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Published online by Cambridge University Press: 11 February 2009
1 We note too that, whereas Iphigeneia recalls her evil father who brought her to her present plight (360), Achilles thinks of his noble father (109). Iphigeneia contrasts her mother to her father (365–8); Achilles mentions his mother as an appropriate complement to his father (109).
2 This is, in fact, one of only two instances in Euripides of πρν μν followed by νὺν δ. The other is at Or. 1095–6.