Book, Chapter

 1  Int,   4|          of sarcasm to compose a poem of such tender and touching
 2    1,   6|          Hyperides? Not a single poem has glowed with a healthy
 3    3,  95|            for he was reciting a poem in the bath -- I pull Giton
 4    3,  96|        up for trying to recite a poem to the people sitting around
 5    3, 100|      than I am; lampoon her in a poem, if you think anything of
 6    4, 119|       sentence," he bawled; "the poem labors to its birth." Ordering
 7    4, 122|         more easily to compose a poem than a rebuttal charged
 8    5, 145|        real meaning of Kipling's poem, "The female of the species
 9    5, 145| transcribe it in full. "It," the poem, "has also been highly applauded
10    5, 145|         here, in a complimentary poem to a patron and intimate
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