ppl. a. [pa. pple. of FLEE v.] In senses of the vb.

1

1621.  G. Sandys, Ovid’s Met., II. 711.

        Fled Soules thou shalt restore to their aboads;
And once against the pleasure of the Gods.

2

a. 1709.  J. Nimmo, Narrative (1889), 51. Ane honest fled Scotsman’s hous called James Reston.

3

1822.  Byron, Werner, III. iv. 100.

                    The Fled Hungarian,
Who seems the culprit.

4

1884.  Tennyson, Becket, I. i.

        They say that you are wise in winged things,
And know the ways of Nature. Bar the bird
From following the fled summer.

5