English, asked by rakshitash12, 9 months ago

plss give the summary of To the foot from its child fast in your answers​

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Answered by Anonymous
1

Answer:

this poem 'To the foot from its child' poet Pablo Neruda has used 'foot' as a metaphor to the trails and tribulations of human life, his birth and his death, his dreams and realities. ... Then age starts catching up with the foot

Example ➡ child grown into a young man, then he grows old and feeble.

Answered by Anonymous
0

☆ANSWER☆

To the Foot from its Child" is a poem richly filled with meaning and striking imagery. It is a criticism on how an individual is reduced to be an object of suppression under varying circumstances. Neruda rightly makes his observation in the beginning of the poem that the child is not aware of the reality but dreams to be a butterfly or an apple. Then the passage of time exposes the foot to such hardships of life that it loses the battle and remains condemned to live in the shoe. Here the poet shows how an individual is conditioned by society. The foot then starts to understand its limits and live accordingly like a blind man out of touch with its fellow. As the foot grows, its soft aspects start to change and grow hard. Neruda effectively uses the imagery of eyeless reptiles to describe the state of the foot. Though life comes hard as volcanoes of death, it is to be accepted. The later half of the poem describes the presence of the foot in every order of life - “the one foot, the other, now the man’s , now the woman’s. The foot has had such a life without any respite. It is a lone and arduous course for the foot “until the whole man chooses to stop”. It continues to dream beyond its confines even when it is buried. In other

words, society overpowers an individual from immense possibilities of life.

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