Also 7 vaging. [f. as prec.] Wandering, roving.
1627. W. Sclater, Exp. 2 Thess. (1629), 223. Men of no setled abode; vaguing, or vagabond Iewes.
1629. Sir W. Mure, True Crucifix, 2715. Sathan, who course doth take On wings of vaging thoughts, before to send His Messingers.
1633. Struther, True Happiness, 135. Hee saw nothing beside, that could so much as draw his vaging desire to it.
1905. C. B. Gunn, Baron Crt. of Stitchill (S.H.S.), Introd. p. xxii. The sturdy, vaguing beggar who would neither work nor want was a constant menace to the cottar and villager.