SATYRINAE: SATYRODES EURYDICE. 193 



SATYRODES EURYDICE.— The eyed brown. 



[The eyod In-own ((rossc): Hoisdiival's butterfly (Ilurris); teii-spotted quakcr butterfly 



(Miiynanl).] 



Papilio eurydice Liiiii.-Joliaiiss., Amoen. Dehis canthus Ilorr. -Schaeff., Corresp. 



acatl., vi: 406 (1763). zool.-niin. ver. Regensb., xix: 72 (1865). 



Argus enrydice Scudd., Syst. rev. Ani6r. Fararge canthus But!., Catal. Satyr. Brit, 



butt., 6 (1872). mu.s., 12.3 (1868). 



Satijrodes eurydice Scudd., Bull. Butt', soc. Euptychia canthus Kirb., Syn. catal. Lep., 



iiat. sc, ii: 24;^ (187.5); Butt., Hj^.s. 19, 36, 120 55 (1871). 



(1881). Satyrodes canthus [Smith], Bull. Brookl. 



Papilio canthus Linn., Syst. nat., 12th ed., ent. soc, vi : 119 (1884). 



ii: 768(1767). Satyrus cantheics God., Encycl. ni6th., ix: 



Affjus canthus Scop., Introd. hist, nat., 432 465, 493-494 (1819). 



(1777). Neonympha cantheus Morr., Catal. Lep. 



Satyrus canthus God., Eucycl. ni6th.,ix: N. Ainer., 10 (1800). 



465, 493 (1819); — Boi.sd.-LcO., L(5p. Am6r. Jlipparchia transmontana Gosse, Cau. 



sept., pi. 60, figs. 1-4 (18.33). nat., 247 (1840). 



Xeonymaha canthus Westw.-IIewits., Gen. Hipparchia boisduvalii Harr., Ins. inj . veg., 



diurn. Lep., ii: 375 (1851) ;— Morr., Syn. 3d ed., 305-306, fig. 128 (1862). 



Lep. N. Amer., 74-75 (1862) ;— Edw., Can. eut., Pararye boisduvalii Edw., Syn. N. Anier, 



XV : 64-69 (1883) ; xvii : 112 (1885) ;— Fern., Butt. butt., 26 (1871). 

 Me., 70-72 (1884) ; —French, Butt. east.U. S., 



232-234 (1886) ;— Mayn., Butt. N. E., 5-6, pj. 1, Figured by Glover, 111. X. A, Lep. pi. 35, fig. 



figs.'e, 6a(1886). 5, ined. 



Creature of air and light, 

 Emblem of that which may not fade or die, 



"Wilt thou not speed thy flight. 

 To chase the south-wind through the glowing sky? 

 YlEMxtis.— Butterfly resting on a Skull. 



Imago (1 : 10 ; 11 : 5). Head covered with brown and gray-brown hairs, with a few 

 white ones outside of and behind the antennae, tlie liinder margin of the eyes bordered, 

 broadly in the middle and below, uarroAvly above, witli wliite scales. Palpi silvery, 

 slightly clouded, wliite externally excepting on the apical joint; above fringed lightly 

 with pale brownish on tlie free poi'tion ; beneatli fringed with dirty white on the first 

 joint, on the second with brownish and blackish fuliginous, pale on the basal half inter- 

 nally, apical joint blackish brown throughout, tipped considerably with white, and 

 with a fewAvhite scales beneath. Antennae dull luteous beneath, above blackish, tinged 

 with reddish luteous on the basal joints, interrupted broadly with white at the base of 

 each joint and slightly touched with white on either side; on the club the white be- 

 comes rather faint and the black brownish, excepting on the terminal three or four 

 joints, which are wholly luteous; beneath the four or five joints previous to these are 

 infuscated; tongue luteous at base, beyond more and more infuscated. 



Thorax covered above with gray-broAvn hairs, tinged slightly Avith olivaceous ; be- 

 neath with very pale brown hairs. Fore legs covered with slightly darker hairs ; 

 other femora covered with pearly grey scales, tinged slightly above and more strong- 

 ly near apex with pale bufi'; tibiae and tarsi dull buff-brown ; spurs dusky, reddish at 

 tip, mostly concealed by pale brown scales; spines dull luteous; claws testaceous, 

 more dusky toward tip ; pad blackish. 



Wings above soft mouse brown on the basal half of the wing, beyond paler, con- 

 siderably so in the $ . Fore wings having the darker portion of the wing limited, at 

 least in the upper half, by a bent line which extends in a slightly concave curve from 

 the subcostal nervure. about midway between the last two divarications, to about the 

 middle of the upper median nervule ; is then bent inward at about a right angle and 



