A graft; whence also a child; as, “You little imp.” In hawking, “to imp a feather” is to engraft or add a new feather for a broken one. The needles employed for the purpose were called “imping needles.” LordCromwell, writing to Henry VIII., speaks of “thatnoble imp your son.”
“Let us pray for … the king’s most excellent majesty and for … his beloved sonEdward, our prince, that most angelic imp.”—Pathway to Prayer.