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Pindari Opera Quae Supersunt

Pindari Opera Quae Supersunt( )
Editor: Böckh, August
Author: Pindar,
Series title:Cambridge Library Collection - Classics Ser.
ISBN:978-1-108-06359-3
Publication Date:Oct 2013
Publisher:Cambridge University Press
Book Format:Paperback
List Price:AUD $89.95
Book Description:

This first part of the second volume of a classic edition of the surviving works of Pindar (c.522-c.443 BCE), edited by German classicist August Böckh (1785-1867), was published in 1819. The editor's Latin preface is followed by the scholia, that is, the ancient Greek commentaries on Pindar.

Book Details
Pages:614
Physical Dimensions (W X L X H):17.8 x 25.4 x 3.1 cm
Book Weight:1.05 Kilograms
Author Biography
Pindar (Editor)
The Greek poet Pindar, a Boeotian aristocrat who wrote for aristocrats, lived at Thebes, studied at Athens, and stayed in Sicily at the court of Hieron at Syracuse. His epinicians, choral odes in honor of victors at athletic games, survive almost complete and are divided into four groups, depending upon whether they celebrate victory at the Olympian, Pythian, Nemean, or Isthmian games. Scholars surmise that these are representative of his other poetry, such as hymns, processional songs, and dirges, extant in fragments.

The 44 surviving odes joyfully praise beautiful, brilliant athletes who are like the gods in their moment of triumph. Bold mythological metaphor, dazzling intricacy of language, and metrical complexity together create sublimity of thought and of style. Pindar was famous in his lifetime and later throughout the Hellenistic world, as is attested by the story that Alexander the Great in 335 B.C. ordered the poet's house spared when his army sacked Thebes.

The "Pindaric ode" form used in England in the seventeenth and early eighteenth centuries was based on an incorrect understanding of Pindar's metrical schemes and was characterized by grandiose diction. Pindar is considered to be the greatest of the Greek lyric poets.

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