[244] Whether the satyric chorus was increased at the same time is unknown. In Fig. 4, which represents a satyric drama of about 400 B.C., not more than twelve choreutae are represented.
[245] For the differences between sileni and satyrs and for their appearance on the stage, see [pp. 24-32].
[246] Cf. the scholia to Sophocles’ Ajax, vs. 134, to Euripides’ Phoenician Maids, vs. 202, etc.
[247] Conversations with Eckermann, July 5, 1827 (Oxenford’s translation).
[248] Cf. Graeber, De Poetarum Atticorum Arte Scaenica (1911), pp. 56 ff.
[249] Cf. Flickinger, op. cit., pp. 28 ff.
[250] Cf. Aristotle’s Poetics, 1456a26 ff.
[251] Cf. Philologus, LXX (1911), 497 f.
[252] Cf. Revue des Études anciennes, XIII (1911), 273.
[253] In the Jernstedt fragment; cf. Capps, Four Plays of Menander, pp. 98 f.