Page:The New International Encyclopædia 1st ed. v. 16.djvu/774

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RALPH ROISTER DOISTER.
682
RAMA.

city wife, by Merrygreek, who maliciously enjoys the diversion of a fool in love. Though she does not intend to accept Ralph, his pursuit makes trouble between Custance and her betrothed, Gawin Goodluck. The fool's chagrin is soothed by Merrygreek by flattering his vain delusion that the lovers fear him, and all ends well.

RALSTON, ra̤l′ston, William Ralston Shedden- (1828-89). An English Russian scholar, and the son of W. P. Ralston Shedden, who, after making a fortune in India, returned to England. He was prepared by a private tutor for Trinity College, Cambridge, where he graduated B.A. in 1850. Though subsequently called to the bar, he never practiced. To free himself from the odium attached to a prolonged lawsuit, begun by his father and continued by his sister, for the Ralston estates in Ayrshire, he added the name of Ralston to Shedden. Entering the printed-book department of the British Museum (1853), he rose rapidly. He learned Russian and traveled extensively in Russia, forming a close friendship with Turgenieff. Owing to ill health, he resigned his post in the British Museum after serving for twenty-two years. He contributed largely to the Athenæum, the Saturday Review, and other periodicals, and published Kriloff and His Fables (1868); a translation of Turgenieff's Liza (1869); Songs of the Russian People (1872); and Early Russian History (1874).

RAM (AS. ram, ramm, Ger. Ramme, battering-ram, OHG. ram, rammo, Ger. Ramm, male sheep), Marine. It was evident to the ancients that a ship, if given a sufficient rate of speed, could deal the enemy's vessel a more disastrous blow than could any weapon then known, so that the use of the ram is as ancient as maritime war. The oar-propelled galley furnished requisite speed and control for ramming, and to further the efficacy of the craft of this sort they were furnished with beaks. The short ranges at which ancient weapons were dangerous were favorable to the use of the ram, and most of the celebrated actions of the galley were decided by it. But the advent of gunpowder rapidly effected a change. With the introduction of sail propulsion ramming was nearly given over, but when steam came to the front it reappeared in a form which soon reached its highest development. The ram, however, has never accomplished much except under special conditions, and it is now regarded as a very subordinate weapon in naval warfare. W. Laird Clowes has carefully tabulated all the eases of ramming or attempted ramming which have taken place in modern naval warfare, and he finds that: (a) wiien both vessels have had plenty of sea room and were able to steer not one of the thirty-two attempts to ram were wholly successful—indeed, the ships attempting to ram received slightly the gravest injuries; (b) where the ramming took place in waters which were too contracted to admit of free manœuvring (32 cases also), 28 per cent. of the vessels attacked by ramming were sunk, as were 3 per cent. of the attacking ships, while the percentages of the attacked vessels which were seriously injured was about double that of the ships attempting to ram. The torpedo and the greatly enhanced gun power of recently built ships both serve to weaken the influence of the ram upon naval operations, leaving its probable effective use confined to unusual and special conditions.

It is difficult to determine who first suggested ramming by steam vessels. One of the earliest designs is that of Capt. Samuel Barron of the United States Navy, which was made in 1827 and a model of which is preserved at the Naval Academy, Annapolis. At this time, however, there was but one steam man-of-war in existence, and it was not until the Civil War broke out that attention was seriously attracted to the importance of ramming. The Merrimac was fitted with a ram with which she sank the Cumberland, and the Monitor was designed to use her sharp bow for ramming if opportunity offered. After the sinking of the Cumberland many war vessels were supplied with rams, and at present nearly all fighting ships are so fitted, but it is not expected that the use of the ram will be other than exceptional.

The marine ram as a special vessel designed to use its beak as its principal weapon of offense appears to have had few advocates after the time of Captain Barron's ram in 1827 until late in the Civil War. Admiral Ammen of the United States Navy was a strong advocate of the purely ram type of vessel, and one of his designs was embodied in the U. S. S. Katahdin. About 1880 the British built the torpedo ram Polyphemus, which is like the Katahdin in many respects. No other large ram vessels have been built which are not also well armed with guns.

Among naval officers the use of the ram is now regarded as the last resort—a weak ship endeavors to sacrifice herself in destroying a more powerful one; a ship whose battery is disabled attempts to destroy a still powerful enemy; or a ship which refuses to surrender is given the coup-de-grâce. In all this, however, the danger of the torpedo is to be faced, and that is commonly regarded as more to be feared than the ram.

Bibliography. For further information, consult: "The Ram in Action and Accident," by W. Laird Clowes (Proceedings of the United States Naval Institute, whole No. 69, Annapolis, 1894); Elliot, The Ram (London, 1884); Bennitt, The Monitor and the Navy Under Steam (Boston and New York, 1900); Proceedings of the United States Naval Institute (various articles); Journal of the Royal United Service Institution, particularly 1875, but also various later volumes, (London); Noel, The Gun, Ram, and Torpedo (Portsmouth, Eng., 1888).

RĀMA, rä′mȧ. In Hindu mythology, the name of the sixth, seventh, and eighth incarnations of Vishnu (q.v.), Parasurama, Ramacandra, and Balarama. Of these the Ramacandra avatar (see Avatar) is by far the most famous, as Rama is here the hero of the Sanskrit epic of the Rāmāyaṇa (q.v.).

RAMA, or Melchora. An interesting tribe formerly upon the Rama River on the Caribbean coast of Southern Nicaragua, and now gathered upon a small island in Bluefield lagoon. They are a detached tribe of the Changuinan or Dorasquean stock of the Isthmus of Panama. They are kept under subjection by the dominant Mosquito (q.v.), and are now on the verge of extinction, having numbered only about 250 persons in 1891, all Christianized by Moravian missionaries, and described as being of fine physique and great strength.