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Published online by Cambridge University Press: 11 February 2009
I Wish to reply to some of the objections raised by Mr. A. Hudson-Williams in Class. Quart., vol. xlvi (1952), p. 27, to my notes on Martial in vol. xliv. In two places, on pp. 17 and 22, he corrects an error of mine, and in one or two other of his remarks he may well be right; but in many cases he does nothing more than repeat the traditional interpretation of a passage without commending it any more effectively than the editors do. I do not think there would be much profit in restating my view on all these passages, but there are some points I wish to make in reply.
page 173 note 1 The reason for this lies no doubt in the meaning of moneo. Rogo, meaning ‘I ask leave to’, can naturally be used with the infinitive; cf. rogat ponere, ‘asks leave to lay aside’ (12. 18. 25); Stat. Theb. 10. 591, Silv. 2. 1. 222; Luc. 9. 1102, Val. Flacc. 7. 379. L. and S. is particularly unhelpful in this matter; see especially s.v. moneo .
page 174 note 1 The purely affirmative enim is not found in Martial either; and I should hesitate to regard evidence from Plautus and Terence as strong. At Pers. i. 63, cited by H.-VV., enim does not answer a question at all.