ther throw or give her , and will be very familiar : 

 / Laftly, having done your will on the ground , (he will 

 look up for your Fift , and will readily jump there-^ 

 on* 



They are much fubjedl to little Grubs, which are in- 

 gendered in the Guts, and difcover themfelvcs in their 

 Mutes, crawling out from them , (hrinking themfelves 

 up , and fo inltantly dying. Thefe Worms do little 

 harm , and that Hawk which hath them is feldom 

 bad. The colour of thefe Worms is red in a Slight 

 Faulcon^znd red in a Barbary-Faulcon > and when dead, 

 in both white. 



There is a fort o{ Srvarthy hlacli^plurnd Havp\^ that 

 is good- mettled, and a high flier, yet hard to be reclai- 

 med : for iTie will neither mind you nor your voice v 

 but when you lure her, will look any other way than 

 that fee ftiGuld. However , you mult (hew your felf 

 very loving towards her, though you (hall get no more 

 from her thaii what you extort by force. For her due 

 reclaiming, lelTen her pride by ordering her Diet with 

 raeafure, with refpedt had unto the Weather i which if 

 it be mild and temperate, you need not fear to hold her 

 liovvn until you have quarried her : and as you fhall fee 

 her amend her manners, alter her Diet, and add to her 

 Mrength according to reafonable expedition , which' 

 will be foon obtained if (lie be found, and the weather 

 moderate. But if ths weather be frorty, have a care of 

 abating flefh. 



When at any time you fly any one of thefe black or 

 tawny Hawks, and (he (loops foul and falls in her 

 flight , you mull take her down with fome living 

 thing. 



If (he be young, fuffer not her (or any other Hawk) 

 to {^y too long •, for nothing is more prejudicial ani 

 (Jirtalkful to a young Hawk at her firft making, than 

 to let her toil and m\ke many (tbopings before flie be 



fervcd 



