Borns with the 'Angles of Inclination, it Will bfeeafieto thofe, that have ex- 
adly obferved them, and that are skill'd in the higher Agronomical Calcula- 
tions, to compute the Rlaeeoi the Moon in her Or bite, that fo it may 
be compared with that of the tables, and with that, which has been obferv’d 
in other places, for the more precife determinating of the Diftr^nce of 
Meridians (that being the way,efteem’d by Kepler the moft certain ) and for 
making a good Judgment of the defeft or exa&nelfe of theCeleftial Tables. 
Then they obferve, That the Beginning and the Middle of this Eclipfe 
hapned to be in the North Eafiern Hemijphere, and the End , in the South- 
Eaftern* The fir ft ContaB ( as 'twere ) of the two Disks was obferv’d 
in the Superior Limb of the Sms Disk in refped to the Vertical Line , and 
in the Inferior in refped to ' the Ec-liptickj* But she Middle, and the End 
werefeenin the Superior Limb, in f eiped both to the Vertical and the 
Ecliptic^ And ( what to this Author feems extraordinary) both the Be- 
ginning and the End of this Eclipfe hapned to be in the Oriental part of the 
Suns Disk. 
Laftly, they take notice, that by their Obfervations it appears, that 
there is but little exaitnefs in all the Agronomical Tables , predidin g the 
Quantity , Beginning and Duration of this Eclipfe • Thofe of Lansbergiuf 
Sporting, That the Obfcuration (hould be of i o. dig, 48' • thofe of Ricci - 
eh, of -9. dig. 1'; and thofe of Kepler, of 7. dig.30'. 16": Again, that 
the Duration (hould be of 2 h. 2'. Laftly , The Beginning did anti- 
cipate the RiecieUn Tables by~y. minuts *, the Endby 21 and the Middle, 
almoftby n, In the mean time the Author notes, that the Rudolphin Tables 
come neared to the Truth • and withal affures the Reader of the goodneffe 
of the Inf r aments employed in his Obfervations , and of the fingular care, 
he, together with his skilful Ahiftants, took in making them. 
Some Inquiries and Directions concerning Tides, propojed by Dr. 
Wallis, for the proving or disproving of his lately publifft 
Difcourfe concerning them . 
The Inquifitive Dr. Wallis, having in his lately printed Hypothecs of Tides 
lntimated,that he had reafon to believe, that the Annual Spring-tides happen 
to be rather about the beginnings of Febr. and Nov. than the two ^Equinoxes, 
doth in a late Letter to hePubli/her, written from Oxford in Aug. laft, defire. 
Sea, fome underftanding perfons atZc» 4 <j»,or Greenwichfmt rather nearer the 
that or upon the Sea^fihore , would make part icular Obfervation of all the 
Spring-Tides (Nety- Moon and Full- Moon ) between this and the End of No- 
vember > and take, account of the Hour i and of the Perpendicular height : tha£ 
we may fee, whether thofe in September, or thofe of November be highefis 
And it were not amifs, the Low waters were obferved too. Which may be 
cafily done by a mark made upon any (landing Poft in the W^ter., by any 
R 2 Water- 
