rare. [f. as next: see -ANCE.] Vagrancy.

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1751.  Johnson, Rambler, No 85, ¶ 9. The understanding may be restrained from that vagrance and dissipation by which it relieves itself after a long intenseness of thought.

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1871.  B. Taylor, Faust (1875), I. xxii. 197. You’ll never mount the airy steep With all your tripping vagrance.

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