( rsgi J 
exaftly in the fame Point, yet do often tend the fame 
way, blowing within a Point or two perhaps of the 
famecourfe^ efpecially when the Wind isfomewhatftrong. 
Or if the Winds have differed, yet the Scudd (as the Sea*- 
men call the current of the Clouds) hath commonly (ho wn 
the motion of the upper Air to agree thereto. 
This r fay Joth often happen, though not al ways. 
And this alfo Monfieur M^r^Wi hath obferved at Paris 
in the aforefaid years, viz. That there are a great 
many days^ during the different Seafons of the year, 
" where the Winds are the fame in both Places, £ e. 
Paris and Vpminfier, ] When the Wind Was the fame, ^ 
" both in one part and the other , it was ordinarily 
pretty ftrong, and of long continuance. And alio he 
obferved that the Winds had changed alike in both 
" Places. Fid. Hiji, de f Acad. Rop des Scimces An. 
1699. , 
Lnimilil IV, Aftro- 
