'Earth is crammed with Heaven' is a quote by Elizabeth Barrett Browning that Ginny used to describe the beginnings of Dawn at the first scene in the owlery.
The latter poem 'pink, small and punctual' is a poem by Emily Dickens that Ginny felt matched the mood of Nature, which was Spring at that moment.
The answers to the puzzles are:
. Dictionary
. Nine
The last one was very easy, and Ginny was sure of it, but she was rather flustered by his nearness and then the sudden shock of mortification. The lines she remembered were an excerpt of a poem titled 'poison Tree' by William Blake. Truly recommended.
The following day, when Ginny returns to the club and finds her project missing, she overhears Draco bullying Colin. Lost in her thoughts she recites a few lines that inevitably interrupts her search for her lost work.
The lines are excerpts from D.H Lawrence's poem 'snake'. Also, a remarkable recommended poem.
Later that night, after Ginny decided to come at night to look for her project or attempt to do it again, she finds herself in the company of Draco. He recites the famous lines from Frost's poem.
'Let them hate, so long as they fear' is a line from Accius.
'You have a February face..' is Ginny quoting Shakespeare from his play, Much Ado about Nothing.
And last but not least, the Golden line..:
Dulce et decorum est pro patria mori
It is a sweet and fitting thing to die for one's country.
Behold. Here Draco bitterly quotes Wilfred Owen's poem, explaining in his own way and justifying why he's so hateful, as Ginny put it earlier, towards everyone.
To put it bluntly, if you haven't understood yet,
He's a spy. Like Snape.
End.
:::::
