104 Analytical Notices of Books. 
of London. This fresh example of the Emberiza calcarata of M. Tem- 
minck was taken by a bird-catcher, in September, 1828, in the vicinity 
of London, and its plumage so nearly corresponds with the description 
given by Mr. Selby, at page 158 of the volume of the Transactions re- 
ferred to, as to make any additional remarks unnecessary. 
I have the honour to be, 
Your obedient humble Servant, 
Joun GouLp. 
33, Bruton Street. 
Art. XXIII. Analytical Notices of Books. 
A Descriptive Catalogue of the Lepidopterous Insects contained in the ° 
Museum of the Honourable East India Company, illustrated by co- 
loured Figures of new Species, and of the Metamorphosis of Indian 
Lepidoptera, §c. By Tuomas Horsrretp, M.D., F.R.S., L.S., 
and G.S., §c. Ato., Parts I. and II. 
In a previous notice of this important Work, in which we confined 
ourselves to an analytical exposition of the views advanced by Dr. Hors- 
field in his Introductory Remarks, we gave an outline of the general 
arrangement of the Lepidoptera propounded by the authour, enume- 
rated the tribes into which he regarded the order as naturally divisibie, 
and explained the characters of each of the stirpes composing the first 
tribe, that of Papilionide. Having been induced by the novel and in- 
teresting nature of the views which we had then to notice to extend our 
analysis to a greater length than usual, we were compelled to defer that 
portion of it which contained the commencement of the descriptions of 
the genera and species of Lepidopterous Insects deposited in the East 
India Company’s Collection. The Second Part of the Descriptive Ca- 
talogue having now appeared, we resume our analysis at the point where 
our previous notice terminated. 
