MONOGRAPH OF THE FALCONIDiE, 
traveller what he has to observe or not in one or other genus with 
respect to their habits, whenever the genus has found its proper 
station according to a natural system. 
At that time we shall admire the infallible order of nature; 
and those men who have guessed and devised these strict iron laws 
of nature, will no longer, in a futile and awkward manner, be vi- 
tuperated and compared with Procrustes. That time will, when 
treed from scientific pedantry, surely with better reason, compare 
with that fabulous giant, those naturalists, who, from the mere 
existence or want of two pairs of muscles on the lower larynx, 
&c., have forcibly torn asunder and mutilated nature by artificial 
sections. 
121-34 
