The eagle had succeeded in catching what looks like a fox, but perhaps because the prey was too big, perhaps because it struggled too much, the animal managed to escape. The bird has twisted around on itself to watch as the fox plummets into the icy water. A couple of feathers, dislodged in the struggle, float slowly down. Snow piled on the branches of the pine-tree has been shaken off by the disturbance and falls down like a waterfall, adding to the strong sense of movement pervading the picture.
The painting depicts a scene from nature during the winter season when all animals find it hard to survive. Zeshin (1807-91) lived and worked during the period of the Meiji Restoration, and perhaps the harsh struggle seen here serves as an allegory of the upheavals Japan was undergoing as it opened its doors fully to the West.
The signature is all but hidden within the black ink of the cliff; it reads 'Zeshin'. The seal beneath reads 'Tairyūkyo'.