Search references for PINDARICS. Phrases containing PINDARICS
See searches and references containing PINDARICS!PINDARICS
Class of odes
Pindarics (alternatively Pindariques or Pindaricks) was a term for a class of loose and irregular odes greatly in fashion in England during the close
Pindarics
5th-century BC Greek lyric poet
termed Pindarics, though the association with Pindar was largely fanciful. Abraham Cowley was considered the main exponent of English Pindarics. In fact
Pindar
Type of lyric poem
Greeks). There are three typical forms of odes: the Pindaric, Horatian, and irregular. Pindaric odes follow the form and style of Pindar. Horatian odes
Ode
Form of literature
form and structure, but generally showing the original influence of the Pindaric or Horatian ode. One non-Western form which resembles the ode is the qasida
Poetry
Immune organ that filters blood
consumption). In 1701, Anne Finch (later, Countess of Winchilsea) had published a Pindaric ode, The Spleen, drawing on her first-hand experiences of an affliction
Spleen
Ancient Greek ethnic group
from the mythical king of Argos, Temenus). Surviving fragments of the Pindaric ode seem to confirm his participation, by praising "his pentathlon victory"
Ancient_Macedonians
Roman lyric poet (65–8 BC)
Horace's Sapphic and Alcaic Odes and, on the other, the loosely structured Pindarics associated with the odes of Pindar. Translations occasionally involved
Horace
English poet and classical scholar (1716–1771)
between 1745 and 1750) The Progress of Poesy: A Pindaric Ode (written between 1751 and 1754) The Bard: A Pindaric Ode (written between 1755 and 1757) The Fatal
Thomas_Gray
British actor and comedian (1926–1988)
dear, I'm Welsh'" before rising to his feet and reciting The Bard, a Pindaric Ode by Thomas Gray. Williams noted that this performance was cut short
Kenneth_Williams
Poetic concept
Churchyard". That poem inspired numerous imitators, and soon both the revived Pindaric ode and "elegy" were commonplace. Gray used the term elegy for a poem of
Elegiac
17th-century English writer
known in English as Pindarics, Irregular Odes or Cowleyan Odes. Some of the most famous odes written after Cowley in the Pindaric tradition are Coleridge's
Abraham_Cowley
Poet and singer in Celtic societies
Thomas Carte's A General History of England to the poet Thomas Gray, whose Pindaric ode "The Bard" (1757) fixed the legend in the public mind. From the 1770s
Bard
1757 poem by Thomas Gray
The Bard. A Pindaric Ode (1757) is a poem by Thomas Gray, set at the time of Edward I's conquest of Wales. Inspired partly by his research into medieval
The_Bard_(poem)
1819 poem by John Keats
to achieve. When he turned to the ode form, he found that the standard Pindaric form used by poets such as John Dryden was inadequate for properly discussing
Ode_on_a_Grecian_Urn
1748 erotic novel by John Cleland
"its delicate sensitivities and noble ideas" expressed in "an elevated Pindaric style". The original work was not illustrated, but many editions of this
Fanny_Hill
French poetic line of 12 syllables
alternation of rhymes is followed. The result is somewhat analogous to the Pindarics of Abraham Cowley. Two of the most famous works written in vers libres
French_alexandrine
Genre of poetry
elaborately to a myth connected to the victor's family or birthplace. The Pindaric ode has a metrical structure rivaled in its complexity only by the chorus
Epinikion
its subtitle, the poem exhibits metrical complexities in imitation of a pindaric ode, that is, the structurally intricate poetry of the Greek lyric poet
Threnodia_Augustalis
Poem by William Wordsworth
currently known, "Ode: Intimations of Immortality". The poem is an irregular Pindaric ode in 11 stanzas that combines aspects of Coleridge's Conversation poems
Ode: Intimations of Immortality
Ode:_Intimations_of_Immortality
Metrical line of verses consisting of six feet
and as one of the types of permissible lines in lyrical stanzas and the Pindaric odes of Cowley and Dryden. Several attempts were made in the 19th century
Hexameter
Clergyman of the Church of England
obviously Butlerian, and it is followed by facetious poetic dialogues and by Pindarics of the Cowleian sort but on such subjects as "On the Grunting of a Hog"
Samuel Wesley (poet, died 1735)
Samuel_Wesley_(poet,_died_1735)
Latin poetry collection
stepson of Augustus' sister Octavia) to sing of Augustus' victories in a Pindaric ode. Horace declines, alleging lack of talent, and requests Iulus to compose
Odes_(Horace)
German poet and philosopher (1770–1843)
Hölderlin composed many of his long and profound poems in the style of the Pindaric hymns (of the Greek poet). He revived this form and fused it with philosophy
Friedrich_Hölderlin
Italian poet and classical scholar
classical scholar. In his verse he practised both concettismo and the Pindaric mode, as he theorized in his Lettera sopra la poesia ditirambica (1629)
Alessandro_Adimari
Poetry written in French
short, seize the day – variety). Ronsard also tried early on to adapt the Pindaric ode into French. Throughout the period, the use of mythology is frequent
French_poetry
distich") Cywydd llosgyrnog ("Tailed") Awdl gywydd ("Multi-rhythm") Awdl ("Pindaric meter"): Byr-a-thoddaid ("Short and melting") Cadwynfyr ("Short chain")
Traditional Welsh poetic metres
Traditional_Welsh_poetic_metres
3rd-century BCE Greek poet, scholar and librarian
Book 3 opens with the Victory of Berenice. Composed in the style of a Pindaric Ode, the self-contained poem celebrates queen Berenice's victory in the
Callimachus
4th-century Syrian bishop
the Elder, in reproducing the Old Testament in the form of Homeric and Pindaric poetry and the New Testament after the fashion of Platonic dialogues, when
Apollinaris_of_Laodicea
17th/18th-century English poet and politician
instructions to a porter how to find Edmund Curll's authors, Philips is a Pindaric writer in red stockings. Others who ridiculed him included Henry Carey
Ambrose_Philips
Ancient Greek poem by Callimachus
Book 3 opens with the Victory of Berenice. Composed in the style of a Pindaric Ode, the self-contained poem celebrates queen Berenice's victory in the
Aetia_(Callimachus)
Hill (143m) in Carmarthenshire, Wales
published by Richard Savage in 1726. It was written in irregularly lined pindarics but the freshness of its approach was concealed beneath the heavily conventional
Grongar_Hill
18th-century English poet
although in this case it was largely formal and showed in his preference for pindarics and occasionally dispensing with rhyme. Here he was in the company of
William_Collins_(poet)
English poet, essayist, and translator
Hart. The ode was another favourite form used by Hughes, written in the pindarics popularised by Abraham Cowley, although in this particular he was at odds
John_Hughes_(poet)
Pastoral poem by John Milton
S. P. Woodhouse and Douglas Bush, and as similar to Homeric hymns and Pindaric odes. Stelle Revard believes that the poems follow the classical hymn model
L'Allegro
Long poem by Hart Crane
comprises 15 lyric poems of varying length and scope. In style, it mixes near-Pindaric declamatory metre, free verse, sprung metre, Elizabethan diction and demotic
The_Bridge_(poem)
Ancient Greek poetry text
role as a historic link between genres as different as Homeric epic and Pindaric lyric. The subject matter and style are viewed as typical of his work,
Lille_Stesichorus
clergyman Nathaniel Williams 1672 1676 BA Welsh writer whose works include A Pindaric Elegy on the famous Physician Dr. Willis William Wynn 1727 1735 BA (1730)
List of alumni of Jesus College, Oxford
List_of_alumni_of_Jesus_College,_Oxford
Poetry collection by Statius
his poetry, his mythological examples, and his invocations all reference Pindaric convention (see also 4.7). The preface to the first book dedicates the
Silvae
17th/18th-century English playwright and tavern keeper
on the Late Glorious Victory Near Hochstet in Germany and The Queen; a Pindaric Ode) had him living in Gray's Inn, and he married a Mary Bradbury in Gray's
Charles_Johnson_(writer)
Group of French Renaissance poets
life is short, seize the day). Ronsard also tried early on to adapt the Pindaric ode into French and, later, to write a nationalist verse epic modelled
La_Pléiade
Welsh Church of England cleric, poet and painter
first published version of his celebration of the hill was written in Pindarics and originally appeared in Richard Savage's miscellany. In the same year
John_Dyer
English schoolteacher, church minister and poet
Charles Rann Kennedy in 1857. "The Reign of Youth", with a rendering into pindarics by Richard Claverhouse Jebb, the verses on Princess Charlotte, an address
Rann_Kennedy
British journalist
'scooped' with evident relish the story of the presentation of an Ode in Pindaric Greek commissioned from an Oxford don for the forthcoming Athens Olympics
Philip_Howard_(journalist)
an ode that retracts or recants what the poet wrote in a previous poem. Pindaric Ode Sapphic ode Stev: a form of Norwegian folk song consisting of quatrain
Glossary_of_poetry_terms
Flat horse race in Britain
Boyd-Rochfort 2:49.40 1961 Pardao Harry Carr Cecil Boyd-Rochfort 2:42.60 1962 Pindaric Bobby Elliott Tom Masson 2:41.80 1963 Duplation Jimmy Lindley Towser Gosden
Lingfield_Derby_Trial
he obtained various preferments. His poems include A Hymn to Darkness, Pindaric Odes, and translations from the classics. Yalden was born in 1670 in the
Thomas_Yalden
Literature written in French from 1494 to 1600
short, seize the day – variety). Ronsard also tried early on to adapt the Pindaric ode into French. Throughout the period, the use of mythology is frequent
French_Renaissance_literature
1980 compilation album
Me", 2:00 The Dovers: "She's Not Just Anybody", 1:54 Sunday Funnies: "A Pindaric Ode", 2:12 The Painted Ship: "Frustration", 2:53 The Live Wires: "Love"
Pebbles, Volume 7 (1980 album)
Pebbles,_Volume_7_(1980_album)
Essay by Denis Diderot
ode or epic. His weightiest dissertations are always animated by some Pindaric outbursts. The enthusiasm that possesses him, the demon who agitates him
Essay_on_the_Life_of_Seneca
Class of Ancient Greek poetic form
Encyclopædia Britannica. Vol. 6 (11th ed.). p. 269. Kelly, Andrew (2010-03-30). "Pindaric Metre: 'The Other Half'". Bryn Mawr Classical Review. Retrieved 2024-11-02
Aeolic_verse
Greek lyric poet (c. 518 – c. 451 BC)
work, with whom he was compared so unfavourably that "the students of Pindaric poetry almost succeeded in burying Bacchylides all over again." Together
Bacchylides
1802 poem by Samuel Taylor Coleridge
Wordsworth's Immortality Ode. Like the Immortality Ode, Dejection is a Pindaric Ode. George Watson claims that the trimming of the poem "set forth upon
Dejection:_An_Ode
6th-century BC Greek lyric poet
entitled Funeral Games ..." Cambell cites P.Oxy.2637 and finds also a pindaric/epinikion tone in a quote from Porphyry (comment. in Ptolem. harmon. iv):"with
Ibycus
'unfruition', 'misconception'" The central section — twenty one 25-line "Pindarics after Cesare Pavese" — drew particular attention; Brownjohn seeing it
Without_Title
Italian Roman Catholic priest and poet (1646–1704)
by the poems of Gabriello Chiabrera and Fulvio Testi, Menzini wrote his Pindaric "Canzoni eroiche e morali" (1674–80). These observe the Greek division
Benedetto_Menzini
The Dyet of Poland Complete Tang Poems Charles Johnson – The Queen; a Pindaric Ode Matthew Prior – An English Padlock Ned Ward – Hudibras Redidivus Isaac
1705_in_literature
"Observations on the Two Pindaric Odes of Gray". In this fashion Berdmore involved himself in discussion of Gray's Pindaric Odes in particular, siding
Samuel Berdmore (schoolmaster)
Samuel_Berdmore_(schoolmaster)
British poet, artist (1660–1685)
JSTOR 860095. Retrieved 6 July 2021. Gillespie, Stuart (1996). "Another Pindaric Ode "To the Pious Memory of Mrs. Ann Killigrew"". Restoration: Studies
Anne_Killigrew
Italian poet and playwright, 1552–1638
Chrétien), much of his work remains readable and pleasant. His grand Pindarics are dull, but some of his Canzonette, like the anacreontics of Ronsard
Gabriello_Chiabrera
Theory and practice of versification
let us not proclaim any contest greater than Olympia." In his book on Pindaric metre, Kiichiro Itsumi characterises this ode as "amalgamated style", that
Greek_prosody
Poem by John Milton
S. P. Woodhouse and Douglas Bush, and as similar to Homeric hymns and Pindaric odes. Stella Revard believes that the poems follow the classical hymn model
Il_Penseroso
American classical scholar
(WINTER 2015), pp. 183-194, JSTOR 24699959. "Fathers and Sons: A Note on Pindaric Ambiguity," The American Journal of Philology, Vol. 112, No. 3 (Autumn
Leslie_Kurke
American painter
inspired her to write "The Olympic Games: Past, Present, and Future, A Pindaric Ode." In 1936, Avery Brundage, then President of the American Olympic Committee
Byrd_Mock
English writer
in London. In 1707, possibly while he was apprenticing, he published A Pindaric Ode on the Union of Scotland and England and Naufragium Britannicum. In
Lewis_Theobald
British classical scholar and musician (born 1958)
Committee, D'Angour composed an Ode to Athens in 2004, in the appropriate Pindaric style, Doric dialect and metre (dactylo-epitrite) of ancient Greek, together
Armand_D'Angour
Roman suffect consul in 31 BC
21–20 BC. This younger Titius, who according to Horace wrote poetry in the Pindaric style, may in turn be the friend of the poet Tibullus mentioned in Tibullus
Marcus_Titius
Irish clergyman (1774–1844)
Heroic Lines of Goldsmith, the Hudibrastics of Butler, and the Peter Pindarics of Lord Byron, with a great variety of Lyric measure, adapted to the music
John_Graham_(clergyman)
British countess and poet
Melancholy, both depicting severe depression. Finch also skilfully employed the Pindaric ode, exploring complex and irregular structures and rhyme schemes. Her
Anne Finch, Countess of Winchilsea
Anne_Finch,_Countess_of_Winchilsea
Italian poet (1650–1712)
his early verse shows the influence of Marino, he later cultivated the Pindaric manner of Chiabrera, producing canzoni of free stanzaic form. His most
Carlo_Alessandro_Guidi
Figure in Greek mythology
apparently dealt with the story, perhaps in his lost play Nemea, since Pindaric scholia tell us that Aeschylus attributed the origin of the Nemean Games
Opheltes
German classical archaeologist
with an explanation of some vase paintings. Pindarische Studien, 1863 – Pindaric studies. Kunst und Leben. Reisebriefe aus Griechenland, dem Orient und
Karl_Friederichs
Savage, Aaron Hill, John Dyer ("Grongar Hill", his first poem, written in Pindaric style, rewritten and published separately in 1727) and others, as well
1726_in_poetry
Ancient Greek poem
in the Nemean games are only recorded by Pindar's poem. As is common in Pindaric victory odes, Nemean 8 features a mythical narrative. In honour of the
Pindar's_Eighth_Nemean_Ode
German classical scholar (1904–1989)
Padua, 1961). In American Journal of Philology 84 (1963) 329–332. "Two Pindaric Passages on the Hereafter." Hermes 96 (1968) 503–506. "Greek Ideas of the
Friedrich_Solmsen
dithyrambs and idylls earned the admiration of contemporaries, but his Pindaric odes lack fire, his sonnets are weak, and his idylls have neither the truth
António_Diniz_da_Cruz_e_Silva
"Profiles of Eminent Men" Isaac Story, A Parnassian Shop, Opened in the Pindaric Stile, by Peter Quince, Esq., satirical verses against the Democratic Republicans
1801_in_poetry
Ancient Greek athlete
ISBN 978-0-19-280553-9. Kyriakou, Poulcheria (1996). "A Variation of the Pindaric Break-Off in Nemean 4". The American Journal of Philology. 117 (1). Johns
Aristocleidas
Poem by Samuel Taylor Coleridge (1790)
poetry written for school and follows the Pindaric ode form that ignores many of the structures of the Pindaric ode. The versions in-between shift to a
Monody on the Death of Chatterton
Monody_on_the_Death_of_Chatterton
American scholar and musician (born 1936)
2025)ISBN 978-0-6743-0127-6 "Poetica obscura: Reexamining Hamann's Contribution to the Pindaric Tradition," Eighteenth-Century Studies 34:1 (2000), 93–115. "Temple du
John_T._Hamilton
in 1698 from Jesus College, Cambridge. Hopkins published in 1698 two Pindaric poems: The Triumphs of Peace, or the Glories of Nassau … written at the
John_Hopkins_(poet)
Son of Apollo in Greek mythology
courage", and whom Poseidon honored "above all mortals". A very fragmentary Pindaric Paean, was perhaps addressed to Tenerus. Its first line has the singer
Tenerus_(son_of_Apollo)
Welsh writer
and obtaining a Bachelor of Arts degree in 1676. He wrote two books: A Pindaric Elegy on the famous Physician Dr. Willis (published in 1675) and Imago
Nathaniel_Williams_(writer)
originally appeared in Richard Savage's Miscellany in 1726, written in Pindaric style; this year Dyer rewrote it as a 150-line piece in four-stress octosyllabics
1727_in_poetry
1584 play by Anthony Munday
Company as being received on 12 November 1584. Silver, Isidore (1941). "Pindaric Parallelism in Du Bellay: A Proof of His Independent Imitation of Pindar"
Fidele_and_Fortunio
différence avec le grec vulgaire (1828) Καναρις, ̓ͅασμα Πινδαρικον (1830). Pindaric ode addressed to Konstantinos Kanaris. L'Art de la rhétorique par Aristote
Konstantinos_Minas
Abraham Cowley: Miscellanies, including "On the Death of Mr. Crashaw" Poems Pindaric Odes Sir John Denham, translator, The Destruction of Troy, published anonymously
1656_in_poetry
English poet
merit in several anti-slavery poems published in the volume, including the Pindaric "Ode to May, Written in 1807, on the Abolition of the African Slave Trade";
William_Stanley_Roscoe
British-bred Thoroughbred racehorse
broodmare she produced five winners, two of which were close to top class: Pindaric (sired by Pinza), won the Lingfield Derby Trial in 1962, while Atilla (sic)
Festoon_(horse)
PINDARICS
PINDARICS
PINDARICS
PINDARICS
Boy/Male
English
Lives on a narrow passage.
Girl/Female
Australian, Chinese, Hebrew, Scottish
The Sun; Pet Form of James Used as a Woman's Name; Supplanter; Similar to James
Male
English
Short form of English Matthew, MATT means "gift of God."
Female
French
French form of Latin Regina, RÉGINE means "queen."
Boy/Male
Indian
Modesty, Decency
Boy/Male
Tamil
Surname or Lastname
German and Dutch
German and Dutch : metonymic occupational name for a dealer in cloth or a tailor, from Middle High German, Middle Low German el(l)e ‘yardstick’, ‘length of the lower arm’.German : from a short form, Edilo, from any of various Germanic personal names composed with adal ‘noble family’.English : from the female personal name Ela, a reduced form of Elena and possibly also of Eleanor.
Boy/Male
Muslim
Barron, Ruler
Girl/Female
Tamil
Chandraja | சஂதà¯à®°à®œà®¾
Daughter of the Moon
Male
English
Variant spelling of English Nolan, NOLAND means "little champion" or "little chariot fighter."
PINDARICS
PINDARICS
PINDARICS
PINDARICS
PINDARICS