. The butterflies of the eastern United States and Canada : with special reference to New England. Butterflies; Butterflies. I'IKKINAK: EUKEMA LISA. 1087 EUREMA LISA.—The little sulphur. [Tlie litllc siilpluir (SciuUlpr); little bordereil yellow butlfilly (Maynaitl); little yellow Ijulter- fly (Abbot).] XanthUUa lisa , Lip. .VniiJr. sept., 53-55, pi. 19, figs. 4-7 (1830). Terias lisn Spec. g(?n. L^p., 1: 661- 2, figs. 5. 5(1836);—Morr., Syn. Lcp. N. Ainer., 34 ();—Joucs, Psyche, i: 121- 125 (1875);—Freiioh, Kep. ins. ill., vii: 14«< (1878); Butt. east. U. 1


. The butterflies of the eastern United States and Canada : with special reference to New England. Butterflies; Butterflies. I'IKKINAK: EUKEMA LISA. 1087 EUREMA LISA.—The little sulphur. [Tlie litllc siilpluir (SciuUlpr); little bordereil yellow butlfilly (Maynaitl); little yellow Ijulter- fly (Abbot).] XanthUUa lisa , Lip. .VniiJr. sept., 53-55, pi. 19, figs. 4-7 (1830). Terias lisn Spec. g(?n. L^p., 1: 661- 2, figs. 5. 5(1836);—Morr., Syn. Lcp. N. Ainer., 34 ();—Joucs, Psyche, i: 121- 125 (1875);—Freiioh, Kep. ins. ill., vii: 14«< (1878); Butt. east. U. 139 (1SS6);— Fern., Butt. Me., 34-35 (18S4);—Mayn., Butt. X. E., 45-J(i. pi. 5, figs. 60, GOa (1886). Eureriui lisa Kirb., Syn. eatal. Lcp., 443 (1871);— Ent. Cub., 89-90 (1882). Pierix Ood., Encyel. m^tb., ix: 109, 136 (1819). Terias sulphurina Poey, Mem. hist. nat. Cuba, i: 24S-249, pi. 18, fig. 1-3 (1853). Terias delia Scudil., Proc. Ess. inst., iii: 162 (1863);-Mayn., Butt. N. E., 46, pi. 8, fig. (SI, 61a (1886). Papilio parvus luteus Seligm., Saniml. ausl. \ viii, pi. 96 (1773). Papilio Abb., Draw. ins. Ga. Brit. Mus., vi: 16, figs. 09-71 (ca. 1800). Figured also by Abbot, Draw. ins. Ga., Oemler Coll.,Bost. soc. nat. hist., 3;—Glover, 111. N. A. Lop., pi, 32, fig, 4; pi. A, fig. 5; pi. N, fig. 6 (ined.). [Not Pieris . Donovan nor Papilio dolia Cram.] Thy citron-yellow wings are bright. And soft the rosy fringe they wear. And rays of gloom" and silver bright Adorn thee, blossom of the air! The Cassia, on whose silken flower Thy fragile life its being fills, What hast thou garnered of its dower To waft thee where thy spirit wills? Laura F. Terias lisa. Shall I compare thee to a summer's day? Thou art more lovely and more temperate. Shakespeare.—5'on««f. Imago (7 :4. 5; 15:6). Head covered above with blackish brown scales, enliv- ened by pretty long, ferrugineo-orange hairs or long, slender scales, especially a


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Keywords: ., bookauthorscuddersamuelhubbard1, bookcentury1800, bookdecade1880