Indite
Indite (in*dīt") , transitive verb
[Old English enditen to indite, indict, Old French enditer to indicate, show, dictate, write, inform, and endicter to accuse; both from Late Latin indictare to show, to accuse, from Latin indicere to proclaim, announce; pref. in- in + dicere to say. The word was influenced also by Latin indicare to indicate, and by dictare to dictate. See Diction, and compare Indict, Indicate, Dictate.]
1.
To compose; to write; to be author of; to dictate; to prompt.
My heart is inditing a good matter.
Could a common grief have indited such expressions?
Hear how learned Greece her useful rules indites.
2.
To invite or ask. [Obsolete]
She will indite him to some supper.
3.
To indict; to accuse; to censure. [Obsolete] — Spenser
Indite , intransitive verb
To compose; to write, as a poem.
Wounded I sing, tormented I indite.