A page from Laurentianus plut. 32.2 (Biblioteca Medicea Laurenziana, Florence), the early-fourteenth-century paper manuscript that is the sole medieval witness to Euripides' Cyclops and the other 'alphabetic plays.' Written in a scholar's Greek hand around 1300–1325 and corrected by the Byzantine scholar Demetrius Triclinius, the codex is the only reason the only complete satyr play from antiquity survives.

Cyclops

Euripides' Cyclops — the only complete satyr play to survive from antiquity — a burlesque of Odysseus's escape from Polyphemus, performed by a chorus of satyrs and their father Silenus, and the sole intact witness to the fourth genre of the Athenian stage.