hii 
8. On the British Species of Agathidium. By Mr. D. Sharp. 
4, Observations on some remarkable Varieties of Sterrha sacraria, 
with General Notes on Variation in Lepidoptera. By Mr. M‘Lachlan. 
_5. Description of Papilio Godeffroyi. By Mr. G. Semper. 
6. New Genera and Species of Gallerucide. By Mr. Baly. 
7. Descriptions of new Hesperide. By Mr. Hewitson. 
8. Longicornia Malayana, Part 3. By Mr. Pascoe. 
9. Descriptions of new or little known Genera and Species of 
Exotic Trichoptera; with Observations on certain Species described 
by Mr. Walker. By Mr. M‘Lachlan. 
10. List of the Longicornia collected by the late Mr. P. Bouchard, 
at Santa Marta. By Mr. Pascoe. : 
11. Catalogue of Buprestide collected by the late M. Mouhot, in 
Siam, &c., with Descriptions of new Species. By Mr. Edward 
Saunders. 
11. Notes on some Hymenopterous Insects collected by Mr. Peckolt 
at Catagallo, South Brazil. By Mr. Frederick Smith. 
12. Notes on the Butterflies of Mauritius. By Mr. Trimen. 
18. New Genera and Species of Psocidee. By Mr. M‘Lachlan. 
The various objects, moreover, exhibited at our Meetings, and the 
observations to which they have given rise—which, thanks to our 
very excellent Secretary, Mr. Dunning, are carefully reported in our 
-*Proceedings’—have been both numerous and interesting. I trust, 
however, that I shall not be exceeding my duties as President, if I 
point out that the attention of our Members seems to be almost ex- 
clusively devoted to Systematic Entomology, and I cannot help 
wishing that we more frequently received communications relating to 
the anatomieal and physiological departments of our Science. 
Nevertheless our Members have been anything but idle during the 
past year, and our own publications can by no means be taken as a 
measure of their activity, for the ‘Proceedings of the Zoological 
Society, the ‘ Zoologist,’ the ‘Entomologist,’ the ‘ Entomologist’s 
Monthly Magazine,’ and Mr. Stainton’s ‘ Entomologist’s Annual’ 
contain many papers contributed by Members of our Society. 
With the exception of a paper of my own, to which our late 
President referred in terms too complimentary on the occasion of his 
last Annual Address, the Number of the Linnean ‘ Transactions’ for 
1866 contains no entomological matter. ‘The ‘ Proceedings’ are, on 
