. Monthly nautical magazine, and quarterly review . r, I will forward theother two ; the one on White Oak, the other on Yellow Pine. Ibegin with Live Oak. I shall expect your comments onthem; you will see at once whether any advantage will ever begained by them. I want you to give your opinion, for no manknows more than you do of this neglected philosophy. If youthink the tables will not be of sufficient interest to the readersof your excellent Magazine, I shall heartily acquiesce in yourjudgment. Perhaps other parts of the experiments (of whichthere are many) would be more interesting than th


. Monthly nautical magazine, and quarterly review . r, I will forward theother two ; the one on White Oak, the other on Yellow Pine. Ibegin with Live Oak. I shall expect your comments onthem; you will see at once whether any advantage will ever begained by them. I want you to give your opinion, for no manknows more than you do of this neglected philosophy. If youthink the tables will not be of sufficient interest to the readersof your excellent Magazine, I shall heartily acquiesce in yourjudgment. Perhaps other parts of the experiments (of whichthere are many) would be more interesting than the tables. Respectfully yours, James W. Griffiths, Esq. [We shall reserve our remarks upon the tables until they haveall been published, which will be within the present can, however, assure our readers that it is not for want ofmatter that we give them publicity, but because we believe themto be the most practically useful timber tables that have everbeen published in any country, in any age of the world.—Eds.] fir p « «,. 318 The Monthly Nautical Magazine. MARINE AND NAVAL ARCHITECTURE CONTRASTED. That the Navy of the United States, in point of speed andfine sea qualities, has been left behind in the voyage of nauticalimprovement by the genius of individual enterprise, is not thefault of American ship-builders. On the contrary, to the honorof mercantile ambition and intelligence, the field of commercialoperations has presented by far the largest measure of usefulnessto the aspiring architect; and it is no wonder that the talentedand active of this profession are now found almost exclusivelywithin the orbit of peaceful mechanism. The superior attrac-tions of unrestricted modelling, wherein the artist is left untram-melled to pursue the bold ideal of science, have never failed tofascinate the mind of genius, and draw it closer into congenialcontact with that daring inspiration, which has projected vastand varied undertakings upon the theatre of commerce


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Keywords: ., bookcentury1800, bookdecade1850, booksubjectshipbuilding, bookyea