Published online by Cambridge University Press: 27 February 2009
1 Two important recent contributions appear to have escaped her: Knox, B. M. W., ‘Euripidean Comedy’ in The Rarer Action: Essays in Honor of Francis Fergusson, New Brunswick, N.J. 1970, pp. 168–196Google Scholar (reprinted in Word and Action, Baltimore, 1979, pp. 250–74) and Stinton, T. C. W., ‘“Si credere dignum est”: some expressions of disbelief in Euripides and others,’ PCPhS n.s. 22 (1976), 60–89Google Scholar; note especially the treatment of El. 737 ff. on pp. 69 f.). She does not know Keene's commentary.
2 In a note discussing this passage in Masters, Servants and Orders in Greek Tragedy, Manchester, 1981 (1982), p. 53 n. 6 I did a gross injustice to Denniston by suggesting he took a view of the monody different from the one I was myself advocating. His note on 112–13 is excellent: my only criticism of it is that it might have been more forcefully expressed.
3 See on this the work cited in the previous note, p. 12.