Read the poem and answer the question. Does the narrator

Read the poem and answer the question. Does the narrator think the hoe has a right to strike him a blow? THE OBJECTION TO BEING STEPPED ON At the end of the row I stepped on the toe Of an unemployed hoe. It rose in offence And struck me a blow In the seat of my sense. It wasnt to blame But I called it a name. And I must say it dealt Me a blow that I felt Like malice prepense. You may call me a fool, But was there a rule The weapon should be Turned into a tool? And what do we see? The first tool I step on Turned into a weapon. Robert Frost

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As a result of the action described in the quotation, all weapons should be changed into
tools, there should be no wars, and everyone should live in peace.

No, the narrator feels the hoe struck him with malice prepense, a legal term implying it
was planned in advance (ironic use), and he complains that the gardening tool has
changed into a weapon.

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