BLUES. 



mentioned it. It has not been reported from 

 the Isle of Man, but has boen taken in Scot- 

 land. Dr. Buchanan White says it has been 

 taken once, by Mr. D. P. Morison, near Pit- 

 lochrie in Perthshire. In England its range 

 is extensive, but, apparently from the cause 

 above stated, capricious. 



Carubridgeshi re. It occurs in several places 

 F. Bond. 



Cheshire. Delamere Forest Noah Green- 

 ing. 



Devonshire. Torquay, Teignmouth, Bovey 

 Tracy, Axminster J. J. Reading. 



Dorsetshire. Parley Heath in plenty, 

 Blandford racecourse, Portland amongst 

 rocks there is no heath near J. G. Dak. 



Durham. Very common at Darlington 

 J. Sang. 



Essex. Very common on a piece of dry 

 ground along the side of the road near High 

 Beech W. J. Argent; the late Edward 

 Doubleday, R. Mendola, and many others 

 have taken ^Egon at this place. 



Glamorganshire. Scarce at Llantrissant 

 Evan John. 



Gloucestershire. Rare at Clifton A. E. 

 Hudd. 



Hampshire. Portsdown W. Buckler; 

 New Forest F. Bond; Woolmer Forest 

 G. G. Barrett ; common but local about 

 Ringwood G. B. Corbin; Sheep Wash, near 

 Petersfield Henry Moncreaff. 



Herefordshire. Ascent of the Black Moun- 

 tain and elsewhere E. Newman. 



Huntingdon. Monk's Wood and other 

 woods F. Bond. 



Kent. Tunbridge Wells Common, tolerably 

 plentiful G. H. Raynor ; swarming near 

 Frant Forest, Tunbridge Wells //. Ramsay 

 Cox; Darent and Birch Woods IF, Machin; 

 abundant on all the chalk downs of the coast 

 district W. 0. Hammond. 



Lancashire. Near Manchester R. S. 

 Eddleston ; common on Chat Moss, South 

 Lancashire. It used formerly to occur on Sol- 

 wick Moss, near Preston 7. B. Ilodgkinson. 



Lincolnshire. Occurs in the county T. 

 II. AUis. 



Middlesex. Scratch Wood F. Bond. 



Monmouthshire. Common atCastle-v-Bwcli 

 George Lock. 



Norfolk. Stratton Strawless G. G. Bar- 

 rett. 



Northamptonshire. Barnwell Wold F. 

 Bond ; near Towcester Hamlet Clark. 



Somersetshire. Brockley, &c. A. E. Hudd. 



Staffordshire. Very rareatWolverhampton 

 F. E. Morris. 



Suffolk. Hemingfleet Heath W. M. 

 Cromfoot ; Sudbury W. D. King. 



Surrey. Hindhead, Witley, Milford C. 

 G. Barrett. 



Sussex. Rogate Common W. Buckler. 



Warwickshire. Coleshill Park and neigh- 

 bourhood ; also Sutton Park F. Enoch ; 

 Rugby G. B. Longstaff. 



Westmoreland. Witherslack,FarawayMoss 

 J. B. Hodgkinson. 



Wight, Isle of. Hampstead, near Yar- 

 mouth F. Bond; Newport Alfred Owen; 

 taken in marshy places in the island ; per- 

 haps common, but local James Pristo. 



Obs. As in the instance of the Marsh 

 Ringlet, at page 97, a preliminary note seems 

 desirable in introducing the butterfly which 

 stands next on my list. To this butterfly the 

 names of Medon, Agestis, Idas, Artaxerxes, 

 and Salmacis, have been successively applied : 

 the first, second, and third of these names 

 appear to be strictly synonymous ; the fourth 

 and fifth were given under the apprehension 

 that the phases or races so named were speci- 

 fically distinct, not only from that which was 

 originally named Medon, but also from each 

 other. At the risk of being considered tedious 

 I will enter a little more into detail. First, 

 the butterfly figured by Esper as Mcdon, in 

 1777, appears identical with that figured by 

 Lewin as Idas, in 1795; and I believe that 

 the figure of Agestis in Hubner represents the 

 same insect. This, which I take as the type, is 

 almost ubiquitous in Gi eat Britain. Secondly, 

 the Hesperia Artaxerxes of Fabricius is identi- 

 cal with the Papilio Artaxerxes of Lewin and 

 Haworth, and is a Scotch insect very different 

 in appearance from Medon. And. thirdly, the 

 PohfommalnsSalmacis of Stephens, a butterfly 



