96 | THE ENTOMOLOGIST. 
In my next paper I shall treat of Catagramma and its allies, 
which form one of the most beautiful and characteristic groups of 
South American butterflies. 
A LEPIDOPTERIST’S GUIDE TO LYNDHURST. 
By Bernarp Locryer. 
(Continued from p. 78.) 
We will now leave the umbrageous shades of Denny Wood 
(very nearly sacrificed to the woodman’s axe, some years since, 
by the orders of the Government Surveyor, but saved to the 
public through the generous exertions of Lord Henry Scott, of 
Beaulieu), and returning to Lyndhurst, take the easternmost of 
the three roads running south through the cultivated tract round 
the village. We pass Foxleaze Terrace on the right, and at the 
end of the first half mile cross a bit of ornamental water running 
through Foxleaze Park. Just beyond this a lane opens out on 
the left, leading to a broad grassy path (Beechen Lane), having 
on the right Park Ground Inclosure, and on the left Pondhead ; 
both these are inclosed by ditches and wooden palisades, over- 
srown with lichens (the favourite resting-places of Cymatophora 
ridens and various Geometre, &c.) Along the palings is a good 
growth of sallow, wild rose, and other shrubs (the resort in spring 
of Anticlea badiata, A. derwata, &c.), and at the end of the path 
you find yourself in an open tract of forest, extending along 
the north-east boundary of Park Hill Inclosure to Denny Wood, 
and called Park Hill Wood and Botley Field. It was here that, 
in August, 1874, I thrashed out of a beech tree a juvenile larva 
of Acronycta alni. 
Several gates open out of both inclosures. Enter Pondhead 
by the first you come to, which leads straight through the 
inclosure to Park Hill private grounds. Here I have taken 
both the imagines and larvee of Lithosia aureola. The other 
species occurring here are common to most of the older inclosures, 
so I will not further mention them. Returning to the main road, 
follow it down, passing the hamlet of Clay Hill on the left, just 
beyond which you will see the Keeper’s Lodge at the entrance to 
Park Ground (or Jones’s) Inclosure. Opening the gate you 
enter a broad path, lined with oak trees and bushes; on the 
