superior wings cinereous, with a dark patch on the disc ; in- 

 ferior gray, with yellowish cilia. 



July, Darenth Wood and Camberwell, 



2. Panzerella Do7i. 3. pi. 106. f. 4. 



Expansion 15 lines. " Long, narrow. Anterior wings pale 

 clay colour, with a dark streak down the middle, and a few 

 minute spots of the same colour near the apex. Posterior 

 wings almost ti-ansparent, bluish, fringe very deep, of a clay 

 colour. End of autumn 1794, among some high grass and 

 water plants in the vicinity of Hampstead." Doji. Brit. Ins. 



3. saturatella»S/'g'/). "Expansion 6i lines. All the wings and 



cilia, with the head, thorax, and body, pale ochreous brown, 

 immaculate and glossy. Found in Darenth Wood in June." 

 Step. III. 



4. lutarella iy?7Z>. ? Tin. pi. 25. f. 168. Expansion 7| lines. 



Grayish-fuscous, head white, thorax and superior wings 

 pale brown, cilia darker, with a fuscous dot on the disc. 

 This does not very well agree with Mr. Stephens's de- 

 scription : " Anterior wings pale, tawny-luteous, and to- 

 tally immaculate; cilia rather pale: posterior wings and 

 cilia fuscous." 

 Taken in Coombe Wood the beginning of June. 



5. lunaris Haw. — Cwt. Brit. Ent. pi. 543 S • 



Fuscous; antennas white at the base, the remainder annu- 

 lated, forehead white : thorax orange, the centre castaneous : 

 superior wings ochreous-orange, with a broad and darker 

 fimbria, centre yellow, costa fuscous, a triangular blackish spot 

 near the middle of the interior margin, with a smaller and 

 more obscure one obliquely attached to its apex, both concave 

 externally: inferior wings pale grey, tarsi annulaled with white. 



Common near Chelsea on old shady pales and rails: in such 

 situations I have generally met with it the middle of June, es- 

 pecially in the Regent's Park; it rests in a very singular man- 

 ner, with its head bent close down and its wings projecting 

 obliquely, as if the head were buried in the wood. This I take 

 to be the type of the genus, and the insect named by the late Mr. 

 Haworth T.fusco-cmrella, which appears to be the T. unitella 

 o^ Hub., I think I have observed standing in the same attitude. 



6. Lambdella Do7i. v. 2. 7;/. 57.^. 1. 



Expansion 7 lines. Fuscous; superior wings ochreous- 

 orange, costa dusky, with a brown triangular spot near the 

 centre of the interior margin and an ovate one on the disc, 

 uniting obliquely with the former one, both edged with white 

 inside. Similar to No, 5 but larger. 



In July 1 789 the late Mr. Bentley discovered a brood in a 

 Furze-bush on Epping Forest. 



The Plant is Antirrhinum Elatitie (Sharp-pointed Toad- 

 flax), communicated by N. B. Ward, Esq. 



