86 ITS HABITS MISUNDERSTOOD. 
“ The owl shriek’d at thy birth, an evil sign.” 
: Hoy VE Pak WU Ack es Se 
While upon any other occasion its presence was supposed 
to predict a death, or at least some dire mishap :— 
“ The screech-owl, screeching loud, 
Puts the wretch, that lies in woe, 
In remembrance of a shroud.” 
Midsummer Nights Dream, Act v. Sc, 2. 
When Richard III. is irritated by the ill-news showered 
thick upon him, he interrupts the third messenger with— 
“Out on ye, owls! nothing but songs of death ?” 
Richard IIT. Act iv. Se. 4. 
It is curious how wide-spread is the superstition regard- 
ing certain birds, and particularly the owl. Even amongst 
the Land Dayaks of Borneo, the owl is considered a bird 
of ill omen. Mr. Spenser St. John, in his “ Life in the 
Forests of the Far East,” observes with regard to omens 
(vol. i, p. 202) :— 
“If a man be going om a war expedition, and has a slip 
during his first day’s journey, he must return to his village, 
especially if by the accident blood be drawn, for then, 
should he proceed, he has no prospect but wounds or 
death. If the accident occur during a long expedition, 
he must return to his last night’s resting place. In some 
tribes, if a deer cry near a party who are setting out on 
