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 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
- 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
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.
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- Information
- Nature's TeachingsHuman Invention Anticipated by Nature, pp. 44 - 49Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 2009First published in: 1877