432 INSECTS. [Caar. XII. 
meta Oramervi, Westw.; E. Templetonti, Westw.; and 
Cryptothelea consorta, Temp. 
All the other tribes of minute Lepitoptera have abun- 
dant representatives in Ceylon; some of them most 
attractive from the great beauty of their markings and 
colouring. The curious little split-winged moth (Ptero- 
phorus) is frequently seen in the cinnamon gardens and 
in the vicinity of the fort, hid from the noon-day heat 
among the cool grass shaded by the coco-nut topes. 
Three species have been captured, all characterised by 
the same singular feature of having the wings fan-like, 
separated nearly their entire length into detached sec- 
tions, resembling feathers in the pinions of a bird 
expanded for flight. 
Homoptera. Cicada.— Of the Homoptera, the one 
which will most frequently arrest attention is the cicada, 
which, resting high up on the bark of a tree, makes the 
forest re-echo with a long-sustained noise so curiously 
resembling that of a cutler’s wheel that the creature 
producing it has acquired the highly-appropriate name 
of the “ knife-grinder.” 
CICADA—" THE ENIFE-GRINDER.” 
In the jungle which adjoined the grounds attached 
to my official residence at Kandy, the shrubs were fre- 
quented by an insect covered profusely with a snow-white 
powder, arranged in delicate filaments that curl like 
