I urgently need your help for two main reasons, Writeacher.

1) First, how would you express the following concept when presenting the programme for an exam:
total (complete?)reading of the abdridged edition of Orwell's 1984.
2) Second, I need to find the paraphrase (and comment) to Emily Dickinson's "Art thou the thing I wanted?" (poem 1282), which deals with her possible anorexia.
I'm including the poem itself. I really hope you can help me rephrase it.

Art thou the thing I wanted?
Art thou the thing I wanted?
Begone -- my Tooth has grown --
Supply the minor Palate
That has not starved so long --
I tell thee while I waited
The mystery of Food
Increased till I abjured it
And dine without Like God --

1) First, how would you express the following concept when presenting the programme for an exam:

total (complete?)reading of the abdridged edition of Orwell's 1984.
I'd need to see the entire sentence.

2) You should try this, line by line. One thing to know -- "my Tooth has grown" can mean that she has gotten older ... or that her starving herself has damaged her teeth.

Try it, line by line.

1) To express the concept of a complete reading of the abridged edition of Orwell's 1984 when presenting it for an exam, you can use the following sentence: "The exam will require a thorough reading of the abridged edition of Orwell's 1984 in its entirety." This sentence conveys the idea that the exam will cover the entire abridged edition of the book.

2) To paraphrase Emily Dickinson's poem 1282, which explores her possible anorexia, you can rephrase it as follows:

"Are you the thing I desired?
Are you the object of my longing?
Go away — my appetite has waned —
Fill the smaller portion
That has not suffered for so long —
I confess, while I waited
The allure of food
Grew until I renounced it
And now I dine, akin to a deity."

In this paraphrase, I have attempted to capture the essence of Dickinson's poem while using different words and expressions. The focus is on the speaker's desire, the decline of their appetite, and their eventual satisfaction with life despite abstaining from food.