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| | epinikia |
 | | Pindar was, in other words, a poet for hire; he was commissioned by the family or city of victors in the games to compose and arrange for the performance of an epinikion, a choral ode, in praise of the athlete, his victory, and, as we shall see, his family and his city. |
 | | If the trip to the games and the victory isolates the victor in a sense from his community, the ode reintegrates him into: house (oikos), the aristocracy, and the city (polis). |
 | | Pythian 6 not arranged in triads, but in single strophes, all of which are metrically equivalent. |
| academic.brooklyn.cuny.edu /classic/wilson/gold/epinikia.htm (2054 words) |
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