A Consolidated Library of Anglo-Saxon Poetry

Word Explorer: age

ago verb pres imperat act 2nd sg conj3

ago verb pres imperat act 2nd sg conj3

Number of occurrences in corpus: 33

A.3.4 52 grief, no token of woe, / old age or grimness, nor narrow death
A.3.4 192 he may swiftly / turn that old age into life, / take on a young s
A.3.4 614 hard thirst, / sorrow nor old age. The noble king / grants them ev
A.3.4 662 e continually / throughout the age of ages, and the splendour of
A.4.2 306 Hebrew men, / warriors of that age, deeply desirous / of spear-con
AEDILVVLF.DeAbbatibus 8 20 , / at length, worn out by old age, the scribe exchanged his time
ALCVIN.VPatRegSanctEubor 529 e old alike. / Neither sex nor age brought him back / to the duty
ALDHELM.CarmVirg 192 es not know the damage of old age, / nor does it fall to earth, as
ALDHELM.CarmVirg 406 / and had matured to prophetic age, / he, the groomsman, foretold C
ALDHELM.CarmVirg 605 the cruel countenance of old age / had sullied and, although she
ALDHELM.CarmVirg 633 ppalled you in her barren old age, / is the city which folk common
ALDHELM.CarmVirg 640 cay breaks them and tired old age destroys them. / But I shall or
ALDHELM.CarmVirg 990 ch, Athanasius, burgeoning in age, succeeded him; / and as shepher
ALDHELM.CarmVirg 1126 th, / flourishing from an early age, over to the teachers of rheto
ALDHELM.CarmVirg 1509 sert, / for at fifteen years of age he fled from mortals of his o
ALDHELM.CarmVirg 1516 d they would never suffer old age while he lived. / For that reas
ALDHELM.CarmVirg 1928 t the thirteenth year of her age / had just passed by on earth,
ALDHELM.CarmVirg 1929 h, when she grew in her first age, / spurning in her heart the wic
ALDHELM.CarmVirg 2282 e other, flourishing later in age, SECUNDA. / Their father, Asturi
ALDHELM.CarmVirg 2289 eautiful youth blooms and old age, furrowed with wrinkles, never
ALDHELM.CarmVirg 2794 ill grow completely sour with age / or that the teeth of drinkers
BEDE.VmetCuthbert.Vulg 1 1 hone bright from the earliest age: / Christ, the bearer of high
BEDE.VmetCuthbert.Vulg 1 8 e those of a young and tender age were playing on the undulatin
BEDE.VmetCuthbert.Vulg 1 486 pontificate, / than which our age rightly regards nothing more
FRITHEGOD.BrevVWilfred 55 anifest. / But after the mature age had brought him to maturity,
FRITHEGOD.BrevVWilfred 70 udda, a man of remarkable old age, / upright in character, deserv
FRITHEGOD.BrevVWilfred 72 slippery joys of this filthy age, / preferring instead to enter
FRITHEGOD.BrevVWilfred 238 n away, and that the unstable age / might perhaps draw him headl
FRITHEGOD.BrevVWilfred 297 wisting reins of slothful old age. / Justly he took up the breath
FRITHEGOD.BrevVWilfred 569 ommand, his already tired old age / was deservedly released from
FRITHEGOD.BrevVWilfred 999 in the declining years of old age, / he sought to recall the man h
FRITHEGOD.BrevVWilfred 1260 d the delights of a deceitful age, / with the company you have ea
N.MiraculaNyniae 87 s perfect brightness on every age like a star. / This venerable