The Nautical Magazine: A Journal of Papers on Subjects Connected with Maritime Affairs, Volume 39Brown, Son and Ferguson, 1870 - Naval art and science |
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Page 4
... leave his imagined prolixity to our care.-ED. ] ON THE ORIGIN AND MIGRATION OF THE POLYNESIAN NATION . By the Rev. D. Lang , M.S.A. THE following paper on the Polynesian races of the various islands of the Great Pacific Ocean has been ...
... leave his imagined prolixity to our care.-ED. ] ON THE ORIGIN AND MIGRATION OF THE POLYNESIAN NATION . By the Rev. D. Lang , M.S.A. THE following paper on the Polynesian races of the various islands of the Great Pacific Ocean has been ...
Page 21
... leaves a very narrow channel which leads to a spacious basin sheltered from all winds . This channel at high water has ... leave a channel . At its southern end it has a little bay about a cable and a half wide , but not deep : the shoal ...
... leaves a very narrow channel which leads to a spacious basin sheltered from all winds . This channel at high water has ... leave a channel . At its southern end it has a little bay about a cable and a half wide , but not deep : the shoal ...
Page 22
... leave but a small channel between them , but which is used by the trading craft of the country . Bay of Magnoe ... leaving only some few breaks or cuts which the pilots , who know them , pass through in their small craft for Bulusam , or ...
... leave but a small channel between them , but which is used by the trading craft of the country . Bay of Magnoe ... leaving only some few breaks or cuts which the pilots , who know them , pass through in their small craft for Bulusam , or ...
Page 23
... leaves two narrow channels for entering and leaving . These channels are tolerably deep with good ground , and the same are found in the middle of the port : yet the space for anchorage in them is very limited , and it will be found ...
... leaves two narrow channels for entering and leaving . These channels are tolerably deep with good ground , and the same are found in the middle of the port : yet the space for anchorage in them is very limited , and it will be found ...
Page 26
... leave but a narrow channel about two cables length across but as the depth in it is from fifteen to twenty fathoms , even a large vessel can be easily towed in . and her safety in doing so would be still greater by placing buoys on the ...
... leave but a narrow channel about two cables length across but as the depth in it is from fifteen to twenty fathoms , even a large vessel can be easily towed in . and her safety in doing so would be still greater by placing buoys on the ...
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Common terms and phrases
Admiralty anchor anchorage appears arrived banks barque beacon bearing Bitter Lakes Board of Trade boat buoy cable Cape Captain cargo channel charts coast collision commerce course crew Damietta danger deck depth dhows distance east eastern eastward England English entrance established fathoms French gale Gironde Government Grebo half harbour hundred inhabitants island isle islet Ismailia land Lesseps life-boat light lighthouse Liverpool loss Marine Mediterranean merchant miles Monarch monsoon Mortlake natives naval navigation nearly night Nile Notice observed officers pass Pelusium port position present Queensland Red Sea reef remarkable river rock round sailing sailors sand saving schooner seamen seen Serapeum ship shoal shore side station steam steamer Strait Suez Canal tide tons town Trinity House United Kingdom vessels voyage weather westerly wind wreck yards Zanzibar
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Page 437 - By the Queen. A PROCLAMATION. VICTORIA R. — WHEREAS we are happily at peace with all Sovereigns, Powers, and States : And whereas...
Page 439 - ... respectively shall always in case of necessity, be extended so far as may be requisite for giving effect to this proviso, but no further or otherwise.
Page 185 - To thee belongs the rural reign; Thy cities shall with commerce shine; All thine shall be the subject main, And every shore it circles thine.
Page 438 - ... the said belligerent parties in the same port, roadstead, or waters within the territorial jurisdiction of Her Majesty, there shall be an interval of not less than twenty-four hours between the departure therefrom of any such vessel (whether a ship of war or...
Page 16 - I am not very willing that any language should be totally extinguished. The similitude and derivation of languages afford the most indubitable proof of the traduction of nations, and the genealogy of mankind. They add often physical certainty to historical evidence ; and often supply the only evidence of ancient migrations, and of the revolutions of ages which left no written monuments behind them.
Page 367 - I conjure my friends on no account to make me the subject of any monument, memorial, or testimonial whatever. I rest my claims to the remembrance of my country upon my published works, and to the remembrance of my friends upon their experience of me in addition...
Page 437 - ... with the advice of our privy council, to issue this our royal proclamation, hereby...
Page 367 - I commit my soul to the mercy of God through our Lord and Saviour Jesus Christ, and I exhort my dear children humbly to try to guide themselves by the teaching of the New Testament in its broad spirit, and to put no faith in any man's narrow construction of its letter here or there.
Page 438 - Kingdom or in the Channel Islands, or in any of Her Majesty's colonies or foreign possessions or dependencies, such...
Page 438 - ... as soon as possible after the expiration of such period of twenty-four hours, without permitting her to take in supplies beyond what may be necessary for her immediate use...