110 LEPIDOPTERA INDICA. 
only found in low, hot valleys at 1000 to 8000 feet elevation, from May to November. 
I took it near the Tista Bridge in August, and noticed that its flight and appearance 
were similar to those of an Ypthima.” 
Genus RAGADIA. 
Ragadia, Westwood, Genera of D. Lep, ii. p. 376 (1851). Butler, Catal. Satyr., B. M. p. 158 (1868). 
Marshall and de Nicéville, Butt. of India, ete. i. p. 234 (1883). Distant, Rhop. Malay. p. 420 
(1886). 
Imaco.—Male. Forewing subtriangular ; costa much arched, apex rounded, 
exterior margin oblique ; costal vein much swollen at the base; cell long, broad ; 
first subcostal emitted before end of the cell; discocellulars very concave ; upper 
radial from slight angle close to subcostal, lower radial from above the middle of 
discocellular; median veinlets very wide apart. Hindwing rather short ; exterior 
margin very convex and slightly uneven; precostal very short ; costal vein much 
curved at the base ; subcostal almost straight, its lower branch emitted at half 
length of the wing ; cell extremely short and acute, the radial emitted from below 
subcostal at about one-third between its base and its branch; upper discocellular 
short, emitted from close to base of subcostal and extending sharply ward, the 
lower discocellular being very acutely bent outward and joining the median vein 
before the origin of its lower branch, the lower discocellular being developed along 
the underside into a narrow elongated glandular pouch, and on the upperside is fur- 
nished with a small tuft of fine long hairs which he along it. Body slender; palpi 
moderately long, clothed in front with rather short hairs, apex slender ; eyes nearly 
naked ; antenuze with a slender gradually formed club. 
Type.—R. Crisia. 
Hasirs.—Capt. Godfrey, who captured &. Crisia in the Malay Peninsula, de- 
seribes it as being ‘found in low undergrowth in the forest, where, especially in the 
early morning, it was several times met with. Its flight beine weak and feeble, but 
it cleverly eludes pursuit by threading its way through the tangled brushwood ” 
(Distant, Rhop. Malay. p. 421). 
RAGADIA CRISILDA (Plate 120, figs. 1, la, b, 2). 
Ragadia Crisilda, Hewitson, Exotic, Butt. iii, Rag. pl. figs. 5,6, 2 (1862). Marshall and de Nicé- 
ville, Butt. of India, ete. i, p. 235, pl. 15, fig. 36, 9 (1883). 
Imaco.—Male.—Upperside dull brownish-black ; cilia cmereous-brown, ore- 
wing crossed by an oblique discal white vein-intersected band, also by the two inner 
and the submarginal band of the underside showing through by semi-transparency. 
Hindwing crossed by an oblique discal and a curved submarginal white band, the 
basal bands and the marginal of the underside also visible. Underside brownish- 
