During the researches which I have made upon this subject since the composition of my former paper, printed in the first Part of this Volume, so many and so varied inquiries arising out of it, and essentially connected with it, have presented themselves, that I have been compelled to make a total change in the plan I had then laid down for the completion of the present section of my communication. I found that many subjects to which I there alluded might, with propriety, be omitted in the present case, as constituting little more, in reference to principles, than illustrations, however interesting they might be when viewed as properties of geometrical figures. On this ground, therefore, I have cancelled a considerable number of properties of the Spherical Conic Sections, and retained only one or two for the purpose of illustrating the method of discussing the properties of those curves. The remarks I intended to make upon the singular points of spherical curves, the geometrical signification of certain symbols, and other inquiries collateral to these, have grown into systems of themselves, or been attached to other dissertations (either wholly or partially completed), to which they seemed to be as closely allied as even to the present subject.