a. and ppl. a. Chiefly poet. [f. QUIVER sb.1 or v.1 + -ED.]
1. Provided or equipped with a quiver.
1634. Milton, Comus, 422. Like a quiverd Nymph with Arrows keen.
a. 1661. Holyday, Juvenal, 22. Quiverd Semiramis th Assyrian nere Did Thus.
1717. Addison, trans. Ovids. Met., Wks. 1758, I. 169. Diana, with a sprightly train Of quiverd virgins.
1813. Scott, Rokeby, I. xxi. A giant he, With quivered back.
1874. W. Bruce, Hebrew Odes, 24. Safe from the shout of the quivered foe.
2. Placed or kept in, or as in, a quiver.
1651. Sherburne, Rape of Hellen, Poems 55. When his quiverd Shafts she did not see, She knew he was not Love.
1725. Pope, Odyss., XXII. 4. Full in their face the lifted bow he bore, And quiverd deaths.
1846. Keble, Lyra Innoc. (1873), 175. If she once unlock her quivered store.