Feet of Clay
- Dave Smith
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Re: Feet of Clay
Hi Everyone
Thanks for the lovely comments and technical advice on Feet of Clay. I appreciated your thoughtful feedback Zondrae and the conversation this initiated. This certainly is a great learning forum.
I've always thought the term Feet of Clay referred to someone who'd been put on a pedestal (metaphorically) and was then found not to be as admirable as originally thought. I'm not always 100% right though
Cheers Nerelie
Thanks for the lovely comments and technical advice on Feet of Clay. I appreciated your thoughtful feedback Zondrae and the conversation this initiated. This certainly is a great learning forum.
I've always thought the term Feet of Clay referred to someone who'd been put on a pedestal (metaphorically) and was then found not to be as admirable as originally thought. I'm not always 100% right though

Cheers Nerelie
- Bob Pacey
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Re: Feet of Clay
"Nerelie everything seems to point to a meaning of " An underlying weakness ' Or " Not as strong as first thought"
Still It fits the bill for your poem
Well Done Bob
Still It fits the bill for your poem
Well Done Bob
The purpose in life is to have fun.
After you grasp that everything else seems insignificant !!!
After you grasp that everything else seems insignificant !!!
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Re: Feet of Clay
I reckon you are 100% right Nerelie.
There are mixed receptions when there is reference to the Bible, but it is amazing what a large body of sayings that we use in everyday speech come from that source.
" Feet of clay " refers to the biblical Book of Daniel where the King of Babylon, Nebuchandezzar, has a vision in which he sees a great statue with a head of gold, chest of silver , feet of clay, hips of bronze, legs of iron and feet made of iron mixed with clay. As you have said Nerelie, a metaphor, a figure on a pedestal, which stood for the decline of the great imperial powers of the world.
A bloke named David Crystal has published a book devoted to explaining all the common sayings derived from the Bible. It's an interesting reference book but terribly tedious to read through.
There are mixed receptions when there is reference to the Bible, but it is amazing what a large body of sayings that we use in everyday speech come from that source.
" Feet of clay " refers to the biblical Book of Daniel where the King of Babylon, Nebuchandezzar, has a vision in which he sees a great statue with a head of gold, chest of silver , feet of clay, hips of bronze, legs of iron and feet made of iron mixed with clay. As you have said Nerelie, a metaphor, a figure on a pedestal, which stood for the decline of the great imperial powers of the world.
A bloke named David Crystal has published a book devoted to explaining all the common sayings derived from the Bible. It's an interesting reference book but terribly tedious to read through.
Neville
" Prose is description, poetry is presence " Les Murray.
" Prose is description, poetry is presence " Les Murray.
- Zondrae
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Re: Feet of Clay
G'day Neville,
Sorry to pinch the thread for a sec..
Someone, knowing I go to church, gave me a translation of the Dead Sea Scrolls. The first twenty, or so, pages were riviting. Then it got so boring I have never been able to finish it. I left the book mark in place in case I ever think I'll try again. (Life is too short!).
Back to this thread. I understood the meaning of 'feet of clay' was - an idol who proved to be not worthy of admiration.
Sorry to pinch the thread for a sec..
Someone, knowing I go to church, gave me a translation of the Dead Sea Scrolls. The first twenty, or so, pages were riviting. Then it got so boring I have never been able to finish it. I left the book mark in place in case I ever think I'll try again. (Life is too short!).
Back to this thread. I understood the meaning of 'feet of clay' was - an idol who proved to be not worthy of admiration.
Zondrae King
a woman of words
a woman of words
- Dave Smith
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Re: Feet of Clay
I’m with you Leonie; one of our favourite songs is about a bloke that pinches sheep.
“and he sang as he shoved that Jumbuk in his tucker bag.” go figure.
TTFN
“and he sang as he shoved that Jumbuk in his tucker bag.” go figure.
TTFN

I Keep Trying
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Re: Feet of Clay
.....ah, that would be Andy you refer to...."Andy sang, Andy watched Andy waited for....." Yeah, yeah I know....I'll leave now..... 

Ross
- Dave Smith
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- Glenny Palmer
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- Joined: Wed Nov 03, 2010 12:47 am
Re: Feet of Clay
'As far as I know it's a type of near rhyme or slant rhyme , perhaps you could call it assonance'
Go to your room Neville! (that's a bit severe, sorry luv).....
Newbies often tell me that they 'have read' my tutorial. tch tch. Neville, can you help me out here....'tutorial'... thesaurus description please. I think it'll say something along the lines of repeatedly reading aka studying...a bit at a time...?
Anyway this is all in there. Ta Zondrae...you save me so much time. Your critique is correct IMO. Apart from technicalities, you will see an example of singular/plural rhyme in 'Unstrained', that when corrected conveys so much more 'power'.
'Assonance':
In the song 'Don't It Make My Brown Eyes Blue'.
'I'll be sad when you're goneI'll just cry all night long....'
'gone' & long' are assonance...not rhyme.
Hellooo Nerelie. Great to see you posting on here. Sing out next time you see me in Coles & we'll have a cuppa & a chat?
Cheeers
Glenny Palmer
Go to your room Neville! (that's a bit severe, sorry luv).....
Newbies often tell me that they 'have read' my tutorial. tch tch. Neville, can you help me out here....'tutorial'... thesaurus description please. I think it'll say something along the lines of repeatedly reading aka studying...a bit at a time...?
Anyway this is all in there. Ta Zondrae...you save me so much time. Your critique is correct IMO. Apart from technicalities, you will see an example of singular/plural rhyme in 'Unstrained', that when corrected conveys so much more 'power'.
'Assonance':
In the song 'Don't It Make My Brown Eyes Blue'.
'I'll be sad when you're goneI'll just cry all night long....'
'gone' & long' are assonance...not rhyme.
Hellooo Nerelie. Great to see you posting on here. Sing out next time you see me in Coles & we'll have a cuppa & a chat?
Cheeers
Glenny Palmer
The purpose of my life is to serve as a warning to others.