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STRIX

Volume 19 · 113 words · 1810 Edition

the owl; a genus of birds belonging to the order of accipitres. See Ornithology Index.

The bubo, or great-eared owl inhabits inaccessible rocks and desert places, and preys on hares and feathered game. Its appearance in cities was deemed an unlucky omen; Rome itself once underwent a lustration because one of them strayed into the capitol. The ancients had them in the utmost abhorrence; and thought them, like the crows, owls, the messengers of death. Pliny styles it bubo fanbris, and nobilis monsrum.

Solaque culminibus ferali carmine bubo Soe queri et longas in fleum duco voces. Virgil.

Perch’d on the roof, the bird of night complains, In lengthen’d shrieks and dire funeral strains.