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Such unaccountable masses of shades and shadows, that at first you almost thought some ambitious young artist, in the time of the New England hags, had endeavored to delineate chaos bewitched.
I don't plan to stop drinking. But... I don't wanna forget. I can't turn away anymore. So, if I'm gonna die, well, it might as well be driving my sword through the heart of that murderous hag.
1646, Richard Crashaw, “Sospetto D' Herode”, in Steps to the Temple, stanza 37:
Fourth of the cursed knot of hags is she / Or rather all the other three in one; / Hell's shop of slaughter she does oversee, / And still assist the execution
A hagfish; one of various eel-like fish of the family Myxinidae, allied to the lamprey, with a suctorial mouth, labial appendages, and a single pair of gill openings.
(obsolete) An appearance of light and fire on a horse's mane or a person's hair.
1656, Thomas White, Peripateticall Institutions, page 149:
Flamma lambentes (or those we call Haggs) are made of Sweat or some other Vapour issuing out of the Head; a not-unusuall sight amongst us when we ride by night in the Summer time: They are extinguisht, like flames, by shaking the Horse Mains
(Northern England) A small wood, or part of a wood or copse, which is marked off or enclosed for felling, or which has been felled.
1845, Edward Fairfax (tr.), Godfrey of Bulloigne; or, The Recovery of Jerusalem: Done into English Heroical Verse, page 168:
This said, he led me over hoults and hags; / Through thorns and bushes scant my legs I drew
A marshyhollow, especially an area of peat lying lower than surrounding moorland, formed by erosion of a gully or cutting and often having steep edges.
1662, Sir William Dugdale, The History of Imbanking and Drayning of Divers Fenns and Marshes, page 292:
And they likewise ordained […] that all the warp should be thrown into the Common wayes, to fill up haggs and lakes, where need was, upon a great penalty, where it should ly neer the Common rode.
1836, Walter Scott, Waverley Novels, page 375:
[…] upon wet brae-sides, peat-haggs, and flow-mosses, […]
1845, The New Statistical Account of Scotland: Ayr, Bute, page 107:
The uplands are generally mossy, resting on clay of a yellow colour, covered by moss of various depths, which often break into what are called hags, or flow-moss.
1868, James Salmon, Gowodean, page 49:
I had made sure to find him in the hag o' Coars-Neuk Moor,
1882, Joseph Senior, Smithy Rhymes and Stithy Chimes, Or, the Short and Simple Annals of the Poor, page 46:
The strongest nag that crosses th' hagg / Wi wots ta Fullod mill.
1898, Charles Spence, From the Braes of the Carse: Poems and Songs by the Late Charles Spence, page 189:
[…] the murky flag / Flaps on Turftennant's rushy hag."
2017, Benjamin Myers, The Gallows Pole, Bloomsbury, published 2019, page 101:
The shallow slow-running groughs fed the hag with a trickle of coppery water.
2023 October 12, Mike Billett, Peat and Whisky: The Unbreakable Bond, Saraband, →ISBN:
The winter snow has collected amongst the eroded peat hags and is being actively reshaped into deep dunes and linear ripples by the strong winds whipping across the summit ridge. In the winter light, large sandblasted granite tors, sugar-coated with ice, stand out[…]
hag (third-person singular simple presenthags, present participlehagging, simple past and past participlehagged)
To cut or erode (as) a hag (a hollow into moorland).
1874, Notes and Queries, page 253:
hag[…] is that part in mosses which is naturally or artificially cut, hollowed, hagged, or hacked; naturally by water runlets forming hollows, and artificially by, among other means, the cutting and removal of peat.
1956, Scotland's Magazine, volume 52, page 39:
Covenanters too met often on our moss-hagged moors.
1990, Angélique Day, Patrick McWilliams, Ordnance Survey Memoirs of Ireland: Co. Antrim VIII-IX, page 5:
on one occasion, where the bog had been cut away, a stump was discovered which bore evident marks of having been hagged .
2024, Peter Hadden, Iain Chisholm, A Very British Journey:
Crowberry is particularly abundant on hagged peat and in cotton grass mires; it prefers drier ground,
From Middle Englishhaggen(“to hack, chop, cut”), from Old Norsehǫggva(“to hew”). Compare Englishhag, above. Noun attested from the 14th century in Older Scots, with the verb from c. 1400.
[…]and the rawzor haggit like a saw—Trumbull o’ Selkirk makes good rawzors, but the weans are unco fond of playing wi’ mine, puir things—Od keep us!
when the razor is hacked like a saw-tooth—Trumbull from Selkirk makes good razors, but the children are uncommonly fond of playing with mine, the poor things—then God help us!