( 4 ° ) 
SPECIES II. — A. Aculeatus. 
PRICKLY-SPIDER. 
About the end of May, a fingle female was found in a meadow. Plate 5, fig. 9. 
The fize of the eyes is fhewn by the dots placed before the figure. The legs are all over 
hairy, and befet here and there with thick fliag and prickles. The thighs have two repiark- 
able prickles, which are five or fix times as long as the others. The thorax longifh, more 
flender towards the anterior parts, and of a dufky colour, is marked by a more lucid lon- 
gitudinal wave, and is all over covered with unequal long and thick hairs. The abdomen 
Ovate, dulky, a little brighter towards the thorax, and coated with thick hair of unequal 
length. The arms very hairy, and fcattered thinly with hairs of a thicker nature than the reft. 
SPECIES III. — A. Inquilinus. 
INMATE-SPIDER. 
About the end of September, a female, plate 8, fig. 5, was found at the edge of a web, 
made by the Labyrinth Spider (Chap. iv. — Spec, ii.) I kept it a long time, and could never 
perceive it fpinning, but it took flies readily upon the wing, like the other Spiders of this 
divifion. 
The fize of the eyes is fhewn by the dots before the figure. The legs are brownifli, very 
hairy, and a little aculeated. The thorax hairy, brownifli, a little reddifh, of a rhomboid fhape, 
terminating above in a point, and has on each fide two blackifh bows. The abdomen ovate, 
brownifli, filky, with many tranfverfe black waves, as fliewn in the figure, and marked 
towards the breaft, above the middle of the juii6lure, with a deep black V. fomewhat brighter 
on 
