ENGLISH. 17 



allowing her to roam too far from the castle. (Memoirs, vol. i. 

 p. 33.) He died at the age of eighty in 1587, and was buried 

 at Standon, where a noble monument is erected to his memory. 

 In the manor house at Everley there is a portrait of him on 

 panel, painted probably by Marc Gerhardt, from which our 

 frontispiece has been accurately copied by the skill of Mr. W. 

 Griggs. A copy, less successful, is given in Clutterbuck's 

 "History of Hertfordshire," 1827, vol. iii. p. 226. 



20. LATHAM (Symon). Falconry; or the 

 Faulcon's Lure and Cure, etc. [Title as in first 

 edition.] With New and Second Booke. London. 

 Printed by Thomas Harper for John Harrison, 1633. 



sm. 4to. 



Second edition : quite as good as the first, of which it is a 

 reprint without alteration. 



A few years ago I found a copy of this edition, now in the 

 collection of M. Pierre A. Pichot, of Paris, containing the 

 suggestive inscription, " Wm. Crosley, Falconer to Col. Thornton. 

 Dec. 29, 1781." (See No. 57.) 



Smaller and less desirable editions were published in 1653 

 and 1658. 



21. LATHAM (Symon). The Gentleman's Exer- 

 cise, OR Supplement to the Bookes of Faulconry. 

 London, 1662. sm. 4to. 



A much scarcer book than the last named. No copy is to be 

 found in the British Museum. 



22. BERT (Edmund). An approved Treatise of 

 Hawkes and Hawking. Divided into three Bookes. 

 The first teacheth, How to make a short-winged 

 Hawke good, with good conditions. The second, 

 How to reclaime a Hawke from any ill condition. 

 The third teacheth. Cures for all knowne griefes and 

 diseases. By Edmund Bert, Gentleman. [Cut of 

 Hawk, leash, glove, hood, lure, etc.] London. Printed 



