438 Mr. Roland Trimen on some new species o7 
small, more or less confluent, black ocelli with widely 
blue-clouded white pupils, bounded interiorly by a thin 
creamy-yellow line; along hind margin a rather narrow 
ill-defined whitish border, separated by a brown streak 
from apical pale-creamy stripe; and traversed longitudi- 
nally by another brown streak close to hind-marginal 
edge. Hind wing:—Beyond middle, between second 
subcostal nervule and submedian nervure, a curved 
transverse row of five conspicuous black ocelli, with 
bluish white pupils, in pale fulvous rings; of these 
ocelli the fifth is much smaller than the rest, and often 
bipupillate ; a narrow hind-marginal border of a paler 
brown than the ground colour, traversed by a dark 
brown streak close to hind-marginal edge. Under 
side:—Rather paler, less glossy. Fore wing :—The 
creamy bands whiter—the inner one considerably nayr- 
rowed, its upper portion more irregular, and sometimes 
even interrupted, its lower macular portion with the two 
lower spots very much reduced or obsolete; the inner 
edge of this stripe is defined by a dentate stria darker 
than the ground colour; in discoidal cell, a little beyond 
its middle, a slightly-angulated dark brown transverse 
stria, preceded by a shorter striate marking, sometimes 
broken into two small spots. Hind wing:—A very short 
dark stria (or two small spots) in discoidal cell near 
base; two irregular dark transverse strize from costal to 
submedian nervure,—one before, the other about, middle, 
—of which. the first is exteriorly edged with some 
indistinct whitish scales; outer stria much more 
irregular than the inner; ocelli as above, but their 
pupils smaller, their rings yellow, narrower, and enclosed 
in thin outer rings of dark brown,—and the black 
containing traces of a very thin bluish crescent; two 
additional, rather duller, but similar ocelli near costa, 
before the others; both interiorly and exteriorly the 
ocelli are bounded by some whitish or whitish violaceous 
clouding. 
This fine form of Leptonewra seems to be sufficiently 
distinct from J. Clytus, Linn., to be ranked as a 
separate species. The female still remains unknown 
to me, but, considering how rarely that sex of Clytus 
proper is taken, in comparison with the very numerous 
males, this is perhaps not to be wondered at in the case 
of a form that appears to be very local. The male 
L. Oxylus differs from L. Clytus in the following respects, 
