Firstly, Beveridge has provoked much thought on people in this poem by raising the issue of inequality between men and women through the theme role of authority. She definitely accentuates this aspect by explaining in the poem that the female is the provider by the child being doing the hard labour of killing the fox for her domineering uncle. (stanza 1, line 4-5). The child being forced to do something she does not want to do symbolises how much power men exude over women. Beveridge uses a metaphor in the line 'Terror barrel-rode through my stomach' to show how the child is scared and feels sick at the thought of killing an animal. The child being forced to do something she does not want to do symbolises how much power men exude over women Therefore, men have a much higher role of authority than women. Beveridge clearly establishes the fact that the child that the child is female by expressing how indifferent her uncle is to her. Lines such as: his arms like dry river beds dammed at the shoulders/his voice harsh, kelpie-cursing/would not understand if I let the fox run to the bush reveal the harshness of her uncle's character.
Beveridge has used her uncle's portrayal to represent her feminist point of view on men and how non-understanding they could be. The bitter imagery used in the line 'my uncle's quick rabbit-skinning hands' In stanza two is used to emphasis such barbaric behaviour of men towards women. Men had abused their authorisation and treated women intolerably explaining the inequality between the genders. Therefore, Beveridge's intention