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The Extant Odes of Pindar / Translated with Introduction and Short Notes by Ernest Myers
Author: Pindar Genre: LiteratureThe Extant Odes of Pindar / Translated with Introduction and Short Notes by Ernest Myers
THE MULE-C
*
and its companion, the next following, are the latest wo
as introduced at Olympi
ccording to
y, to be sung the same night beneath the moon by the company of fr
*
st of all games-and when friends have good hap the good are glad forthwith at the sweet tidings-now therefore, O son of Kronos, unto whom ?tna belongeth, the wind-beaten burden th
ory for Kamarina. May God be gracious to our prayers for what shall be! For I praise him as a man most zealous in the rearin
ht. He, when he had won the foot-race in bronze armour[1], spake thus to Hypsipyle as he went to receive his crown: 'For fleetness such
e introduction
uppose that Psaumis p