60 Chservutions of Nebule and Clusters of Stars. 
G.C | h. & H. | — 
1544 | VIII. 52 | 1873, Jan. 3. Very loose Cl., scarcely more compressed than the neighbour- 
hood. (I. obs.) 
1546 456—= | 1848, Dec. 19. Fades away gradually, r? 
II. 821 | 1850, March 9. gbM, perhaps to a 8 starlike Nucl. 
1851, Jan. 31. Seen r by Lord R. and myself, edge filamentous. 
1852, Feb. 13. Resolvable appearance to Lord R. and myself. 
1856, Jan. 9. Edge filamentous,lbM but I see no * or Nucl., neither can I see it is r. 
Pos. Dist. 
1861, Dec. 26. a B 224°-0: 120" 
ao 249-7 100 
ae 274°3 140 
Be 334-2 85 
1862, Jan. 25. Light almost equable except at edges which fade off LoS 
rapidly. (XIV. obs.) 
1548 457—= |1850, Mar. 9. TI think clearly r, sev. points, at least 3 seen plainly in edge which 
I. 218 I suspect to be filamentous ; no nucl., more R than h describes it. 
1852, Jan. 16. 2 Best 8m. pin a line with it, the p one is double, neb. is R, 
edges diffused. 
1852, Feb. 13. 2 st ins part, edges not sharp and perhaps filamentous. Lord 
R. thought it like a Cl. at a great distance. 
1855, Jan. 21. RB, edges filamentous and has all the appearance of a glob. Cl., 
this struck me at once when it came into the field. One stellar point in sp 
edge and I suspect another close sf this point, a 3rd in sf edge and perhaps 
others at the centre. 
1856, Jan. 10. Light nearly equable, edge filamentous. I can see no st in it, 
but it strikes one at once as being a dist Cl. 
1876, Jan. 26. pB, pL, irr, vv lbM, * 8 m. (=B.D.+39° No. 1979) in Pos. 
_—-266°-2, Dist. 234-6. Clouds. 
1876, Feb. 25. pB, L, vvlbM or rather nearer the nf end, irregular, v1 E sp nf. 
Like the head of a Comet with a very short tail sp. * 8 m. Pos. 266°°8 (3), 
Dist. 230-0 (3) or p 19°75, 12'"8 s. [Adopting the Pos. of the * given 
in the Bonn observations, Vol. VI., we find the place of the neb. for 1860-0 
7” 28™ 38°60 50° 48' 34"°8.] (VII. obs.) 
1549 458= |1867, Jan. 2. A superb cluster consisting of about 20 or 30 bright stars 
Wl, scattered over a densely rich background of very minute stars; v Ri; vmC 
perhaps 5’ or 6' in diameter. With the low Ramsden [power about 3002] 
I could barely separate the small stars, but the night was far from good. 
(II. obs.) 
1551 459 = 1877, Feb. 15. Several rich fields, richest part about 10’ diam. st 9... mag. 
VIII. 38 sev. D st. (1. obs.) 
1553 | VIII. 87 | 1877, Feb. 15. Cl, S, P, not at all remarkable. (I. obs.) 
1554 460= )| 1874, Mar. 10. 1554 is pB, p L, R, gmbM. 
IT. 822 Pos. Dist. 
5391 06.6 2 112) wa, 175°°5 41"-7 
WOES in, 247-1 72:0 
* 9m. (orange) 158°7 162°4 
* 103 m. 0:8 124°8 
Orange star to Nova nf [=5391]. Pos. 35°-9, 
Dist. 3560. pF, pS, vmE 146°-4, att to 
a * 12 m. at sf end, the place is that of the 
*, about 2' long and 20” broad. * 10 m. | 
(yellow) Pos. 164°°6, Dist. 310 from the * 
att. (I. obs.) 
fe i ee ee er, 
