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Pahom's wife's statement that "the more land you have, the more trouble" could predict that Pahom's pursuit of acquiring more land will ultimately lead to his downfall or negative consequences. This foreshadows that Pahom's greed and obsession with land ownership will have detrimental effects on his life.
Pahom paid one thousand rubles for thirteen thousand acres of land from the Bashkirs.
More land.
Tolstoys charachter Pahom makes the boast that if he had enough land, he would not fear the devil himself. This is only a bragging that if one has a large parcel of land that he would be protected against evil. This is a literary question and not religious in intent.
Pahom's greed is the devil in the story.
Pahom believes that the only trouble peasants face is not having enough land. He thinks that if they had more land, they would be able to live without any worries or troubles.
he made mistake in his life that he was greedy about acquiring more land..........
An example of transformation in "How Much Land Does a Man Need" is when the main character, Pahom, starts off as content with his land but becomes consumed by greed and a desire for more land. This transformation leads Pahom to make reckless decisions that ultimately result in his downfall.
Pahom takes the Bashkirs to court because they refused to complete the agreement to sell him the land he desired. He takes them to court in order to enforce the deal and ensure that he acquires the land he believes will make him truly wealthy.
In the end, Pahom's greed leads him to overextend himself as he tries to buy more and more land from the Bashkirs. Exhausted and desperate, he finally collapses from a heart attack, dying on the very land he coveted so much. The story serves as a cautionary tale about the destructive nature of greed and excessive ambition.
The initial conversation between the devil and Pahom, where the devil mentions that no matter how much land a person has, it is never enough, foreshadows Pahom's insatiable greed for more land. Pahom's dream about the devil leading him to endless land that ends up crushing him can be seen as foreshadowing his ultimate demise in his pursuit of acquiring more land.
As Phalom comes along the third side of his land, he is in a hurried state. He had not completed two miles of digging, and he had over a 10-mile goal.