-
Pindarics (alternatively
Pindariques or Pindaricks) was a term for a
class of
loose and
irregular odes
greatly in
fashion in
England during the close...
- Cowley, who
revived the form in
England with his
publication of
fifteen Pindarique Odes in 1656.
Though this
title derives from Pindar, it is a misunderstanding...
-
found himself without a
rival in
public esteem. This
volume included the
Pindarique Odes, the Davideis, the
Mistress and some Miscellanies.
Among the latter...
- "new Augustus" (see
Augustan literature). It is
subtitled "A Funeral-
Pindarique Poem
Sacred to the
Happy Memory of King
Charles II," and is one of several...
- Mr. Crashaw" from Poems: Viz I, II. The Mistress, or Love Verses. III.
Pindarique Odes. And IV. Davideis, or a
Sacred Poem on the
Troubles of
David (London:...
- Hume)
Matthew Prior – An
English Ballad: In
answer to Mr Despreaux's
Pindarique ode on the
taking of
Namure Richard Steele – The Procession: A poem on...
-
favour of the
succession of the duke of York, was
followed (1685) by a "
Pindarique" on his coronation. In 1688 he
wrote Jus
regium Coronae, a
learned defence...
- sick
person by
Archbishop Tillotson; as also, a
prospect of death, a
Pindarique essay with
suitable cuts". London, W. Taylor.
Retrieved 18
February 2019...
-
knowledge of
ancient Gr****. His
first publication was in 1694, with A
Pindarique Ode . . . in
Memory of
Queen Mary. The next year, he
published Bersaba...
-
Prodigy (London:
Printed & sold by John Morphew, 1706). The Spleen, A
Pindarique Ode. By a Lady (London:
Printed & sold by H. Hills, 1709). Free-thinkers:...