X.
FOR AGESIDAMOS OF EPIZEPHYRIAN
LOKRIS,
WINNER IN THE BOYS' BOXING-MATCH.
This ode bears somewhat the same relation to the next that the fourth does to the fifth. It was to be sung at Olympia on the night after the victory, and Pindar promises the boy to write a longer one for the celebration of his victory in his Italian home. The date is B.C. 484.
Sometimes have men most need of winds, sometimes of showered waters of the firmament, the children of the cloud.
But when through his labour one fareth well, then are due honey-voiced songs, be they even a prelude to words that shall come after, a pledge confirmed by oath in honour of high excellence.
Ample is the glory stored for Olympian winners: thereof my shepherd tongue is fain to keep some part in fold. But only by the help of God is wisdom[1] kept ever blooming in the soul.
Son of Archestratos, Agesidamos, know certainly that for thy boxing I will lay a glory of sweet strains upon thy crown of
- ↑ Perhaps σοφός (which means often rather clever or skilful than wise) has here the special reference to poetic skill, which it often has in Pindar.