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SMITING-LINE

Volume 19 · 111 words · 1810 Edition

in a ship, is a small rope fastened to the mizen-yard arm, below at the deck, and is always furled up with the mizen-sail, even to the upper end of the yard, and thence it comes down to the poop. Its use is to loofe the mizen-sail without striking down the yard, which is easily done, because the mizen-sail is furled up only with rope-yarns; and therefore when this rope is pulled hard, it breaks all the rope-yarns, and so the sail falls down of itself. The sailor's phrase is, "finita est misera" (whence this rope takes its name), that is, hale by this rope that the sail may fall down.