24 Mr. Herschel's and Mr. South’s observations of the apparent 
No. I. R. A. o h 6 m ; Decl. 7° 49' N. 
35 Piscium ; Struve 4 ; III. 6 2 ; 
Large white ; small blue, bearing illumination very well. 
Position. 
O © / 
90—30. 9 
29.30 
29. o 
28.52 
29.43 
28.46 
29.27 
28.38 
Mean sr — 29.14 
Nov. 27, 1821. 
Five feet Equatorial. 
S J- 
Position =5 6o°.4,6 f sf. 
Distance = 11". 168 
Distance. 
Parts. 
36. o'} 
35* 8 I 
37- o f 
36. o J 
S 
34- 5 
35- o 
34- 1 
38. o 
34- 9 
1 
i 
H 
Mean ~ 35.70 
Z — — 0.28 
35*42 
Sir William Herschel measured this star on the 30th of 
June 1783, and his measures, as recorded in his Second Cata- 
logue, Phil. Trans. 1785, are 
Position 58° 54' sf. Distance 12^.50, 
so that this star has undergone no material alteration. M. 
Struve (Dorpat Obs. iii. ) has four sets of measures, the mean 
result of which is 
1821.45 ; Position 62° 12* sf; A declin. sss 9^.87 5 ; whence 
distance =s 10" 591* 
