A Consolidated Library of Anglo-Saxon PoetryNumber of occurrences in corpus: 18
| A.3.4 27 | of roughness, / but that noble | field | blossoms under the clouds blo |
| A.4.2 294 | lay devastated by war / on the | field | of victory, slashed by swords |
| AEDILVVLF.DeAbbatibus 20 12 | ess of heavenly dew. / Now the | field | rejoices, monks flourish thro |
| AEDILVVLF.DeAbbatibus 22 8 | own paths. / There was a broad | field, | which gave off sweet scent / f |
| ALCVIN.VPatRegSanctEubor 318 | down it rolled around in that | field, | about to die. / In its writhing |
| ALCVIN.VPatRegSanctEubor 338 | th green grass than the whole | field. | / He pondered to himself: ‘A |
| ALCVIN.VPatRegSanctEubor 710 | wed a crop for himself in the | field, | / and drove the birds away wit |
| ALCVIN.VPatRegSanctEubor 985 | l place of the previous plain | field, | / he asked me whether by chanc |
| ALCVIN.VPatRegSanctEubor 1180 | s clergy over a certain level | field | fit for racing. / Then the you |
| ALCVIN.VPatRegSanctEubor 1370 | / and as if he were treading a | field | of soil, he wandered then in |
| ALDHELM.CarmVirg 119 | d a sixty-fold fruit from the | field | of the earth; / the sheaves the |
| ALDHELM.CarmVirg 125 | thirty-fold bundles / from the | field | while they reap; the one who |
| ALDHELM.CarmVirg 226 | d the furrows / of the pleasant | field, | snatching sheaves from the ha |
| ALDHELM.CarmVirg 279 | losed-up tombs throughout the | field | will open up of their own acc |
| ALDHELM.CarmVirg 2791 | ne-shoot sprouted in a meagre | field; | / from where, plucking the grap |
| BEDE.VmetCuthbert.Vulg 1 160 | tprints anywhere in the snowy | field. | / In his search he finds the |
| FRITHEGOD.BrevVWilfred 183 | d plough a fresh and untilled | field, | with Christ / as his ploughsha |
| FRITHEGOD.BrevVWilfred 664 | the seed sprung forth in the | field, | and the shepherds rejoiced in |