H AW 
and of {mall ae although he had been honoured with 
itinguithed literary characters. 
earance as an 
pry of the death of the at Bate: Dr. Goldfmith, vba 
in {pite of the remonftrances a Mr. Hawes, had taken 
r, which produced a Solent 
Hawes, therefore, publifhe 
Goldfmith’s illnefs, fo far as relates 
James’s powders, together with Remarks on the Ufe 
Abufe of pawerful Mediciues in the DeRenes of acute 
an had tranflated 
to the exhibition of 
inftitution in the ay ep which he had the fatisfaétion of 
n 1775, inthe formation of the Royal 
a 64 became the ie on, 
h Dr. i pee 
d to their 
i d, if. the means 
prematur 
reputation and efleem, and was induced to ‘relinquifh 
; and in the year a a he ob 
ele& 
HAWICK, i in Geogr. ial town in 
= county of Roxburgh, Scolds was “gr a of tnd 
‘re town during t thraldom 0 d is feated 
at the confi eat the Teviot. 
"sige lord ; and had 
fs, ‘dois oe 
Ww: 
invelts the inhabitants or burgeffes with t 
cleGting two bailiffs, and two reprefentatives of each of the 
and two annual. fairs, oe 
st black cattle. A neat to been 
magiftrates have fepatied the town with —_ by 
uthor was in 1774, on the oc- A 
and. 
oN of the firft ¢: ~ 
: (ef 
7 the diferent feafone when they 
HAW 
ae 
feized by Wm. Penge 
tary co onfine ment. 
land, vol. viii..; alfo Chalmers 
175.) 
HAWK, in 1 Ornithology. See Fatco 
The hawk makes _ —_* of a vis tiielae art, called: 
s’s Caledonia, vol. ii, Pr 11 Sr 
p- 
| hawking, o 
"Natalie dings abet moe a number and divifion of the 
mo sa ead e diftribution is that inte 
long- eet and a aeaeaeed wks. 
o the long-winged, hich may be alfo called the j<tcon 
esis belong the falcon, haggard-falcon, pee Icon, od Rect 
a bby, faker, merlin, and bawler ; all which % 
anned, fed, and mewed, much after the rane ieateke 0 
f 
the fe thore-rwinieed re or hawks properly fo called, are the 
ree and rant rrow 
The 
much arg 
in ~— of the fparrow-hawk, 
mufket 3 and that of the lanner, /azne. 
The hawk has different names, cn aatieg to their differ. 
ent ages. year fhe is called a /oarage ; the fecond, 
an inferview 5 the third, a white hawh ; 3 es fourth, a bandh 
br aiff, rae: 
are eae Thofe taken in 
mile es 3 thofe which, had for- 
aces not far off, by the old 
r them- 
fle fear bac thofe whick have changed their pigtaces 
“i — ag os : . ie — lived at 
rge, and preyed for themfelves. about the woods, Aag- 
gar. Be For the fj cles awks lesiteily iifed te 
a art of hoodia we refer to the articles Faico and Fax- 
o HAWKING. 
Add, t 
accord! Ing to " 
CONRY. 
-The Englith o rare a thought thefe birds worthy of 
its protection : r Ces gs out of any man’s ground, 
is anes b if ne ora year and aday, and by a 
at the king’s will; one half to him, and half to the owner 
of the ground. Stat. 11 Hen. VIL eap. 17.) Stealing 
hawks, in difobedience to the rules prefcribed by the fat. 
37 Edw. I11. cap. 19. is felony, 3 Init. 98. See Fat- 
CONRY- 
Hawk, Make, in Falconry, a name given to an old ftaunch 
hawk, which being ufed to fly, will eae a young one to. 
fi 
witha hs wwn-aoeedsy i in Bot 
Hawk-weed, Traiteng, crovked-feeded. 
‘Hawk-weed; Woolly. b See rereee 4 , 
See Hit RACIUM. 
See Hyosenis. — 
Haws-nth, 
