释义 |
scolion Gr. Antiq.|ˈskəʊlɪən| Also skolion, scolium, erron. scholion. [Gr. σκόλιον.] A song sung in turn by the guests at a banquet.
1603Holland Plutarch 1257 Terpander was the inventour of those songs called Scolia, which were sung at feasts. 1656Stanley Hist. Philos. vi. iv. 7 Which Athenæus, proveth against the Calumiations of Demophilus not to be a sacred hymne or Pæan, but a Scolion or Festivall Song. 1776Burney Hist. Mus. I. 467 In the following Scolium, Timocreon gives his opinion of riches. 1850Mure Lit. Greece III. 101 The celebrated scolion, or series of scolia, addressed to Harmodius and Aristogiton. 1874Mahaffy Soc. Life Greece x. 296, I mean the Scolia, when one guest commenced a sentence in verse, and handed a branch to any other he chose, who was compelled to finish the verse in the cleverest way he could. |