Major English Writers of the Eighteenth Century, Volume 1Harold E. Pagliaro Free Press, 1969 - English literature |
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Page 83
... Pindar ( 522-433 B.C. ) , but few of whom wrote true Pindarics . Most classical scholars agree that the typical Pindaric ode is composed of three identical parts , each of which is subdivided into a strophe , an antistrophe , and an ...
... Pindar ( 522-433 B.C. ) , but few of whom wrote true Pindarics . Most classical scholars agree that the typical Pindaric ode is composed of three identical parts , each of which is subdivided into a strophe , an antistrophe , and an ...
Page 435
... Pindar , and passing into the Enemy's Ranks , fell ineffectual to the Ground . Then Pindar darted a Javelin , so large and weighty , that scarce a dozen Cavaliers , as Cavaliers are in our degenerate Days , could raise it from the ...
... Pindar , and passing into the Enemy's Ranks , fell ineffectual to the Ground . Then Pindar darted a Javelin , so large and weighty , that scarce a dozen Cavaliers , as Cavaliers are in our degenerate Days , could raise it from the ...
Page 848
... Pindar's lyre . In his notes to the edition of the Odes in 1768 , Poems by Mr. Gray , p . 38 , Gray explains the idea of the first strophe : " The subject and simile , as usual with Pindar , are united . The various sources of poetry ...
... Pindar's lyre . In his notes to the edition of the Odes in 1768 , Poems by Mr. Gray , p . 38 , Gray explains the idea of the first strophe : " The subject and simile , as usual with Pindar , are united . The various sources of poetry ...
Contents
John Dryden 16311700 | 4 |
ABSALOM AND ACHITOPHEL | 11 |
MAC FLECKNOE | 37 |
Copyright | |
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