SATYR INJE. 
221 
the abdominal area on the hindwing thickly irrorated with lilaeine-grey scales. 
Forewing with a large subapical blue-black ocellus with a minute white pupil and a 
narrow ochreous-yellow and a black outer ring; above which are the two white 
apical oblique spots and below it two smaller white spots ; the broad oblique band 
paler than above, and the discocellular brown streak broader. Hindwing with the 
apical border yellow; with a short subbasal and an entire discal transverse 
blackish zigzag line; a large prominent subapical and also a subanal blue-black 
ocellus, each with a minute white pupil and blue speckles, an ochreous-yellow and a 
black outer ring, the yellow ring dilated inwardly; between these two large ocelli 
are three very small blue-speckled black spots. Female. Upper and undersides 
paler than in the male ; markings the same. Body beneath oclireous-brown ; sides 
of head, streak on sides of palpi, and forelegs beneath ochreous-yellow. 
Expanse, to 5 inches. 
Habitat. “N.E. India (Assam, Cachar). 
This is a larger insect than N. Grishna , with which it has hitherto been 
erronously associated. The latter species (Crishna) is from Java, the type speci¬ 
men, from which the original description was taken, being then in the East India 
Company’s Collection, and is referred to in the Catal. Lep. Mus. E. I. C. i. p. 221, 
as Gyllo Grishna , but now deposited in the British Museum. N. Westwoodii differs 
from it, on the upperside, in the forewing having the yellow band somewhat broader, 
the black apical spot being much larger and not encircled with yellow ; there are 
also two small white spots above and one below this black spot, these small white 
spots being, moreover, placed at an outwardly-oblique angle from the central dot in 
the black spot, whereas, in Grishna , the white spot above and the one below the 
black ocellus are both in a direct vertical line with its central white dot. On the 
hindwing the pale yellow apical border is longer, and no ocelli are present, whereas 
in Grishna there are two, and in some specimens three, distinct ocelli, the two upper 
being of large size and a smaller one subanal. On the underside, the forewing has 
the yellow band also broader, the discocellular brown streak being entire; the apical 
ocellus is four times the size of that in Grishna , with its adjacent upper and lower 
white dots placed in position as on the upperside. The hindwing has the apical 
ocellus also larger ; the subanal ocellus is also as large again as that in Grishna , and 
there is no indication of the small anal ocellus. Other minor differences in Grishna 
are that the latter species has a pale yellow dentate spot close to the costal vein 
within the cell of the forewing, and in the hindwing there is a black dot within 
the middle of the cell, whereas in Westwoodii there is a zigzag blackish subbasal line. 
Expanse of Grishna 3f inches. 
Distribution .— 1 u Mr, Wood-Mason took several males on Nemotha, 3300 feet 
elevation, in Cachar, in September and October. There are specimens in the Indian 
a g 2 
