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Weary of sowing for others to reap - Elizabeth Akers Allen "Rock Me to Sleep"

Reap the far star-gold - Charles Baudelaire "The Venal Muse" transl. not credited

And burns at the scythe that reaps - Stephen Vincent Benet "The Walkers"

The glint of a reaper's blue scythe - Marie Hedderwick Browne "Her First Season"

The harvests of fancy reap - W. Wilfred Campbell "Beyond the Hills of Dream"

Reap the hopes I had - "Centos and Suggestions" transl. and arranged by Rev. John Brownlie in Hymns from the Greek Offices

Reap where ancients sowed - Arthur Hugh Clough "Dipsychus"

Reaping what was never sown - Benjamin Copeland "A Prophecy"

Must blessing reap in tears - Charles Cotton "Contentation"

Who reaps the powers of heaven and earth - Enheduana "The Hymn to Inana" transl. by Sophus Helle

The moon reaping God's blue fields - Eleanor Farjeon "A Sheaf of Nature-Songs VII"

Sowers who never will reap - George Blackstone Field "Men of the Line"

Reap this cruel seed - T'ai Freedom Ford "Emancipation Celebration"

Reaping the harvest of animal bones - Camille Louise Goering "Under and Down"

And bloodless the laurels we reap - "The Golfer's Garland"

Who sow evil and reap the consequences - Sophia Magaretta Hensley "Futurity"

Sowed a verse and reaped a sword - Muhammad Iqbal "The Secrets of the Self"

Sowed an atom and reaped a sun - Muhammad Iqbal "The Secrets of the Self"

To sow in guilt what they must reap in woe - "The King of Darkness: On the Fallen Angels" [Mirror of Literature, Amusement, and Instruction v.12 no.337, Oct. 25, 1828]

As mead to reapers in the wheat - Vachel Lindsay "A Rhyme for All Zionists: The Eyes of Queen Esther, and How they Conquered King Ahasuerus"

As the sickle reaps the sheaf - Fiona MacLeod "The Songs of Ethlenn Stuart"

Reaped the battle together - James MacPherson "Fragments of Ancient Poetry: VII"

Reaping time for kisses - Louis J. McQuilland "With Bertha Up the River"

On a reaped afternoon - George Meredith "The Day of the Daughter of Hades"

From whence his vengeance such a harvest reap'd - Robert Montgomery "Vision of Hell" [Mirror of Literature, Amusement, and Instruction v.12 no.337, Oct. 25, 1828]

Reaper of my evening song - Pablo Neruda "In My Sky at Twilight" transl. by W.S. Merwin

Who would reap where fortune's wheel hath trod - A.J. Requier "The Phantasmagoria: A Legend of Eld" [Graham's Magazine v.XXXIV no.2, Feb. 1849]

Sees little grain to reap - Clinton Scollard "A Song for Joyce's Country"

Reaping a barren grain - Robert W. Service "L'Envoi"

A reaper on the roadway - Dora Sigerson Shorter "A Meadow Tragedy"

To reap the summer's glow - Joyce Sidman and Rick Allen "Winter Bees"

Reaps the flame of mightiest stars - Clark Ashton Smith "Ode to the Abyss"

Sow your gladness for earth's reaping - C.H. Sorley "All the Hills and Vales"

And for my faith reaped tares - Capt. James Sprent "A Confession of Faith" [The Anzac Book: Written and Illustrated in Gallipoli by the Men of Anzac, 1916]

Shall reap the years of peace - George Sterling "The Voice of the Wheat"

Where Azrael reaps a full harvest - Barry Straton "Charity"

But the stranger reaps our harvest - Jane Francesca Agnes Wilde "The Famine Year"

Reaping gold apples of the storm - Humbert Wolfe "Apples"

Nor reaping summer's fulfillment - Humbert Wolfe "The Drift of the Lute"

Reaping of nations overripened - Francis Brett Young "On a Subaltern Killed in Action"


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