11 
Inhabits Sierra Leone ; Village of Waterloo. Called Coquetoon, and the pale variety called Grhnme 
(Mr. Whitfield). Brit. Miis. 
The hair is rather paler at the base, of the dorsal streak grey, with a blackish tip. 
There is a male and female in the museum of the Earl of Derby, and a young female in the collection 
of the British Museum, presented by the Earl of Derby. 
M. F. Cuvier's (Mam. Lithog. t. .) figure is the pale variety, which Mr. Whitfield regards as distinct ; 
the separate head in this plate appears to have been taken from the Guevei. 
**** Knees not tufted; ears moderate, rounded; horns short, thick, conical; head with a pale streak on each side over 
the eyes to the base of the horns. 
The Guevei. Cephalop/ius Maxwellu. 
Grey brown or sooty brown ; sides of head and body greyer ; chin, throat, chest and belly whitish 
grey ; abdomen and front of thigh white ; broad streak over each eye to the base of the horns 
yellowish white ; feet and end of nose rather darker ; fur rather rigid ; hair uniform. 
Antilope Maxioellii, H. Smith, G. A. K. iv. 267. — A. pygmea, Pallas, Spic. xii. 18 ? — The Guevei, BulFon, H. N. 
— A. pygmea (^Guevei'), F. Cuv. Mam. Lithog. t. . good. — A. Frederici, Laur. — Sundevall. — A. Philan- 
tomba, Ogilby, Proc. Zool. Soc. 1836, 121 ; 1839, 27. 
Inhabits W. Africa. Brit. Mus. 
This species is known from C. monticola by being larger, by the whiteness of the eye-streak, and of the 
front of the thigh and chest. 
There is an adult male and female of this species in the British Museum ; the male is bright sooty 
brown, darker near the rump; the female is nearly uniform pale grey brown. It is well-figured by M. F. 
Cuvier. 
The NouMETGE or Cape Guevei. Cephalophiis monticola. 
Grey brown ; streak over the eyes, legs and outer part of thighs rufous ; feet grey brown ; chin, 
chest, abdomen, and underside of tail and inside of ears white ; fur soft, grey, with intermixed 
rather rigid black hairs. 
Antilope monticola, Thunb. Stockh. N. H. xxxii. t. 5. — A. ccerulea, H. Smith, G. A. K. v. 855. — Daniell's 
Afr. Scenery, t. . — Harris, W. A. A. t. 26. — A. perpusilla, H. Smith, G. A. K. v. 864. — A. pygmea, 
Licht. Saugth. t. 16. — ^Sundevall. 
Inhabits South Africa. Brit. Mus. 
The colours vary in intensity ; in a female in the British Museum, the rufous colour of the thighs and 
the white of the chest are more distinct than in the male, but this may depend on the season when they were 
killed. 
A very young fawn (perhaps hardly born), which was brought home from the Cape by M. Verreaux, is 
darker, and the reddish tint extends over nearly the whole body. 
Thunberg described the South African species, but says that there is a specimen in the Stockholm 
Museum, brought by Afzelius from Sierra Leone, which agrees with his animal ; so he evidently did not 
observe the difference between the two species. 
The Black-rumped Guevei. Cephalophus melanorheus. Tab. X. 
Grey brown ; throat and sides paler ; rump and upper part of tail black ; chin, chest, abdomen, back 
and front edge of thighs and under part of tail white ; narrow streak over the eyes whitish ; feet 
like the back ; fur soft, pale grey, with intermixed rather rigid black hairs. 
Cephalophus melanorheus, Gray, Ann. and Mag. Nat. Hist. 1846.— C. Philantomba, Gray, Cat. Mam. B. M. 163. 
(not H. Smith.) 
Inhabits Fernando Po (J. Thompson, Esq.). Brit. Mus. 
There are two specimens of this species in the British Museum ; they are easily known by the black 
mark on the rump ; they are coloured like the Guevei from W. Africa, but smaller, and have the soft fur 
and interspersed black hair of the Cape Guevei, C. monticola. 
The Gbisled Guevei. Cephalophus punctulatus . Tab. XI. fig. I. 
Dark fulvous brown ; sides and legs rather paler ; narrow streak over the eyes and inside of ears 
pale brown ; chin, throat, chest, belly and front of thighs and under part of tail white ; hair grey 
at the base, with brown ends and yellow subterminal rings ; crown and upper part of tail darker ; 
feet pale, varied. 
