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The ceaseless strife of armed ambitions - Sophie M. Almon-Hensley "Content"

Merged into the seething strife - Martin Armstrong "Miss Thompson Goes Shopping"

Joy of strife with life's wild fates - Karle Wilson Baker "Bluebird and Cardinal"

Coming in with thunderings and strife - Stephen Vincent Benet "Rain after a Vaudeville Show"

Bear the strife of little tongues and coward insults - Robert Blair "The Grave"

In the tempest of the battle's strife - William C.S. Blair "Byzantium"

Weary of wasting strife - Teresa Brayton "A Christmas Song"

Steady strife for a deathless crown - Vera M. Brittain "That Which Remaineth"

Sorrow and strife to greet - Anne Bronte "Stanzas [Oh, weep not, love!]"

Where wild are the waves of strife - J.G. Brooks "To the 'Blue-eyed Lassie'"

The rapture of the strife - Lord Byron "Ode to Napoleon Buonaparte"

Darken with the dust of strife - George Spencer Cautley "Puritans and Ritualists"

And strife but blinds the eyes - Arthur Hugh Clough "Noli Aemulari"

That heals the sad heart's strife - Benjamin Copeland "The Light of Life"

Traveling through this vale of sin and strife - Cora "A Thought of the Future" [Graham's Magazine v.XL no.4, April 1852]

The strife of armoured souls - James H. Cousins "The Legend of St. Mahee of Endrim"

The requiem guns of strife - Eric Dickinson "The Garden"

Reverberations of eternal strife - A.E. "Shadows and Lights"

Thrown in the darkness of the strife - George Blackstone Field "The Answer"

An outlet for each pool of strife - E. Fonton "A Vigil with St. Louis" [The Continental Monthly v.5 no.1, Jan. 1864]

Above the firmament of man's uncertain strife - Charles Gibson "Sonnets X"

The red-foamed riot of delirious strife - Wilfrid Wilson Gibson "The Torch"

On the crimson fields of strife - Frances E.W. Harper "Our Hero"

Disturb us with the thought of strife - E.E. St. L. Hill "Parting"

Whence public strife and naked crime - Horace "The Portent [Ode 20, Bk V]" transl. by Rudyard Kipling

Strong from the peril of the strife - William D. Howells "Saint Christopher"

Through all forms of grief and strife - Robinson Jeffers "To his Father"

Undisturbed by any angel of strife - Robinson Jeffers "The Truce and the Peace"

Amid the flying ruins of strife - Charles Bertram Johnson "Serenity"

The strife of hourly being - Fanny Kemble "Sonnet [But to be still! oh, but to cease awhile]"

And sleep on a pillow of strife - Henry Kendall "Australia Vindex"

Cries of echoing strife and scorn - Emily Lawless "Afterword"

Strife of winds and birds - Eugene Lee-Hamilton "Apollo and Marsyas"

Rise victorious from every worldly strife - E.M. "Part VI. The Apologia"

The banner in the strife - George Meredith "A Ballad of Fair Ladies in Revolt"

Of a creature matched with strife - George Meredith "Earth and Man"

While the rich man's mill is strife - William Morris "The Pilgrim of Hope III: Sending to the War"

Nor failed for fear of strife - "Niels Ebbeson, 1340" transl. by E.M. Smith-Dampier

Clothed the water's strife - Margaret Fuller Ossoli "Journey to Trenton Falls"

Through bitterest inward strife - Anne Proctor "Verse: A Legend of Provence"

Though in the strife our heart-strings break - Edward S. Rand "Fallen" [The Continental Monthly March 1862]

Tears and strife to give him worth - Cale Young Rice "The Immanent God"

The strife of hope that struggles - Charles G.D. Roberts "A Street Vigil"

Quiet for murmuring winds at strife - Rennell Rodd "Disillusion"

Roads reach to strife - Margaret E. Sangster "Preface"

The harsh and grating strife of tyrants - Percy Bysshe Shelley "Dedication of the Revolt of Islam to His Wife"

Exhaustion from unequal strife - "Sickbed of Cuchulain: Summons to Cuchulain" transl. by Eleanor Hull

Drives Winter from his path of strife - W. Gilmore Simms "Stanzas"

To eat the bread of strife - "Sticheron Idiomelon" transl. by Rev. John Brownlie in Hymns from the Greek Offices

Four fateful years of mortal strife - Richard Henry Stoddard "Abraham Lincoln: An Horatian Ode"

Strife well lost - Sara Teasdale "Barter"

Sing strife or rising moons - Louis Untermeyer "Songs and the Poet"

Wants no trophies here of strife - Alaric A. Watts "Stanzas [Oh! why amid this hallowed scene]" [Mirror of Literature, Amusement, and Instruction v.10 no.288, supplementary number, 1828]

Upon the summits void of strife - John Hall Wheelock "Travail"

Yielded her heart's sweet strife - Helen Hay Whitney "The Love of the Rose"

Sharp and shrill as swords at strife - John Greenleaf Whittier "The Pipes at Lucknow"

Among the vulgar scenes of strife - "The Whore"

Children marked by endless strife - Emanuel Xavier "How Some of Us Survived Cuando El Mundo Did Not Want Us"


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