ENDROMWA=:. 5 1 



almost oblong, with the costa faintly curved, apex blunt, hind 

 margin rather straight and oblique ; anal angle rounded off; 

 and dorsal margin gracefully curved ; pale fulvous, with a 

 white tuft at the base ; first transverse line thick, black, 

 rather oblique, edged toward the base with white ; second 

 line also black, slender in the middle, thick toward both 

 margins, strongly elbowed outwardly above the dorsal margin, 

 then curved up and proceeding almost straight to the costa, 

 where it is edged on the outside with white ; between these 

 lines, at the end of the discal cell, is a large oblique black 

 lunule and the central space is also varied with several 

 whitish clouds ; at the anal angle is a wedge-shaped dark 

 chestnut blotch, and above it the hind marginal space is 

 varied with whitish dashes on the nervures ; placed in an 

 oblique series from the apex of the wing are three wedge- 

 shaped pearly white spots ; cilia extremely short, chestnut 

 brown, except where the white streaks on the nervures spread 

 out on the margin. Hind wings rather elongated and some- 

 what squared at the apex, with the hind margin rounded ; 

 bright fulvous, with a distinct, central, transverse, slender, 

 dark brown stripe, much curved in its course ; toward the 

 anterior margin, nearer the base, is a large faintly brown 

 lunule ; outside the transverse stripe on the anterior margin 

 is a dark brown blotch followed by two white spots ; some- 

 times fainter tawny, or even blackish, clouds form a sort of 

 band, parallel with the central stripe, across the wing ; 

 cilia very short, fulvous, sometimes with brown dashes or 

 white clouds. 



Antennge of the female shorter, regularly pectinated with 

 very short teeth, thorax broader, and abdomen much stouter 

 than in the male, the former paler brown, the latter dark 

 brown, much obscured with an abundance of long whitish- 

 brown scales, and having no distinct anal tuft ; fore wings 

 similar in markings to those of the male, but longer, larger 

 and much paler, being of a delicate pale yellowish fulvous, 

 much variegated with whitish clouds, but more tawny at the 



