Use the following persistent identifier: http://nrs.harvard.edu/urn-3:hul.ebook:CHS_Nagy.Pindars_Homer.1990.
Introduction: A Word on Assumptions, Methods, and Aims
This unit consists of a “disordered” first half, four syllables that display a wide variety of possible combinations of long (–) and short (⏑) quantities, such as – – – –, – – – ⏑, – ⏑ – –, – ⏑ – ⏑, ⏑ – – –, ⏑ – – ⏑, – ⏑ – ⏑, [21] followed by an “ordered” second half, four syllables that rigidly follow the pattern – ⏑ ⏑ –. There is a principle of order even in the disorder of the first half, as {6|7} we can see from a constraint that escapes notice at first sight. The constraint is this: the first half does not allow just any possible combination of longs and shorts. One pattern in particular, – ⏑ ⏑ –, is avoided in the disordered first half, and this pattern – ⏑ ⏑ – is precisely the ordered pattern of the second half. [22] In other words it is a matter of overarching order that the first half be disorder as opposed to the order of the second half. The first half is the plus interpretation of disorder, the second half is the minus interpretation of order, while the two halves together comprise the zero interpretation of order. [23] As we shall see later, such an arrangement on the level of form is typical of the {7|8} thought patterns of myth making on the level of content: in the stories of myth, the opposition of disorder and order, of discord and concord, serves to achieve an overall concept of order, concord. [24] More specifically the opposition of social division and integration serves to achieve an overall concept of integration. [25] Further, the opposition of alien and native serves to achieve an overall concept of native. [26]
Pindar is following in the path of epic with his own epinician themes. An expert in the art of Pindar writes about this passage: [43]
All of which “draws together the strands of many matters in brief.” {16|17}
Footnotes