42 g)f pais^u artn DmMns, 



Remedy for a Hawk'j takhg Stand in a Tree, 



In the firft place you rauft chufe fuch places where 

 are no Wood or Trees, or as little as may be. If you 

 cannot avoid it, then have two or three live Trains, 

 and give them to as many men, placing them conve- 

 niently for to ufe them. When therefore your Hatvl^ 

 hath riooped, and endeavours to go to ftand, let him 

 to whom the Hawk^ moft bends caft out his Train- 

 Duck feeled : if the Haw^^WxW her, reward her there- 

 with. \i this courfe will not remedy that fault in her 

 by twice or thrice fo doing, my advice is then to part 

 with the Buzzard, 



How to help cf, Hawk frovoard and coy through 

 pride ofGreafe. 



There is a fcurvy quality in feme Harvh/, proceeding 

 from pride ofGreafe, or being high kept, which is a 

 difdainful coynefs. Such a H^wj^ therefore muft not be 

 re\yajded although (he kill i yet give her leave to plume 

 a little i and then let the Faulconer take a Sheeps- 

 Heart cold, or the Leg of a Pullet, and whilft the Haw}^ 

 is bufie in pluming, let either of them be conveyed into 

 the Body of the Fowl, that it may favour thereof > and 

 when the HawJ^ hath eaten the Brains, Heart, and 

 Tongue of the Fowl, then take out your Inclofure, and 

 call your H^jpj^with it to your Fiii, and feed her there- 

 with : after this give her fome Feathers of the Neck of 

 the Fowl to fcowr and make her cart. 



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