Book contents
- Frontmatter
- PREFACE
- Contents
- NAUTICAL
- CHAPTER I THE RAFT
- CHAPTER II THE OAR, THE PADDLE, AND THE SCREW
- CHAPTER III SUBSIDIARY APPLIANCES.—PART I
- CHAPTER IV SUBSIDIARY APPLIANCES.—PART II
- CHAPTER V SUBSIDIARY APPLIANCES. PART III.—THE BOAT-HOOK AND PUNT-POLE.—THE LIFE-BUOY AND PONTOON-RAFT
- WAR AND HUNTING
- ARCHITECTURE
- TOOLS
- OPTICS
- USEFUL ARTS
- ACOUSTICS
- INDEX
CHAPTER I - THE RAFT
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 29 August 2010
- Frontmatter
- PREFACE
- Contents
- NAUTICAL
- CHAPTER I THE RAFT
- CHAPTER II THE OAR, THE PADDLE, AND THE SCREW
- CHAPTER III SUBSIDIARY APPLIANCES.—PART I
- CHAPTER IV SUBSIDIARY APPLIANCES.—PART II
- CHAPTER V SUBSIDIARY APPLIANCES. PART III.—THE BOAT-HOOK AND PUNT-POLE.—THE LIFE-BUOY AND PONTOON-RAFT
- WAR AND HUNTING
- ARCHITECTURE
- TOOLS
- OPTICS
- USEFUL ARTS
- ACOUSTICS
- INDEX
Summary
THE RAFT
IT has been frequently said that the modern developments of science are gradually destroying many of the poetical elements of our daily lives, and in consequence are reducing us to a dead level of prosaic commonplace, in which existence is scarcely worth having. The first part of this rather sweeping assertion is perfectly true, but, as we shall presently see, the second portion is absolutely untrue.
Science has certainly destroyed, and is destroying, many of the poetic fancies which made a part of daily life. It must have been a considerable shock to the mind of an ancient philosopher when he found himself deprived of the semi-spiritual, semi-human beings with which the earth and water were thought to be peopled. And even in our own time and country there is in many places a still lingering belief in the existence of good and bad fairies inhabiting lake, wood, and glen, the successors of the Naiads and Dryads, the Fauns and Satyrs, of the former time. Many persons will doubtless be surprised, even in these days, to hear that the dreaded Maelström is quite as fabulous as the Symplegades or Scylla and Charybdis, and that the well-known tale of Edgar Poe is absolutely without foundation.
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- Nature's TeachingsHuman Invention Anticipated by Nature, pp. 1 - 11Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 2009First published in: 1877