It might add a bit to Syrithe Pugh's fascinating thoughts about the parallels between RCK's dream and Aeneas's dream-visit to Hades that in the latter case Aeneas pleads for forgiveness from the stony-faced ghost of Dido, who turns away from him and flees back into the arms of her former husband, Sychaeus. I'm still struck by the form of Jim Broaddus's phrase, "faith sufficient to doubt, much less to refuse to believe." Sounds at once Pauline and Wittgensteinian. Ken Gross