bewield

Etymology
From, equivalent to en.

Verb

 * 1)  To hold in hand; rule; control; manage; handle; wield.
 * 2) * 1900, Jacobus (de Voragine), William Caxton, Frederick Startridge Ellis, The Golden Legend, Or, Lives of the Saints:
 * But the hands of them that beat him became dry and the hands of the provost also, in such wise that they might not bewield them.
 * But the hands of them that beat him became dry and the hands of the provost also, in such wise that they might not bewield them.