121 
PAMPHILA ACTjEON. 
Curtis' B. E. X. PI. 442. 
Is nearly intermediate between P. Linea and P. 
SylTcmus ; the surface fiilyous-brown, with a longi- 
tudinal ray, and a transverse arch of seven small 
spots of a lighter yellow towards the anterior edge 
of the upper mngs. In the middle each of these 
wings is marked with a black oblique line in the 
male ; and on each of the inferior wings of the 
female there is a mark similar to that just men- 
tioned. The primary vrings are fulvous beneath in 
both sexes, with the apex greyish-green, and pre- 
ceded by an arch of small pale spots, which are 
merely the repetition of those on the surface. The 
body is reddisli on the back, and whitish beneath ; 
the antenmn blackish and ringed with yellow, hav- 
ing the club ferruginous at the tip. 
“ Found in plenty at Lulworth; and I have 
heard that it has been found also at the Burning 
Cliff, near Weymouth.” J. C. Dale, Esq. in Lou- 
don’s Mag. 
We now come to the second great primary 
division of the Lepidopterous order, the Crepuscu- 
LARIA of LatreUle, characterised by the prismatic 
