50 THE CANADIA N ENTOMOLOGIST. 



relatively as broad as in Cybele. It is of a deeper fulvous than any except 

 Liliana, which it resembles in this respect as well as in size and shape of 

 wings. Liliana shows a very narrow belt, so encroached on by the 

 unusually large silver spots as to be reduced more than one-half in 

 width. 



Satyrus Paul us. 



Male. — Expands nearly 2 inches. 



Upper side blackish-brown, color of Ncphele ; both wings have a faint 

 submarginal black line; on primaries two small black ocelli, the upper 

 one with white central dot ; fringes brown, on secondaries darker at the 

 ends of the nervules. Under side of primaries brown, yellow-tinted, of 

 secondaries more decidedly colored by yellow ; both wings have the hind 

 margins edged with black, just within which is a parallel black line ; a 

 little beyond, a second line or fine stripe, not quite parallel to the margin 

 on primaries, and irregularly crenated on secondaries ; across disk of 

 primaries a sinuous dark stripe ; the basal half of the wing, above median, 

 finely streaked with dark brown ; the costal margin sprinkled with same, 

 grayish at apex ; the ocelli repeated, but greatly enlarged, with ochraceous 

 rings and small white pupils ; in one example these ocelli are of nearly 

 equal size, but in the other the lower one is obsolescent, represented by 

 a brown dot in a small pale brown spot ; across the disk of secondaries 

 an irregularly sinuous and partly angular black stripe, and another less 

 distinct near base, the two forming the outlines of a broad band ; the 

 whole wing streaked and sprinkled with dark brown, but the streaks are 

 extremely fine and almost obsolete j color from base to outer edge of the 

 band yellow-brown, but beyond the band clouded with gray ; the ocelli 

 are from three to six in the two examples examined, in pairs of three in 

 the one case, a tolerably large one forming the middle of each, the others 

 minute, one or two obsolescent ; in the other example the ocellus on 

 second median interspace is distinct and pupilled, but the other two are 

 obsolescent. 



Female. — Expands 2 inches. 



Paler, with the extra-discal area a shade lighter j on this are the two 

 ocelli, the upper one large, with white pupil, the other medium, without 

 pupil, each in pale yellow ring. Under side brown, with a yellow tint and 

 suffused with whitish-gray, largely over the extra-discal area of each wing; 

 all the markings distinct ; primaries more heavily streaked than in male, 



