English, asked by aashi6728, 1 year ago

central idea of the poem "fire and ice" ​

Answers

Answered by shreeyab
7

Ostensibly, the poem "Fire and Ice" by Robert Frost is about the hypothetical end of the world, with the speaker asserting that it will be destroyed either by fire or by ice. One could argue, though, that the central idea of this poem is that fire and ice are equally destructive, in their own ways.

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Answered by ananyajay09
1

Answer:

The poem revolves around the theme that human emotions are destructive when allowed to runn amok (out of control). They can destroy a person morally, physically or even mentally. The poet tells us about the destructive bearing of ill-feelings like- love, lust, intolerance, greed, hatred etc.

Here, in this poem the poet signifies love, passion etc. as fire and hatred, greed etc. as ice. Also, world represents a relationship of humankind.

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