Respuesta :

The buzz found in Robert Frost's "Out Out" symbolizes the careless energy of hardware that, when out of the control of man, can pulverize human life. 
Distributed in 1916 when Britain was at that point occupied with war, a circumstance that required Robert Frost's arrival to the United States, this sonnet looks at the duality of hardware; that is, the blending of the risk and the efficiency of apparatus.

Answer: The buzz saw in Robert Frost's "Out Out" symbolizes the sudden cruelty life can inflict.

Explanation: In the poem, the boy dies by blood loss when his hand is severed by a buzz-saw. The use of personification describes the buzz saw, an inanimate object, as "snarling" and "leaping" out of the boy's hand, but the saw is not at fault for the boy's death, it is the result of him doing the work of an adult man.

The saw itself is a tool, but is also the extension of the person using it. In a way, it's a deadly tool depending on who uses it, and how qualified they are to use it.