ppl. a. [f. prec. vb. + -ED1.] Made a thrall, enslaved, held in bondage; also transf. thrall-like, servile.
1527. St. Papers Hen. VIII., I. 230. For the delyveraunce of Your Grace out of the thraulde, pensif, and dolerous lif that the same is in.
a. 1586. Sidney, Arcadia, II. (1622), 103. With the most submissiue behauiour that a thralled heart could expresse.
1665. Surv. Aff. Netherl., 179. The English spirit, that prefers an honourable death to a thralled life.
1859. A. Macmillan, Lett. (1908), 11. Italy is the thralled place she is, owing to her indulgence in that luscious enfeebling vein of literature.