~ 
— it is called tru ing. 
(me is called cnposcman At The 
“HAW 
: Jt of a bird the hawk preys on, is called the inke.. What 
the hawk Jeaves.of her prey is called the pill, or pelf. 
re are alfo proper terms for her feveral aétions. When 
fhe flutters with her wings, as if ftriving to get away, either 
from perch or filt, fhe is faid to bate. When ftandi 
anding too 
Wh eezes, it is 
called /niting. When fhe raifes and thakes herfelf, the is faid 
to roufe. When after mantling fhe croffes her wings together 
over her back, fhe is faid to warble. 
When a hawk feizes, fhe is faid to bind. When, after 
feizing, fhe pulls off the feathers, fhe is faid to plume. When 
fhe raifes a fowl aloft, and at length defcends with it to the 
When, being aloft, fhe de- 
cends to ftrike her prey, it is called /foopin en fhe 
flies out too. far from the the i is faid to abl When, 
is called cancelicring. . When fhe hits the prey, yet does not 
trufs it, it is Sails ruff. he makin ng a hawk tame and 
‘bringin 
mpany, manning her. n old ftaunch hawk, ufed to fly 
and fet vee Se = young one, is called am 
“according to the ge: and condition of the bird to be ma- 
naged. An eye/s, e.g. needs no reclaiming; fhe is to be 
carefully nurfed aiid teougnn up in her natural tamenefs. 
A be ancher, foar-hawk, or ramage-hawk, needs no_nurf- 
ing 5 3 the is to be brought down from her wildnefs, and ha- 
eaated to another courfe of life ;:and in purfuance o' 
a intereits, fhe is to be made fubje&t to thofe 
 Toreclaim, ¢¢. ahi d-fale h ith fhut- . 
Se Ta oe on, they begin wi 62 
the ght, by pulling a over 
oye and fixing her by a creanfe, which makes her more 
h 
The next thing is to handle her ae uk her i 
“ me ta “ al ces that 
rte often ftroaking her, ierting her ont 
& her about; wabooding, and prefently imalieg her again; 
, toa come grad 
_it, ahd catting it ane your head, &c. and if fhe comes to it 
the lure about your head, 
* fimall iquaron, were oe 
H A W 
‘and this for eight or nine days, witha ever faerng her | 
All the while fhe i is to be kept fharp fet, hen soe be free 
quently fed with a little at a time, unhooding her for the 
purpofe ; and, when unhooded, the voice is to be co@tina- 
ally ufed a her, that fle may learn it ; and that the ring 
of the voice eH A yeeros put her in hopes of being fed. 
This do o be inv a to come from the perch to 
the fit, by unilriking her hood, fhewing her fome meat, 
ufing the voice, and calling - till fhe come to it, -and feed 
thereon. If = fill vefutey keep her fharp fet, till the will 
dually fatther and fobs off to pe lure, waving 
roundly, reward her; in three or four days more call her to 
mes lure, <e garnifhed as above, as far as it is poflible 
for her to or hear you; and fet her loofe from all her 
fuisbraes 
The hawk thus manned, reclaimed, and lured, you may 
go with her into the fields, and while her off your fit, 
to fee whether the will take out, or not: if fhe mount and 
y round you in circles, as a good hawk ought to do, after 
two or three turns call to her on your voice, and fling out 
and upon her ein or comin. 
to it, give her a chicken, or pigeon, and let her kill and fee 
reon. Being thus far initiated, as her firft ftones every 
evening, to prepare her body for caftings ; and then Caftings, 
to cleanfe and fcour her body, and make her eager. The 
courfe conor till the have endewed and muted enough 
enter upon bufinefs. i 
If the beineke be intended for fome particular fort of game, 
mblance of that fort of game; and make 
a practice of ficiactay as and rewarding her thereon, 
i ; calling her, when feeding, 
to the lure. Add, that it may be pro- 
per to feed her in fuch forts of places as thofe her game is 
chiefly to be found in. sia 
To enter a hawk, be convenient to tdke a well- 
hawk, and tet Ser ftoop a fowl, on brook or plaflx; 
this done, reward, hood, ; the 
hawk, fa bow-fhot up the wind, loofe st Sokal 
foftly vhiitle her off the fift, till the have so 0 or muted; 
into the wind, and when 4h 
t her 
is at a proper hight, let go: a fowl for her to ftoop and 
See Farconr 
HAWKINS, 2 acer in Biograply, a fncceféfol nasal 
commander, was. at: Pl ‘1520. ' While very 
he feveral ni Spain, Portugal, and the 
Canaries, a ' obfervant ndvery in intelligent 
he acquired a fund of k 
rer “He is isch ae 
igh feveral 
of Guinea, where, Maasggs) by money; but 
© of three hundred 
fo far from its being regarded 
manity, he even bore the se cio neh 
