SATYRINZ. 99 
with a slightly paler inner line. Forewing with a subapical obtusely-oval black 
ocellus, bipupilled with bluish-white and narrowly ringed with dark reddish-ochreous. 
Hindwing with a small subanal round ocellus with single pupil. Underside paler. 
Forewing with the discal area suffused with chestnut-brown ; ocellus prominent, ringed 
with pale ochreous; apical border and upper area of ocellus thickly covered with 
cinerescent strige ; submarginal and conjoined discal dusky-brown line prominent. 
Hindwing uniformly covered with dull cinerescent mostly-confluent strigze; crossed 
by a discal undulated sinuous slender brown line, and a less-defined submarginal 
line ; two perfectly formed prominent subanal ocelli of nearly equal size, each with 
a single pupil and pale ochreous ring, above which are four inner submarginal 
cinereous-white ocelloid-dots, which latter are sometimes replaced by well-developed 
minute ocelli. 
Female. Upperside somewhat paler; ocellus on forewing larger. Underside 
as in the male, except that the ocellus on forewing is also larger. 
Expanse, ¢ 2 to 2,%,  2;% to 2° inches. 
Hasirat.—Western Himalayas. 
Distinguishable from C. Annada by the shorter and more convex apex of the 
forewing, and on the underside of the hindwing by the more uniformly disposed 
and duller strigz, the sinuous discal line being slender and uniform in width 
throughout its course across the wing, and by the prominent well-formed subanal 
ocelli. 
Our illustrations of this species on Plate 116, figs. 1, la, represent the male and 
female specimens of C. Nada. 
Disrripution.—This species ‘‘is very common in the Western Himalayas, 
throughout the outer ranges, at moderate elevations from May to September” 
(Butt. of India, 247). Colonel A. M. Lang found it ‘‘ very abundant in Middle and 
Upper Kunawur, in June and July, frequenting hot, dry hill-sides ’’ (MS. Notes). 
We possess specimens from Col. Lang, and both sexes obtained by Major H. B. 
Hellard at Simla and Masuri, in June and October ; from Kulu by Mr. J. H. Hocking, 
and from the Jumna Valley, 5000 to 6000 feet, in September, by Major J. W. 
Yerbury. Mr. W. Doherty obtained it in ‘* Kumaon generally, at from 6000 to 
9000 feet elevation” (J. A. 8S. Bengal, 1886, 119). Specimens from Naini Tal, 
6500 feet, taken by Col. A. M. Lang in May, 1887, and from the Kulu Valley, 5000 
feet, taken by Mr. de Nicéville, are in Mr. G. F. Hampson’s Collection. In Mr, 
J. H. Leech’s Collection are examples taken at Sultanpur in Kulu by Mr. A. Graham 
Young ; others also from Sultanpur taken in September, by Mr. McArthur, from 
Ramband 2000 feet, taken in May, 1889, from Narkunda, taken in April, and from 
Chamba Valley, taken in September by Mr. McArthur. 
02 
