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CHAPTER V - SUBSIDIARY APPLIANCES. PART III.—THE BOAT-HOOK AND PUNT-POLE.—THE LIFE-BUOY AND PONTOON-RAFT

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  29 August 2010

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Summary

AS all rowing men know, an indispensable appliance to the boat is the Boat-hook, which can be used either as a pole, wherewith to push the boat along, or as a grapnel, by which it can be drawn towards the shore or a ship. As the latter portion has been discussed at the close of the preceding chapter, we may proceed to the former.

Every one knows how a boat may be propelled by a pole pressed against the bank or the bottom of the water, and that there are certain boats, called punts, which are propelled in no other way.

Now, the punt-poles and boat-hooks, of which some examples are given in the accompanying illustration, have long been anticipated in Nature, there being many creatures which have no other mode of progression; such, for example, as the common Earth-worm, which pushes itself along by certain bristles which project from the rings of which the body is composed, and which have the power of extension and contraction to a wonderful extent. As, however, I shall advert to these in another part of the work, I will content myself at present with a single example, namely, the beautiful marine worm known as the Serpula.

This worm lives in a shelly tube, which is lined with a delicate membrane, up and down which it passes with ease, ascending slowly, but generally descending with such wonderful rapidity that the eye cannot follow its movements.

Type
Chapter
Information
Nature's Teachings
Human Invention Anticipated by Nature
, pp. 44 - 49
Publisher: Cambridge University Press
Print publication year: 2009
First published in: 1877

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