S4f LEONINE MONKEY. 
To the Baboons succeed the Monkies, properly 
so called : they have commonly a pair of pouches 
in the lower jaw, for the temporary reception of 
their food ; a circumstance which occurs also in 
some of the Baboons. Their tails are long, and, 
in most species, a bare or callous space appears on 
each side the tail 
MONKIES. 
LEONINE MONKEY. 
Simla Leonina. S, caudata harhata ntgray harha amplissima al- 
hiday caudee pr^elongce apice fioccoso, natihiis cahns. 
Black Monkey, with callosities behind, very large whitish beard, 
and very long tufted tail. 
Guenon a criniere. Buff', suppl. y. p. Si, pr. 22. 
This species was described from the living ani- 
mal in the possession of the Due de Bouillon; and 
was in the Royal Menagerie at Versailles, in the 
year 1775. Its length was two teet,. from nose 
to tail, and it was eighteen inches high when 
standing on all-fours. The legs were long in 
proportion to the body : the face naked and quite 
black: the whole body and limbs of the same co- 
lour; the hair, though long, appearing short, on 
account of its lying smooth : around the face, ac- 
cording to Buffon's figure, is a fine long chevelure 
of grey-brown hair, and a large beard of fair grey. 
