TUCKED AWAY among my
boating books at home is a copy of the Encyclopaedia Britannica, published in
1771. Well, it’s only the first volume, to tell the truth, containing words
starting with A and B. But among those words is one that interests all boaters:
Anchor. And it’s quite interesting to read what they thought about anchors all
those years ago ...
ANCHOR, in maritime
affairs, an extremely ufeful inftrument, ferving to retain a fhip in its place.
It is a very large and heavy
iron inftrument, with a double hook at one end, and a ring at the other, by
which it is faftened to a cable. It is caft into the bottom of the fea, or
rivers; when, taking its hold, it keeps fhips from being drawn away by the
wind, tide, or currents.
The parts of an anchor
are, 1. The ring to which the cable is faftened. 2. The beam or fhank, which is
the longeft past of the anchor. 3. The arm, which is that which runs into the
ground. 4. The flouke or fluke, by fome called the palm, the broad and peaked
part, with its barbs, like the head of an arrow, which faftens into the ground.
5. The ftock, a piece of wood faftened to the beam near the ring, ferving to
guide the fluke, fo that it may fall right and fix in the ground.
There are feveral kinds of
anchors: 1. The fheet-anchor, which is the largeft, and is never ufed but in
violent ftorms, to hinder the fhip from being driven a-fhore. 2. The two
bowers, which are ufed for fhips to ride in a harbour. 3. The ftream anchor. 4.
The grapnel.
The fhank of an anchor is
to be three times the length of one of its flukes; and a fhip of 500 tons hath
her fheet-anchor of 2000 weight; and fo proportionably for others, fmaller or
greater. The anchor is faid to be a-peak when the cable is perpendicular
between the hawfe and the anchor.
An anchor is faid to come
home when it cannot hold the fhip, the cable is hitched about the fluke. To
fhoe an anchor is to fit boards upon the flukes, that it may hold the better in
foft ground. When the anchor hangs right up and down by the fhip’s fide, it is
faid to be a cock-bell, upon the fhip’s coming to an anchor.
The inhabitants of Ceylon
ufe large ftones inftead of anchors; and in fome other places of the Indies the
anchors are a kind a wooden machines, loaded with ftones.
— Well, there you are. Now
you not only have encyclopedic knowledge of anchors, but you can read Olde
Englishe, too. I guess that makes you quite a fmartafs.
Today’s
Thought
In
the stormy night it is well that anchors twain be let down from the swift ship.
— Pindar, Olympian Odes
Tailpiece
“How’s the new Jewish
opera singer getting along?”
“I’m not sure. She doesn’t
seem to know if she’s Carmen or Cohen because she’s always so Bizet.”
(Drop by every
Monday, Wednesday, Friday for a new Mainly about Boats column.)
1 comment:
Ha ha! Even though I am an ancient Englishe man, I enjoyed this poft.
Post a Comment