70 
IS’^orthainptonslnrc. I do not remember taldiig any T. orhona or 
T. suhscqua whilst I -was away from home, except one orhona at East 
Dereham, I^orfolk. On looking over my captures some time after- 
wards, I was delighted to find that one supposed orhona is really 
suhsequa. I feel quite sure that I took it in September, at sugar, in 
Sparham, mistaking it for T. orhona, but there is just the possibility 
that I reared it from a Yardley Chase pupa. I feel sure, hoAvever, 
that I never did in my life rear any of the Trijilicence, except 
(several years ago) a iQv: promiha and one Jimhria. 
I had but one specimen of T. suhsequa in my collection, and have 
since taken one other in Eamnor AYood in the Eew Forest, in 
September, 1879. 
Euphorbia esula in Norfolk. There is in Sparham a large 
bed of this plant covering several yards of a hedge bank. I have 
known it here (by sight, though not by name) for about thirty 
years past. Last June I gathered a bit and identified it. I have 
no reason to think it has been introduced to Sparham, unless by 
accident with other seeds, in the course of fanning operations. 
Pachyprotasis L.EVICOLLIS. On the 6th of June, 1879, at 
Hockering, Mr. IT. Howard, who was with me, bottled for me a 
beautiful fly, which Mr. Eridgman identihed by the aboam name 
and considered it a good “find.” 
On the 23rd of June, 1879, in Sparham, I found three larvie of 
Porthesia chnjsorrliea feeding on a blackthorn fence. I reared 
them all. 
Ortiiagoriscus mola (The Short Sunfisii). On the 19th of 
November, 1879, on the Salthouse Marsh, Mr. J. H. Gurney, jun. 
and I noticed the remains of a large fish which jnizzled us, until 
the fisherman w'ho Avas with us described it as a “ Sunfisb,” and 
said it Avas about “five feet six inches deep across the tAvo 
flippers,” and not so long from head to tail. We saAv the mouth 
and one eye, but the fish had been boiled and mauled so 'that it 
Avas difficult to recognise it. Brett, the captor, told me he found it 
Avashed ashore on the 31st of last month, that he rove a lino 
through a hole which he cut in one of the flippers, and toAved the 
fish behind his boat, but that as soon as he set sail the sunfish 
revived and pulled the boat round once or tAvice, much to the 
consternation of another man Avho Avas in the boat at the time. 
From Avhat I saAv and heard I am sure this Avas the short Sunfish, 
not the oblong one. 
