How to make the Soar or Haggard Go{h^wk. 



Firft trim them with Jeffes, Bcvets, and Bells , as 

 foon as they come to your hands s keep them feeled 

 fome time, hooding and unhooding them often, teach- 

 ing them to feed on the Fift three or four days, or till 

 they have left their Rammagenefs and become gentle : 

 having fo done, unfeel them by Candle light at night, 

 caufing them to tire or plume upon a Wing or Leg 

 of a Pullet •, and be fure to deal gently and mildly 

 with them until you have won and throughly man- 

 ned them : then you may go into fome pleafant field, 

 and firit give them a bit or two hooded on your Fiit, 

 and the likeunhooded, cafi: them down fair and foftly 

 on fome Fearch, and make them come from it to your 

 Fift, calling to them with a Faulconer's ufual terms > 

 and when they come, feed them, calling all the while 

 in the fame manner to make them acquainted with 

 your voice. The next day you may call them with 

 aGreanceata farther dilknce, feeding them as be- 

 fore. 



When you have thus called your GoJ}jawk^2ibxo2id 

 three or four days , and that you hnd her grow cun- 

 ning, then take her on your Fill, and mount on Horfe- 

 back, and ride with her an hour or two, unhooding 

 and hooding her fometimes, giving her a bit or two in 

 fight of your Spaniels, that (he may not be afraid of 

 them : this being 'done, fet her on a Tree With a thort 

 Greance tied to her Loins, and going half a fcore yards 

 from her on Horfeback , call her to your Fill: accor- 

 ding to art i) if (he come, reward her with two or 

 three bits , and caft her up again to the Tree : then 

 throw out a dead Pullet ( to which (he was ufed be- 

 fore ) about a dozen yards from her j if (he fly to it 

 and feize it, let her feed three or four bits upon it , ride 



the 



