like England, occasionally visited by the young birds. Out of Europe, the Atlas range o f mountains
in North Africa is one of its places of abode, while in the East it frequents the great ranges of the
Himalayas, and doubtless the Steppes o f Tartary ; for it is probably the “ Bear-coot ” so frequently spoken
o f by Atkinson, as standing a t the tents o f the wandering Kirghises and other tribes of that country. Mr.
Gurney has no doubt that it also frequents all the countries of North America that are favourable to its
habits, from Labrador to Texas, but believes that it is never found on the Pacific side of that continent.-
• The powers of flight o f this king o f British birds are commensurate with its large size and ample wings.
It may often be seen in fine weather sailing to a vast height toward the blue vault of heaven, apparently
for no other purpose than that o f pleasure ; and its evolutions are graceful and majestic while thus engaged ;
a t other times it may be observed hunting the hill-side in couples and in concert, one flying directly over
their intended prey, and the other following near the grouud ; and it has been known to stoop and carry
off a hare from before the hounds. Such is the alarm its presence creates, that the swift-flying Golden
Plover and the fleet Mountain-Hare appear as if spell-bound when overshadowed by the wino-s of their
terrible enemy. I t preys alike upon Grouse, black game, Curlews, Partridges, and Plovers among birds,
to which may be added the flesh o f hares, rabbits, lambs, fawns, moles, and carrion o f all kinds, particularly
stranded sheep, fatally struck deer, &c. ; and I see no reason for doubting the possibility or probability
o f its occasionally pouncing upon and carrying off a sleeping infant or shepherd’s child, if left
unprotected on the hill-side : many such occurrences have been recorded, and doubtless some of them are
founded in truth. Lord Hill informs me, on the authority o f the shepherds on his fine estate in Ross-shire,
that the Golden Eagle, while hunting the hill-side, will frequently swoop down upon a lamb, playfully take
it up in its talons, and drop it again, and. then another and another, apparently trifling with its victim after the
manner o f a cat with a mouse. The shepherds also assert that it occasionally takes the lambs over to the
smaller islands between the mainland and Skye ; and as no sheep are kept on those islands, there can be no
doubt that the lambs occasionally found there are thus conveyed thither.
The situations selected by the Golden Eagle for the purposes o f nidification are very varied : sometimes a
bold precipitous overhanging rock is selected ; at others merely an escarpment on the hill-side, where,
without any great amount of prowess or trouble on the p art o f the collector, the nest may be robbed
of its eggs or young ; a t other times, and doubtless formerly more frequently than at present, the large
stump or forked branch of a towering tree is chosen for the site of its large plateau o f sticks, branches of
heather, and other materials, the centre being usually formed o f finer substances, such as wool, moss, fern-
grass, and tufts of Luzula syhatica. I f left unmolested, the birds frequently resort to the same eyrie for
years, annually adding fresh materials, until at length, like the huge structures o f their representative the
Wedge-tailed Eagle o f Australia, the nests become of gigantic dimensions. The eggs, mostly two and
sometimes three in number, vary considerably in their markings, some being o f a nearly uniform dull
white, while others are most beautifully blotched and clouded with grey and brown over a light stone-
coloured ground. To give a minute description o f any one egg would answer no good end, they are so
variable ; the reader will find some splendid varieties figured in Mr. Hewitson’s fine work on the eggs o f our
native birds, and in the ‘ Ootheca Wolleyana.’ Those who take especial interest in British oology should
endeavour to gain access to the collection formed by the late Mr. John Wolley, which was bequeathed
by him to Alfred Newton, Esq., and contains a very large series o f the eggs o f this species. Besides
varying so much in colour, the eggs also differ considerably in size and shape ; Mr. Alfred Newton informs
me that the largest egg in his collection measures 3*23 inches by 2-59, and the smallest 2-85 by 2-16.
When first hatched, the eaglets are covered with white down, in which state they remain for a considerable
period, day by day increasing in strength and stature ; brown stub feathers next begin to appear in their
wings and tail ; and if the eggs have been hatched about the usual time the end of April, the summer has
far advanced before they have gained sufficient power to exercise their pinions.
The young, during the first two years o f their existence, present a marked difference from the adult in the
colouring of the tail, the basal three-fourths o f its length being white, and the apical fourth o f a rich brown,
which has obtained for the bird the trivial name o f the Ring-tailed Eagle. As they increase in age, thè
white gradually darkens into the hue o f the tip ; and when fully adult, the tail is o f a uniform dark brown,
except at the base, where it is marbled with grey.
The female, as is usual with birds of prey, is by far the largest, often attaining a weight o f fourteen pounds.
When adult, the whole o f the body and wings are o f a dark rich vinous brown ; the lanceolate feathers
clothing the head and neck rich golden brown ; farsi, which are covered with feathers to the toes, greyish
white ; tail the same as the body, except a t the base, where it is grey marbled with brown ; hill horn-colour ;
cere and toes yellow ; irides brown.
The front figure o f the Plate represents the bird about one-third o f the size of life, taken from an example
about three or four years old.