g) 
Remarks on New or Interesting Lepidoptera. 339 
Westw., and to P. mahadeva, Moore. Rich brown, showing 
scattered gold spangles under a iens. Fore-wings with a white 
spot, scarcely visible above, at the end of the cell; hind margins 
spotted with white or cream-colour, and with a sub-marginal row 
of conical spots of the same colour, nearly as in pollua, towards the 
hinder angle, sometimes shading into buff. Hind-wings with the 
incisions white, an outer row of five white, greenish white, or 
buff angles, preceded by an incomplete one at the tip, and a small 
one at the anal angle. Within this is a row of six large conical 
greenish white spots, about twice as long as broad, and more or 
less excavated at the base; preceeded towards the costa by two 
smaller and somewhat irregular spots, one above another. Under 
side similar but pale, and the outer row of spots rather larger. 
This species cannot be confounded with polluaw, which it resembles 
in the fore-wings, because the markings of the hind-wings are so dis- 
similar. From P. palephates and P. mahadeva, which it resembles 
on the hind-wings, the markings of the fore-wings will at once 
separate it. It was received in a collection from Madras, but Mr. F. 
Moore supposes that the real locality is probably British Burmah. 
P. tibullus, W. F. Kirb. or merope, Cram., var. ?—Male like that 
of merope ; but hind-wings with a broad continuous black band 
across the centre, instead of a row of spots, connected with the 
black hind margin (the incisions are cream-colour), by short 
black bands and streaks, leaving only a series of long cream- 
coloured spots on the outside. Female like that of P. brutus 
(hippocoon, Fabr.), but with no white spot at the tip of the 
fore- wings, and with much narrower dark borders, more distinctly 
spotted with white to the hind-wings. A pair from Zanzibar. 
I have seen several specimens of the male, but only one female. 
Entheus Marshalli, W. F. Kirb—Expands two inches, or a 
little less; allied to vitrews, Cram., but with rather longer and 
more pointed wings. Wings dark brown, yellowish green at the 
base, with vitreous longitudinal stripes and spots. Fore-wings 
with three stripes running nearly from the base three-quarters 
across the wing, followed by a transverse row of six spots across 
the tip of the wing, of which the three lower ones are smaller 
than the others. The first stripe is simple, and almost connected 
with the second at the base; the second is shorter, but is con- 
nected with a small one above it, which extends as far as the 
Scien. Proc., R.D.S. Vou. 1, Pt, v. DB IND: 
