APPENDIX. 



This species does not appear to be scarce in Tenasserim, as Messrs, Marshall and 

 de Nic6ville report that " Capt. Bingham took the species in the Donat Kauge and Mop l ay 

 in January, at MepJay in January and February* in the Thoungyeen Forests in March and May, 

 and at Houndraw in November; and Li nib org took it at Ahsown, probably in the cold 

 weather," - 



The only example I have seen from the Malay Peninsula is the male specimen here 

 figured, belonging to Dr. J, Anderson, and destined for the collection of the Calcutta Museum. 



Genus C(ELITES (oafisa, p. 45), 

 2. Coelites epiminthia. (Tab. XIX,, fig. 8.) 



Calitw E}>iminthia t Westwood (Doubl. & Hew.), Gen. Diurn* Lep. p. 868, n. 2, note (1851) \ BufcL Cat, Satyr. 

 Brit. Mug. pp, 111, 112 1 1868 1 ; Druce, Proc. Zooh Soc* 1878* p. 839, n. 1. 



Wings above violaceous-blue; anterior wings with the base, costal area, the apes and outer margin 

 pale brown ; posterior wings with the base, costal area and outer margin pale brown. Wings beneath pale 

 brown, a greyish - violaceous fascia crossing both wings near apices of cells, and the apices and outer 

 margins broadly of the same colour; this pale coloration on the anterior wings possesses four or five 

 obscure ocellated spots placed between the nervnles, of which two near the apes are the most prominent ; 

 posterior wings with five ocellated spots placed between the nervules, of which the third is smallest; two 

 narrow dark violaceous submargmal lines to both wings and the margins narrowly of the same colour. 

 Body above pale brown ; body beneath and legs pale brown. 



Exp. wings, 68 to 70 snillim. 



Eab. — Malay Peninsula; Province Wellesley (coll. Diet.). — Sumatra (Bntl.).— Borneo (Weatw, and 

 Bruce). 



Messrs. Marshall and de Nieeville have evidently misunderstood tins species, and not 

 Mr. Butler, as they conclude, t The anterior wings do possess ocellated spots beneath, which 

 Prof. Westwood did not describe — they are some times almost obsolete — and they were found 

 present in ail the Bornean examples which I have examined. 



Genus NE CHINA (to follow C<elites). 



Nearina, Westwood, Gen, Dium. Lep, p. SCO ( 1851 } ; Marsh, & de Nic. Butt. Lid., Burm.& Ceyl, vol. i. p. 138 

 (1882). 



This genus as arranged systematically with other genera of Satyrida belonging to the Malay 

 Peninsula is related to CvlitM, agreeing with that genua in the common characters of having the median 

 nervulea of the anterior wings widely separated, the first and second median ncrvules of the posterior 

 wings having a common origin at apex of cell, and the lower disco-cellular nervule of posterior wings 

 distinctly longer than the upper one. It, however, differs from C'aditcs in having the costal nervure of 

 the anterior wings only dilated in a scarcely perceptible maimer, and the lower disco-cellular nervule 

 of the anterior wings is strongly and concavely bent inwardly towards the lower discoidal nervule* The 

 species of Neorim are also noticeable by their large size and the well- developed caudate prolongation of 

 the posterior wings. 



Neorina t as at present understood, is a small genus, and its species are confined to 

 Continental India and the true Indo-Malayan region. 



* Butt. Ind., Bunn, k CeyL vol i. p. 141. f Ibid. p. 102. 



