THE WEATHER. 



The following table, and the accompanying remarks, 

 originally formed by Dr. Herschel, and approved with 

 some alterations by the experienced Dr. Adam Clarke, are 

 the result of many years' close observation ; the whole 

 being on a due consideration of the attraction of the sun 

 and moon, in their several positions respecting the earth, 

 and will, by inspection, show the observer what kind of 

 weather will most probably follow the entrance of the moon 

 into any of its quarters so probably, indeed, that it has 

 seldom been found to fail. 



TABLE, for telling the weather through all the lunations of 

 each year forever. 



OBSERVATIONS. 1. The nearer the time of the moon's 



