16 



left 011 the field of battle." He was laid (two days after) in tlie šame 

 grave " with several of his friends wlio fell on that bloody day, and 

 a simple monument in the burial-ground at Ferozepore, erected bv 

 the Prince to the memory of his faithful physician and beloved 

 companion, records his tragic fate, and marks his joumey's utmost 

 bourn*." 



ScHizoRHiNA Bassii. (PI. XLI. fig. 8.) 



This fine species, described in the 'Annals and Mag. of Nat. 

 History' (vol. xx. p. 264), is figured here. The genus Bassia was 

 not named after Mr. G. Bass. 



ScHizoRHiNA (Hemipharis ?) Emilia. (PI. XLI. fig. 9.) 



S. {H. ?) nitida, subgracilis, subparallela, ceneo-viridis, thoraeis 

 linea laf.erali, maculisąue duabus postice aurantiacis (^aliquando 

 subobsoletis), elijtrisųue singulis lineatim punctatis, aurantiaco 

 maculatis aut plagiatis. 



Animalculura hoc pulchrum, Febr. 2ndo, a. d. 1856, die nat. de- 

 scriptum, Emilise Jalland, fihse fratris mei, dicatum est. 



Head rather closely punetured, very shghtly notched in front, 

 above distinctly punetured. Thorax indistinctly punetured, except 

 before the hind angles, shaped much as in //. insularis, of a highly 

 polished but obscure brassy green, thickened margiu of thorax in 

 front yellow, the yellow continuous (beyond the middle of the edge) 

 on the inner side ; thorax on each side with a narrow irregularly- 

 edged yellow line, almost parallel with the edge, and truncated and 

 somewhat dilated behind ; before the posterior thoracic lobe are two 

 small triaugular yellowspots. Scutelluni yellow; margins, especially 

 at the apex, green ; each elytron is irregularly margined with yellow 

 on the sides at the base, and there are six to eight irregular yellow 

 marks, one before the apex somewhat transverse ; sides of meso- and 

 metathorax yellow ; sides of abdomen with three yellow spots ; 

 pygidium with two yellow marks nearly coveiing it, and divided by a 

 pear-shaped green spot, or green extended so as to leave only four 

 small yellow spots ; tibise and tarsi tinted with purplish ; base of 

 anterior femora and cox8e rufous. This species quite connects the 

 subgenera Hemipharis and Diaphonia, and shows the accuracy of the 

 views of that leamed entomologist Dr. Schaum. The two specimens 

 are females, and have short lamellse to the antennse. 



Hab. New Hebrides (Aneiteum). Collected by Mr. John Mac- 

 gillivray, the able naturalist to H. M. S. 'Herald.' 



ScHizoRHiNA (Hemipharis) Id^. (PI. XLI. fig. 7.) 

 S. (H.) grandis, fusculo-nigra, capitis vertice, thorace supra, elytris 

 a basi, usque ultra medium, pygidio, mesothoracis lateribus, meta- 

 thorace femoribus posticis infra flavescenti-brunneis. 

 S. (H.) Broivnii valde affinis et forsan varietas geographica. Di- 



* 'Travels in Ceylon and Continental India,' translated from the Gernian. 

 Edinburgh, 1848. A very grapbic work, consisting of the letters chiefly of that 

 talented man, who fell at Ferozeshah. 



