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Anchoring with guns | 1
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Using an anchor on a dark night, &c. | 2
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On the best sail to bring a ship to anchor under | 3
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To remove a waist anchor to the opposite bow | 5
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To recover a vessel to an upright position | 5
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Remarks on three cables on end, on one anchor, &c. | 6
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At single anchor | 7
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To back an anchor with the buoy rope | 8
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Steadying a ship at anchor | 9
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Stowing stream and kedge anchors | 10
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Anchoring on a muddy bottom | 10
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On making alterations in masts, yards, sails, &c. | 11
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A sea-anchor. | 12
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Anchoring in rivers where fire rafts may be used | 14
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To prevent surprise at anchor | 15
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Sheet anchor | 15
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When obliged to anchor in a thronged roadstead in blowing weather | 16
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On anchoring broadside on to the wind in blowing weather | 17
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Night anchor watch in blowing weather | 18
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On coming to an anchor in blowing weather, with a leading wind | 19
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To recover an anchor by sweeping | 20
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Anchored in an open roadstead in blowing weather | 21
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Anchoring on a lee-shore, and cutting away masts. | 22
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| PAGE
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Block ships | 24
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On using snatch blocks | 25
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Boats taking in water in bulk | 25
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Main buntlines | 26
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Boat tackles | 26
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On boats leaving the ship from the stern where other boats are in two | 26
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On boats leaving vessels at sea when hove-to | 27
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Topsail buntlines | 28
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Sister blocks | 28
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Bobstays carried away | 29
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Brailing up sails | 29
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Bobstays cap | 30
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On veering a buoy astern to pick up a boat | 30
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Hoisting out boats | 32
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On boats being sent to tow vessels when on fire | 32
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Boats going alongside a ship at anchor | 33
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On hoisting boats in or out with lower yards and topmasts struck | 33
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Towing boats | 34
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In getting boats out when all the masts are gone | 35
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Chain slings for boats | 36
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Bathing | 36
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Block-strops, pointing | 38
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Sea boats' crews | 38
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A strong box | 39
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Top-gallant buntlines | 40
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Boats with treasure | 40
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Boatswain's store-room | 41
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Leading-blocks | 41
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Exercising newly raised boys | 42
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Boys | 43
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Boatswain and his mates | 44
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Shifting, or taking out, a bowsprit. | 44
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Quarter and stern boats at sea | 45
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The order of a ship known by her boats | 46
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To get boom-boats out with lower yards carried away | 47
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Monkey-blocks | 48
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Backing or shivering the mizen-topsail by the wind | 48
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On steeving the bowsprit | 49
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Stopper abaft the bitts | 50
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Battle -- necessary arrangements for ditto | 50
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Boats assisting to launch themselves | 53
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Boats sent to cut out at night | 54
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To take out a waist or bower-anchor between two boats. | 55
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Hoisting up quarter-boats, when a ship has much rolling motion | 56
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| PAGE
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Veering cables in a heavy squall | 58
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On using hemp cables | 59
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On coaling screw steamers | 63
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Courses | 62
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Taking in cables | 62
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To ascertain how the ship's hawse is, by a common compass | 63
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Wharping along shore in chase. | 64
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Courses single sheets | 65
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On ships of the line working their cables on the middle or main-deck | 66
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Coal tar | 66
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Commanders of ships of the line | 67
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Tarry canvass for stopping leaks | 69
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On the midshipmen's chests | 69
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Collision | 70
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Chasing an enemy | 70
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Jacob's ladders on lower caps | 71
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Bending a course in blowing weather | 71
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Cap shores | 71
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Club-hauling. | 72
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| PAGE
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Head sails | 108
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Floating hawsers | 108
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On heaving-to with the ship's head in-shore | 108
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Hailing aloft in blowing weather | 109
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On accidents to the helm. | 109
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Hatchway covers | 110
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Hooks used for the chain cables | 110
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Hove-to | 111
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Heaving the lead in shoal water | 112
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On the heads of ships of the line being raised | 112
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Extreme heeling a ship | 114
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Hauling all the yards together in tacking | 115
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Taut weather helm | 115
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On clearing hawse in blowing weather | 116
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Hawsers | 116
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Hauling up or lowering down things over a ship's side | 116
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| PAGE
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Moored with a swivel | 137
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Marline-spikes | 137
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On steam vessels having main-topsails | 138
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On the position of masts | 139
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Taut mooring | 140
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Mooring | 141
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Mates of the hull | 141
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Master's Assistants | 142
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Mizen-stays | 143
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A man overboard at sea | 144
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Spare messenger | 147
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Boatswains' mates | 147
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Mooring boats off from the ship | 148
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How to shorten the lower masts without taking them out | 149
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Taking out wedges for staying the lower masts | 150
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On the rolling motion with light winds, with yards square | 151
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Manning yards, and dressing ships with flags | 151
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On topmasts being struck for a lengthened period | 152
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Accident to main-topmast | 153
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With only two cables to moor, with nearly a cable each way | 153
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Fidding topmasts | 154
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Fidding top-gallant masts abaft all | 155
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Mustering ship's company by the open list | 155
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When lower masts are stripped | 156
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Magazines ventilating | 156
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| PAGE
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Main-deck ports badly secured against surprise | 162
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Going in or out of unfrequented ports | 163
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Lower mast-head pendants | 163
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Pointing, grafting, &c. | 163
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Parrel, or parrel-lashings, of top-gallant yards carried away | 164
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On the necessity of sounding the pump-well more frequently when at anchor | 166
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On leaving port when first commissioned | 168
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Prisoners | 170
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Having show-poles above the royal rigging | 171
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On the single whip and pendant | 173
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On using the word port, instead of larboard | 174
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In pilot-water, holy-stoning, washing, or cleaning decks before daylight | 175
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| PAGE
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Scudding. | 188
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Unbending sails in blowing weather | 189
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Stay-sails | 189
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Sudden shifting squalls | 189
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Ship on shore with the wind free, or right aft, in moderate weather | 190
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Ship on shore, nearly on the top of high tide, night approaching, barometer falling, and every appearance of squally weather | 190
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Ship on shore on a beach, without the slightest chance of saving her, wind on the land | 191
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Ship on shore by the wind | 192
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Ship in shore on a falling tide, no chance of getting her off until high tide, with weather fine | 192
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Shifting a topsail while the other sail is still set. | 194
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Topmast-stay shot, or carried away | 195
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Making sail from a spring on the cable | 196
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Scrubbing sails | 107
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Making sail from a spring laid out by another vessel | 197
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Taking in top-gallant sails | 198
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Taking in square-sails by the wind. | 199
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Wearing ship. | 201
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Setting square-sails in blowing weather. | 202
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On trimming the sails. | 203
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To take in a lower studding-sail, blowing fresh | 205
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Setting topmast studding-sails | 205
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On keeping a ship's head the right way in light airs or calms, &c. | 206
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On signals, calm | 207
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On bending sails | 209
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Fore top-gallant and royal stays. | 210
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After-swifters on the lower-masts. | 211
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To shift a bowsprit by the spars of the ship | 212
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On every ship helping to make her own seamen and riggers | 215
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On sailing along a coast with high land and deep ravines | 216
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Spring used, attached to the anchor or cable | 217
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Steering with stern-way in making a stern-board | 218
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Stopping-in running gear | 219
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On the sails to steer by when close-hauled | 221
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On station bills | 222
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On having the rating of seamen's shoemaker, for repairing the seamen's shoes | 222
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On making show-ships of vessels of war | 224
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Scrubbing hammocks and washing clothes at night | 225
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On steamers | 227
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Men going on immediate service | 228
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On sails being too taut up in rainy weather | 229
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On not carrying sail in proportion as the gale decreases | 231
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On ornaments to ships | 232
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Sunday | 234
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On giving the young gentlemen every opportunity of working the ship | 234
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Painting ship. | 237
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To make sure of casting the ship the right way, by slipping or cutting the cable | 238
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On steering. (By Gower.) | 238
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Spars sending on deck, and striking guns, or other weights below, during blowing weather | 239
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On taking the wives of seamen belonging to the ship to sea, to attend on passengers | 240
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| PAGE
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How to kill the Auger-Worm. | 257
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By the wind | 257
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Watering | 258
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On relieving wheel, lead, look-out, &c. | 258
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Water-line | 259
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On the working one watch against the other, or one part of the ship against the other | 260
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On weighing with a free wind | 260
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Weighing with a heavy head-sea | 261
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Meeting a wreck at sea, and blowing too hard for any boat to live on the water | 261
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When rolling heavy, with the wind right aft | 263
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Wearing or staying. (From the Nautical Magazine.) | 264
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| PAGE
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Ridicule, if well applied, will save much punishment | 296
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To save numerous reports | 297
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Look-out men | 297
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On the arrangements of the watches by the watch-bill | 298
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On the petty officers messing by themselves | 299
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On wearing medals in the navy | 300
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On touching hats | 301
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On holydays in port | 301
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On the sleeping of the watch on deck | 304
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On the hands being turned up to dance, or to skylark | 305
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Pigs. | 306
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Sick men | 306
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Amusement | 308
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Remarks on the working room on the upper deck of a ship of the line | 309
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The dirty work of a ship | 311
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Every ship should be her own dock-yard as much as possible | 312
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Sprinkling decks | 314
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On giving certificates | 314
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Clothes found lying about the decks | 315
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Upon dead-eyes, hearts, and thimbles | 316
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For a boat to ride out a gale under the lee of a spanned spar | 317
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