[133.4] p. 34-41.
[134.1] For particulars vide Hibbert Lectures, pp. 37, 46-48, 103, 117.
[135.1] Laws, p. 909 E.
[135.2] 738 C.
[137.1] Bull. Corr. Hell., XXVI, pp. 399-489.
[138.1] Vide Cults, 3, pp. 199-202.
[138.2] Ib., p. 199.
[139.1] Vide Foucart, Des Associations religieuses.
[141.1] A paper by Pierre Waltz in the Revue des Études Grecques, 1911—‘sur les sentences de Ménandre’—aims at discovering or imagining the dramatic setting of each fragment and at disproving the view that Menander was posing as an original ethical teacher. Accepting his theory, we can still assign high value to the ‘sentences’ for the purpose of Greek ethical history, whether we regard them as original and earnest utterances of Menander or commonplaces which he uses lightly for dramatic purposes; for if the latter view of them is the truer, they show at least what was in the air.
[142.1] Kock, Com. Att. Frag., 602.