C i86 ) 
And therefore inftead o" next after the Fertial Equi- 
nox , we fay, next after the One and Twentieth of 
March. 
But then it is faid (by a Miftake, I fuppofe) after the 
Fir ft Full Moon^ inftead of upon, or next after the Firft 
Full Moon, (for To it is co be underftood) and added, 
And if the Full Moon happens upon a Sunday, Eafler-day 
is the Sunday after. Which muft needs be a Miftake. 
For. in fuch Cafe, it is to be that Sunday^ not the Sun' 
day after. 
And fo the Tables agree (contrary to this Note) both 
that For Forty Tears, and that To find Rafter for Ever, 
And fo it was obfervedin the Years 1668, 1678, and 
1682. ^ And fo whenever the Cafe happens, that the Ec- 
clefiaftical Full Moon falls on a Sunday. But this (though 
it be a Miftake) doth not influence the prefent Cafe. 
That which concerns the preftnt Cafe,, is. On what 
. Day we muft reckon the Ecclejiajiical Full Moon to 
fall. 
For we are not to judge, either the Equinox^ or the 
Full Moon, according as they happen in the Heavens, or 
in our Almanacks ; biat according to the Pafchal Tables, 
fitted to the time of theNicene Council. 
And accordingly, we reckon the Equinox to be now 
(as then it was) on March zi. 
And as to the Full Moon (next after that Equinox) 
we are to Account it thus : 
The Golden Number (fitted to the Cycle of Nineteen 
Years,' after the End of which it begins again, at i, i, 
3, <©f.) is placed in the firft Column of our Calendar, 
to tell us, on what Day (of fuch Year) the New Moon 
is fuppofed to happen, in each Month ,• and the Fifteenth 
Day of that Moon is reputed the Full Moon. 
Now 
