HARE-LIPPED MONKEY. 
cantly called *' Systematic Natural History," 
has egrcgiously erred respe6ling this animal. 
He lias copied BuiFon's figure, as we have 
done, of the Malbrouck, under the name of 
the Hare-Lipped Monkey ; and then, which 
we have been careful not to do, has given, as 
a synonime, the Macaque of BufFon, and de- 
scribed that African animal, instead of the 
Asiatic Malbrouck represented.. So that, in 
£:i€tj he has neither figured the Macaque, 
which he has described ; nor described the 
Malbrouck, which he has figured. Nor is 
this the only error into which Dr. Shaw has 
on this occasion fallen ; for he confounds the 
Cynomologus and Cynocephalus of Linnaeus, 
in a manner which we should not have ex- 
pcdied where the writer seems so particularly 
boastful of his scientific arrangement* 
Pennant, who has, as we apprehend, very 
innocently led Dr. Shaw into these mistakes, 
on mentioning the Malbrouck as a variety of 
the Macaque, makes the following ingenious 
remarks — • 
Le Malbrouck of M. De BufFon," says 
he. 
