London: John James Audubon. Hand-colored etching with aquatint and line-engraving by Robert Havell, Jr., after a watercolor from nature by Audubon. Sheet: (38 1/8 x 25 inches). The Great Horned Owl from the first edition of Audubon's "The Birds of America." "The flight of the Great Horned Owl is elevated, rapid, and graceful. It sails with apparent ease, and in large circles, in the manner of an eagle, rises and descends without the least difficulty, by merely inclining its wings or its tail, as it passes through the air. Now and then, it glides silently close over the earth, with incomparable velocity, and drops, as if shot dead, on the prey beneath. At other times, it suddenly alights on the top of a fence-stake or a dead stump, shakes its feathers, arranges them, and utters a shriek so horrid that the woods around echo to its dismal sound." - Audubon The nocturnal Great Horned Owl, named after the angular horn-like feather tufts on its head and known for its deep hoot and…