80 THE ENTOMOLOGIST. 
bicuspis and Phoxopteryx siculana have been taken, both in the 
Chart and in Wildernesse Park. All these, and many others, 
inhabit this wood, and should be taken in their respective 
seasons. 
Leaving Mr. Saxby’s corner for the village of Seal we come 
upon a fine old fence; this fence is often a great consolation to 
the entomologist on a windy day, and should at all times be 
looked over: it encloses Wildernesse Park, which is not open to 
“the collector. Many good moths have been found upon these 
palings: we hear of ten Cymatophora fluctuosa in one day; 
Notodonta chaonia, N. dodonea, N. trepida, Stauropus fagi, 
Boarmia roboraria, B. consortaria, Cleora lichenaria, Phycis 
abietella, Chrosis Audownana, Carpocapsa grossana, Stigmonota 
punceticostana, S. Weirana, Coccyx splendidulana, Catoptria 
Juliana, &e. 
In a short time, on going down the road, we come up to Mr. R. 
White’s ‘‘ Yeoman Inn,” in Seal, and I have no doubt we shail 
only be too glad to avail ourselves of a rest. Another mile’s walk 
and we reach the “ Bat-and-Ball” Station of the Chatham and 
Dover Railway, whence we may return to town; or by the Tub’s 
Hill Station, to which we came. 
I think I have sketched the locality for the reader in such a 
manner that he has but to loiter to be happy. What I have. 
missed or not told him, he will have the pleasure of finding for 
himself; neither have I treated of the many woods and heaths on 
the other side of Sevenoaks: that is but a pleasure deferred. 
As I said at the commencement, Seal ought to have been the 
title of this article: it is the natural headquarters for all the 
places I have described, and within an easy walk of any of them. 
IT have to thank Mr. Hedle for kindly giving me the value of 
his experience of some twenty years, during which he has collected 
over this ground. 
Royal Aquarium, Westminster, March, 1880. 
NOTES ON THE RHOPALOCERA OF NATAL. 
By A. J. Sprcuer. 
(Concluded from p. 58.) 
Amblypodia is a genus allied to the European Thecla, and is 
represented by some four species, the largest and handsomest of 
