PLATE CLII. 29 



iimilar inftance fince that time. In the Plates of Roefel, vol. 4, a 

 Figure of the Caterpillar is given, but without either Pupa or Moth, 

 fo that vrere it not for the reference and authority of Linnaeus, and 

 fince his time, of Fabricius, it would fcarcely be known to what 

 Infe6l it belonged. The eggs we have not found either figured of 

 defcribed, though they are fo very fmgularly united together, and 

 would certainly have been noticed by the ingenious Roefel if he had 

 met with them. 



The Antennae of the female are fetaceous, or like a brifile, but 

 that part of the male is both fingular and beautiful ; it is elegantly 

 feathered next the bafe, and tejrnjinates in a bridle, like the female. 



PLATE 



