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Subject: PINDAR (522-440 B.C.)
Matches Found: 10

UPDATE command denied to user 'poetryex_users'@'localhost' for table `poetryex_poems`.`subcnt` AFTER PINDAR, by WARREN PENDLETON CARRIER    Poem Source                    
First Line: The felled oak feeds a winter fire
Last Line: Nor will there be in any place we go
Subject(s): Pindar (522-440 B.c.)


AFTER PINDAR, by CLAYTON ESHLEMAN    Poem Source         Poet Analysis             Poet's Biography
First Line: The siberian greco-roman wrestler
Last Line: Autumn sings, in singe with winter's fangs
Subject(s): Pindar (522-440 B.c.)


FOUR METRICAL EXPERIMENTS: 4. PINDARIC, by SAMUEL TAYLOR COLERIDGE    Poem Text         Poet Analysis             Poet's Biography
First Line: Once again, sweet willow, wave thee!
Last Line: Why stays my love?
Subject(s): Pindar (522-440 B.c.); Willow Trees


GLORY, by ROBERT PINSKY    Poem Full Text     Poem Explanation     Poet Analysis             Poet's Biography
First Line: Pindar, poet of the victories, fitted names
Subject(s): Mythology - Greek; Pindar (522-440 B.c.); Poetry & Poets


GOOSEBERRY-PIE; A PINDARIC ODE, by ROBERT SOUTHEY    Poem Text         Poet Analysis             Poet's Biography
First Line: Gooseberry-pie is best
Last Line: Praise my pindaric ode?
Subject(s): Food & Eating; Odes (as Poetic Form); Pies; Pindar (522-440 B.c.)


ODES IV, 2. TO JULIUS ANTONIUS, by QUINTUS HORATIUS FLACCUS    Poem Source                     Poet's Biography
First Line: Whoever strives to rival pindar
Last Line: Snowy to see where it bears a mark, and fulvid all the rest
Alternate Author Name(s): Horace
Subject(s): Pindar (522-440 B.c.); Poetry And Poets


ODES. TO HIMSELFE, AND THE HARPE, by MICHAEL DRAYTON    Poem Text         Poet Analysis             Poet's Biography
First Line: And why not I, as hee
Last Line: Although in skelton's ryme.
Subject(s): Horace (65-8 B.c.); Pindar (522-440 B.c.)


PINDARIC ODE: TO MR. HOBS, by ABRAHAM COWLEY    Poem Text         Poet Analysis             Poet's Biography
First Line: Vast bodies of philosophy
Last Line: And that which never is to dye, for ever must be young.
Subject(s): Hobbes, Thomas (1588-1679); Pindar (522-440 B.c.)


THE EAGLE AND THE SONNET, by CHARLES TENNYSON TURNER    Poem Text                     Poet's Biography
First Line: As on the sceptre of the olympian king
Last Line: To clutch my climax with an angry cry?
Subject(s): Birds; Eagles; Pindar (522-440 B.c.)


THE PRAISE OF PINDAR, by QUINTUS HORATIUS FLACCUS    Poem Text                     Poet's Biography
First Line: Pindar is imitable by none
Last Line: And there with humble sweets contents her industry.
Alternate Author Name(s): Horace
Subject(s): Pindar (522-440 B.c.)