148 SHAKESPEARE’S [ HAZEL. 
pores be opened. And when the pores be so opened, she 
smiteth and flappeth her wings, and in so doing the old 
feathers leap out, and new grow; and so the new feathers 
make her in better state and the more able to flight. And 
two kinds there be of such fowls: for some be tame, and 
some be wild. And he that is tame taketh wild fowls, and 
taketh them to his lord ; and he that is wild taketh tame 
fowls. And this goshawk is of a. disdainous kind; for if 
she fail by any hap of the prey that she reseth to, that day 
uneath she cometh to her lord’s hand. And they be borne 
on the left hand, that they may somewhat take of the right 
hand, and be fed therewith. 
Bartholomew (Berthelet), bk. xii. § 2., where also are various 
directions for keeping and feeding hawks, for which see 
also Markham’s ‘* Husbandry,” etc. 
We find in falconry: 16 kinds of Hawks or fowls that 
prey. Of which the Circos (which is lame and limpeth of 
one leg) was held in ancient time for the luckiest augury 
in case of weddings and of cattle. In general, Hawks are 
divided into sundry and distinct kinds by their greediness 
more or less. Hollana’s Pliny, bk. x. ch. viii. 
Tue Hawk holds beneath its talons all night a bird that 
fortune offers it at night-time, but when the sun rises the 
Hawk even though hungry lets the bird fly away, and if 
he meets it at some other time, does not pursue it. 
Hortus Sanitatis, bk. iii, § 4. 
Hazel. 
Taminc oF THE SHREW, ii, I, 255. 
V. Filbert. 
Heart’s-ease. 
Romeo anv JuLieT, iv. 5 (not of the plant). 
[A writer in the Saturday Review (March 24, 1894) says that 
“‘ Heart’s-ease”’ is properly the name of the wall-flower, but he 
gives no authority for the statement.] 
® 
Vv. Pansy. 
ry 
