Early Stages.—Unknown.

The Red Satyr is found in Texas, Arizona, Mexico, and Central America.

[Plate XXV].

Genus CŒNONYMPHA, Westwood
(The Ringlets)

"There is a differency between a grub and a butterfly; yet your butterfly was a grub."—Shakespeare.

Butterfly.—Small butterflies. The costal, median, and submedian veins are all strongly swollen. The palpi are very heavily clothed with hairs, the last joint quite long and porrect. The antennæ are short, delicate, gradually but distinctly clubbed. The eyes are naked. Both wings on the outer margin are evenly rounded.

Egg.—The egg is conical, truncated, flat on the top, rounded at the base, with the sides marked with numerous low, narrow ribs, between which are slight cross-lines, especially toward the apex.

Caterpillar.—The head is globular; the body is cylindrical, tapering gradually backward, furnished in the last segment with two small horizontal cone-shaped projections.