#age of sail literature
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Again the topsails were hoisted and top-gallant sheets home. It was a strong breeze, although the water was smooth, and the Aurora dashed through at the rate of eight miles an hour, with her weather leeches lifting.
— Frederick Marryat, Mr. Midshipman Easy
“The quarter-master during ordinary watches conns the ship, and stands beside the wheel at the conn, unless close-hauled, when his station is at the weather side, where he can see the weather-leeches of the sails,” wrote Admiral William H. Smyth in his Sailor’s Word-Book.
Leeches are the borders or edges of sails, and those on the weather side are facing the wind (the opposite of lee).
The Blackwall Frigate ‘Yorkshire’, British School 19th century.
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