= ae : waw 
for forgery : 9a and 10 W:. C 2D Hawkers Ruling e pened of his reign. This work was 
ithou itor was remunerated w a the large fum of 6000 poun: nds, 
The'aéts relating to A kers‘do not eee to makers of He then became ia STR Os and died in the year 
c 
to the venders of Hooké and new{papers. (9 aie OW. cap. 
24. Zand 4 Anne, cap. 4. 29 G. II. c. 26.) “But haw- a Boe man and fcho 2 
k HAWKING, the art or exercife of chafing and taking 
wild fowls, by means of hawks, or birds of pre 
Hawking is the fame thing with what we otherwife call 
falconry 5 3 which fee. 
fale, any tea, or ipirituons liquors, though with a Ber. 
mit, under the penalty of having the fam Bia 
imprifonment and profecution of the offender (9G 
nd if fi k or F hi r 
hal Et iar is "hep oft ogn fate hawker, Sc a - The word Aawsing, “in ‘its latitude, alfo includes -the 
Tanne Mall be forfeited ‘onetbex with all the goods in his taming ni: “difciplinneg of hawks, and fitting them for the 
pack ; and he fhall be adjudged to have forfeited his eens fport. 
(7 Geo. III. cap. 43.) No hawker fhall expofe goods Hawking, though an ie now much difufed amon 
to fale in any part of a market town, but the public market- "%» comparifon of what it anciently was, does yet furni 
place : nor fhall he fell any goods, by auétion, on pain of 2 great variety of fignificant ce which h fill obtain in our 
language. Thus the parts of a hawk have their proper 
Se woe BENG nace te Geography, aniflandin ames. The legs, from the thigh to the foot, are called 
an arm of the Pacific ocean, difcovered by Vancouver ; 33 arms ; the toes, the peity Singles ; the claws, the F the 
es. longs 3 = from four to 10 Broad. N. lat. 53° 36%. The wings are called the fails ; the long feathers thereof, the 
‘WwW. long. 2 * 4". beams ; the two longeft, the principal feathers 3 the next 
peek ae s River, a river of New South Wales, thereto, the flags. The tail is called the train; the breait- 
‘that runs into Broken bay. feathers, the mails ; thofe behind the thigh, the pendant fea- 
AWKESBURY Townfbip, a townthip in the county of thers. When the feathers are not yet full grown, fhe is faid 
to be unfummed; when they are complete, fhe is fum iummed. 
ae Ppber Canada, on the Ottawa river, adjoining The craw, or crop, is called the gorge. The pi pipe next the 
at AW KESWORTH, Joun, in arg Ay, was born at fundament, where the farces are drawn down, is called the 
rin Kent, in the yeari7i5 5,and to the trade of ‘, panel ; the flimy fubftance lying in the panel, is called the 
‘€ 
‘the = part his youth in the office of an attorney. By beak ; the nether part, the clap; the yellow part between 
Tig ows palecta RE hited himielf for literary. occupations, | the bak and ~ —. the fear, or feer ; the two {mali holes 
and in 1744 he became fucceffor to Dr. Johnfon, in c ompil- , therein, the ra 
ing the parliamentary debates for the Gentleman’s Magazine. As to her Riis the leathers, with bells buttoned on 
‘For this he wrote many pieces of poetry, during feveral “a her legs, are called Aewits. The leathern thong, weg’ 
_ eeffive years, under the fignature of H. Greville. In 1752 he the falconer holds the hawk, is called the /ea/ or hea, 
embarked in a periodical work under’ or of “ The Ad- little fraps, by which the leafe is faftened to the leg j fs ; 
venturer,” which was continued to the 140th number, one and a line or packthread faftened to the leafe, in difcipiming 
half of the papers being of his own compofition. Thefeeffays her, acreanfe. A cover for her head to keep her in 
were well received by the public, and highly merited the fuc-’ is called a ood: alarge wide hood, open behind, to be ote 
cefs pecgbisrs they obtained by the purity of their morals, the ele- at firlt, is called a rufier hood: to draw the ftrings, that A 
-gance of their critical difquifitions, and the knowledge they hood may be in readinefs to be pulled off, is called unfriking 
difplayed of life and manners. The papers which have moft the hood. The blinding a hawk juft taken, by runnin ke 
_ generally been admired, are thofe containing eaftern tales, or thread through her eye-lids, and thus draw ing them ever t 
ead af domettic life, i in the former of which is exhibited a eyes, to prepare her for being hooded, is ca 
imagination, fi re or Sapo a a fowl, made of leather and fe: 
= sion erring a lnpemeny conferred on he au- her fe Ace fall oe come seas the fe 
tho: Somethin given to a hawk, to deeale — 
otic cafting. Small ‘feathers given her to 
“ help t 
a alfo t im the Seite pieces: entitled bes A ie an oratorio 5 3 ie | sagt = flomach, is calieda rel Her throwing 
ar and . mmeline,”’ entertainment the gorge after ona is cabled sar 
« A Fairy Tale,’ a very elegant fancy a In 1761 he The eee Sof her e, &c. enfeam A being * on 
pu entes S Lee rg fhe inferting a. fat in her be, * 
«« Almoran and Hamet,” which poffeffes much merit as a lieu of a eh ms one, is called imping. Lhe giving 
“romance of the erou and ignited d clafs. He edited the © irr Bae if fowl to pull at,, is ring 
5 
ue 4to. ‘adorned with charts, maps, and views, and the © 
Leer 
im 
i 
