Webster's Revised Unabridged Dictionary · 1913

Indue

Indue , transitive verb

[Latin induere to put on, clothe, from Old Latin indu (from in- in) + a root seen also in Latin exuere to put off, divest, exuviae the skin of an animal, slough, induviae clothes. Compare Endue to invest.]

1.
To put on, as clothes; to draw on.
The baron had indued a pair of jack boots. — Sir W. Scott
2.
To clothe; to invest; hence, to endow; to furnish; to supply with moral or mental qualities.
Indu'd with robes of various hue she flies. — Dryden
Indued with intellectual sense and souls. — Shakespeare