on their slag heap, these children
wear skins peeped through by bones and spectacles of steel
with mended glass, like bottle bits on stones.
All of their time and space are foggy slum.
so blot their maps with slums as big as doom.
(a) who are these children?
(b) what is their slag heap?
(c) why are these bones peeping through their skin?
(d) what does ? with mended glass? mean?

 a. 'An elementary school classroom in a slum' written by Sir Stephen Harold Spender.
b. 'Slag heap' is a hill or an area of refuse from a mine or industrial site.
c. The slums are choked with garbage and smoke. The condition of poverty in the slums is extreme as is evident from the condition of the dilapidated school there and the malnourished and emaciated bodies of the slum children.. The maps put up on the walls show different countries around the world: they are a window to the outside world. But, they have no meaning as the lives of the slum children are destined for doom or death: a symbol of their bleak existence and poor future.
d. The figure of speech used in the third line is simile.  
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