[ 22 ^ ] 
iary motions, fo as to prove himfelf the Governor 
both of the natural and moral world ; tho’ improv’d 
philofophy has given us a j utter notion of thefe mat- 
ters than the antients had. I wifh our religious fen- 
timents may advance, in proportion to our improved 
philofophy. 
March i6, 1753. 
Wm. Stukeley- 
XXXIV. A farther Account of the GiantY 
Caufeway in the County of Antrim in Ire- 
land, by the Rev < Richard Pocock, LL,D. 
Archdeacon oj Dublin, and F. R. S. 
Read May 24,'J'N a letter, which I wrote in 1747 to 
• 753 - Martin FolkeSj Efq; Prefident of the 
Royal Society, which was read in January, and 
printed in the Philofophical TranfaFtions for that 
month, I obferved, in relation to the Giant’s Caufe- 
way, that there appeared in the Sea-cliffs three ftrata 
of pillars between thirty and forty feet high, with 
ttrata of a black rock between them ; that the caufe- 
way itfelf was the lowed of all thefe, extending in 
a point into the fea ; and that another is feen towards 
the top of the cliff. 
' Laft fummer I took another view of it ^ I went 
from Bally-Caflle, which is about to miles to the eatt 
of the Caufeway. When I came two miles to the 
weft of Bally-Cadle, within lefs than a mile of Bal- 
lintoy, half a mile to the fouth of the fea-cliffs, and 
about a quarter to the fouth of the road, 1 law the 
