1889.] W. Doberty — Oeiiain hjceenidse from Lower Tenasserim. 433 



71. Nacadtjba viola, Horsf. 

 Mergui, Myitta. 



72. Nacadtjba dana, de Nice, (? = almora, Dvnce). 

 Myitta. 



73. Lampides iELiANUs, Fab. 

 Mergui, Myitta. 



74. Lampides subdita, Moore. 

 Mergui, Myitta. 



75. Lampides bochus. Cram. 



I am not aware of any difference between Jamides and Lampides, 

 and think it likely that the former genus will have to fall before the 

 latter, which occurs earlier in Hiibner. It is to be hoped that no more 

 species of this genus will be described without an examination of the 

 prehensores, which are fortunately of great diversity in the different 

 kinds, as if to counterbalance their puzzling similarity in colours and 

 markings. 



76. PoLYOMMATDS BjiTicus, Linnseus. 

 Myitta. 



77. Takucus plinius. Fab. 

 Mergui. 



78. EVEEES UMBRIEL, n. sp., PI. XXIII, Fig. 1. 



Male, above black, the cilia of the hindwing and of the lower 

 angle of the forewing whitish, except at the ends of the veins. Below 

 grey-white (much whiter than in in E. kola) with the following blackish 

 markings, the discal ones quadrate. Foreioing with a streak across the 

 end of the cell, a broad straight transverse discal band, inwardly dis- 

 located below the middle median, the lower part outwardly oblique, 

 outer margin widely dark, containing an inner lunular and an outer 

 slender whitish fascia. Hindwinc/ with a large subcostal, a smaller 

 cellular and a minute abdominal spot all near the base, a streak across 

 the end of the cell, and a broad discal transverse band broken into four 

 quadrate masses of which only the upper two touch each other, the 

 first covering two spaces, the second (strongly dislocated outwardly) 

 three, and the third (nearer the base, oblique), two ; the fourth being 

 a small lunule between the submedian and the internal veins. Outer 

 margin broadly dark, containing a row of whitish lunules (the subanal 

 one orange) suiTOunding black spots of which the two subanal ones are 

 touched with metallic green. A whitish submarginal and a black 

 marginal line, both very slender, the cilia and the tip of the tail white. 



The broad, unbroken, quadrate discal bands of the underside easily 

 distinguish this peculiar species from Everes Jcala, de Niceville, which 

 has rows of round black spots instead. E. kala has somewhat the aspect 



