16 DIURNAL LEPIDOPTERA. 



central orange spot. Posterior wing with the anal angle acute : a large orange spot near the 

 apex. 



Underside lustrous white, irrorated throughout with minute black dots. Both wings 

 crossed near the middle by a nearly straight ill-defined band slightly tinted with lilac, and 

 bordered below by a waved black line : commencing near the apex of the anterior wing and 

 ending below the middle of the abdominal fold, sometimes continuous, sometimes broken where 

 the wings meet. Posterior wing with a second very indistinct broken band beyond the middle. 

 Both wings with a line of minute black spots near the outer margin. 



Exp. 1t% inch. 



In the Collection of W. C. Hewitson, from North India. 



The male of Anops Bulls very nearly resembles the dark females of A, Thetys : it may be 

 always readily known from the numerous varieties of A. Thetys not only by the peculiar form 

 of its wings, but also by the position of the transverse band of the underside, which is nearer 

 the apex of the anterior wing, and crosses the posterior wing at the end of the cell and in a line 

 with the disco-cellular nervures. 



Genus BEUDQRIX, Hewitson. 



AphnvEUs, part., Doubleday. 

 Dipsas, part., Westwood. 



Head large ; eyes large and prominent, hirsute, the space between them occupied by some 

 bright colour. Palpi squamose, smooth ; the terminal joint in the male very short, slender 

 (much longer in the female) . Antenna long, distinctly clubbed ; the club long (less distinct in 

 the female) . Body very robust, densely covered v ith long hair. 



Anterior wing triangular; costal margin straight or slightly curved, apex acute; outer 

 margin slightly curved outwards from the apex to the middle inwards near the anal angle. 

 Costal ncrvurc extending to beyond the middle of the margin; the subcostal nervure with 

 three branches, two before the end of the cell, the third at a distance from the apex ; the 

 discoidal cell long, closed by the disco-cellular nervules in a straight line, — the first obsolete, 

 the second and third of nearly equal length, joining the third branch of the median nervure a 

 little beyond its base ; the upper discoidal nervure leaves the subcostal before the end of the 

 discoidal cell. 



Posterior wing with one tail (with the exception of D. Timoleon, which has two) ; the anal 

 angle with a large and conspicuous lobe ; the costal nervure continued to the apex of the wing ; 



