take the altitude or depression of some of the stars about the pole, in order to find the latitude and the hour of the night. NOCTURNAL ARC. That part of a circle, parallel to the equator, which is described by a celestial object, between its setting and rising. NODDY. The _Sterna solida_, a dark web-footed sea-bird, common about the West Indies. Also, a simpleton; so used by Shakspeare in the _Two Gentlemen of Verona_. NODES. Those points in the orbit of a planet or comet where it intersects the ecliptic. The ascending node is the point where it passes from the south to the north side of the ecliptic; the descending node is the opposite point, where the latitude changes from north to south. (_See_ LINE OF NODES.) NOG. A tree-nail driven through the heels of the shores, to secure them. NOGGIN. A small cup or spirit-measure, holding about 1/4 of a pint. NOGGING. The act of securing the shores by tree-nails. Also, warming beer at the galley-fire. NO HIGHER! _See_ NEAR. NO-HOWISH. Qualmy; feeling an approaching ailment without being able to describe the symptoms. NO-MAN'S LAND. A space in midships between the after-part of the belfry and the fore-part of a boat when it is stowed upon the booms, as is often done in a deep-waisted vessel; this space is used to contain any blocks, ropes, tackles, &c., which may be necessary on the forecastle, and probably derives its name from being neither on the starboard nor port side, neither in the waist, nor on the forecastle. NONAGESIMAL DEGREE. The point of the ecliptic which is at the greatest altitude above the horizon. NON-COMBATANTS. A term applied erroneously to the purser, master surgeon, &c., of a man-of-war, for all men on board may be called on, more or less, to fight. NON-COMMISSIONED OFFICERS. In familiar parlance, _non-coms._ are the sergeants, corporals, and others, appointed under special regulations, by the orders of the commanding officer. NON-CONDENSING ENGINE. A high-pressure steam-engine. NONIUS SCALE, OR VERNIER. That fixed to the oblong opening near the lower end of the index-bar of a sextant or quadrant; it divides degrees into minutes, and these again into parts of seconds. NO! NO! The answer to the night-hail by which it is known that a midshipman or warrant officer is in the boat hailed. NON-RECOIL. This was effected by securing the breeching while the gun was run out: often practised in small vessels. NOOK. A small indentation of the land; a little cove in the inner parts of bays and harbours. NOOK-SHOTTEN. A Shakspearian expression for a coast indented with bays; as in _Henry V._ Bourbon speaks contemptuously of "that nook-shotten isle of Albion." NOON. Mid-day. NOOSE. A slip or running knot. NORE. The old word for north. Also, a canal or channel. NORIE'S EPITOME. A treatise on navigation not to be easily cast aside. NORLAND. Of, or belonging to, the north land. NORMAL LEVEL OF A BAROMETER. A term reckoned synonymous with _par-line_ (which see). NORMAN. A short wooden bar thrust into one of the holes of the windlass or capstan in a merchantman, whereon to veer a rope or fasten the cable, if there be little strain upon it. Also fixed through the head of the rudder, in some ships, to prevent the loss of the rudder. Also, a pin placed in the bitt-cross-piece to confine the cable from falling off. NORRIE, AND TAMMIE NORRIE. The Scotch name for the puffin. NORTH. From the Anglo-Saxon _nord_. NORTH-AWAY YAWL. The old term for _Norway yawl_ (which see). NORTH-EAST PASSAGE. To the Pacific, or round the north of Europe, has been divided into three parts, thus: 1. From Archangel to the river Lena; 2. from the Lena, round Tschukotskoi-ness to Kamtschatka; and 3. from Kamtschatka to Japan. They have been accomplished at various times, but not successively. NORTHERN DIVER. The _Colymbus glacialis_, a large diving-bird. NORTHERN-GLANCE. The old sea-name of the _aurora borealis_ (which see). NORTHERN LIGHTS. _See_ NORTHERN-GLANCE. NORTHERS. Those winds so well known to all seamen who have frequented the West Indies, and which are preceded by the appearance of a vast quantity of fine cobwebs or gossamer in the atmosphere, which clings to all parts of a vessel's rigging, thus serving as a warning of an approaching gale. Northers alternate with the seasons in the Gulf of Mexico, the Florida Channel, Jamaica, Cuba, &c. Their cold is intense. NORTH FOLLOWING. For this and _north preceding_, _see_ QUADRANT. NORTH PASSAGE TO THE INDIES. The grand object of our maritime expeditions at a remote period, prosecuted with a boldness, dexterity, and perseverance which, although since equalled in the same pursuit, have not yet been surpassed:-- "I will undertake To find the north passage to the Indies sooner, Than plough with your proud heifer."--_Massinger._ NORTH SEA. The Jamaica name for the north swell. (_See_ GROUND-SEA.) NORTH-WESTER. This wind in India usually commences or terminates with a violent gust from that quarter, with loud thunder and vivid lightning. Also, gales which blow from the eastern coast of North America in the Atlantic during the autumn and winter. NORTH-WEST PASSAGE. By Hudson's Bay into the Pacific Ocean has been more than once attempted of late years, but hitherto without success. Some greatly doubted the practicability of such an enterprise; but the north-west passage, as far as relates to the flow of the sea beneath the ice, was satisfactorily solved by H.M.S. _Investigator_, Sir R. Maclure, reaching the western end of Barrow's Straits. The former question, up to Melville Island, which Sir R. Maclure reached and left his notice at in 1852, having been already thoroughly established by Sir E. Parry in 1820. NORTH WIND. This wind in the British seas is dry and cold, and generally ushers in fair weather and clear skies. The barometer rises with the wind at north, and is highest at N.N.E.; the air forming this wind comes from colder latitudes, and has therefore lost most of its moisture. NORWAY SKIFF. A particularly light and buoyant boat, which is both swift and safe in the worst weather. NORWAY YAWL. This, of all small boats, is said to be the best calculated for a high sea; it is often met with at a distance from land, when a stout ship can hardly carry any sail. The parent of the _peter-boat_. NOSE. Often used to denote the stem of a ship. Also, a neck of land: _naes_, or _ness_. NOTARY. The person legally empowered to attest deeds, protests, or other documents, in order to render them binding. NOTCH. The gaffle of a cross-bow. NOTCH-BLOCK. _See_ SNATCH-BLOCK. NOTCH-SIGHT OF A GUN. A sight having a V-shaped notch, wherein the eye easily finds the lowest or central point. NOTHING OFF! A term used by the man at the conn to the steersman, directing him to keep her close to the wind; or "nothing off, and very well thus!" (_See_ THUS.) NOTIONS. An American sea-term for a cargo in sorts; thus a notion-vessel on the west coast of America is a perfect bazaar; but one, which sold a mixture--logwood, bad claret, and sugar--to the priests for sacrament wine had to run for it. NOUD. A term in the north for fishes that are accounted of little value. NOUP. A round-headed eminence. NOUS. An old and very general term for intelligent perception, evidently from the Greek. NOUST. A landing-place or indent into the shore for a boat to be moored in; a term of the Orkney Isles. NOZZLE-FACES. Square plates of brass raised upon the cylinder; one round each of the steam-ports, for the valve-plates to slide upon. NOZZLES. In steamers, the same as steam-ports; they are oblong passages from the nozzle-faces to the inside of the cylinder; by them the steam enters and returns above and below the piston. Also pump nozzles. NUBECULAE, MAJOR AND MINOR. The _Magellanic clouds_ (which see). NUCLEUS OF A COMET. The condensed or star-like part of the head. NUDDEE. A Hindostanee word for a river. NUGGAR. A term in the East Indies for a fort, and also for an alligator. NULLAH. A ravine or creek of a stream in India. NUMBER. The number on the ship's books is marked on the clothing of seamen; that on a man's hammock or bag corresponds with his number on the watch and station bill. The ships of the royal navy are denoted by flags expressing letters, and when passing or nearing each other the names are exchanged by signals.--_Losing the number of the mess_, is a phrase for dying suddenly; being killed or drowned. NUMERARY OR MARRYAT'S SIGNALS. A useful code used by the mercantile marine, by an arrangement of flags from a cypher to units, and thence to thousands. (_See_ SIGNALS.) NUN-BUOY. A buoy made of staves, somewhat in the form of a double cone; large in the middle, and tapering rapidly to the ends; the slinging of which is a good specimen of practical rigging tact. NURAVEE YAWL. A corruption of _Norway yawl_ (which see). NURSE. An able first lieutenant, who in former times had charge of a young boy-captain of interest, but possessing no knowledge for command. Also, a small kind of shark with a very rough skin; a dog-fish. NUT. A small piece of iron with a female screw cut through the middle of it, for screwing on to the end of a bolt. NUTATION. An oscillatory motion of the earth's axis, due chiefly to the action of the moon upon the spheroidal figure of our globe. NUTS OF AN ANCHOR. Two projections either raised or welded on the square part of the shank, for securing the stock to its place. NYCTALOPIA. _See_ MOON-BLINK. O. O. The fourth class of rating on Lloyd's books for the comparative excellence of merchant ships. But insured vessels are rarely so low. (_See_ A.) O! OR HO! An interjection commanding attention or possibly the cessation of any action. OAK. _Quercus_, the valuable monarch of the woods. "Hearts of oak are our ships," as the old song says. OAKUM [from the Anglo-Saxon _aecumbe_]. The state into which old ropes are reduced when they are untwisted and picked to pieces. It is principally used in caulking the seams, for stopping leaks, and for making into twice-laid ropes. Very well known in workhouses.--_White Oakum._ That which is formed from untarred ropes. OAKUM-BOY. The caulker's apprentice, who attends to bring oakum, pitch, &c. OAR. A slender piece of timber used as a lever to propel a boat through the water. The blade is dipped into the water, while the other end within board, termed the loom, is small enough to be grasped by the rower. The _silver oar_ is a badge of office, similar to the staff of a peace-officer, which on presentation, enables a person intrusted with a warrant to serve it on board any ship he may set foot upon.--_To boat the oars_, is to cease rowing and lay the oars in the boat.--_Get your oars to pass!_ The order to prepare them for rowing, or shipping them. OAR, TO SHOVE IN AN. To intermeddle, or give an opinion unasked. OAR-PROPULSION. The earliest motive power for vessels; it may be by the broadside in rowlocks abeam, by sweeps on the quarters fore and aft, or by sculling with one oar in the notch of the transom amidships. (_See_ STERN-OAR.) OARS! The order to cease rowing, by lifting the oars from the water, and poising them on their looms horizontally in their rowlocks.--_Look to your oars!_ Passing any object or among sea-weed.--_Double-banked oars_ (which see). OASIS. A fertile spot in the midst of a sandy desert. OATH. A solemn affirmation or denial of anything, before a person authorized to administer the same, for discovery of truth and right. (_See_ CORPORAL OATH.) Hesiod ascribes the invention of oaths to discord. The oath of supremacy and of the Protestant faith was formerly taken by an officer before he could hold a commission in the royal navy. OAZE. Synonymous with the Ang.-Sax. _wase_ when applied to mud. (_See_ OOZE.) OBEY. A word forming the fulcrum of naval discipline. OBI. A horrible sorcery practised among the negroes in the West Indies, the infliction of which by a threat from the juggler is sufficient to lead the denounced victim to mental disease, despondency, and death. Still the wretched trash gathered together for the obi-spell is not more ridiculous than the amulets of civilized Europe. OBLATE. Compressed or flattened. OBLIGATION. A bond containing a penalty, with a condition annexed for payment of money or performance of covenants. OBLIMATION. The deposit of mud and silt by water. OBLIQUE-ANGLED TRIANGLE. Any other than a right-angled triangle. OBLIQUE ASCENSION. An arc between the first point of Aries and that point of the equator which comes to the horizon with a star, or other heavenly body, reckoned according to the order of signs. It is the sum or difference of the right ascension and ascensional difference. OBLIQUE BEARINGS. Consist in determining the position of a ship, by observing with a compass the bearings of two or more objects on the shore whose places are given on a chart, and drawing lines from those places, so as to make angles with their meridians equal to the observed bearings; the intersection of the line gives on the chart the position of the ship. This is sometimes called the method of cross-bearings. OBLIQUE SAILING. Is the reduction of the position of the ship from the various courses made good, oblique to the meridian or parallel of latitude. If a vessel sails north or south, it is simply a distance on the meridian. If east or west, on the parallel, and refers to parallel sailing. If oblique, it is solved by middle latitude, or Mercator sailing. OBLIQUE STEP. A movement in marching, in which the men, while advancing, gradually take ground to the right or left. OBLIQUITY OF THE ECLIPTIC. The angle between the planes of the ecliptic and the equator, or the inclination of the earth's equator to the plane of her annual path, upon which the seasons depend: this amounts at present to about 23 deg. 27'. OBLONG SQUARE. A name improperly given to a parallelogram. (_See_ THREE-SQUARE.) OBSERVATION. In nautical astronomy, denotes the taking the sun, moon, or stars' altitude with a quadrant or sextant, in order thereby to find the latitude or time; also, the lunar distances. OBSERVE, TO. To take a bearing or a celestial observation. OBSIDIONAL CROWN. The highest ancient Roman military honour; the decoration of the chief who raised a siege. OBSTACLES. Chains, booms, abattis, snags, palisades, or anything placed to impede an enemy's progress. Unforeseen hindrances. OBTURATOR. A cover or valve in steam machinery. OBTUSE ANGLE. One measuring above 90 deg., and therefore beyond a right angle; called by shipwrights _standing bevellings_. OBTUSE-ANGLED TRIANGLE. That which has one obtuse angle. OCCIDENT. The west. OCCULTATION. One heavenly body eclipsing another; but in nautical astronomy it is particularly used to denote the eclipses of stars and planets by the moon. OCCUPY, TO. To take military possession. OCEAN. This term, in its largest sense, is the whole body of salt water which encompasses the globe, except the collection of inland seas, lakes, and rivers: in a word, that glorious type of omnipotent power, whether in calm or tempest:-- "Dark, heaving, boundless, endless, and sublime, The image of Eternity." In a more limited sense it is divided into--1. The Atlantic Ocean. 2. The Pacific Ocean. 3. The Indian Ocean. 4. The Southern Ocean. OCEAN-GOING SHIP. In contradistinction to a coaster. OCHRAS. A Gaelic term for the gills of a fish. OCTAGON. A geometrical figure which has eight equal sides and angles. ODHARAG. The name of the young cormorant in our northern isles. OE. An island [from the Ang.-Sax.] _Oes_ are violent whirlwinds off the Faeroe Islands, said at times to raise the water in syphons. OFERLANDERS. Small vessels on the Rhine and the Meuse. OFF. The opposite to _near_. Also applied to a ship sailing from the shore into the open sea. Also, implies abreast of, or near, as "We were off Cape Finisterre."--_Nothing off!_ The order to the helmsman not to suffer the ship to fall off from the wind. OFFAL. Slabs, chips, and refuse of timber, sold in fathom lots at the dockyards. OFF AND ON. When a ship beating to windward approaches the shore by one board, and recedes from it when on the other. Also used to denote an undecided person. Dodging off a port. OFF AT A TANGENT. Going in a hurry, or in a testy humour. OFF DUTY. An officer, marine, or seaman in his watch below, &c. An officer is sometimes put "off duty" as a punishment. OFFENCES. Crimes which are not capital, but by the custom of the service come under the articles of war. OFFICER. A person having some command. A term applied both in the royal and mercantile navies to any one of a ship's company who ranks above the fore-mast men. OFFICER OF THE DAY. A military officer whose immediate duty is to attend to the interior economy of the corps to which he belongs, or of those with which he may be doing duty. OFFICER OF THE WATCH. The lieutenant or other officer who has charge of, and commands, the watch. OFFICERS' EFFECTS. The effects of officers who die on board are not generally sold; but should they be submitted to auction, the sale is to be confined entirely amongst the officers. OFFICIAL LETTERS. All official letters which are intended to be laid before the commander-in-chief, must be signed by the officers themselves, specifying their rank under their signatures. All applications from petty officers, seamen, and marines, relative to transfer, discharge, or other subjects of a similar nature, are to be made through the captain or commanding officer. They ought to be written on foolscap paper, leaving a margin, to the left hand, of one-fourth of the breadth, and superscribed on the cover "On H. M. Service." OFFING. Implies to sea-ward; beyond anchoring ground.--_To keep a good offing_, is to keep well off the land, while under sail. OFF-RECKONING. A proportion of the full pay of troops retained from them, in special cases, until the period of final settlement, to cover various expected charges (for ship-rations and the like). OFF SHE GOES! Means run away with the purchase fall. Move to the tune of the fifer. The first move when a vessel is launched. OFF THE REEL. At once; without stopping. In allusion to the way in which the log-line flies off the reel when a ship is sailing fast. OFFWARD. The situation of a ship which lies aground and leans from the shore; "the ship heels offward," and "the ship lies with her stern to the offward," is when her stern is towards the sea. OGEE. In old-pattern guns, the doubly curved moulding added, by way of finish, to several of the rings. OGGIDENT. Jack's corruption of _aguardiente_ [Sp.], a fiery and very unwholesome spirit. OIL-BUTT. A name for the black whale. OILLETS, OR [OE]ILLETS. Apertures for firing through, in the walls of a fort. OITER. A Gaelic word still in use for a sand-bank. OJANCO SNAPPER. A tropical fish of the Mesoprion family, frequenting the deep-water banks of the West Indies. OKE. A Levant weight of 2-3/4 lbs., common in Mediterranean commerce. OLD COUNTRY. A very general designation for Great Britain among the Americans. The term is never applied to any part of the continent of Europe. OLD HAND. A knowing and expert person. OLD HORSE. Tough salt-beef. OLD ICE. In polar parlance, that of previous seasons. OLD-STAGER. One well initiated in anything. OLD-STAGERISM. An adherence to established customs; sea conservatism. OLDSTERS. In the old days of cockpit tyranny, mids of four years' standing, and master's-mates, &c., who sadly bullied the youngsters. OLD WIFE. A fish about 2 feet long, and 9 inches high in the back, having a small mouth, a large eye, a broad dorsal fin, and a blue body. Also, the brown long-tailed duck of Pennant. OLD WOMAN'S TOOTH. A peculiar chisel for stub morticing. OLERON CODE. A celebrated collection of maritime laws, compiled and promulgated by Richard C[oe]ur-de-Lion, at the island of Oleron, near the coast of Poitou, the inhabitants of which have been deemed able mariners ever since. It is reckoned the best code of sea-laws in the world, and is recorded in the black book of the admiralty. OLICK. The torsk or tusk, _Gadus callarias_. OLIVER. A west-country term for a young eel. OLPIS. A classic term for one who, from a shore eminence, watched the course which shoals of fish took, and communicated the result to the fishers. (_See_ CONDER.) OMBRE. A fish, more commonly called grayling, or _umber_. ON. The sea is said to be "on" when boisterous; as, there is a high sea on. ON A BOWLINE. Close to the wind, when the sail will not stand without hauling the bowlines. ONAGER. An offensive weapon of the middle ages. ON A WIND. Synonymous with _on a bowline_. ON BOARD. Within a ship; the same as _aboard_. ONCIA. A gold coin of Sicily; value three ducats, or 10_s._ 10_d._ sterling. ONCIN. An offensive weapon of mediaeval times, consisting of a staff with a hooked iron head. ON DECK THERE! The cry to call attention from aloft or below. ONE-AND-ALL. A mutinous sea-cry used in the Dutch wars. Also, a rallying call to put the whole collective force on together. ON EITHER TACK. Any way or every way; a colloquialism. ON END. The same as _an-end_ (which see). Top-masts and topgallant-masts are on end, when they are in their places, and sail can be set on them. ONE O'CLOCK. _Like one o'clock._ With speed; rapidly. ONERARIAE. Ancient ships of burden, with both sails and oars. ONE, TWO, THREE! The song with which the seamen bowse out the bowlines; the last haul being completed by belay O! ONION-FISH. The _Cepola rubescens_, whose body peels into flakes like that vegetable. It is of a pale red colour. ON SERVICE. On duty. ON-SHORE WINDS. Those which blow from the offing, and render bays uncomfortable and insecure. ON THE BEAM. Implies any distance from a ship on a line with her beams, or at right angles with the keel. ON THE BOW. At any angle on either side of the stem up to 45 deg.; then it is either four points on the bow, or four points before the beam. ON THE QUARTER. Being in that position with regard to a ship, as to be included in the angles which diverge from right astern, to four points towards either quarter. OOMIAK. A light seal-skin Greenland boat, generally worked in fine weather by the women, but in bad weather by the men. OPEN. The situation of a place which is exposed to the wind and sea. Also, applied in meteorology, to mild weather. Also, open to attack, not protected. Also, said of any distant visible object. OPEN HAWSE. When a vessel rides by two anchors, without any cross in her cables. OPEN ICE. Fragments of ice sufficiently separate to admit of a ship forcing or boring through them under sail. OPENING TRENCHES. The first breaking of ground by besiegers, in order to carry on their approaches towards a besieged place. OPEN LIST. One of a ship's books, which contains the whole of the names of the actual officers and crew, in order to regulate their victualling. The crew are mustered by the open list. OPEN LOWER DECKERS, TO. To fire the lower tier of guns. Also said of a person using violent language. OPEN ORDER. Any distance ordered to be preserved among ships, exceeding a cable's length. OPEN PACK. A body of drift ice, the pieces of which, though very near each other, do not generally touch. It is opposed to close pack. OPEN POLICY. Where the amount of the interest of the insured is not fixed by the policy, but is left to be ascertained by the insured, in case a loss shall happen. OPEN ROADSTEAD. A place of hazard, as affording no protection either from sea or wind. OPERATIONS. Field movements, whether offensive or defensive. OPHIUCHUS. One of the ancient constellations, of which the lucida is _Ras-al-ague_, one of the selected nautical objects at Greenwich. This asterism is sometimes called _Serpentarius_, its Latin name, instead of its Greek. OPINION. An experienced witness, who never saw the ship, yet may legally prove that from the description of her by another witness she was not sea-worthy. OPOSSUM-SHRIMP. A crustacean, so named from its young being carried about in a sort of pouch for some little time after being hatched; the _Mysis flexuosus_ of naturalists. OPPIGNORATION. The pawning of part of the cargo to get money for the payment of the duty on the remainder. OPPOSITE TACKS. Making contrary boards. Also, a colloquialism for cross purposes. OPPOSITION. A celestial body is said to be in opposition to the sun when their longitudes differ 180 deg., or half the circumference of the heavens. OPTICK. An old term for a magnifying-glass. ORAGIOUS. An old term for stormy or tempestuous weather:-- "The storme was so outrageous, And with rumlings oragious, That I did feare." ORAMBY. A sort of state-barge used in the Moluccas; some of them are rowed by 40, 80, or even, it is said, 100 paddles each. ORARIAE. Ancient coasting vessels. ORB. The circular figure made by a body of troops. ORBIT. The path described by a planet or comet round the sun. ORBITAL. Relating to the orbit of a heavenly body. ORC. Wrack or sea-weed, used as manure on some of the coasts of England. ORCA. A classical name for a large voracious sea-animal, probably a grampus. Anglicized as ork or orc; thus in the second song of Drayton's strange _Polyolbion_-- "The ugly orks, that for their lord the ocean woo." And Milton afterwards introduces them-- "An island salt and bare, The haunt of seals and orcs, and sea-mews clang." ORDER ARMS! The word of command, with muskets or carbines, to bring the butt to the ground, the piece vertical against the right side, trigger-guard to the front.--_Open order_ and _close order_, are terms for keeping the fleet prepared for any particular man[oe]uvre. ORDER-BOOK. A book kept for the purpose of copying such occasional successive orders as the admiral, or senior officer, may find it necessary to give. ORDERLY. The bearer of official messages, and appointed to wait upon superior officers with communications. ORDERLY OFFICER. In the army. _See_ OFFICER OF THE DAY. ORDER OF BATTLE. The arranging of ships or troops so as to engage the enemy to the best advantage. ORDER OF SAILING. _See_ SAILING, ORDER OF. ORDERS. Societies of knights. (_See_ KNIGHTHOOD.) ORDERS IN COUNCIL. Decrees given by the privy council, signed by the sovereign, for important state necessities, independently of any act of parliament; but covered by an act of indemnity when it is assembled. ORDINARY. The establishment of the persons formerly employed to take charge of the ships of war which are laid up in ordinary at several harbours adjacent to the royal dockyards. These duties are now under the superintendent of the dockyard. Also, the state of such men-of-war and vessels as are out of commission and laid up. ORDINARY SEAMAN. The rating for one who can make himself useful on board, even to going aloft, and taking his part on a top-sail or topgallant-yard, but is not a complete sailor, the latter being termed an able seaman. It would be well if our merchant seamen consisted of apprentices and A.B.'s. ORDINARY STEP. The common march of 110 paces in a minute. ORDNANCE. A general name for all sorts of great guns which are used in war. Also, all that relates to the artillery and engineer service. ORDNANCE-HOY. A sloop expressly fitted for transporting ordnance stores to ships, and from port to port. OREILLET. The ear-piece of a helmet. OREMBI. A small _korocora_ (which see). ORGUES. Long-pointed beams shod with iron, hanging vertically over a gateway, to answer as a portcullis in emergency. ORIENT. The east point of the compass. ORIFLAMME. The banner of St. Dennis; but the term is often applied to the flags of any French commander-in-chief. ORIGIN. Merchant ships claiming benefit for importation, must obtain and produce certificates of _origin_, in respect to the goods they claim for. (_See_ PRODUCTION.) ORIGINAL ENTRY. The date at which men enter for the navy, and repair on board a guard-ship, or tender, where bedding or slops may be supplied to them, and are forwarded with them to their proper ships. ORILLON. In fortification, a curved projection formed by the face of a bastion overlapping the end of the flank; intended to protect the latter from oblique fire; modern ricochet fire renders it of little consequence. ORION. One of the ancient constellations, of which the lucida is the well-known nautical star _Betelgeuze_. ORISONT. The horizon; thus spelled by our early navigators. ORLOP. The lowest deck, formerly called "over-lop," consisting of a platform laid over the beams in the hold of ships of war, whereon the cables were usually coiled, and containing some cabins as well as the chief store-rooms. In trading vessels it is often a temporary deck. ORLOP-BEAMS, OR HOLD-BEAMS. Those which support the orlop-deck, but are chiefly intended to fortify the hold. ORNAMENTS. The carvings of the head, stern, and quarters of the old ships. ORNITHAE. An ancient term for the periodical winds by which migratory birds were transported. ORTHODROMIC. The course which lies on a meridian or parallel. ORTHOGRAPHIC PROJECTION. The profile, or representation of a vertical section, of a work in fortification. ORTIVE AMPLITUDE. The eastern one. OSCILLATING MARINE-ENGINE. A steam-engine where the top of the piston-rod is coupled with the crank, and the piston-rod moves backward and forward in the direction of the axis of the cylinder, while its extremity revolves in a circle with the crank. OSCILLATING PUMP-SPEAR. A contrivance by which the pumps of a large vessel are worked, connected with a crank-shaft and fly-wheel, driven by handles in the same way as a winch. OSMOND. The old term for pig-iron; a great article of lading. OSNABURG. In commerce, a coarse linen cloth manufactured in Scotland, but resembling that made at Osnaburg in Germany. OSPREY. The fish-hawk, _Pandion haliaetus_; Shakspeare, in _Coriolanus_, says-- "I think he'll be to Rome As is the osprey to the fish." OS SEPIAE. The commercial term for the sepia, or cuttle-fish bones. OSTMEN. A corrupted form of _Hoastmen_. OTSEGO BASS. _Coregonus otsego_, a fish of the American lakes. OTTER-PIKE. The lesser weever, _Trachinus draco_; also called sea-stranger. OTTOMITES. An old term for Turks. See Shakspeare in _Othello_. OUNDING. Resembling or imitating waves; used by Chaucer and others. OUSTER LE MER. The legal term for excuse, when a man did not appear in court on summons, for that he was then beyond the seas. OUT-AND-OUTER. An old phrase signifying thorough excellence; a man up to his duty, and able to perform it in style. OUT-BOARD. The outside of the ship: the reverse of _in-board_. OUT-BOATS. The order to hoist out the boats. OUT-EARING CLEAT. This is placed on the upper side of the gaff, to pass the outer earing round from the cringle. OUTER-JIB. In sloops, where the head-sails are termed foresail-jib and outer-jib, if set from the foremast-head. It is now very common for _ships_ to set two standing jibs, the stay and tack of the inner one being secured at the middle of the jib-boom. OUTER TURNS AND INNER TURNS. The _outer turns_ of the earing serve to extend the sail outwards along its yard. The _inner turns_ are employed to bind the sail close to the yard. OUTFIT. The stores with which a merchant vessel is fitted out for any voyage. Also, the providing an individual with clothes, &c. OUT-FLANK, TO. By a longer front, to overlap the enemy's opposite line, and thus gain a chance to turn his flank. OUT-HAUL, OR OUT-HAULER. A rope used for hauling out the tack of a jib lower studding-sail, or the clue of a boom-sail. The reverse of _in-haul_. OUT-HOLLING. Clearing tide-ports, canals, and channels of mud. OUTLANDISH. Foreign; but means with Jack a place where he does not feel at home, or a language which he does not understand. OUTLET. The effluent or stream by which a lake discharges its water. Also applied to the spot where the efflux commences. OUT-LICKER. A corruption of _out-rigger_ (which see). OUT-LIER. A word which has been often used for _out-rigger_, but applies to outlying rocks, visible above water. OUT-OARS. The order to take to rowing when the sails give but little way on a boat. OUT OF COMMISSION. A ship where officers and men are paid off, and pennant hauled down. OUT OF TRIM. A ship not properly balanced for fast sailing, which may be by a defect in the rigging or in the stowage of the hold. OUT OF WINDING. Said of a plank or piece of timber which has a fair and even surface without any twists: the opposite of _winding_. OUT OR DOWN. An exclamation of the boatswain, &c., in ordering men out of their hammocks, _i.e._ turn out, or your laniard will be cut. OUT-PENSIONERS. Those entitled to pensions from Greenwich Hospital, but not admitted to "the house." OUT-PORTS. Those commercial harbours which lie on the coasts; all ports in the United Kingdom out of London. (_See_ CLOSE-PORTS.) OUTREGANS. Canals or ditches navigable by boats. OUT-RIGGER. A strong beam, of which there are several, passed through the ports of a ship, and firmly lashed at the gunwale, also assisted by guys from bolts at the water-line, to secure the masts in the act of careening, by counteracting the strain they suffer from the tackles on the opposite side. Also, any boom rigged out from a vessel to hang boats by, clear of the ship, when at anchor. Also, any spar, as the boomkin, for the fore-tack, or the jigger abaft to haul out the mizen-sheet, or extend the leading blocks of the main braces. Also, a small spar used in the tops and cross-trees, to thrust out and spread the breast backstays to windward. Also, a counterpoising log of wood, rigged out from the side of a narrow boat or canoe, to prevent it from being upset. OUT-SAIL, TO. To sail faster than another ship, or to make a particular voyage with greater despatch. OUTSIDE MUSTER-PAPER. A paper with the outer part blank, but the inner portion ruled and headed; supplied from the dock yards to form the cover of ships' books. OUTSIDE PLANKING. Such are the wales, the plank-sheer, the garboard-strakes, and the like. OUTWARD. A vessel is said to be entered outwards or inwards according as she is entered at the custom-house to depart for, or as having arrived from, foreign parts. OUTWARD CHARGES. Pilotage and other dues incurred from any port: the reverse of _inward charges_. OUTWORKS. Works included in the scheme of defence of a place, but outside the main rampart; if "detached," they are moreover outside the glacis. OUVRE L'[OE]IL. A mark on French charts over supposed dangers. OVER AND UNDER TURNS. Terms applied to the passing of an earing, besides its inner and outer turns. OVER-ANENT. Opposite to. OVER-BEAR. One ship overbears another if she can carry more sail in a fresh wind. OVERBOARD. The state of any person or thing in the sea which had been in a ship.--_Thrown overboard_ also means cast adrift by the captain; withdrawal of countenance and support. OVER-BOYED. Said of a ship when the captain and majority of the quarter-deck officers are very young. OVERFALL. A rippling or race in the sea, where, by the peculiarities of bottom, the water is propelled with immense force, especially when the wind and tide, or current, set strongly together. (_See_ RIPPS.) OVER-GUNNED. Where the weight of metal is disproportioned to the ship, and the quarters insufficient for the guns being duly worked. OVERHAND KNOT. Is made by passing the end of a rope over its standing part, and through the bight. OVERHAUL. Has many applications. A tackle when released is overhauled. To get a fresh purchase, ropes are overhauled. To reach an object, or take off strain, weather-braces are overhauled. A ship overhauls another in chase when she evidently gains upon her. Also, overhauls a stranger and examines her papers. Also, is overhauled, or examined, to determine the refit demanded. OVER-INSURANCE. _See_ RE-INSURANCE, and DOUBLE INSURANCE. OVERLAP. A designation of the hatches of a ship; planks in clinch-built boats. Points of land _overlap_ a harbour's mouth at a particular bearing.--_To overlap_, to fay upon. OVERLAY DAYS. Days for which demurrage can be charged. OVER-LOFT. An old term for the upper deck of a ship. OVER-LOOKER. Generally an old master appointed by owners of ships to look after everything connected with the fitting out of their vessels when in harbour in England. OVER-MASTED. The state of a ship whose masts are too high or too heavy for her weight to counter-balance. OVER-PRESS, TO. To carry too much sail on a ship. OVER-RAKE. When a ship rides at anchor in a head-sea, the waves of which frequently break in upon her, they are said to over-rake her. OVER-RIGGED. A ship with more and heavier gear than necessary, so as to be top-hampered. OVER-RISEN. When a ship is too high out of the water for her length and breadth, so as to make a trouble of lee-lurches and weather-rolls. Such were our 80-gun three-deckers and 44's on two decks, happily now no more. OVER-RUNNING. (_See_ UNDER-RUN.) Applied to ice, when the young ice overlaps, and is driven over. OVER-SEA VESSELS. Ships from foreign parts, as distinguished from coasters. OVER-SETTING. The state of a ship turning upside down, either by carrying too much sail or by grounding, so that she falls on one side. (_See_ UPSET.) OVERSHOOT, TO. To give a ship too much way. OVERSLAUGH. From the Dutch _overslag_, meaning the bar of a river or port. Also, in military parlance, the being passed over in the roster for some recurring duty without being assigned to it in turn. OVER-SWACK. An old word, signifying the reflux of the waves by the force of the wind. OVERWHELM. A comprehensive word derived from the Ang.-Saxon _wylm_, a wave. Thus the old song-- "Lash'd to the helm, should seas o'erwhelm." OWLER. An old term on our southern coast for smuggler. Particularly persons who carried wool by night, in order to ship it contrary to law. OWN, TO. To be a proprietor in a ship. OWNERS. The proprietors of ships. They are bound to perform contracts made by their masters, who are legally their agents. OXBOWS. Bends or reaches of a river. OX-EYE. A small cloud, or weather-gall, seen on the coast of Africa, which presages a severe storm. It appears at first in the form of an ox-eye, but soon overspreads the whole hemisphere, accompanied by a violent wind which scatters ships in all directions, and many are sunk downright. Also, a water-fowl. Also, the smaller glass bull's eyes. OXYGON. A triangle which has three sharp or acute angles. OXYRINCHUS. A large species of the skate family. OYSE. An inlet of the sea, among the Shetlands and Orkneys. OYSTER-BED. A "laying" of culch, that is, stones, old shells, or other hard substances, so as to form a bed for oysters, which would be choked in soft mud. OYSTER-CATCHER, OR SEA-PYE. The black and white coast-bird, _Haematopus ostralegus_. OZELLA. A Venetian coin both in gold and silver; the former being L1, 17_s._ 4_d._, and the latter 1_s._ 7_d._, in sterling value. P. PACE. A measure, often used for reconnoitring objects. The common pace is 2-1/2 feet, or half the geometrical pace. The pace is also often roughly assumed as a yard. PACIFIC OCEAN. A name given by the Spaniards to the "Great Ocean," from the fine weather they experienced on the coast of Peru. Other parts, however, prove this a misnomer. PACK-ICE. A large collection of broken floe huddled together, but constantly varying its position; said to be open when the fragments do not touch, and close when the pieces are in contact. PACKING-BOXES. Recesses in the casing of a steamer, directly facing the steam-ports, filled with hemp-packing and tallow, in order to form steam-tight partitions. PACKS. Heavy thunder clouds. PAD, OR PAD-PIECE. In ship-building, a piece of timber placed on the top of a beam at its middle part, in order to make up the curve or round of the deck. PADDLE. A kind of oar, used by the natives of India, Africa, America, and by most savages; it is shorter and broader in the blade than the common oar.--_To paddle_, is to propel a boat more purely by hand, that is, without a fulcrum or rowlock. PADDLE-BEAMS. Two large beams projecting over the sides of a steamer, between which the paddle-wheels revolve. (_See_ SPONSON.) PADDLE-BOX. The frame of wood which encircles the upper part of the paddle-wheel. PADDLE-BOX BOATS. Boats made to fit the paddle-box rim, stowed bottom upwards on each box. PADDLE-SHAFT. The stout iron axis carrying the paddle-wheels, which revolves with them when keyed. PADDLE-STEAMER. A steam-ship propelled through the water by paddle-wheels. PADDLE-WHEELS. The wheels on each side of a steamer, suspended externally by a shaft, and driven by steam, to propel her by the action of the floats. PADDY, OR PADI. Rice in the husk, so called by the Malays, from whose language the word has found its way to all the coasts of India. PADDY-BOATS. A peculiar Ceylon boat, for the conveyance of rice and other necessaries. PADDY'S HURRICANE. Not wind enough to float the pennant. PADRONE. (_See_ PATRON or MASTER.) This word is not used in larger vessels than coasters. PADUAN. A small Malay vessel, armed with two guns, one aft and the other forward, for piratical purposes. PAGODA. Tall tapering buildings erected by the Chinese and other eastern nations, to note certain events, or as places for worship, of which the great pagoda of Pekin may be taken as an example. They are rather numerous on the banks of the Canton River. (_See_ STAR-PAGODA.) PAH. A New Zealand stronghold. (_See_ HEP-PAH.) PAHI. The large war-canoe of the Society Islands. PAID OFF. _See_ PAYING OFF. PAINTER. A rope attached to the bows of a boat, used for making her fast: it is spliced with a thimble to a ring-bolt inside the stem. "Cut your painter," make off. PAIR-OAR. A name of the London wherry of a larger size than the scull. PAIXHAN GUN. Introduced by the French General Paixhan about 1830, for the horizontal firing of heavy shells; having much greater calibre, but proportionally less metal, than the then current solid-shot guns. PALABRAS. Sp. words; hence _palaver_ amongst natives of new countries where the Spaniards have landed. PALADIN. A knight-errant. PALANQUIN. The covered litter of India. PALAVER. _See_ PALABRAS. PALES AND CROSS-PALES. The interior shores by which the timbers of a ship are kept to the proper breadth while in frame. PALISADES. [Sp.] Palings for defensive purposes, formed of timber or stout stakes fixed vertically and sharpened at the head. PALLET. A ballast-locker formerly used, to give room in the hold for other stowage. PALLETTING. A slight platform made above the bottom of the magazines, to keep the powder from moisture. PALM. The triangular face of the fluke of an anchor. Also, a shield-thimble used in sewing canvas, rope, &c. It consists of a flat thimble to receive the head of the needle, and is fixed upon a piece of canvas or leather, across the _palm_ of the hand, hence the name. PALMAIR. An old northern word for rudder. Also, a pilot. PALMETTO. One of the palm tribe, from the sheath of which sennit is worked for seamen's (straw) hats. PALM-WINE. A sub-acid and pleasant fermented tropical drink. (_See_ TODDY.) PAMBAN MANCHE, OR SNAKE-BOAT OF COCHIN. A canoe used on the numerous rivers and back-waters, from 30 to 60 feet long, and cut out of the solid tree. The largest are paddled by about twenty men, double-banked, and, when pressed, they will go as much as 12 miles an hour. PAMPAS. The Savannah plains of South America, so extensive that, as Humboldt observes, whilst their northern extremity is bounded by palm-trees, their southern limits are the eternal snows of the Magellanic straits. PAMPERO. A violent squall of wind from the S.W., attended with rain, thunder, and lightning, over the immense plains or pampas of the Rio de la Plata, where it rages like a hurricane. PAN. In fire-arms, is a small iron cavity of the old flint lock, adjacent to the touch-hole of the barrel, to contain the priming powder. PANCAKES. Thin floating rounded spots of snow ice, in the Arctic seas, and reckoned the first indication of the approach of winter, in August. PANDEL. A Kentish name for the shrimp. PANDOOR. A northern name for a large oyster, usually taken at the entrance of the pans. PANGAIA. A country vessel of East Africa, like a barge, with one mat-sail of cocoa-nut leaves, the planks being pinned with wooden pins, and sewed with twine. PANNIKIN. A small tin pot. PANNYAR. Kidnapping negroes on the coast of Africa. PANSHWAY. A fast-pulling passenger-boat used on the Hooghly. PANTOGRAPH. An instrument to copy or reduce drawings. PANTOMETER. An instrument for taking angles and elevations, and measuring distances. PAOLO. A Papal silver coin, value 5-1/4_d._; ten paoli make a crown. PAPS. Coast hills, with rounded or conical summits; the lofty paps of Jura are three in number. PAR, OR PARR. In ichthyology, the samlet, brannock, or branling. Also, a commercial term of exchange, where the moneys are equalized. PARA. A small Turkish coin of 3 aspers, 1-1/2 farthing. PARABOLA. A geometrical figure formed by the section of a cone when cut by a plane parallel to its side. PARADE. An assembling of troops in due military order. Also, the open space where they parade or are paraded. The quarter-deck of a man-of-war is often termed the sovereign's parade. PARALLACTIC ANGLE. The angle made at a star by arcs passing through the zenith and pole respectively. PARALLAX. An apparent change in the position of an object, arising from a change of the observer's station, and which diminishes with the altitude of an object in the vertical circle. Its effect is greatest in the horizon, where it is termed the _horizontal parallax_, and vanishes entirely in the zenith. The positions of the planets and comets, as viewed from the surface of the earth, differ from those they would occupy if observed from its centre by the amount of parallax, the due application of which is an important element. The stars are so distant that their positions are the same from whatever part of the earth they are seen; but attempts have been made to detect the amount of variation in their places, when observed from opposite points of the earth's orbit, the minute result of which is termed the _annual parallax_; and the former effect, due to the observer's station on our globe, is called the _diurnal parallax_. PARALLEL. A term for those lines that preserve an equal distance from each other. It is sometimes used instead of latitude, as, "Our orders were to cruise in the parallel of Madeira." More definitely, they are imaginary circles parallel with the equator, ninety in the northern, and ninety in the southern hemispheres. PARALLEL-BAR. In the marine steam-engine, forms a connection with the pump-rods and studs along the centre line of the levers. PARALLEL OF LATITUDE. Is a circle parallel to the equator passing through any place. _Almucantar_ is the Arabic name. PARALLELOGRAM. A right-lined quadrilateral figure, the opposite sides of which are parallel and equal. PARALLELOPIPED. A prism or solid figure contained under six parallelograms, the opposite sides of which are equal and parallel. PARALLELS. The trenches or lines made by a besieger parallel to the general defence of a place, for the purpose of connecting and supporting his several approaches. PARALLEL SAILING. Sailing nearly on a given parallel of latitude. PARALLELS OF DECLINATION. Secondary circles parallel to the celestial equator. PARANZELLO. A small Mediterranean vessel, pink-sterned, with a lateen main-sail and mizen, and a large jib. PARAPET. A breast-high defence against missiles; its top is usually sloped away to the front, that the defenders may conveniently fire over it; and it is preferred of earth, of a thickness proportionate to the kind of fire it is intended to resist; its height also is often much increased. PARASANG. A Persian military measure, sometimes assumed as a league, but equal to about 4 English miles. PARBUCKLE. A method of hauling up or lowering down a cask, or any cylindrical object, where there is no crane or tackle; the middle of a rope is passed round a post, the two ends are then passed under the two quarters of the cask, bringing the ends back again over it, and they being both hauled or slackened together, either raise or lower the cask, &c., as may be required. The parbuckle is frequently used in public-house vaults. Guns are parbuckled up steep cliffs without their carriages, and spars in timber-yards are so dealt with. PARCEL, TO. To wind tarred canvas round a rope. PARCELLING. Narrow strips of old canvas daubed with tar and frequently wound about a rope like bandages, previous to its being served. PARCLOSE. A name of the limber-hole. PARDON. The gazetted amnesty or remission of penalty for deserters who return to their duty; the same as _act of grace_. PARGOS. A fish resembling a large bream, from which the crews of Quiros and Cook suffered violent pains and bad effects. The porgy of Africa and the West Indies. PARHELION. A mock or false sun; sometimes more than one. PARIAH. The low-caste people of Hindustan; outcasts.--_Pariah-dogs_; also outcasts of no known breed. PARK. A piece of ground (other than a battery) appointed for the ranging of guns or of ordnance stores. PARLEY. That beat of drum by which a conference with the enemy is desired. Synonymous with chamade.--_To parley._ To bandy words. PARLIAMENT-HEEL. The situation of a ship when careened by shift of ballast, &c.; or the causing her to incline a little on one side, so as to clean the side turned out of water, and cover it with fresh composition, termed _boot-topping_ (which see). PAR-LINE. A term signifying the normal level of a barometer for a given station, or the mean pressure between 32 deg. and the sea-level, to which last the observations are all to be corrected and reduced. PAROLE. The word of honour given by a prisoner of war until exchanged. Also, synonymous with _word_ (which see). PAROLE-EVIDENCE. In insurance cases it is a general rule, that the policy alone shall be conclusive evidence of the contract, and that no parole-evidence shall be received to vary the terms of it. PARRALS, OR PARRELS. Those bands of rope, or sometimes iron collars, by which the centres of yards are fastened at the slings to the masts, so as to slide up and down freely when requisite. PARREL-ROPE. Is formed of a single rope well served, and fitted with an eye at each end; this being passed round the yard is seized fast on, the two ends are then passed round the after-part of the mast, and one of them being brought under, and the other over the yard, the two eyes are lashed together; this is seldom used but for the top-gallant and smaller yards. PARREL WITH RIBS AND TRUCKS, OR JAW PARRELS. This is formed by passing the two parts of the parrel-rope through the two holes in the ribs, observing that between every two ribs is strung a truck on each part of the rope. (_See_ RIBS and TRUCKS.) The ends of the parrel-rope are made fast with seizings; these were chiefly used on the topsail-yards. PARREL WITH TRUCKS. Is composed of a single rope passing through a number of bull's-eye trucks, sufficient to embrace the mast; these are principally used for the cheeks of a gaff. PARSEES. The great native merchants of Bombay, &c., and a very useful class as merchants and shopkeepers all along the Malabar coast. They are the remains of the ancient Persians, and are Guebres, or fire-worshippers. PART, TO. To break a rope. To part from an anchor is in consequence of the cable parting. PARTAN. A name on our northern coasts for the common sea-crab. PARTING. The state of being driven from the anchors by breaking the cables. The rupture or stranding of any tackle-fall or hawser. PARTIZAN, OR PERTUISAN. A halbert formerly much used. Thus in Shakspeare (_Antony and Cleopatra_), "I had as lief have a reed that will do me no service, as a partizan I could not heave." Also, a useful stirring man, fit for all sorts of desultory duties. PARTIZAN WARFARE. Insurrectionary, factional, and irregular hostilities. PARTNERS. A framework of thick plank, fitted round the several scuttles or holes in a ship's decks, through which the masts, capstans, &c., pass; but particularly to support it when the mast leans against it. PARTNERSHIP with a neutral cannot legalize commerce with a belligerent. PART OWNERS. Unlike any other partnership, they may be imposed upon each other without mutual consent, whence arises a frequent appeal to both civil and common law. (_See_ SHIP-OWNER.) PARTRIDGES. Grenades thrown from a mortar. PARTY. The detachment of marines serving on board a man-of-war. Also, a gang of hands sent away on particular duties. PASHA. Viceroy. A Turkish title of honour and command. PASS. A geographical term abbreviated from passage, and applied to any defile for crossing a mountain chain. Also, any difficult strait which commands the entrance into a country. Also, a certificate of leave of absence for a short period only. Also, a thrust with a sword. PASS, OR PASSPORT. A permission granted by any state to a vessel, to navigate in some particular sea without molestation; it contains all particulars concerning her, and is binding on all persons at peace with that state. It is also a letter of licence given by authority, granting permission to enter, travel in, and quit certain territories. PASS, TO. To give from one to another, and also to take certain turns of a rope round a yard, &c., as "Pass the line along;" "pass the gasket;" "pass a seizing;" "pass the word there," &c. PASSAGE. A voyage is generally supposed to comprise the outward and homeward passages. Also, a west-country term for ferry. (_See_ VOYAGE.) PASSAGE-BOAT. A small vessel employed in carrying persons or luggage from one port to another. Also, a ferry-boat. PASSAGE-BROKER. One who is licensed to act in the procuring of passages by ships from one port to another. PASSAGE-MONEY. The allowance made for carrying official personages in a royal ship. Also, the charge made for the conveyance of passengers in a packet or merchant-vessel. PASSAGES. Cuts in the parapet of the covered way to continue the communication throughout. PASSANDEAU. An ancient 8-pounder gun of 15 feet. PASSAREE, OR PASSARADO. A rope in use when before the wind with lower studding-sail booms out, to haul out the clues of the fore-sail to tail-blocks on the booms, so as to full-spread the foot of that sail. PASSED. The having undergone a regular examination for preferment. PASSED BOYS. Those who have gone through the round of instruction given in a training-ship. PASSE-VOLANT. A name applied by the French to a _Quaker_ or wooden gun on board ship; but it was adopted by our early voyagers as also expressing a movable piece of ordnance. PASSPORT. _See_ PASS. PASS-WORD. The countersign for answering the sentinels. PATACHE. A Portuguese tender, from 200 to 300 tons, for carrying treasure: well armed and swift. PATACOON. A Spanish piece of eight, worth 4_s._ 6_d._ PATALLAH. A large and clumsy Indian boat, for baggage, cattle, &c. PATAMAR. An excellent old class of advice-boats in India, especially on the Bombay coast, both swift and roomy. They are grab-built, that is, with a prow-stern, about 76 feet long, 21 feet broad, 11 feet deep, and 200 tons burden. They are navigated with much skill by men of the Mopila caste and other Mussulmans. PATAMOMETER. An instrument for measuring the force of currents. PATAXOS. A small vessel formerly used by the Spaniards as an advice-boat. PATCH. The envelope used with the bullet in old rifles.--_Muzzle-patch_ is a projection on the top of the muzzle of some guns, doing away with the effect of dispart in laying. PATELLA. The limpet, of which there are 250 known species. PATERERO. A kind of small mortar sometimes fired for salutes or rejoicing, especially in Roman Catholic countries on holidays. PATERNOSTER-WORK. The framing of a chain-pump. PATH. The trajectory of a shell. PATOO-PATOO. A formidable weapon with sharp edges, used by the Polynesian Islanders and New Zealanders as a sort of battle-axe to cleave the skulls of their enemies. PATROL. The night-rounds, to see that all is right, and to insure regularity and order. PATRON, OR PADRONE. The master of a merchant vessel or coaster in the Mediterranean. Also, a cartridge-box, _temp._ Elizabeth. PAUL BITT. A strong timber fixed perpendicularly at the back of the windlass in the middle, serving to support the system of pauls which are pinned into it, as well as to add security to the machine. PAULER, THAT IS A. A closer or stopper; an unanswerable or puzzling decision. PAUL RIM. A notched cast-iron capstan-ring let into the ship's deck for the pauls to act on. PAULS, OR PAWLS. A stout but short set of bars of iron fixed close to the capstan-whelps, or windlass of a ship, to prevent them from recoiling and overpowering the men. Iron or wood brackets suspended to the paul-bitts of a windlass, and dropping into appropriate scores, act as a security to the purchase. To the windlass it is vertical; for capstans, horizontal, bolted to the whelps, and butting to the deck-rim. PAUL THERE, MY HEARTY. Tell us no more of that. Discontinue your discourse. PAUNCH-MAT. A thick and strong mat formed by interweaving sinnet or strands of rope as close as possible; it is fastened on the outside of the yards or rigging, to prevent their chafing. PAVILION. A state tent. PAVILLON [Fr.] Colours; flag; standard. PAVISER. Formerly a soldier who was armed with a pavise or buckler. PAWK. A young lobster. PAWL. _See_ PAULS. PAY. A buccaneering principle of hire, under the notion of plunder and sharing in prizes, was, _no purchase no pay_. PAY, TO [from Fr. _poix_, pitch]. To pay a seam is to pour hot pitch and tar into it after caulking, to defend the oakum from the wet. Also, to beat or drub a person, a sense known to Shakspeare as well as to seamen. PAY A MAST OR YARD, TO. To anoint it with tar, turpentine, rosin, tallow, or varnish; tallow is particularly useful for those masts upon which the sails are frequently hoisted and lowered, such as top-masts and the lower masts of sloops, schooners, &c. PAY A VESSEL'S BOTTOM, TO. To cover it with tallow, sulphur, rosin, &c. (_See_ BREAMING.) PAY AWAY. The same as _paying out_ (which see). To pass out the slack of a cable or rope.--_Pay down._ Send chests or heavy articles below. PAYING OFF. The movement by which a ship's head falls off from the wind, and drops to leeward. Also, the paying off the ship's officers and crew, and the removal of the ship from active service to ordinary. PAYING OUT. The act of slackening a cable or rope, so as to let it run freely. When a man talks grandiloquently, he is said to be "paying it out." PAYMASTER. The present designation of the station formerly held by the purser; the officer superintending the provisioning and making payments to the crew. PAY ROUND, TO. To turn the ship's head. PAY-SERJEANT, IN THE ARMY. A steady non-commissioned officer, selected by the captain of each company, to pay the subsistence daily to the men, after the proper deductions. PEA-BALLAST. A coarse fresh-water sand used by ships in the China trade for stowing tea-chests upon. PEA OR P.-JACKET. A skirtless loose rough coat, made of Flushing or pilot cloth. PEAK. The more or less conical summit of a mountain whether isolated or forming part of a chain. Also, the upper outer corner of those sails which are extended by a gaff. PEAK, TO. To raise a gaff or lateen yard more obliquely to the mast. _To stay peak_, or _ride a short stay peak_, is when the cable and fore-stay form a line: a long peak is when the cable is in line with the main-stay. PEAK DOWN-HAUL. A rope rove through a block at the outer end of the gaff to haul it down by. PEAK HALLIARDS. The ropes or tackles by which the outer end of a gaff is hoisted, as opposed to the _throat-halliards_ (which see). PEAK OF AN ANCHOR. The bill or extremity of the palm, which, as seamen by custom drop the _k_, is pronounced pea; it is tapered nearly to a point in order to penetrate the bottom. PEAK PURCHASE. A purchase fitted in cutters to the standing peak-halliards to sway it up taut. PEARL. A beautiful concretion found in the interior of the shells of many species of mollusca, resulting from the deposit of nacreous substance round some nucleus, mostly of foreign origin. The _Meleagrina margaritifera_, or pearl oyster of the Indian seas, yields the most numerous and finest specimens. PECTORAL FINS. The pair situated behind the gills of fishes, corresponding homologically to the fore limbs of quadrupeds and the wings of birds. PEDESTAL-BLOCKS. Synonymous with _plumber-blocks_ (which see). PEDESTAL-RAIL. A rail about two inches thick, wrought over the foot-space rail, and in which there is a groove to steady the heel of the balusters of the galleries. PEDRO. An early gun of large calibre for throwing stone-balls. PEDRO-A-PIED [_Pedro-pee_]. The balance on one leg in walking a plank as a proof of sobriety. A man placed one foot on a seam and flourished the other before and behind, singing, "How can a man be drunk when he can dance Pedro-pee," at which word he placed the foot precisely before the other on the seam, till he proved at least he had not lost his equilibrium. This was an old custom. PEECE. An old term for a fortified position. PEEGAGH. The Manx or Erse term for a large skate. PEEK. _See_ PEAK. PEEL. A stronghold of earth and timber for defence. Also, the wash of an oar. PEGASUS. One of the ancient northern constellations, of which the lucida is Markab. PEKUL. A Chinese commercial weight of about 130 or 132 lbs. PELAGIANS. Fishes of the open sea. PELICAN. A well-known water-bird. Also, the old six-pounder culverin. PELL [from the British _pwll_]. A deep hole of water, generally beneath a cataract or any abrupt waterfall. Also, a large pond. PELLET. An old word for shot or bullet. PELLET-POWDER. Has its grains much larger and smoother, and is intended to act more gradually than service gunpowder, but by the English it is at present considered rather weak. PELTA. An ancient shield or buckler, formed of scales sewed on skins. PEMBLICO. A small bird whose cry was deemed ominous at sea as presaging wind. PEMMICAN. Condensed venison, or beef, used by the hunters around Hudson's Bay, and largely provided for the Arctic voyages, as containing much nutriment in a small compass. Thin slices of lean meat are dried over the smoke of wood fires; they are then pounded and mixed with an equal weight of their own fat. It is generally boiled and eaten hot where fire is available. PEN. A cape or conical summit. Also, the Creole name for houses and plantations in the country. Also, an inclosure for fishing on the coast. PENA, OR PENON. High rocks on the Spanish coasts. PENANG LAWYER. A cane, with the administration of which debts were wont to be settled at Pulo-Penang. PENCEL. A small streamer or pennon. PENDANT. _See_ PENNANT. PENDANT. A strop or short piece of rope fixed on each side, under the shrouds, upon the heads of the main and fore masts, from which it hangs as low as the cat-harpings, having an iron thimble spliced into an eye at the lower end to receive the hooks of the main and fore tackles. There are besides many other pendants, single or double ropes, to the lower extremity of which is attached a block or tackle; such are the fish-pendant, stay-tackle-pendant, brace-pendant, yard-tackle-pendant, reef-tackle-pendant, &c., all of which are employed to transmit the efforts of their respective tackles to some distant object.--_Rudder-pendants._ Strong ropes made fast to a rudder by means of chains. Their use is to prevent the loss of the rudder if by any accident it should get unshipped. PENDULUM. A gravitating instrument for measuring the motion of a ship and thereby assisting the accuracy of her gunnery in regulating horizontal fire. PENGUIN. A web-footed bird, of the genus _Aptenodytes_, unable to fly on account of the small size of its wings, but with great powers of swimming and diving: generally met with in high southern latitudes. PENINSULA. A tract of land joined to a continent by a comparatively narrow neck termed an isthmus. PENINSULAR WAR. A designation assigned to the Duke of Wellington's campaigns in Portugal and Spain. PENKNIFE ICE. A name given by Parry to ice, the surface of which is composed of numberless irregular vertical crystals, nearly close together, from five to ten inches long, about half an inch broad, and pointed at both ends. Supposed to be produced by heavy drops of rain piercing their way through the ice rather than by any peculiar crystallization while freezing. PENNANT. A long narrow banner with St. George's cross in the head, and hoisted at the main. It is the badge of a ship-of-war. Signal pennants are 9 feet long, tapering from 2 feet at the mast to 1 foot. They denote the vessels of a fleet; there are ten pennants, which can be varied beyond any number of ships present. When the pennant is half mast, it denotes the death of the captain. When hauled down the ship is out of commission. Broad pennant denotes a commodore, and is a swallow-tailed flag, the tails tapering, and would meet, if the exterior lines were prolonged; those of a cornet could not. PENNANT-SHIP. Generally means the commodore, and vessels in the employ of government. It is also an authority delegated by the commander of convoy to some smart merchant ship to assist in the charge, and collect stragglers. PENNOCK. A little bridge thrown over a water-course. PENNY-WIDDIE. A haddock dried without being split. PENSIONERS. Disabled soldiers or sailors received into the superb institutions of Chelsea and Greenwich, or, "recently if they choose," receiving out-pensions. PENSTOCK. A flood-gate to a mill-pond. Also used in fortification, for the purpose of inundating certain works. PENTAGON. A right-lined figure of five equal sides and angles. PENUMBRA. The lighter shade which surrounds the dark shadow of the earth in an eclipse of the moon. Also, the light shade which usually encircles the black spots upon the sun's disc. PEON-WOOD. _See_ POON-WOOD. PEOTTA. A craft of the Adriatic, of light burden, propelled by oars and canvas. PEPPER-DULSE. _Halymenia edulis_; a pungent sea-weed, which, as well as _H. palmata_, common dulse, is eaten in Scotland. PER-CENTAGE. A proportional sum by which insurance, brokerage, freight, del credere, &c., are paid. PERCER. A rapier; a short sword. PERCH. A pole stuck up on a shoal as a beacon; or a spar erected on or projected from a cliff whence to watch fish. PERCUSSION. The striking of one body by another. PERDEWS. A corruption from _enfans perdus_, to designate those soldiers who are selected for the _forlorn hope_ (which see). PERIGEE. That point in the moon's orbit where she is nearest to the earth; or the point in the earth's orbit where we are nearest to the sun. PERIHELION. That point in the orbit of a planet or comet which is nearest to the sun. PERIKO. An undecked boat of burden in Bengal. PERIL, OR PERIL OF THE SEA. Does not mean danger or hazard, but comprises such accidents as arise from the elements, and which could not be prevented by any care or skill of the master and crew. (_See_ ACT OF GOD.) PERIMETER. The sum of all the sides of a geometrical figure taken together. PERIODICAL WINDS. _See_ MONSOON and TRADE-WINDS. PERIODIC INEQUALITIES. Those disturbances in the planetary motions, caused by their reciprocal attraction in definite periods. PERIODIC TIME. The interval of time which elapses from the moment when a planet or comet leaves any point in its orbit, until it returns to it again. PERIPHERY. The circumference of any curved figure. PERISHABLE MONITION. The public notice by the court of admiralty for the sale of a ship in a perishable condition, whose owners have proved contumacious. PERIWINKLE. The _win-wincle_ of the Ang.-Sax., a favourite little shell-fish, the pin-patch, or _Turbo littoreus_. PERMANENT MAGNETISM. The property of attraction and repulsion belonging to magnetized iron. (_See_ INDUCED MAGNETISM.) PERMANENT RANK. That given by commission, and which does not cease with any particular service. PERMIT. A license to sell goods that have paid the duties or excise. PERPENDICLE. The plumb-line of the old quadrant. PERPENDICULAR. A right line falling from or standing upon another vertically, and making the angle of 90 deg. on both sides. PERRY. An old term for a sudden squall. PERSONNEL. A word adopted from the French, and expressive of all the officers and men, civil and military, composing an army or a naval force. PERSPECTIVE. The old term for a hand telescope. Also, the science by which objects are delineated according to their natural appearance and situation. PERSUADER. A rattan, colt, or rope's end in the hands of a boatswain's mate. Also, a revolver. PERTURBATIONS. The effects of the attractions of the heavenly bodies upon each other, whereby they are sometimes drawn out of their elliptic paths about the central body, as instanced by the wondrous discovery of Neptune. PESAGE. A custom or duty paid for weighing merchandise, or other goods. PESETA, OR PISTOREEN. A Spanish silver coin: one-fifth of a piastre. PESSURABLE, OR PESTARABLE, of our old statutes, implied such merchandise as take up much room in a ship. PETARD. A hat-shaped metal machine, holding from 6 to 9 lbs. of gunpowder; it is firmly fixed to a stout plank, and being applied to a gate or barricade, is fired by a fuse, to break or blow it open. (_See_ POWDER-BAGS.) PETARDIER. The man who fixes and fires a petard, a service of great danger. PET-COCK. A tap, or valve on a pump. PETER. _See_ BLUE PETER. PETER-BOAT. A fishing-boat of the Thames and Medway, so named after St. Peter, as the patron of fishermen, whose cross-keys form part of the armorial bearings of the Fishmongers' Company of London. These boats were first brought from Norway and the Baltic; they are generally short, shallow, and sharp at both ends, with a well for fish in the centre, 25 feet over all, and 6 feet beam, yet in such craft boys were wont to serve out seven years' apprenticeship, scarcely ever going on shore. PETER-MAN, OR PETERER. A fisherman. Also, the Dutch fishing vessels that frequented our eastern coast. PETITORY SUITS. Causes of property, formerly cognizable in the admiralty court. PETREL. The _Cypselli_ of the ancients, and _Mother Cary's chickens_ of sailors; of the genus _Procellaria_. They collect in numbers at the approach of a gale, running along the waves in the wake of a ship; whence the name _peterel_, in reference to St. Peter's attempt to walk on the water. They are seen in all parts of the ocean. The largest of the petrels, _Procellaria fuliginosa_, is known by seamen as Mother Cary's goose. PETROLEUM. Called also rock, mineral, or coal, oil. A natural oil widely distributed over the globe, consisting of carbon and hydrogen, in the proportion of about 88 and 12 per cent. It burns fiercely with a thick black smoke; and attempts, not yet successful, have been made to adapt it as a fuel for steamers. PETRONEL. An old term for a horse-pistol; also for a kind of carbine. PETTAH. A town adjoining the esplanade of a fort. PETTICOAT TROWSERS. A kind of kilt formerly worn by seamen in general, but latterly principally by fishermen. (_See_ GALLIGASKINS.) PETTY AVERAGE. Small charges borne partly by a ship, and partly by a cargo, such as expenses of towing, &c. PETTY OFFICER. A divisional seaman of the first class, ranking with a sergeant or corporal. PHALANX. An ancient Macedonian legion of varying numbers, formed into a square compact body of pikemen with their shields joined. PHARONOLOGY. Denotes the study of, and acquaintance with, lighthouses. PHAROS. A lighthouse; a watch-tower. PHASELUS. An ancient small vessel, equipped with sails and oars. PHASES. The varying appearances of the moon's disc during a lunation; also those of the inferior planets Venus and Mercury, as they revolve round the sun. PHILADELPHIA LAWYER. "Enough to puzzle a Philadelphia lawyer" is a common nautical phrase for an inconsistent story. PHINAK. A species of trout. (_See_ FINNOCK.) PHYSICAL ASTRONOMY. That department of the science which treats of the causes of the motions of the heavenly bodies. PHYSICAL DOUBLE-STAR. _See_ DOUBLE-STAR and BINARY SYSTEM. PIASTRE. A Spanish silver coin, value 4_s._ 3_d._ sterling. Also, a Turkish coin of 40 paras, or 1_s._ 7_d._ PICARD. A boat of burden on the Severn, mentioned in our old statutes. PICCANINNY. A negro or mulatto infant. PICCAROON. A swindler or thief. Also, a piratical vessel. PICCARY. Piratical theft on a small scale. PICKERIE. An old word for stealing; under which name the crime was punishable by severe duckings. PICKET. A pointed staff or stake driven into the ground for various military purposes, as the marking out plans of works, the securing horses to, &c. (_See also_ PIQUET, an outguard.) PICKETS. Two pointers for a mortar, showing the direction of the object to be fired at, though it be invisible from the piece. PICKLE-HARIN. A sea-sprite, borrowed from the Teutonic. PICKLING. A mode of salting naval timber in our dockyards, to insure its durability. (_See_ BURNETTIZE.) PICK UP A WIND, TO. Traverses made by oceanic voyagers; to run from one trade or prevalent wind to another, with as little intervening calm as possible. PICTARNIE. A name on our northern coasts for the _Sterna hirundo_, the tern, or sea-swallow. PICUL. _See_ PEKUL. PIE. The beam or pole that is erected to support the _gun_ for loading and unloading timber. Also called _pie-tree_. PIECE OF EIGHT. The early name for the coin of the value of 8 reals, the well-known Spanish dollar. PIER. A quay; also a strong mound projecting into the sea, to break the violence of the waves. PIERCER. Used by sail-makers to form eyelet-holes. PIGGIN. A little pail having a long stave for a handle; used to bale water out of a boat. PIG-IRON. (_See_ SOW.) An oblong mass of cast-iron used for ballast; there are also pigs of lead. "A nodding beam or pig of lead May hurt the very ablest head." PIG-TAIL. The common twisted tobacco for chewing. PIG-YOKE. The name given to the old Davis quadrant. PIKE. (_See_ HALF-PIKE.) A long, slender, round staff, armed at the end with iron. (_See_ BOARDING-PIKE and PYKE.) Formerly in general use, but which gave way to the bayonet. Also, the peak of a hill. Also, a fish, the _Esox lucius_, nicknamed the fresh-water shark. PIKE-TURN. _See_ CHEVAUX DE FRISE. PIL, OR PYLL. A creek subject to the tide. PILCHARD. The _Clupea pilchardus_, a fish allied to the herring, which appears in vast shoals off the Cornish coast about July. PILE. A pyramid of shot or shell.--_To pile arms_, is to plant three fire-locks together, and unite the ramrods, to steady the outspread butt-ends of the pieces resting on the ground. A pile is also a beam of wood driven into the ground to form by a number a solid foundation for building upon. A _sheeting-pile_ has more breadth than thickness, and is much used in constructing coffer-dams. PILE-DRIVER. A machine adapted for driving piles. Also, applied to a ship given to pitch heavily in a sea-way. PILGER. An east-country term for a fish-spear. PILING ICE. In Arctic parlance, where from pressure the ice is raised, slab over slab, into a high mass, which consolidates, and is often mistaken for a berg. PILL. (_See_ PIL.) A term on the western coast for a draining rivulet, as well as the creek into which it falls. PILLAGE. Wanton and mostly iniquitous plunder. But an allowed ancient practice, both in this and other countries, as shown by the sea ordinances of France, and our black book of the admiralty. PILLAN. A northern coast name for the shear-crab. PILLAR OF THE HOLD. A main stanchion with notches for descent. PILLAW. A dish composed at sea of junk, rice, onions, and fowls; it figured at the marriage feast of Commodore Trunnion. It is derived from the Levantine _pillaf_. PILLOW. A block of timber whereon the inner end of the bowsprit is supported. PILMER. The fine small rain so frequent on our western coasts. PILOT. An experienced person charged with the ship's course near the coasts, into roads, rivers, &c., and through all intricate channels, in his own particular district.--_Branch pilot._ One who is duly authorized by the Trinity board to pilot ships of the largest draft. PILOTAGE. The money paid to a pilot for taking a ship in or out of port, &c. PILOT CUTTER. A very handy sharp-built sea-boat used by pilots. PILOT-FISH. _Naucrates ductor_, a member of the _Scomber_ family, the attendant on the shark. PILOT'S-ANCHOR. A kedge used for dropping a vessel in a stream or tide-way. PILOT'S FAIR-WAY, OR PILOT'S WATER. A channel wherein, according to usage, a pilot must be employed. PINCH-GUT. A miserly purser. PINCH-GUT PAY. The short allowance money. PINE. A genus of lofty coniferous trees, abounding in temperate climates, and valuable for its timber and resin. The masts and yards of ships are generally of pine. (_See_ PITCH-PINE.)--_Pine_ is also a northern term for drying fish by exposure to the weather. PING. The whistle of a shot, especially the rifle-bullets in their flight. PINGLE. A small north-country coaster. PINK. A ship with a very narrow stern, having a small square part above. The shape is of old date, but continued, especially by the Danes, for the advantage of the quarter-guns, by the ship's being contracted abaft. Also, one of the many names for the minnow.--_To pink_, to stab, as, between casks, to detect men stowed away. PINKSTERN. A very narrow boat on the Severn. PIN-MAUL. _See_ MAUL. PINNACE. A small vessel propelled with oars and sails, of two, and even three masts, schooner-rigged. In size, as a ship's boat, smaller than the barge, and, like it, carvel-built. The armed pinnace of the French coasts was of 60 or 80 tons burden, carrying one long 24-pounder and 100 men. In _Henry VI._ Shakspeare makes the pinnace an independent vessel, though Falstaff uses it as a small vessel attending on a larger. Also, metaphorically, an indifferent character. PINNOLD. A term on our southern shores for a small bridge. PINS.--_Belaying pins._ Short cylindrical pieces of wood or iron fixed into the fife-rail and other parts of a vessel, for making fast the running-rigging. PINTADOS. Coloured or printed chintzes, formerly in great demand from India, and among the fine goods of a cargo. PIN-TAIL. The _Anas acuta_, a species of duck with a long pointed tail. Also, in artillery, the iron pin on the axle-tree of the limber, to which the trail-eye of the gun-carriage is attached for travel. PINTLES. The rudder is hung on to a ship by pintles and braces. The braces are secured firmly to the stern-post by jaws, which spread and are bolted on each side. The pintles are hooks which enter the braces, and the rudder is then wood-locked; a dumb pintle on the heel finally takes the strain off the hinging portions. PIONEERS. A proportion of troops specially assigned to the clearing (from natural impediments) the way for the main body; hence, used generally in the works of an army, its scavenging, &c. Labourers of the country also are sometimes so used. PIPE. A measure of wine containing two hogsheads, or 125 gallons, equal to half a tun. Also, a peculiar whistle for summoning the men to duty, and directing their attention by its varied sounds. (_See_ CALL.) PIPE-CLAY. Known to the ancients under the name of _paretonium_; formerly indispensable to soldiers as well as the jolly marines. PIPE DOWN! The order to dismiss the men from the deck when a duty has been performed on board ship. PIPE-FISH. A fish of the genus _Syngnathus_, with an elongated slender body and long tubular mouth. PIPER. A half-dried haddock. Also, the shell _Echinus cidaris_. Also, the fish _Trigla lyra_. PIQUET. A proportion of a force set apart and kept on the alert for the security of the whole.--The _outlying piquet_, some distance from the main body, watches all hostile approach.--The _inlying piquet_ is ready to act in case of internal disorder, or of alarm. PIRACY. Depredation without authority, or transgression of authority given, by despoiling beyond its warrant. Fixed domain, public revenue, and a certain form of government, are exempt from that character, therefore the Barbary States were not treated by Europe as such. The Court of Admiralty is empowered to grant warrants to commit any person for piracy, only on regular information upon oath. By common law, piracy consists in committing those acts of robbery and depredation upon the high seas, which, if committed on land, would have amounted to felony, and the pirate is deemed _hostis humani generis_. PIRAGUA [Sp. _per agua_]. _See_ PIROGUE. PIRATE. A sea-robber, yet the word _pirata_ has been formerly taken for a sea-captain. Also, an armed ship that roams the seas without any legal commission, and seizes or plunders every vessel she meets; their colours are said to be a black field with a skull, a battle-axe, and an hour-glass. (_See_ PRAHU.) PIRIE. An old term for a sudden gust of wind. PIRLE. An archaic word signifying a brook or stream. PIROGUE, OR PIRAGUA. A canoe formed from the trunk of a large tree, generally cedar or balsa wood. It was the native vessel which the Spaniards found in the Gulf of Mexico, and on the west coasts of South America; called also a dug-boat in North America. PISCARY. A legal term for a fishery. Also, a right of fishing in the waters belonging to another person. PISCES. The twelfth sign of the zodiac, which the sun enters about the 21st of February. PISCIS AUSTRALIS. One of the ancient southern constellations, the lucida of which is Fomalhaut. PISTOL. An old word for a swaggering rogue; hence Shakspeare's character in _Henry V._ PISTOLA. A Papal gold coin of the sterling value of 13_s._ 11_d._ PISTOLE. A Spanish gold coin, value 16_s._ 6_d._ sterling. PISTOLET. This name was applied both to a small pistol and a Spanish pistole. PISTOLIERS. A name for the heavy cavalry, _temp._ Jac. I. PISTOL-PROOF. A term for the point of courage for which a man was elected captain by pirates. PISTON. In the marine steam-engine, a metal disc fitting the bore of the cylinder, and made to slide up and down within it easily, in order, by its reciprocating movement, to communicate motion to the engine. PISTON-ROD. A rod which is firmly fixed in the piston by a key driven through both. PIT. In the dockyards. _See_ SAW-PIT. PITCH. Tar and coarse resin boiled to a fluid yet tenacious consistence. It is used in a hot state with oakum in caulking the ship to fill the chinks or intervals between her planks. Also, in steam navigation, the distance between two contiguous threads of the screw-propeller, is termed the _pitch_. Also, in gunnery, the throw of the shot.--_To pitch_, to plant or set, as tents, pavements, pitched battles, &c. PITCH-BOAT. A vessel fitted for boiling pitch in, which should be veered astern of the one being caulked. PITCHED. A word formerly used for _stepped_, as of a mast, and also for _thrown_. PITCH-HOUSE. A place set apart for the boiling of pitch for the seams and bottoms of vessels. PITCH IN, TO. To set to work earnestly; to beat a person violently. (A colloquialism.) PITCHING. The plunging of a ship's head in a sea-way; the vertical vibration which her length makes about her centre of gravity; a very straining motion. PITCH-KETTLE. That in which the pitch is heated, or in which it is carried from the _pitch-pot_. PITCH-LADLE. Is used for paying decks and horizontal work. PITCH-MOP. The implement with which the hot pitch is laid on to ships' sides and perpendicular work. PITCH-PINE. _Pinus resinosa_, commonly called Norway or red pine. (_See_ PINE.) PITH. Well known as the medullary part of the stem of a plant; but figuratively, it is used to express strength and courage. PIT-PAN. A flat-bottomed, trough-like canoe, used in the Spanish Main and in the West Indies. PIT-POWDER. That made with charcoal which has been burned in pits, not in cylinders. PIVOT. A cylinder of iron or other metal, that may turn easily in a socket. Also, in a column of troops, that flank by which the dressing and distance are regulated; in a line, that on which it wheels. PIVOT-GUN. Mounted on a frame carriage which can be turned radially, so as to point the piece in any direction. PIVOT-SHIP. In certain fleet evolutions, the sternmost ship remains stationary, as a pivot upon which the other vessels are to form the line anew. PLACE. A fortress, especially its main body. PLACE FOR EVERYTHING, AND EVERYTHING IN ITS PLACE. One of the golden maxims of propriety on board ship. PLACE OF ARMS. In fortification, a space contrived for the convenient assembling of troops for ulterior purposes; the most usual are those at the salient and re-entering angles of the covered-way. PLACER. A Spanish nautical term for shoal or deposit. Also, for deposits of precious minerals. PLACES OF CALL. Merchantmen must here attend to two general rules:--If these places of call are enumerated in the charter-party, then such must be taken in the order laid down; but if leave be given to call at all, or any, then they must be taken in their geographical sequence. PLAGES [Lat.] An old word for the divisions of the globe; as, _plages of the north_, the northern regions. PLAIN. A term used in contradistinction to mountain, though far from implying a level surface, and it may be either elevated or low. PLAN. The area or imaginary surface defined by, or within any described lines. In ship-building, the _plan of elevation_, commonly called the _sheer-draught_, is a side-plan of the ship. (_See_ HORIZONTAL PLAN and BODY-PLAN, or plan of projection.) PLANE. In a general sense, a perfectly level surface; but it is a term used by shipwrights, implying the area or imaginary surface contained within any particular outlines, as the plane of elevation, or sheer-draught, &c. PLANE-CHART. One constructed on the supposition of the earth's being an extended plane, and therefore but little in request. PLANE OF THE MERIDIAN. _See_ MERIDIAN. PLANE-SAILING. That part of navigation which treats a ship's course as an angle, and the distance, difference of latitude, and easting or westing, as the sides of a right-angled triangle. The easting or westing is called departure. To convert this into difference of longitude, parallel, middle latitude, or Mercator's sailing is needed, depending on circumstances. Plane-sailing is so simple that it is colloquially used to express anything so easy that it is impossible to make a mistake. PLANE TRIANGLE. One contained by three right lines. PLANETS, PRIMARY. Those beautiful opaque bodies which revolve about the sun as a centre, in nearly circular orbits. (_See_ INFERIOR, MINOR, and SUPERIOR.) PLANETS, SECONDARY. The satellites, or moons, revolving about some of the primary planets--the moon being our satellite. PLANIMETRY. The mensuration of plane surfaces. PLANK. Thick boards, 18 feet long at least, from 1-1/2 to 4 inches thick, and 9 or 10 inches broad; of less dimensions, it is called _board_ or _deal_ (which see), the latter being 8 or 9 inches wide, by 14 feet long. PLANKING. The outside and inside casing of the vessel. PLANK IT, TO. To sleep on the bare decks, choosing, as the galley saying has it, the softest plank. PLANK-SHEER. Pieces of plank covering the timber-heads round the ship; also, the gunwale or covering-board. The space between this and the line of flotation has latterly been termed the free-board. PLAN OF THE TRANSOMS. The horizontal appearance of them, to which the moulds are made, and the bevellings taken. PLANT. A stock of tools, &c. Also, the fixtures, machinery, &c., required to carry on a business. PLANTER. In Newfoundland it means a person engaged in the fishery; and in the United States the naked trunk of a tree, which, imbedded in a river, becomes one of the very dangerous snag tribe. PLASH, TO. To wattle or interweave branches. PLASTRON. A pad used by fencers. Also, the shield on the under surface of a turtle. PLATE. In marine law, refers to jewels, plate, or treasure, for which freight is due. Thus, _plate-ship_ is a galleon so laden. PLATE. _Backstay-plate._ A piece of iron used instead of a chain to confine the dead-eye of the backstay to the after-channel.--_Foot-hook or futtock plates._ Iron bands fitted to the lower dead-eyes of the topmast-shrouds, which, passing through holes in the rim of the top, are attached to the upper ends of the futtock-shrouds. PLATE-ARMOUR. Thick coverings or coatings for ships on the new principle, to render them impervious to shot and shell, if kept just outside of _breaking-plate_ distance. PLATEAU. An upland flat-topped elevation. PLATFORM. A kind of deck for any temporary or particular purpose: the orlop-deck, having store-rooms and cabins forward and aft, and the middle part allotted to the stowage of cables. Also, the flooring elevation of stone or timber on which the carriage of a gun is placed for action. Hence, in early voyages, a fort or battery, with well-mounted ordnance, is called "the platform." PLATOON. Originally a small square body or subdivision of musketeers; hence, _platoon exercise_, that which relates to the loading and firing of muskets in the ranks; and _platoon firing_, _i.e._ by subdivisions. PLAY. Motion in the frame, masts, &c. Also said of the marine steam-engine when it is in action or in play. Also, in long voyages or tedious blockades, play-acting may be encouraged with benefit; for the excitement and employment thus afforded are not only good anti-scorbutics, but also promoters of content and good fellowship: in such-- "Jack is not bound by critics' crabbed laws, But gives to all his unreserved applause: He laughs aloud when jokes his fancy please-- Such are the honest manners of the seas. And never--never may he ape those fools Who, lost to reason, laugh or cry by rules." PLAYTE. An old term for a river-boat. PLEDGET. The string of oakum used in caulking. Also, in surgery, a small plug of lint. PLEIADES. The celebrated cluster of stars in Taurus, of which seven or eight are visible to the naked eye; the assisted vision numbers over 200. PLENY TIDES. Full tides. PLICATILES. Ancient vessels built of wood and leather, which could be taken to pieces and carried by land. PLONKETS. Coarse woollen cloths of former commerce. (_See_ statute 1 R. III. c. 8.) PLOT, OR PLOTT. A plan or chart. (_See_ ICHNOGRAPHY.) PLOTTING. The making of the plan after an actual survey of the place has been obtained. PLOUGH. An instrument formerly used for taking the sun's altitude, and possessed of large graduations. When a ship cuts briskly through the sea she is said to plough it. PLUCKER. The fishing frog, _Lophius piscatorius_. PLUG. A conical piece of wood to let in or keep out water, when fitted to a hole in the bottom of a boat.--_Hawse-plugs._ To stop the hawse-holes when the cables are unbent, and the ship plunges in a head-sea.--_Shot-plugs._ Covered with oakum and tallow, to stop shot-holes in the sides of a ship near the water-line; being conical, they adapt themselves to any sized shot-holes. PLUMB. Right up and down, opposed to parallel.--_To plumb._ To form the vertical line. Also, to sound the depth of water. PLUMBER-BLOCKS. These, in a marine steam-engine, are Y's, wherein are fixed the bushes, in which the shafts or pinions revolve. PLUMMET. A name sometimes given to the hand-lead, or any lead or iron weight suspended by a string, as used by carpenters, &c. PLUNDER. A name given to the effects of the officers and crew of a prize, when pillaged by the captors, though the act directs that "nothing shall be taken out of a prize-ship till condemned." (_See_ PILLAGE.) PLUNGING FIRE. A pitching discharge of shot from a higher level, at such an angle that the shot do not ricochet. PLUNGING SPLASH. The descent of the anchor into the water when let go. PLUSH [evidently from _plus_]. The overplus of the grog, arising from being distributed in a smaller measure than the true one, and assigned to the cook of each mess, becomes a cause of irregularity. (_See_ TOT.) PLUVIOMETER, OR RAIN-GAUGE. A measurer of the quantity of rain which falls on a square foot. There are various kinds. PLY, TO. To carry cargoes or passengers for short trips. Also, _to work to windward_, to beat. Also, _to ply an oar_, to use it in pulling. PLYMOUTH CLIMATE. "The west wind always brings wet weather, The east wind wet and cold together; The south wind surely brings us rain, The north wind blows it back again." PLYMOUTH CLOAK. An old term for a cane or walking stick. P.M. [Lat. _post meridiem_.] Post meridian, or after mid-day. P.O. Mark for a petty officer. POCHARD. A kind of wild duck. POCKET. A commercial quantity of wool, containing half a sack. Also, the frog of a belt. POD. A company of seals or sea-elephants. POGGE. The miller's thumb, _Cottus cataphractus_. POHAGEN. A fish of the herring kind, called also _hard-head_ (which see). POINT. A low spit of land projecting from the main into the sea, almost synonymous with promontory or head. Also, the rhumb the winds blow from. POINT A GUN, TO. To direct it on a given object. POINT A SAIL, TO. To affix points through the eyelet-holes of the reefs. (_See_ POINTS.) POINT-BEACHER. A low woman of Portsmouth. POINT-BLANK. Direct on the object; "blank" being the old word for the mark on the practice-butt. POINT-BLANK FIRING. That wherein no elevation is given to the gun, its axis being pointed for the object. POINT-BLANK RANGE. The distance to which a shot was reckoned to range straight, without appreciable drooping from the force of gravity. It varied from 300 to 400 yards, according to the nature of gun; and was measured by the first graze of the shot fired horizontally from a gun on its carriage on a horizontal plane. The finer practice of rifled guns is much abating the use of the term, minute elevations being added to the point-blank direction for even the very smallest ranges. POINT BRASS OR IRON. A large sort of plumb for the nice adjustment of perpendicularity for a given line. POINT-DE-GALLE CANOE. Consists of a single stem of _Dup_ wood, 18 to 30 feet long, from 1-1/2 to 2-1/2 feet broad, and from 2 to 3 feet deep. It is fitted with a balance log at the ends of two bamboo out-riggers, having the mast, yard, and sail secured together; and, when sailing, is managed in a similar way to the catamaran. They sail very well in strong winds, and are also used by the natives of the Eastern Archipelago, especially at the Feejee group, where they are very large. POINTER. The index or indicator of an instrument.--_Station pointer._ A brass graduated circle with one fixed and two radial legs; by placing them at two adjoining angles taken by a sextant between three known objects, the position of the observer is fixed on the chart. POINTER-BOARD. A simple contrivance for duly training a ship's guns. POINTERS. Stout props, placed obliquely to the timbers of whalers, to sustain the shock of icebergs. All braces placed diagonally across the hold of any vessel, to support the bilge and prevent loose-working, are called pointers. Also, the general designation for the stars {a} and {b} in the Great Bear, a line through which points nearly upon the pole-star. POINT-HOLES. The eyelet-holes for the points. POINTING. The operation of unlaying and tapering the end of a rope, and weaving some of its yarns about the diminished part, which is very neat to the eye, prevents it from being fagged out, and makes it handy for reeving in a block, &c. POINT OF THE COMPASS. The 32d part of the circumference, or 11 deg. 15'. POINTS. _See_ REEF-POINTS.--_Armed at all points_, is when a man is defended by armour cap-a-pie. POINTS OF SERVICE. The principal details of duty, which ought to be executed with zeal and alacrity. POLACRE. A ship or brig of the Mediterranean; the masts are commonly formed of one spar from truck to heel, so that they have neither tops nor cross-trees, neither have they any foot-ropes to their upper yards, because the men stand upon the topsail-yards to loose and furl the top-gallant sails, and upon the lower yards to loose, reef, or furl the top-sails, all the yards being lowered sufficiently for that purpose. POLANS. Knee-pieces in armour. POLAR CIRCLES. The Arctic and the Antarctic; 23 deg. 28' from either pole. POLAR COMPRESSION. _See_ COMPRESSION OF THE POLES. POLAR DISTANCE. The complement of the _declination_. The angular distance of a heavenly body from one of the poles, counted on from 0 deg. to 180 deg. POLARIS. _See_ POLE-STAR. POLAR REGIONS. Those parts of the world which lie within the Arctic and Antarctic circles. POLDAVIS, OR POLDAVY. A canvas from Dantzic, formerly much used in our navy. A kind of sail-cloth thus named was also manufactured in Lancashire from about the year 1500, and regulated by statute 1 Jac. cap. 24. POLE. The upper end of the highest masts, when they rise above the rigging. POLEAXE, OR POLLAX. A sort of hatchet, resembling a battle-axe, which was used on board ship to cut away the rigging of an adversary. Also in boarding an enemy whose hull was more lofty than that of the boarders, by driving the points of several into her side, one above another, and thus forming a kind of scaling-ladder; hence were called boarding-axes. POLEMARCH. The commander-in-chief of an ancient Greek army. POLE-MASTS. Single spar masts, also applied where the top-gallant and royal masts are in one. (_See_ MAST.) POLES. Two points on the surface of the earth, each 90 deg. distant from all parts of the equator, forming the extremities of the imaginary line called the earth's axis. The term applies also to those points in the heavens towards which the terrestrial axis is always directed.--_Under bare poles._ The situation of a ship at sea when all her sails are furled. (_See_ SCUD and TRY.) POLE-STAR. {a} _Ursae minoris_. This most useful star is the lucida of the Little Bear, round which the other components of the constellation and the rest of the heavens appear to revolve in the course of the astronomical day. POLICY. A written contract, by which the insurers oblige themselves to indemnify sea-risks under various conditions. An _interest_ policy, is where the insurer has a real assignable interest in the thing insured; a _wager_ policy, is where the insurer has no substantial interest in the thing insured; an _open_ policy, is where the amount of interest is not fixed, but left to be ascertained in case of loss; a _valued_ policy, is where an actual value has been set on the ship or goods. POLLACK. The _Merlangus pollachius_, a well-known member of the cod family. POLLUX. {b} _Geminorum_. A bright and well-known star in the ancient constellation Gemini, of which it is the second in brightness. POLRON. That part of the armour which covered the neck and shoulders. POLTROON. Not known in the navy. POLYGON. A geometrical figure of any number of sides more than four; regular or irregular. In fortification the term is applied to the plan of a piece of ground fortified or about to be fortified; and hence, in some countries, to a fort appropriated as an artillery and engineering school. POLYMETER. An instrument for measuring angles. POLYNESIA. A group of islands: a name generally applied to the islands of the Pacific Ocean collectively, whether in clusters or straggling. POMELO, OR PUMELO. _Citrus decumana._ A large fruit known by this name in the East Indies, but in the West by that of shaddock, after Captain Shaddock, who introduced it there. POMFRET. A delicate sea-fish, taken in great quantities in Bombay and Madras. POMMELION. A name given by seamen to the cascable or hindmost knob on the breech of a cannon. PONCHES. Small bulk-heads made in the hold to stow corn, goods, &c. PONCHO. A blanket with a hole in the centre, large enough for the head to pass through, worn by natives of South and Western America. POND. A word often used for a small lagoon, but improperly, for ponds are formed exclusively from springs and surface-drainage, and have no affluent. Also, a cant name for the Mediterranean. Also, the summit-level of a canal. PONENT. Western. PONIARD. A short dagger with a sharp edge. PONTAGE. A duty or toll collected for the repair and keeping of bridges. PONTONES. Ancient square-built ferry-boats for passing rivers, as described by Caesar and Aulus Gellius. PONTOON. A large low flat vessel resembling a barge of burden, and furnished with cranes, capstans, tackles, and other machinery necessary for careening ships; they are principally used in the Mediterranean. Also, a kind of portable boat specially adapted for the formation of the floating bridges required by armies: they are constructed of various figures, and of wood, metal, or prepared canvas (the latter being most in favour at present), and have the necessary superstructure and gear packed with them for transport. POO. A small crab on the Scottish coast. POOD. A Russian commercial weight, equal to 36 lbs. English. POODLE. An old Cornish name for the English Channel. Also, a slang term for the aide-de-camp of a garrison general. POOL. Is distinguished from a _pond_, in being filled by springs or running water. Also, a _pwll_ or port. POOP. [From the Latin _puppis_.] The aftermost and highest part of a large ship's hull. Also, a deck raised over the after-part of a spar-deck, sometimes called the _round-house_. A frigate has no poop, but is said to be pooped when a wave strikes the stern and washes on board. POOPING, OR BEING POOPED. The breaking of a heavy sea over the stern or quarter of a boat or vessel when she scuds before the wind in a gale, which is extremely dangerous, especially if deeply laden. POOP-LANTERN. A light carried by admirals to denote the flag-ship by night. POOP-NETTING. _See_ HAMMOCK-NETTINGS. POOP-RAILS. The stanchions and rail-work in front of the poop. (_See_ BREAST-WORK and FIFE-RAILS.) POOP-ROYAL. A short deck or platform placed over the aftmost part of the poop in the largest of the French and Spanish men-of-war, and serving as a cabin for their masters and pilots. This is the topgallant-poop of our shipwrights, and the former round-house cabin of our merchant vessels. POOR JOHN. Hake-fish salted and dried, as well as dried stock-fish, and bad _bacalao_, or cod, equally cheap and coarse. Shakspeare mentions it in _Romeo and Juliet_. POPLAR. The tree which furnishes charcoal for the manufacture of gunpowder. POPLER. An old name for a sea-gull. POPPETS. Upright pieces of stout square timber, mostly fir, between the bottom and bilge-ways, at the run and entrance of a ship about to be launched, for giving her further support. Also, poppets on the gunwale of a boat support the wash-strake, and form the rowlocks. POPPLING SEA. Waves in irregular agitation. PORBEAGLE. A kind of shark. PORPESSE, PORPOISE, OR PORPUSS. The _Phoc[oe]na communis_. One of the smallest of the cetacean or whale order, common in the British seas. PORT. An old Anglo-Saxon word still in full use. It strictly means a place of resort for vessels, adjacent to an emporium of commerce, where cargoes are bought and sold, or laid up in warehouses, and where there are docks for shipping. It is not quite a synonym of _harbour_, since the latter does not imply traffic. Vessels hail from the port they have quitted, but they are compelled to have the name of the vessel and of the port to which they belong painted on the bow or stern.--_Port_ is also in a legal sense a refuge more or less protected by points and headlands, marked out by limits, and may be resorted to as a place of safety, though there are many ports but rarely entered. The left side of the ship is called _port_, by admiralty order, in preference to _larboard_, as less mistakeable in sound for starboard.--_To port the helm._ So to move the tiller as to carry the rudder to the starboard side of the stern-post.--_Bar-port._ One which can only be entered when the tide rises sufficiently to afford depth over a bar; this in many cases only occurs at spring-tides.--_Close-port._ One within the body of a city, as that of Rhodes, Venice, Amsterdam, &c.--_Free-port._ One open and free of all duties for merchants of all nations to load and unload their vessels, as the ports of Genoa and Leghorn. Also, a term used for a total exemption of duties which any set of merchants enjoy, for goods imported into a state, or those exported of the growth of the country. Such was the privilege the English enjoyed for several years after their discovery of the port of Archangel, and which was taken from them on account of the regicide in 1648. PORTABLE SOUP, and other preparations of meat. Of late years a very valuable part of naval provision. PORTAGE. Tonnage. Also, the land carriage between two harbours, often high and difficult for transport. Also, in Canadian river navigation means the carrying canoes or boats and their cargo across the land, where the stream is interrupted by rocks or rapids. PORT ARMS! The military word of command to bring the fire-lock across the front of the body, muzzle slanting upwards; a motion preparatory for the "charge bayonets!" or for inspecting the condition of the locks. PORT-BARS. Strong pieces of oak, furnished with two laniards, by which the ports are secured from flying open in a gale of wind, the bars resting against the inside of the ship; the port is first tightly closed by its hooks and ring-bolts. PORT-CHARGES, OR HARBOUR-DUES. Charges levied on vessels resorting to a port. PORTCULLIS. A heavy frame of wooden or iron bars, sliding in vertical grooves within the masonry over the gateway of a fortified town, to be lowered for barring the passage. When hastily made, it was termed a sarrazine. PORTE. _See_ SUBLIME PORTE. PORT-FIRE. A stick of composition, generally burning an inch a minute, used to convey fire from the slow-match or the like to the priming of ordnance, though superseded with most guns by locks or friction-tubes. With a slightly altered composition it is used for signals; also for firing charges of mines. PORT-FLANGE. In ship-carpentry, is a batten of wood fixed on the ship's side over a port, to prevent water or dirt going into the port. PORT-GLAIVE. A sword-bearer. PORT-LAST, OR PORTOISE. Synonymous with _gunwale_. PORT-MEN. A name in old times for the inhabitants of the Cinque Ports; the burgesses of Ipswich are also so called. PORT-MOTE. A court held in haven towns or ports. PORT-NAILS. These are classed double and single: they are similar to clamp-nails, and like them are used for fastening iron work. PORT-PENDANTS. Ropes spliced into rings on the outside of the port-lids, and rove through leaden pipes in the ship's sides, to work the port-lids up or down by the tackles. PORT-PIECE. An ancient piece of ordnance used in our early fleets. PORT-PIECE CHAMBER. A paterero for loading a port-piece at the breech. PORT-REEVE. A magistrate of certain sea-port towns in olden times. PORT-ROPES. Those by which the ports are hauled up and suspended. PORTS, OR PORT-HOLES. The square apertures in the sides of a ship through which to point and fire the ordnance. Also, aft and forward, as the _bridle-port_ in the bows, the _quarter-port_ in round-stern vessels, and _stern-ports_ between the stern-timbers. Also, square holes cut in the sides, bow, or stem of a merchant ship, for taking in and discharging timber cargoes, and for other purposes.--_Gunroom-ports._ Are situated in the ship's counter, and are used for stern-chasers, and also for passing a small cable or a hawser out, either to moor head and stern, or to spring upon the cable, &c. (_See_ MOOR and SPRING.)--_Half-port._ A kind of shutter which hinges on the lower side of a port, and falls down outside when clear for action; when closed it half covers the port to the line of metal of the gun, and is firmly secured by iron hooks. The upper half-port is temporary and loose, will not stand a heavy sea, and is merely secured by two light inch-rope laniards. PORT-SALE. A public sale of fish on its arrival in the harbour. PORT-SASHES. Half-ports fitted with glass for the admission of light into cabins. PORT-SHACKLES. The rings to the ports. PORT-SILLS. In ship-building, pieces of timber put horizontally between the framing to form the top and bottom of a port. PORT-TACKLES. Those falls which haul up and suspend the lower-deck ports, so that since the admiralty order for using the word _port_ instead of _larboard_, we have _port port-tackle falls_. PORTUGUESE. A gold coin, value L1, 16_s._, called also _moiadobras_. PORTUGUESE MAN-OF-WAR. A beautiful floating acalephan of the tropical seas; the _Physalia pelagica_. POSITION. Ground (or water) occupied, or that may be advantageously occupied, in fighting order. POSITION, GEOGRAPHICAL, of any place on the surface of the earth, is the determination of its latitude and longitude, and its height above the level of the sea. POSSESSORY. A suit entered in the admiralty court by owners for the seizing of their ship. POST. Any ground, fortified or not, where a body of men can be in a condition for defence, or fighting an enemy. Also, the limits of a sentinel's charge. POST-CAPTAIN. Formerly a captain of three years' standing, now simply captain, but equal to colonel in the army, by date of commission. POSTED. Promoted from commander to captain in the navy; a word no longer officially used. POSTERN. A small passage constructed through some retired part of a bastion, or other portion of a work, for the garrison's minor communications with the town, unperceived by the enemy. POSTING. Placing people for special duty. Also, publicly handing out a bad character. POST OF HONOUR. The advance, and the right of the lines of any army. POUCH. A case of strong leather for carrying ammunition, used by soldiers, marines, and small-arm men. Also, the crop of a shark. POUCHES. Wooden bulk-heads across the hold of cargo vessels, to prevent grain or light shingle from shifting. POULDRON. A shoulder-piece in armour. Corrupted from _epauldron_. POULTERER. Called "Jemmy Ducks" on board ship; he assists the butcher in the feeding and care of the live stock, &c. POUND. A lagoon, or space of water, surrounded by reefs and shoals, wherein fish are kept, as at Bermuda. POUND-AND-PINT-IDLER. A sobriquet applied to the purser. POUNDER. A denomination applied to guns according to the weight of the shot they carry; at present everything larger than the 100-pounder is described by the diameter of its bore, coupled with its total weight. POW. A name on the Scotch shores for a small creek. Also, a mole. POWDER. _See_ GUNPOWDER. POWDER, TO. To salt meat slightly; as Falstaff says, "If thou embowel me to-day, I'll give you leave to powder me, and eat me too, to-morrow."--_Powdering-tub._ A vessel used for pickling beef, pork, &c. POWDER-BAGS. Leathern bags containing from 20 to 40 lbs. of powder; substituted for petards at the instance of Lord Cochrane, as being more easily placed. They have lately been called Ghuznee bags. POWDER-HOY. An ordnance vessel expressly fitted to convey powder from the land magazine to a ship; it invariably carries a red distinguishing flag, and warns the ship for which the powder is intended, to put out all fires before she comes alongside. POWDER-MAGAZINE. The prepared space allotted for the powder on board ship. POWDER-MONKEY. Formerly the boy of the gun, who had charge of the cartridge; now powder-man. POWDER-VESSEL. A ship used as a floating magazine. POWER. Mechanical force; in the steam-engine it is esteemed effective, expansive, or full. (_See_ HORSE-POWER.) POZZOLANA. Volcanic ashes, used in cement, especially if required under water. PRACTICABLE. Said of a breach in a rampart when its slope offers a fair means of ascent to an assaulting column. PRACTICAL ASTRONOMY. A branch of science which includes the determination of the magnitude, distance, and phenomena of the heavenly bodies; the ready reduction of observations for tangible use in navigation and geography; and the expert manipulation of astronomical instruments. PRAECURSORIAE. Ancient vessels which led or preceded the fleets. PRAEDATORIAE, OR PRAEDATICAE. Long, swift, light ancient pirates. PRAHU. [Malay for boat.] The larger war-vessels among the Malays, range from 55 to 156 feet in length, and carry 76 to 96 rowers, with about 40 to 60 fighting men. The guns range from 2 inches to 6 inches bore, are of brass, and mounted on stock-pieces, four to ten being the average. These boats are remarkable for their swiftness. PRAIA [Sp. _playa_]. The beach or strand on Portuguese coasts. PRAIRIE. The natural meadows or tracts of gently undulating, wonderfully fertile land, occupying so vast an extent of the great river-basins of North America. PRAM, OR PRAAM. A lighter used in Holland, and the ports of the Baltic, for loading and unloading merchant ships. Some were fitted by the French with heavy guns, for defending the smaller ports. PRANKLE. A Channel term for the _prawn_. PRATIQUE. A Mediterranean term, implying the license to trade and communicate with any place after having performed the required quarantine, or upon the production of a clean bill of health. PRAWN. A marine crustacean larger than a shrimp, much esteemed as an article of food. PRAYER-BOOK. A smaller hand-stone than that which sailors call "bible;" it is used to scrub in narrow crevices where a large holy-stone cannot be used. (_See_ HOLY-STONE.) PRECEDENCE. The order and degree of rank among officers of the two services. (_See_ RANK.) PRECESSION OF THE EQUINOXES. A slow motion of the equinoctial points in the heavens, whereby the longitudes of the fixed stars are increased at the present rate of about 50-1/4" annually, the equinox having a retrograde motion to this amount. This effect is produced by the attraction of the sun, moon, and planets upon the spheroidal figure of the earth; the luni-solar precession is the joint effect of the sun and moon only. PREDY, OR PRIDDY. A word formerly used in our ships for "get ready;" as, "Predy the main-deck," or get it clear. PRE-EMPTION. A right of purchasing necessary cargoes upon reasonable compensation to the individual whose property is thus diverted. This claim is usually restricted to neutrals avowedly bound to the enemy's ports, and is a mitigation of the former practice of seizing them. (_See_ COMMEATUS.) PREMIUM. Simply a reward; but in commerce it implies the sum of money paid to the underwriters on ship or cargo, or parts thereof, as the price of the insurance risk. PREROGATIVE. A word of large extent. By the constitution of England the sovereign alone has the power of declaring war and peace. The crown is not precluded by the Prize Act from superseding prize proceedings by directing restitution of property seized, before adjudication, and against the will of the captors. PRESENT! The military word of command to raise the musket, take aim, and fire. PRESENT ARMS! The military word of command to salute with the musket. PRESENT USE. Stores to be immediately applied in the fitting of a ship, as distinguished from the supply for future sea use. PRESERVED MEAT AND VEGETABLES. The occasional use of such food and lime-juice at sea, is not only a great luxury, but in many cases essential to the health of the crew, as especially instanced by the increase of scurvy in ships where this precaution is neglected. PRESIDENT. At a general court-martial it is usual for the authority ordering it to name the president, and the office usually falls upon the second in command. PRESS, TO. To reduce an enemy to straits. (_See_ IMPRESSMENT.) PRESS-GANG. A party of seamen who (under the command of a lieutenant) were formerly empowered, in time of war, to take any seafaring men--on shore or afloat--and compel them to serve on board men-of-war. Those who were thus taken were called _pressed men_. PRESS OF SAIL. As much sail as the state of the wind, &c., will permit a ship to carry. PRESSURE-GAUGE. The manometer of a steam-engine. PREST. Formerly signified quick or ready, and a _prest man_ was one willing to enlist for a stipulated sum--the very reverse of the _pressed man_ of later times. (_See_ PRESS-GANG.) PRESTER. An old name for a meteor. PRESUMPTIVE EVIDENCE. Is such as by a fair and reasonable interpretation is deducible from the facts of a case. PREVENTER. Applied to ropes, &c., when used as additional securities to aid other ropes in supporting spars, &c., during a strong gale; as preventer-backstays, braces, shrouds, stays, &c. PREVENTER-PLATES. Stout plates of iron for securing the chains to the ship's side; one end is on the chain-plate bolt, the other is bolted to the ship's side below it. PREVENTER-STOPPERS. Short pieces of rope, knotted at each end, for securing the clues of sails or rigging during action, or when strained. PREVENTIVE SERVICE. The establishment of coast-guards at numerous stations along the shores of the United Kingdom for the prevention of smuggling. PRICKER. A small marline-spike for making and stretching the holes for points and rope-bands in sails. Also, the priming-wire of a gun. Also, a northern name for the basking-shark. PRICKING A SAIL. The running a middle seam between the two seams which unite every cloth of a sail to the next adjoining. This is rarely done till the sails have been worn some time, or in the case of heavy canvas, storm-sails, &c. It is also called middle-stitching. PRICKING FOR A SOFT PLANK. Selecting a place on the deck for sleeping upon. PRICKING HER OFF. Marking a ship's position upon a chart by the help of a scale and compasses, so as to show her situation as to latitude, longitude, and bearings of the place bound to. PRIDE OF THE MORNING. A misty dew at sunrise; a light shower; the end of the land breeze followed by a dead calm in the tropics. PRIEST'S-CAP. An outwork which has three salient angles at the head and two inwards. PRIMAGE. Premium of insurance. Also, a small allowance at the water side to master and mariner for each pack or bale of cargo landed by them: otherwise called _hat-money_. PRIMARY PLANET. (_See_ PLANETS, PRIMARY.) PRIME. The fore part of the artificial day; that is, the first quarter after sunrise. PRIME, TO. To make ready a gun, mine, &c., for instantaneous firing. Also, to pierce the cartridge with the priming-wire, and apply the quill-tube in readiness for firing the cannon.--_To prime a fire-ship._ To lay the train for being set on fire.--_To prime a match._ Put a little wet bruised powder made into the paste called devil, upon the end of the rope slow-match, with a piece of paper wrapped round it. PRIME VERTICAL. That great circle which passes through the zenith and the east and west points of the horizon. PRIMING-IRONS. Consist of a pointed wire used through the vent to prick the cartridge when it is "home," and of a flat-headed one similarly inserted after discharge to insure its not retaining any ignited particles. PRIMING-VALVES. The same with escape-valves. PRINTED INSTRUCTIONS. The name of the volume formerly issued by the admiralty to all commanders of ships and vessels for their guidance; now superseded by Queen's Regulations. PRISE, TO. To raise, or slue, weighty bodies by means of a lever purchase or power. (_See_ PRIZING.) PRISE-BOLTS. Knobs of iron on the cheeks of a gun-carriage to keep the handspike from slipping when prising up the breech. PRISM. In dioptrics, is a geometrical solid bounded by three parallelograms, whose bases are equal triangles. PRISMATIC COMPASS. One so fitted with a glass prism for reading by reflection, that the eye can simultaneously observe an object and read its compass bearing. PRISONER AT LARGE. Free to take exercise within bounds. PRISONERS OF WAR. Men who are captured after an engagement, who are deprived of their liberty until regularly exchanged, or dismissed on their parole. PRISONER UNDER RESTRAINT. Suspended from duty; deprived of command. PRISON-SHIP. One fitted up for receiving and detaining prisoners of war. PRITCH. A dentated weapon for striking and holding eels. PRIVATE. The proper designation of a soldier serving in the ranks of the army, holding no special position. PRIVATEER PRACTICE, OR PRIVATEERISM. Disorderly conduct, or anything out of man-of-war rules. PRIVATEERS, or men-of-war equipped by individuals for cruising against the enemy; their commission (_see_ LETTERS OF MARQUE) is given by the admiralty, and revocable by the same authority. They have no property in any prize until it is legally condemned by a competent court. The admiral on the station is entitled to a tenth of their booty. This infamous species of warfare is unhappily not yet abolished among civilized nations. PRIVATE PROPERTY. Commissions of privateers do not extend to the capture of private property on land; a right not even granted to men-of-war. Private armed ships are not within the terms of a capitulation protecting private property generally. PRIVATE SIGNAL. Understood by captains having the key, but totally incomprehensible to other persons. PRIVY-COAT. A light coat or defence of mail, concealed under the ordinary dress. PRIZE. A vessel captured at sea from the enemies of a state, or from pirates, either by a man-of-war or privateer. Vessels are also looked upon as _prize_, if they fight under any other standard than that of the state from which they have their commission, if they have no charter-party, and if loaded with effects belonging to the enemy, or with contraband goods. In ships of war, the prizes are to be divided among the officers, seamen, &c., according to the act; but in privateers, according to the agreement between the owners. By statute 13 Geo. II. c. 4, judges and officers failing in their duty in respect to the condemnation of prizes, forfeit L500, with full costs of suit, one moiety to the crown, and the other to the informer. Prize, according to jurists, is altogether a creature of the crown; and no man can have any interest but what he takes as the mere gift of the crown. Partial interest has been granted away at different times, but the statute of Queen Anne (A.D. 1708) is the first which gave to the captors the whole of the benefit. PRIZE ACT OF 1793. Ordained that the officers and sailors on board every ship and vessel of war shall have the sole property in all captures, being first adjudged lawful prize, to be divided in such proportions and manner as His Majesty should order by proclamation. In 1746 a man, though involuntarily kept abroad above three years in the service of his country, was deemed to have forfeited his share to Greenwich. PRIZE-ACTS. Though expiring with each war, are usually revived nearly in the same form. PRIZEAGE. The tenth share belonging to the crown out of a lawful prize taken at sea. PRIZE-COURT. A department of the admiralty court; (_oyer et terminer_) to hear and determine according to the law of nations. PRIZE-GOODS. Those taken upon the high seas, _jure belli_, from the enemy. PRIZE-LIST. A return of all the persons on board, whether belonging to the ship, or supernumeraries, at the time a capture is made; those who may be absent on duty are included. PRIZE-MASTER. The officer to whom a prize is given in charge to carry her into port. PRIZE-MONEY. The profits arising from the sale of prizes. It was divided equally by chart. 5 Hen. IV. PRIZING. The application of a lever to lift or move any weighty body. Also, the act of pressing or squeezing an article into its package, so that its size may be reduced in stowage. PROA, OR FLYING PROW. _See_ PRAHU. PROBATION. The noviciate period of cadets, midshipmen, apprentices, &c. PROBE. A surgical sounder.--_To probe._ To inquire thoroughly into a matter. PROCEEDS. The product or produce of prizes, &c. PROCESSION. A march in official order. At a naval or military funeral, the officers are classed according to seniority, the chiefs last. PROCURATION, LETTERS OF. Are required to be exhibited in the purchase of ships by agents in the enemy's country. PROCYON. {a} _Canis minoris_, the principal star of the Lesser Dog. PROD. A poke or slight thrust; as in _persuading_ with a bayonet. PRODD. A cross-bow for throwing bullets, _temp._ Hen. VII. PRODUCTION. For obtaining the benefits of trading with our colonies, it is necessary that the goods be accompanied by a "certificate of production" in the manner required by marine law. (_See_ ORIGIN.) PROFILE DRAUGHTS. In naval architecture, a name applied to two drawings from the sheer draught: one represents the entire construction and disposition of the ship; the other, her whole interior work and fittings. PROFILE OF A FORT. _See_ ORTHOGRAPHIC PROJECTION. PROG. A quaint word for victuals. Swift says, "In town you may find better prog." It is also a spike. PROGRESSION. _See_ ARC OF DIRECTION. PROJECTILES. Bodies which are driven by any one effort of force from the spot where it was applied. PROJECTION. A method of representing geometrically on a plane surface varied points, lines, and surfaces not lying in any one plane: used in charts and maps, where it is of various kinds, as globular, orthographic, Mercator's, &c. In ship-building, an elevation taken amidship. (_See_ BODY-PLAN.) PROKING-SPIT. A long Spanish rapier. PROMISCUI USUS. A law term for those articles which are equally applicable to peace or war. PROMONTORY. A high point of land or rock projecting into a sea or lake, tapering into a neck inland, and the extremity of which, towards the water, is called a cape, or headland, as Gibraltar, Ceuta, Actium, &c. PROMOVENT. The plaintiff in the instance-court of the admiralty. PRONG. Synonymous with _beam-arm_ or _crow-foot_ (which see). PROOF. The trial of the quality of arms, ammunition, &c., before their reception for service. Guns are proved by various examinations, and by the firing of prescribed charges; powder by examinations, and by carefully measured firings from each batch. PROOFS OF PROPERTY. Attestations, letters of advice, invoices, to show that a ship really belongs to the subjects of a neutral state. PROOF TIMBER. In naval architecture, an imaginary timber, expressed by vertical lines in the sheer-draught, to prove the fairness of the body. PROPELLER. This term generally alludes to the Archimedean screw, or screw-propeller. PROPER MOTION OF THE STARS. A movement which some stars are found to possess, independent of the apparent change of place due to the precession of the equinoxes, the accounting for which is as yet only ingenious conjecture. PROPORTION. In naval architecture, the length, breadth, and height of a vessel, having a due consideration to her rate, and the object she is intended for. PROPPETS. Those shores that stand nearly vertical. PROSPECTIVE, OR PROSPECT GLASS. An old term for a deck or hand telescope, with a terrestrial eye-piece. (_See_ SPY-GLASS.) PROTECTIONS, ON PAPER, against impressment, were but little regarded. Yet seafaring men above 55, and under 18, were by statute exempted, as were all for the first two years of their going to sea, foreigners serving in merchant ships or privateers, and all apprentices for three years. PROTEST. A formal declaration drawn up in writing, and attested before a notary-public, a justice of the peace, or a consul in foreign parts, by the master of a merchant-ship, his mate, and a part of the ship's crew, after the expiration of a voyage in which the ship has suffered in her hull, rigging, or cargo, to show that such damage did not happen through neglect or misconduct on their part. PROTRACTOR. An instrument for laying off angles on paper, having an open mark at the centre of the circle, with a radial leg, and vernier, which is divided into degrees (generally 90). PROVE, TO. To test the soundness of fire-arms, by trying them with greater charges than those used on service. PROVEDORE [Sp.] One who provided victuals for ships. PROVENDER. Though strictly forage, is often applied to provisions in general. PROVISIONS. All sorts of food necessary for the subsistence of the army and navy. Those shipped on board for the officers and crew of any vessel, including merchant-ships, are held in a policy of insurance, as part of her outfit. PROVISO. A stern-fast or hawser carried to the shore to steady by. A ship with one anchor down and a shore-fast is moored _a proviso_. Also, a saving clause in a contract. PROVOST-MARSHAL. The head of the military police. An officer appointed to take charge of prisoners at a court-martial, and to carry the sentences into execution. The executive and summary police in war. PROW. Generally means the foremost end of a vessel. Also, a name for the beak of a xebec or felucca. PUCKA. A word in frequent use amongst the English in the East Indies, signifying sterling, of good quality. PUCKER. A wrinkled seam in sail-making. Also, anything in a state of confusion. PUDDENING, OR PUDDING. A thick wreath of yarns, matting, or oakum (called a _dolphin_), tapering from the middle towards the ends, grafted all over, and fastened about the main or fore masts of a ship, directly below the trusses, to prevent the yards from falling down, in case of the ropes by which they are suspended being shot away. Puddings are also placed on a boat's stem as a kind of fender; and also laid round the rings of anchors to prevent hempen cables or hawsers from chafing. PUDDING AND DOLPHIN. A larger and lesser pad, made of ropes, and put round the masts under the lower yards. PUDDLE-DOCK. An ancient pool of the Thames, the dirtiness of which afforded Jack some pointed sarcasms. PUDDLING. A technical term for working clay to a plastic state in an inclosed space, until it is of the requisite consistence for arresting the flow of water. A term in iron furnace work. PUFF. A sudden gust of wind. A whistle of steam. PUFFIN. The _Fratercula arctica_, a sea-bird with a singular bill, formerly supposed to be a bird in show, but a fish in substance, in consequence of which notion the pope permitted its being eaten in Lent. PULAS. An excellent twine, made by the Malays from the _kaluwi_, a species of nettle. PULL-AWAY-BOYS. A name given on the West Coast of Africa to the native Kroo-men, who are engaged by the shipping to row boats and do other work not suited to Europeans in that climate. PULL FOOT, TO. To hasten along; to run. PULLING. The act of rowing with oars; as, "Pull the starboard oars," "Pull together." PULL-OVER. An east-country term for a carriage-way. PULO. The Malay word for island, and frequently met with in the islands of the Eastern seas. PULWAR. A commodious kind of passage-boat on the Ganges. PUMMEL. The hilt of a sword, the end of a gun, &c.--_To pummel._ To drub or beat. PUMP. A well-known machine used for drawing water from the sea, or discharging it from the ship's pump-well.--_Chain-pump_, consists of a long chain, equipped with a sufficient number of metal discs armed with leather, fitting the cylinders closely, and placed at proper distances, which, working upon two wheels, one above deck and the other below, in the bottom of the hold, passes downward through a copper or wooden tube, and returning upward through another, continuously lifts portions of water. It is worked by a long winch-handle, at which several men may be employed at once; and it thus discharges more water in a given time than the common pump, and with less labour.--_Main pumps._ The largest pumps in a ship, close to the main-mast, in contradistinction to _bilge pumps_, which are smaller, and intended to raise the water from the bilges when a ship is laying over so that it cannot run to the main pump-well. _Hand-pump_, is the distinctive appellation of the common small pump. Superseded by Downton and others. PUMP-BARREL. The wooden tube which forms the body of the machine, and wherein the piston moves. PUMP-BOLTS. Saucer-headed bolts to attach the brake to the pump-standard and pump-spear. PUMP-BRAKE. The handle or lever of the old and simplest form of pump. PUMP-CARLINES. The framing or partners on the upper deck, between which the pumps pass into the wells. PUMP-CHAINS. The chains to which the discs, &c., are attached in the chain-pump. PUMP-CISTERNS. Are used to prevent chips and other matters getting to, and fouling the action of, the chain-pumps. PUMP-COAT. A piece of stout canvas nailed to the pump-partners where it enters the upper deck, and lashed to the pump, to prevent the water from running down when washing decks, &c. PUMP-DALES. Pipes or long wooden spouts extending from the chain-pumps across the ship, and through each side, serving to discharge the water without wetting the decks. PUMP-FOOT. The lower part, or well-end, of a pump. PUMP-GEAR. A term implying any materials requisite for fitting or repairing the pumps, as boxes, leather, &c. PUMP-HOOK. An iron rod with an eye and a hook, used for drawing out the lower pump-box when requisite. PUMPKIN, OR POMPION. _Cucurbita pepo_, a useful vegetable for sea use. PUMP SHIP! The order to the crew to work the pumps to clear the hold of water. PUMP-SPEAR. The rod of iron to which the upper box is attached--and to the upper end of which the brake is pinned--whereby the pump is put in motion. PUMP SUCKS. The _pump sucks_ is said when, all the water being drawn out of the well, and air admitted, there comes up nothing but froth and wind, with a whistling noise, which is music to the fagged seaman. PUMP-TACKS. Small iron or copper tacks, used for nailing the leather on the pump-boxes. PUNCH. An iron implement for starting bolts in a little, or for driving them out, called a _starting_ or _teeming punch_. Also, a well-known sea-drink, now adopted in all countries. It was introduced from the East Indies, and is said to derive its name from _panch_, the Hindostanee word for _five_, in allusion to the number of its ingredients. (_See_ BOULEPONGES.) PUNISHMENT. The execution of the sentence against an offender, as awarded by a court-martial, or adjudged by a superior officer. PUNISHMENT DRILL. Fatiguing exercise or extra drill for petty delinquencies. PUNK. The interior of an excrescence on the oak-tree; used as tinder, and better known as touch-wood. (_See_ SPUNK.) PUNT. An Anglo-Saxon term still in use for a flat-bottomed boat, used by fishermen, or for ballast lumps, &c. PUOYS. Spiked poles used in propelling barges or keels. PURCHASE. Any mechanical power which increases the force applied. It is of large importance to nautical men in the combinations of pulleys, as whip, gun-tackle, luff-tackle, jeer, viol, luff upon luff, runner, double-runner, capstan, windlass, &c. PURCHASE A COMMISSION, TO. A practice in our army, which has been aptly termed the "buying of fetters;" it is the obtaining preferment at regulated prices. At present the total value of a commission in a regiment of infantry of the line ranges from L450 for an ensigncy, up to L4540 for a lieutenant-colonelcy, and higher in the other branches of the service. PURCHASE-BLOCKS. All blocks virtually deserve this name, but it is distinctively given to those used in moving heavy weights. PURCHASE-FALLS. The rope rove through purchase-blocks. PURRE. A name for the dunlin, _Tringa alpina_, a species of sand-piper frequenting our shores and the banks of rivers in winter. PURSE-NET. A peculiar landing-net in fishing. It is used in the seine and trawl to bewilder the fish, and prevent their swimming out when fairly inside; like a wire mouse-trap. PURSER. An officer appointed by the lords of the admiralty to take charge of the provisions and slops of a ship of war, and to see that they were carefully distributed to the officers and crew, according to the printed naval instruction. He had very little to do with money matters beyond paying for short allowance. He was allowed one-eighth for waste on all provisions embarked, and additional on all provisions saved; for which he paid the crew. The designation is now discarded for that of _paymaster_. PURSER'S DIP. The smallest dip-candle. PURSER'S GRINS. Sneers. PURSER'S NAME. An assumed one. During the war, when pressed men caught at every opportunity to desert, they adopted _aliases_ to avoid discovery if retaken, which alias was handed to the purser for entry upon the ship's books. PURSER'S POUND. The weight formerly used in the navy, by which the purser retained an eighth for waste, and the men received only seven-eighths of what was supplied by government. One of the complaints of the mutiny was, having the purser's instead of an honest pound. This allowance was reduced to one-tenth. PURSER'S SHIRT. "Like a purser's shirt on a handspike;" a comparison for clothes fitting loosely. PURSER'S STEWARD. The official who superintended and noted down the exact quantity and species of provisions issued to the respective messes both of officers and men. PURSER'S STOCKING. A slop article, which stretched to any amount put into it. (_See_ SHOW A LEG.) PURSUE, TO. To make all sail in chase. PUSH, TO. To move a vessel by poles. PUSHING FOR A PORT. Carrying all sail to arrive quickly. PUT ABOUT. Go on the other tack. PUT BACK, TO. To return to port--generally the last left. PUTHAG. A name on the Scottish shores for the porpoise; it is a Gaelic word signifying _the blower_. PUT INTO PORT, TO. To enter an intermediate or any port in the course of a voyage, usually from stress of weather. PUT OFF! OR PUSH OFF. The order to boats to quit the ship or the shore. PUTTING A SHIP IN COMMISSION. The formal ceremony of hoisting the pennant on the ship to be fitted. This act brought the crew under martial law. PUTTING A STEAM-ENGINE IN GEAR. This is said when the gab of the eccentric rod is allowed to fall upon its stud on the gab-lever. PUTTOCK. A cormorant; a ravenous fellow. PUTTOCK-SHROUDS. Synonymous with _futtock_; a word in use, but not warranted. PUT TO SEA, TO. To quit a port or roadstead, and proceed to the destination. PYKAR. A herring-boat, or small vessel, treated of in statute 31 Edward III. c. 2. PYKE, TO. A old word signifying to haul on a wind. PYKE-MAW. The great tern, _Larus ridibundus_; a species of sea-gull. PYKE OFF, TO. To go away silently. PYPERI. A sort of vessel made of several pieces of wood merely lashed together; hardly superior to a raft, but sharp forward to cut the water. PYRAMID. A solid, the base of which is any right-lined plane figure, and its sides are triangles, having their vertices meeting in one point, named its vertex. PYROTECHNY. The science of artificial fire-works, including not only such as are used in war, but also those intended for amusement. Q. QUADE. An old word for unsteady.--_Quade wind_, a veering one. QUADRANT. A reflecting instrument used to take the altitude above the horizon of the sun, moon, or stars at sea, and thereby to determine the latitude and longitude of the place, &c. &c. It was invented by Hadley. Also, in speaking of double stars, or of two objects near each other, the position of one component in reference to the other is indicated by the terms, _north following_, _north preceding_, _south following_, or _south preceding_, the word quadrant being understood.--_A gunner's quadrant_, for determining the gun's angle of _elevation_. The long arm is inserted into the bore, while the short one remains outside, with a graduated arc and plummet, showing the inclination. For _depression_, on the contrary, the long arm must be applied to the face of the piece. Also, a graduated arc on the carriage showing, by an index on the trunnion, the gun's elevation above the plane of its platform; first applied by the gallant Captain Broke.--The _mural quadrant_, was framed and fitted with telescope, divisions, and plumb-line, firmly attached to the side of a wall built in the plane of the meridian; only used in large observatories.--_Senical quadrant_, consists of several concentric quadratic arcs, divided into eight equal parts by radii, with parallel right lines crossing each other at right angles. It was made of brass, or wood, with lines drawn from each side intersecting one another, and an index divided by sines also, with 90 deg. on the limb, and two sights on the edge, to take the altitude of the sun. Sometimes, instead of sines, they were divided into equal parts. It was in great use among the French navigators, from its solving the problems of plane sailing. QUADRATE, TO. To trim a gun on its carriage and its trucks; to adjust it for firing on a level range. QUADRATURE. The moon is said to be in quadrature at the first and last quarter, when her longitude differs 90 deg. from that of the sun. QUADROON [from L. _quatuor_, four]. The offspring of a mulatto woman and a white man. QUAGMIRE. A marsh in which, from its concave and impermeable bottom, the waters remain stagnant, rendering the surface a quaking bog. QUAKER. A false or wooden gun; so called in allusion to the "Friends" not fighting. QUALIFIED PROPERTY. Not only those who have an absolute property in ships and goods, but those also who have but a qualified property therein, may insure them. (_See_ EQUITABLE TITLE.) QUALITIES. The register of the ship's trim, sailing, stowage, &c., all of which are necessary to her _behaviour_. QUAMINO. A negro. QUANT. An old term for a long pole used by the barge-men on our east coast; it is capped to prevent the immerged end from sticking in the mud. QUARANTINE. Is, at most, a seclusion of forty days, from a free communication with the inhabitants of any country, in order to prevent the importation of the plague, or any other infectious disorder, either by persons or goods. The quarantine laws originated in the Council of Health at Venice in the fourteenth or fifteenth century. (_See_ LAZARETTO.) QUARRIL. The short dart or arrow shot from a cross-bow; or the bricolle of the middle ages. QUARRY. The prey taken by whalers; a term borrowed from falconers. QUARTE. In sword defence was one of the four guards, and also a position in fencing. QUARTER. This term literally implies one quarter of the ship, but in common parlance applies to 45 deg. abaft the beam. Thus the log is hove over the lee-quarter; quarter boats hang abaft the mizen-mast, &c. Again, the quarters apply to the divisional batteries, as forward, main, middle, or lower-decks, forecastle, and quarter-deck, and yet these comprise both sides. Close-quarters may be on any point, and the seaman rather delights in the bow attack, using the bowsprit as his bridge.--_Giving quarter._ The custom of asking and giving quarter in warfare originated, it is said, between the Dutch and Spaniards, that the ransom of an officer or soldier should be a _quarter_ of his year's pay. No quarter is given to pirates, but it is always given to a vanquished honourable opponent.--_On the quarter_, 45 deg. abaft the beam. QUARTER, FIRST. When the moon appears exactly as a half-moon, 90 deg. from the sun towards the east, she is in the first quarter, with her western half illuminated. QUARTER, LAST. When the moon appears exactly as a half-moon, and her angular distance from the sun 90 deg., but towards the west, she is said to be in the last quarter, with her eastern half illuminated. QUARTER-BADGE. Artificial galleries; a carved ornament near the stern of those vessels which have no quarter-galleries. QUARTER-BILL. A list containing the different stations to which the officers and crew are quartered in time of action, with their names. QUARTER-BLOCKS. Blocks fitted under the quarters of a yard, on each side the slings, for the topsail-sheets, topsail-cluelines, and topgallant-sheets to reeve through. QUARTER-BOAT. Any boat is thus designated which is hung to davits over the ship's quarter. QUARTER-CASK. One-half of a hogshead, or 28 imperial gallons. QUARTER-CLOTHS. Long pieces of painted canvas, extended on the outside of the quarter-netting, from the upper part of the gallery to the gangway. QUARTER-DAVITS. Pieces of iron or timber with sheaves or blocks at their outer ends, projecting from a vessel's quarters, to hoist boats up to. QUARTER-DECK. That part of the upper deck which is abaft the main-mast. (_See_ DECKS, and JACK'S QUARTER-DECK.) QUARTER-DECKERS. Those officers more remarkable for etiquette than for a knowledge of seamanship. QUARTER-DECKISH. Punctilious, severe. QUARTER-DECK NETTINGS. _See_ NETTING. QUARTER-DECK OFFICERS. A term implying the executive in general; officers whose places in action are there, in command. QUARTER-FAST. _See_ FAST. QUARTER-FLOOD. _See_ FLOOD. QUARTER-GALLERY. A sort of balcony with windows on the quarters of large ships. (_See_ GALLERY.) QUARTER-GALLEY. A Barbary cruiser. QUARTER-GUARD. A small guard posted in front of each battalion in camp. QUARTER-GUNNER. _See_ GUNNER. QUARTER-LADDER. From the quarter-deck to the poop. QUARTERLY ACCOUNT OF PROVISIONS. A return sent to the Admiral and Victualling Board, at the expiration of every three months. QUARTERLY BILL. The document by which officers draw three months' personal pay. QUARTERLY RETURNS. Those made every three months to the admiral, or senior officer, of the offences and punishments, the officers serving on board, &c. QUARTER-MAN. A dockyard officer employed to superintend a certain number of workmen. QUARTER-MASTER. A petty officer, appointed to assist the master and mates in their several duties, as stowing the hold, coiling the cables, attending the binnacle and steerage, keeping time by the watch-glasses, assisting in hoisting the signals, and keeping his eye on general quarter-deck movements. In the army, a commissioned officer, ranking with subalterns, charged with the more immediate supervision of quarters, camps, and the issue of arms, ammunition, rations, stores, &c., for his own regiment. QUARTER-MASTER GENERAL. Is the head of that department of the army which has charge of the quartering, encamping, embarking, and moving of troops, and of the supply of stores connected therewith. QUARTER-NETTINGS. The places allotted on the quarters for the stowage of hammocks, which, in action, serve to arrest musket-balls. QUARTER-PIECES. Projections at the after-part of the quarter, forming the boundaries of the galleries. QUARTER-POINT. A subdivision of the compass-card, equal to 2 deg. 48' 45" of the circle. QUARTER-PORTS. Those made in the after side-timbers, and especially in round-stern vessels. They are inconvenient for warping, and generally fitted with rollers. QUARTER-RAILS. Narrow moulded planks, reaching from the stern to the gangway, and serving as a fence to the quarter-deck, where there are no ports or bulwarks. QUARTERS. The several stations where the officers and crew of a ship of war are posted in time of action. (_See_ BATTLE, ENGAGEMENT, &c.) But this term differs in the army, for the soldier's quarters are his place of rest. (_See_ HEAD-QUARTERS, WINTER-QUARTERS, &c.) QUARTER-SIGHTS. The engraved index on the base-rings of cannon in quarter degrees from point-blank to two or three degrees of elevation. QUARTER-SLINGS. Are supports attached to a yard or other spar at one or both sides of (but not in) its centre. QUARTERS OF THE YARDS. The space comprehended between the slings, or middle and half-way out on the yard-arms. QUARTER-STANCHIONS. Strong iron stanchions in a square-sterned vessel, connecting the main-rail with the taffrail; used for ridge-ropes to extend the awnings. QUARTER-TACKLE. A strong tackle fixed occasionally upon the quarter of the main-yard, to hoist heavy bodies in or out of the ship. QUARTER-TIMBERS. The framing timbers in a vessel's quarter. QUARTER-WATCH. A division of one-fourth of the crew into watches, which in light winds and well-conducted ships is enough; but the officers are in three, and they must not be found nodding. QUARTER-WIND. Blowing upon a vessel's quarter, abaft the main-shrouds. QUASHEE. The familiar designation of a West India negro. QUATUOR MARIA, OR BRITISH SEAS, are those four which surround Great Britain. QUAY. _See_ KEY. QUEBRADA. From the Spanish for ravine, or broken ground. QUEBRANTA HUESOS [Sp.] Literally, _bone-breaker_. The great petrel, _Procellaria gigantea_. QUECHE. A small Portuguese smack. QUEEN ANNE'S FREE GIFT. A sum of money formerly granted to surgeons annually, in addition to their monthly twopences from each man, or as often as they passed their accounts. QUEEN'S COCKPIT. A mess of dissolute mates and midshipmen of the old _Queen_, 98, who held a sort of examination of ribaldry for a rank below that of gentleman. QUEEN'S OWN. Sea provision (when a queen reigns); similar to _king's own_. QUEEN'S PARADE. The quarter-deck. QUERCITRON. _Quercus tinctoria_, the name of a North American oak, which affords a valuable yellow dye. QUERIMAN. A mullet of Guiana, found in turbid waters, where it lives by suction. QUERPO [Sp. _cuerpo_, body]. A close short jacket: "Long-quartered pumps, with trowsers blue, And querpo jacket, which last was new." QUICKEN, TO. In ship-building, to give anything a greater curve; as, _to quicken the sheer_, opposed to straightening it. QUICKLIME. That which is unslacked, good for cleaning and white-washing ships' holds. QUICK-MARCH, OR QUICK-STEP. The ordinary pace is 3-1/4 miles to the hour, or 110 paces (275) feet to the minute. QUICK MATCH. Used as a train to any charge to be fired rapidly, is made of cotton threads treated with a composition of gunpowder, gum, and water; and burns nearly as would a train of loose powder. QUICK RELIEF. One who turns out speedily to relieve the watch before the sound is out of the bell. QUICK-SAND. A fine-grained loose sand, into which a ship sinks by her own weight as soon as the water retreats from her bottom. QUICK SAVER. A span formerly used to prevent the courses from bellying too much when off the wind. QUICK-STEP. _See_ QUICK-MARCH. QUICK-WORK. Generally signifies all that part of a ship which is under water when she is laden; it is also applied to that part of the inner upper-works of a ship above the covering board. Also, the short planks worked inside between the ports. In ship-building the term strictly applies to that part of a vessel's side which is above the chain-wales and decks, as well as to the strakes which shut in between the spirkettings and clamps. In general parlance quick-work is synonymous with _spirketting_. QUID. The chaw or dose of tobacco put into the mouth at a time. _Quid est hoc?_ asked one, tapping the swelled cheek of his messmate; _Hoc est quid_, promptly replied the other. QUIETUS. A severe blow, a settler. QUIHI. The sobriquet of the English stationed or resident in Bengal, the literal meaning being, "Who is there?" It is the customary call for a servant; one always being in attendance, though not in the room. QUILKIN. A west-country term for a frog. QUILL-DRIVER. Captain's clerk, purser's secretary, _et hoc genus omne_. QUILL-TUBES. Those in use with port-fires for firing guns before the