What are the poems that describe "fighting spirit"?

The ambitious people eat the meat of Huns when they are hungry, and they laugh and talk about drinking the blood of Xiongnu when they are thirsty—— Yue Fei of the Song Dynasty, "The River is Red·Written on the Heart"

The old man is in trouble, and his ambition is thousands of miles——Cao Cao of the Han Dynasty, "Though the Turtle" "Shou"

Returning to Zhining without a five-acre garden, the original intention of reading was in the Yuan and Yuan Dynasties - Lu You of the Song Dynasty "Reading"

Xing Tian dances with relatives, and the fierce ambition is always there - Wei and Jin · Tao Yuanming's "Reading the Classic of Mountains and Seas·Part 10"

What is the end of self-purification and letting go of emotions - Anonymous "East City is High and Long" of the Han Dynasty

The ambition is fame and farewell What a sigh - "Farewell" by Lu Guimeng of the Tang Dynasty

The husband's ambitions are all over the world, and he is still close to his neighbors thousands of miles away - "Preface to the White Horse Wang Biao" by Cao Zhi of the Wei and Jin Dynasties

Moved to the Han Dynasty It is difficult to recover in the end, and I am determined to annihilate the military service——Tang Dynasty Du Fu's "Five Ode to Ancient Relics Part Five"

Writing poems to express ambitions, but it is difficult to record this ambition——Pan An of Wei and Jin Dynasties "Three Mourning Poems"

My true ambition is to starve to death, and I am picking weeds in my dream——"Nan'an Army" by Wen Tianxiang of the Song Dynasty

My husband all has ambitions, and he will make meritorious deeds when he meets them——Yang of the Tang Dynasty Jiong's "Crossing the Fortress"

Hidden away the crisis, suppressed his ambition, and gathered water shields leisurely in the lake in a short boat - Song Dynasty Lu You's "Qinyuan Spring·The Lone Crane Returns"

A man with lofty ideals and a lonely man Don’t complain: it’s hard to use ancient materials——Du Fu’s “The Journey of Ancient Cypresses” of the Tang Dynasty

Nine sides are so rotten that they are like worms, Polygala is really as good as the grass——Gong Zizhen’s “Polygala” of the Qing Dynasty

A life of arrogance, bitterness and disharmony, kindness and sparseness, matchmaking and hard work are so good - Tang Dynasty Li Bai's "Reply to the King Drinking Alone on the Twelve Cold Nights and Feelings"

References

Ancient Poetry Article website: http://www.gushiwen.org/shiju/lizhi.aspx