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1931, William Faulkner, Sanctuary, Vintage, published 1993, page 130:
I have but one rift in the darkness, that is that I have injured no one save myself by my folly, and that the extent of that folly you will never learn.
to the dread rattling thunder / Have I given fire and rifted Jove's stout oak / With his own bolt
1822, William Wordsworth, A Jewish Family (in a small valley opposite St. Goar, upon the Rhine), lines 9–11:
The Mother—her thou must have seen, / In spirit, ere she came / To dwell these rifted rocks between.
1894, Ivan Dexter, Talmud: A Strange Narrative of Central Australia, published in serial form in Port Adelaide News and Lefevre's Peninsula Advertiser (SA), Chapter III,
he stopped rigid as one petrified and gazed through the rifted logs of the raft into the water.
The mightie trunck halfe rent, with ragged rift Doth roll adowne the rocks, and fall with fearefull drift.
1986 December 21, Corinne Lightweaver, “AIDS Fears Shadow Lesbian's Memories”, in Gay Community News, volume 14, number 23, page 6:
Whether these men are alive or not, the fragile meeting ground I shared with them has been rift apart by a microscopic menace they didn't tell us about in high school biology.