GOLDEN EAGLE. 17 
tendance he protracted beyond the natural time by clip- 
ping the wings, and thus retarding the flight of the young 
birds. 
Eagles are said to be very long-lived ; one that died at 
Vienna was stated to have lived in confinement one hun- 
dred and four years. Their voice is sharp and loud, con- 
sisting generally of two notes, repeated many times in 
succession. Two birds of this species kept by Mr. Selby 
“appeared untameable in disposition, their fierceness re- 
maining undiminished through years of confinement. They 
did not exhibit any partiality even for the person who 
constantly attended and fed them, but were as ready to 
attack him as a stranger.” 
In the menagerie at the Gardens of the Zoological So- 
ciety there are two Golden Eagles, and four White-tailed 
Eagles ; but the keepers find the Golden Eagles the most 
tractable of the two species. 
‘Captain Green, of Buckden in Huntingdonshire, has 
now in his possession a splendid specimen of the Golden 
Eagle, which he has himself trained to take hares and 
rabbits.” — Naturalist for May 1837. 
Mr. Thompson has given the following information on 
the authority of a sporting friend. “ When out hunting 
among the Belfast mountains, an Hagle appeared above 
his hounds as they came to fault on the ascent to Devis, 
the highest of the chain. As they came on the scent 
again, and were in full cry, the Eagle for a short time 
kept above them, but at length advanced and carried off 
the hare, when at the distance of from three to four hun- 
dred paces before the hounds.” 
M. Luighi Benoit of Messina has thus referred to the 
habits of the Golden Eagle in Sicily. A pair have been seen 
to hunt in concert for small mammiferous animals in the 
VOL. I. Cc 
