44 c>f ^atufe0 am ^Mkm. 



high-flying Hi w/^j- fhould be made inwards, it being a 

 commendable quality in them to make in and turn head 

 at the fecond or third tofs of the Lure , and when (he 

 poureth down upon it as iffhe had killed. 



And as the teaching of a Faulcon , or any other < 

 H^wi^ to come readily to and love the Lure, is an art 

 highly commendable, bccaufe it is the effedt of great 

 labour and induftry : fo it is the caufe of favingmany 

 a Hatvk^^ which otherways would be loft irrecovera- 

 bly. 



Mark this by the way, that fome naturally high-fly- 

 ing Hatv}{f will be long before they be made upwards, 

 ftill fifliingand playing the flugs '•> and when they (hould 

 get up to cover the Fowl, they will rtoop before the 

 Fowl be put out : And this may proceed from two 

 caufes. In the firft place , flie may be too (harp fet , 

 and in the next place, it may be (he is flown untimely, 

 either too foon or too late. 



when you fee a Han>k^ ufe thofe evil Tatches with- 

 out any vifible caufe , caft her out a dead Fowl for a 

 dead Quarry, and hood her up inftantly without Re- 

 ward, todifcoarageher from pradtifing the like ano- 

 ther time : half an hour afterwards call her to the Lure 

 and feed her, and ferve her after this manner as often 

 as flie h(heth in that fa(hion. 



Bcfides, to Qoiicdi this errour,the Faulcorter ought to 

 confult the natures and difpofitions of his Hawk/ , and 

 (hould carefully obferve which fly hii;h when in good 

 plight, and which beft when they are kept low •, which 

 when Qiarpeft fet, and which on the contrary in a mean 

 between both ", which early at Sun-iifing, which when 

 the Sun is but two hours hij^h j which fooner, and 

 which later in an evening. 



For know that the natures of Harvkj are diflcrent* 



Co are the time to fly each one : for to fly a Hawl^ in 



her Dioper times, and to fly her out of ir, is as difagvee- 



^ ' abia^ 



