APATURA II. 
Just as Celtis has been supposed to have been covered by the description of 
Lycaon, Fab., so Ilerse Fab. has within the last two or three years been appor¬ 
tioned to Clyton, altogether wrongly. The description of Ilerse, Fab. Ent. Svst. 
III., p. 229, No. 718, is as follows : — 
P. S. alis dentatis fusco ferrugineis: anticis albo punctatis, posticis utrinque 
ocellis septem coecis. ^ 
Papilio Ilerse, Jon. fig. pict. 4, tab. 7, fig. 2. 
Habitat- -Dom. Drury. 
Corpus fusco ferrugineum. Aim anticie obscure ferruginem, pone medium 
fascia e maculis sex punctisque quatuor apicis albis, subtus pallidiores. Posticae 
fusco ferrugineae ocellis septem nigris iride ferruginea : secundo tertioque pupilla 
Cl 1 ugmea, reliquis ccecis. Subtus pallidiores ocellis septem coeruleis iride Hava • 
annulo nigro. ’ 
lugs dentated, marked with fuscous and ferruginous ; the fore wings spotted 
with white, the hind wings also with seven black ocelli. 
P. Herse, Jones’ leones. 
Habitat unknown. Collection of M. Drury. Body fusco-ferrugineous : fore 
wings obscure ferruginous, with an extra-median band of six spots and four apical 
spots, white ; under side paler. Hind wings fusco ferruginous ; with seven black 
ocelh with ferruginous indes, the second and third pupilled with ferruginous, 
Ua2ringT d; ^ ^ WW> 0<xlli ’ wiih y dlow irides > in 
Hlits description cannot apply to Clyton, in which the fore wings are not 
obscure-ferruginous, but ferruginous at base and blackish-brown towards hind 
margm, they are not spotted with white, but with yellow or yellow-ferruginous ■ 
-• r^7 18 T P ° Sed “f ^ Sp0tS and the ouUr s P° ts ««instead of 
six and four, as in Herse. The hind wings are blackish-brown in Clyton, not 
fusco-ferrugmous; there are but six ocelli and all are blind, with no ferrugi¬ 
nous pupis. n Herse there are seven, the second and third pupilled with ferru¬ 
ginous. In Herse the under side of both wings is described L paler than the 
ppei, with no variety of color or shade on the several areas; that is, the fore 
wings must be ferruginous, or less obscurely ferruginous, and the hind wings a 
pale fusco-ferrugmous. In Clyton the under sides are brown, gray, purplish with 
he least possible fuscous on primaries only, and in vars. Ocekata mid ploserpiZ 
there is no ferruginous at all on either wing. In the form which I call Flora 
ioie is ferruginous, but it is intense, and the whole surface is richly diversified 
in cohir hi Herse are seven blue ocelli in black rings, with yellow irides; in 
// on lough the pupils are blue the irules are ferruginous. There is therefore 
the deSCriPti0U ° f mrSe and the insect —P‘ 
