A Consolidated Library of Anglo-Saxon Poetry

Word Explorer: home

Number of occurrences in corpus: 32

A.3.4 243 Just as when someone / brings home the fruits of the earth / at h
A.3.4 275 away, / to seek again his own home. / Then he grasps in his feet t
A.3.4 321 out seek the plains, / his old home away from this ancestral turf
A.3.4 345 joyfully the noble one to his home, / until the peerless on flies
A.3.4 351 ne / again visits his ancestral home, / his fair land. Birds, sad at
A.3.4 361 ature is allowed to enjoy his home, / the welling streams in the w
A.3.4 427 ence / he gives up his land and home, and has grown old; / he travel
A.3.4 436 allowed to seek / his ancestral home, his sun-bright settlement / aft
A.3.4 483 n with valour eternal joy, / a home in the heavens, until the end
A.3.4 593 lting in bliss / in that happy home, elect spirits, / for ever more
A.3.4 599 / gleam brightly in that happy home / before the face of the etern
A.4.2 132 ientious subordinate / to bear home. The two daring women / then bo
AEDILVVLF.DeAbbatibus 22 98 st spoke as follows: / ‘This home has been established because
ALCVIN.VPatRegSanctEubor P 37 or themselves, benefit, and a home. / After the Roman band with th
ALCVIN.VPatRegSanctEubor 385 believed, he ran swiftly back home, / hastening with healed body a
ALCVIN.VPatRegSanctEubor 398 s merits, / and on returning home, she had taken with her some d
ALCVIN.VPatRegSanctEubor 831 fee, he returned / to seek his home again and told it all to his
ALCVIN.VPatRegSanctEubor 884 ple, and had ordered / his own home and his life with righteous m
ALCVIN.VPatRegSanctEubor 1119 cured, he returned to his own home. / Nor it is tedious to recall
ALCVIN.VPatRegSanctEubor 1128 d. / He entered the virgin’s home when her mother asked him, / a
ALCVIN.VPatRegSanctEubor 1196 the day, / and he was carried home half-alive by his companions.
ALCVIN.VPatRegSanctEubor 1460 y to sacred places. / Returning home from there, the best of teach
ALCVIN.VmetWillibrord 20 15 rich man returned to his own home; / and suddenly, thirst inflamed
ALCVIN.VmetWillibrord 30 13 ejoicing that she was running home on her own legs, / who previous
ALDHELM.CarmVirg 777 ly man heading for an eternal home. / An unfaithful relative prefer
BEDE.VmetCuthbert.Vulg 1 52 mounted his horse, returning home / on the same path by which he
BEDE.VmetCuthbert.Vulg 1 227 e sea for His own, / granted a home in the clouds, bread from a s
BEDE.VmetCuthbert.Vulg 1 289 s. / The confused folk return home, begging forgiveness, / and in p
BEDE.VmetCuthbert.Vulg 1 328 words were spoken; they come home, the savage serpent flees, / th
FRITHEGOD.BrevVWilfred 56 e decided to leave his native home behind him / and to serve the
FRITHEGOD.BrevVWilfred 164 s returning steps to the dear home of his father, mentioned abov
N.MiraculaNyniae 383 as an exile. / Then, returning home, he visited the well-known wal