NOTES ON DEILEPHILA EUPHORBIA. 369 



Sp. 29. Eut. politus. Fern. Viridis, antennis fuscis basi 

 viridibus, pedibus Jiavo-fulvis, femor'ibus viridibus, alls 

 hyalinis. 



Laete viridis, fere glaber : caput thorace vix latius : oculi ocellique 

 rufo-fusci : antennae fuscae, corporis dimidio breviores ; articuli 

 l us . et 2 US . virides : thorax crassus, hujus familiae plerisque laevior, 

 antice utrinque aeneo-viridis : abdomen fere laeve, thorace longius 

 et paullo angustius, subtus non angulatum ; discus cupreo-viridis : 

 pedes flavo-fulvi ; coxae et femora viridia, hae apice flava ; tarsi 

 apice fusci ; protarsi fulvi : alae hyalinse ; squamulae fulvae, nervi 

 flavi ; stigma minimum. (Corp. long. § lin. ; alar. 1| lin.) 



August ; on grass in fields ; near London. 



Sp. 30. Eut. vagans. Fem. JEneus, antennis pedibusque 

 fuscis, alis subhyalinis. 



iEneus, ad Amblymerum propter articulo 3°. parvo antennas pro- 

 pinquus : caput postice viride, thorace paullo latius : oculi ocel- 

 lique rufo-fusci: antennae pallide fuscae, corporis dimidio longiores; 

 clava obscurior ; articulus l us . flavus ; 3 US . et sequentes ad 6 ura . 

 fulvi : metathorax viridi-aeneus : abdomen thorace paullo longius 

 et latius, subtus viridi-seneum non angulatum : pedes pallide 

 fusci ; coxae aeneae ; tibiae apice tarsique helva, hi apice pallide 

 fusci ; protibiae et protarsi fulva : alae subhyalinae ; squamula?. 

 fuscae ; nervi pallide fulvi ; stigma obscurius, minutum. (Corp. 

 long. | lin. ; alar, f lin. 



Far. [3. — Caput et metathorax omnino viridia : antennae articulis 3°- 

 ad G um . pallide fuscis. 



July ; on grass in fields ; near London. June ; Isle of Wight. 



Art. XXXIV. — Notes on Tieilephila Euphorbia. (See 

 Plates VIII. and IX.) 



Gentle Reader, — Turn with us to the beautiful plates 

 of Deilephila Euphorbice, the present of our valued friend, 

 Mr. Raddon. Our friend, we imagine, has no great partiality 

 for the pen ; for with so prolific a subject, one which would 

 have elicited from some of our modern entomologists abstruse 

 disquisitions on system, physiology, and metamorphosis, Mr. 



NO. IV. VOL. II. 3 B 



