. ( • *) 
Tab. 2. F. A Spider hanging on the Branch of a 
Tree, with its Head turned againji the H ind , and fpinning 
out its Thread , 'till it finds that it adheres to fome Body, (as 
to theWall here reprefented ) by which kind of Bridge it paffes 
over Rivers , &c. 
G. A Spider having broke the firjl Thread , bp which it 
hung, and let out feveral others, is carried by the Wind , 
and floats in the Air with its Legs extended. 
II. An Account of the Moon's Eclipfe, February 2. 
\yo ‘t • objer^ed at Streatham near London, 
and compared with the Calculation. ’Ey the ReV. 
Mr H. CrelTener, M. A. Fellow of the (Royal Society . 
I N the Iaft Lunar Eclipfe, on the fecond of February 
1709-10. the time of the end (which was what a** 
lone the want of a proper Apparatus and a favourable 
Skie yrould give me leave exactly to determine) I found 
to be the fame (with but a very inconfideraWe Diffe* 
rence) which the Calculation, according to our moft 
Learned Prefidents admirable Theory, promis’d me to 
expeft. 
There being therefore no Examples of any Calcula- 
tion (that I know of) according to that Theory, nor 
of the Theory’s Agreement with Obfervation yet made 
Publick ^ I thought it proper to offer this one to this 
Learned Society’s Perufal, that the exaft confent with 
Obfervation in this, may pr^ipt fome of them to try 
~the like in others. I have added the Calculation from 
the famous Mr. Flamfieed' s Tables, according to Horry’s 
Theory, 
