glee-beam
English
editAlternative forms
editEtymology
editCalque of Old English glēobēam (“harp”, literally “joy-wood”), equivalent to glee + beam.
Noun
editglee-beam (plural glee-beams)
- (Anglo-Saxon, historical, kenning, music) A harp.
- 1895, Mary Louisa Georgina Petrie Carus-Wilson, Tokiwa and Other Poems, page 120:
- " […] So we do him service gladly, thronging round our noble king,
While the glee-beams at the banquet with the Scêfing's praises ring."
- 1896, Stephen Humphreys Villiers Gurteen, The Epic of the Fall of Man:
- The king's scop or earl's gleeman, was the favourite of the court; the one indispensable guest at every banquet and every courtly gathering; whose skill with the glee-beam or harp spread joy throughout the festive hall, and whose memory was stored with soul-stirring tales of great deeds, the recital of which could not fail to fire the hearts and quicken the pulses of young and old alike.
- 1919, The Wellesley Alumnae Quarterly, volume 4, page 166:
- That man may sing and declare many things. A marvel of wisdom is hidden in his heart. Another with his fingers may loudly strike the harp, stir the glee-beam for the joy of his companions.
- 1923, Lucy Foster Madison, A Maid at King Alfred's Court:
- “Then there will we abide. Long have we wayfared, and wearied am I by the journey. Though the priests may not hearken to song, or story, or glee-beam, yet will they shelter us for the night.”