SATYRINjE. 
231 
short narrow excurved transverse pale bluish-grey fascia before the apex. Sindwing 
with a prominent elongate glandular jpatch of black scales on the submedian vein near the 
end, the patch overlapped by several longish black hairs, which project inward from a 
longitudinal fold between the lower median and submedian vein, similar hairs also ex¬ 
tending upward along the fold to near the base of the vein. Underside dark umber- 
brown. Both wings crossed by a uniformly broad glossy bluish-grey straight discal 
fascia, and an outer marginal fascia, the latter traversed by the two dark brown slender 
marginal lines, the fasciae on the forewing being partly confluent towards the apex. 
Hindiving with five prominent ocelli, which are somewhat small and of nearly equal 
size, each with small black centre, a pure white narrow pupil, an ochreous ring, and 
then a dark brown ring, all being encompassed in the pale bluish-grey border. 
Female. Upperside as in the male, except that the forewing has a more con¬ 
spicuous bluish-grey excurved subapical fascia, and in the hindwing the marginal 
bluish-grey band extends beyond the marginal lines, the third ocellus being also 
decidedly the smallest. Body beneath, legs, and sides of palpi pale brownish-ochreous; 
antennae ochreous. 
Expanse, $ 2f, ? 3 inches. 
Habitat. —Upper Tenasserim. 
From typical 0. Epiminthia (Bornean, Sumatran, and Malay Peninsula examples) 
this species is distinguishable in having more even outer margins and less angular 
hindwing, the forewing of the male being somewhat narrower at the apex. On the 
underside the transverse discal fascia crossing both wings is broader and straight, 
being very similar to that in O. Euptychioides and G. humilis , and not bent inward 
in crossing the hindwing, as in G. Epiminthia ; the ocelli on the hindwing are totally 
different, those in G . Epiminthia being much larger and composed only of an 
ochreous-brown centre, a narrow white pupil, and an outer black ring. 
Distribution.— Major C. H. E. Adamson (Catal. of Burmese Butterflies, p. 6) 
obtained males of this species near Tounggya, Seckkan, in April, 1888, and others 
near Rannee in October, in the neighbourhood of Moulmain, “ in thick moist rattan 
jungle.” Capt. C. J. Bingham c< took a single female in the Mepley Valley, in Upper 
Tenasserim, in October ” (Butt. India, 102). 
The illustrations of this species on our Plate No. 75, figs. 3, 3a, represent the 
male, kindly lent from Major Adamson’s collection. An example of this species 
being also in the possession of Mr. H. Gfrose-Smith. 
Indo-Malayan Allied Ccelites.— G. Epiminthia , Westwood in Doubleday and 
Hewitson’s Gen. D. Lep. p. 368 (1851). Distant, Khop. Malay, p. 415, pi. xix. fig. 8 
(1886). Habitat. Borneo, Sumatra, Salangore, Malay Peninsula.— C. Euptychioides^ 
Felder, Reise Nov. Lep. iii. p. 499 (1867). Staudinger, Exot. Schmett. p. 223, pi. 
79. Habitat. Borneo.— G. humilis , Butler, Ann. Nat. Hist. 1867, p. 403, pi. 8, fig. 
