ENGLISH. 43 



pp. 55-60, and part iv, pp. 213-222), collected from various, 

 sources, with facsimile woodcuts from Turbervile (No. 15). 



76. LACROIX (Paul). Manners, Customs, and 



Dress during the Middle Ages. London. 1877. 



4to. 



A translation from the French (which see) with full-page illu- 

 minated plates, and engravings from early MSS., a chapter being 

 devoted to Falconry (pp. 195-212). 



'J']. HARTING (J. E.). The Ornithology of 

 Shakespeare, critically examined, explained and illus- 

 trated. London, John Van Voorst. 1871. Svo. 



Contains a chapter on "Hawks and Hawking" (pp. 49-82), 

 explaining the Hawking terms used by Shakespeare, with illus- 

 trations from other authors, and some curious statistics con- 

 cerning the prices paid for hawks, and the practice of the art in 

 the 1 6th century. The frontispiece represents Shakespeare with 

 a falcon on his glove, drawn by J. Wolf, the only portrait of 

 Shakespeare with a hawk. 



78. HARTING (J. E.). The article "Falconry," 

 revised, in Stonehenge's " Rural Sports." Fifteenth 

 edition. London. 1880. 8vo. 



79. HARTING (J. E.). Essays on Sport and 

 Natural History. London, Horace Cox. 1883. 8vo. 



Contains chapters on Hunting and Hawking, the Boke of 

 St. Albans, Hawking as taught by the Boke, Taking Passage 

 Hawks in Holland, How to Train a Passage Hawk, and a 

 review of an Arabic Treatise on Hawking. 



80. HARTING (J. E.). Hints on the Manage- 

 ment OF Hawks. London, Horace Cox. 1884. 8vo. 



The various steps to be taken in taming, training, feeding, 

 and flying hawks are detailed from personal knowledge, and from 



