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Very often the eagle himfelf is found in 

 the foreft. Mountainous, and rocky coun- 

 tries are his delight. On the ledge of fome 

 fteep, prominent rock he builds his eyry, and 

 rears his royal progeny. But when food be- 

 comes fcarce in thofe defolate regions, as it 

 fome times does, he finds it convenient to make 

 an excurfion into the foreil:. Here he hunts 

 the leveret, and the faw^n ; and fcreens his 

 atrocious deeds in the clofeft woods. Wher- 

 ever he is feen, the watchful foreiler endeavours 

 to keep him in fight, till he bring him to the 

 ground. And yet I have heard of a pair of 

 eagles, which took pofi'efiion of a part of the 

 foreft, called King's-wood, where they eluded 

 all the arts of the keeper, and continued their 

 annual depredations, for feveral years. Some- 

 time ago, an eagle was killed, after three 

 difcharges, near Afhley-lodge ; and was ex- 

 tended, like the imperial arms, in the court- 

 room of the king's-houfe at Lyndhurft. 



Of all the feathered inhabitants of the 

 forefl I fliould have thought it's fcenes, in all 

 refpeds, the beft adapted to the rook. Here 

 he might build his habitation ; and rear his 



young. 



