48 
FALCONIDiE. 
“ Among the first [perennial birds] may be reckoned the Hawks, of 
which we have several sorts : the Marlions, Spar-hawks, Hobbies, and, 
in some places, the Lannards. In the reign of Elizabeth, the Cornish 
and Devonshire gentlemen employed a great deal of their time in hatch- 
ing, nurturing, and instructing them to fly at the Partridge. In Corn- 
wall at present, this tedious science, which consumes so much of life 
for so little an end, is now no more, but still exists, it seems, in a 
neighbouring island ; for being at Trerice (the seat of the present Lord 
Arundell of Trerice), August 25, 1738, I saw a Hawk, which being 
overpowered by a Crow, fell near a man at his labour in the field, who 
perceiving the Hawk quite spent, brought it into the house to a gentle- 
man then steward to his Lordship. The Hawk was armed, as usual, 
with silver plates on its legs and neck ; and Mr. Church (so the steward 
was called) perceiving an inscription engraved, quickly discovered the 
name of an Irish gentleman, and the place he lived at ; upon this he 
took great care of the Hawk, and wrote immediately to the gentleman. 
The bird was a favourite, and the gentleman sent a servant from Ire- 
land into Cornwall on purpose to fetch it.” p. 242. 
In a letter from John Past on, Esquire, to the Knight of the same 
name, written at Norwich, in 1472 — in the reign of Edward IY. — it 
is remarked, after a most urgent appeal for a Hawk of any kind rather 
than none, being sent him from Calais : — “ If I have not an Hawk, I 
shall wax fat for default of labour, and dead for default of company, 
by my troth.”* 
In the autumn and winter I have met with the peregrine fal- 
con in Ireland, far from its native rocks, and have little doubt 
that the young birds of the year generally migrate. Kisso men- 
tions it as a bird of passage to the South of Europe, appearing in 
the autumn and departing in the spring.]* About the marine 
cliffs at Navarino, I saw this species on the 29th April, 1841, and 
believed it to be breeding there. { 
* Fenn’s Original Letters, &c., vol. 2, p. 111. 
f Vol. 3, p. 26, edit. 1826. See Savi’s Ornitologia Toscana, vol. 1, p. 41. 
+ As Pennant, in treating of the Lanner, remarks, “ this species breeds in Ireland,” 
and Bewick repeats the words, it is perhaps requisite to state, that the true Falco 
lanarius, Linn., has never to my knowledge occurred in this country. The bird called 
lanner by Pennant, is now considered to be the peregrine falcon at a certain age. 
There can be little doubt that the “ Goshawk” of more than one of our Irish lists is 
also this species. It is the only English name applied to “Falco per egrinus” in M‘ 
Skimmin’s History of Carrickfergus. We learn also, from two exCellentcontribu- 
