English, asked by dolly1055, 8 months ago

explain the symbolise used in the poem "fire and ice"?​

Answers

Answered by suneetadevisd993
2

Answer:

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Frost's poem, “Fire and Ice,” the speaker symbolizes fire as desire or love, and ice is symbolized to be destruction and hate. Another way to symbolize ice in this poem is coldness. Frost immediately connects fire with desire because of its perfect rhyme. ... Fire is burning hot, and ice is freezing cold.

Answered by ananyanayak321
1

Answer:

explain the symbolise used in the poem "fire and ice"?

Explanation:

Robert Frost is famous for his ability to juxtapose nature with human emotions and finally draw out moral. The poem Fire and Ice is also symbolic. In this poem, the poet says that the most dangerous things which could destroy the world are fire and ice.

However the fire here, symbolises desire and greed and ice symbolises hate and coldness of relations. According to the poet, both these evils would destroy the humanity because greed leads a person to commit blunders and so does the hate.

Introduction

Fire and Ice by Robert Frost is a short, figurative and symbolic poem that juxtaposes the scientific assumptions of his time and his own imaginations. The poet talks about the discourse going on about which of the two things i.e. fire and ice will destroy the world.

Meaning

For the poet, fire means the burning desire for the material things and ice means coldness that emerges in humans because of the desires and materialistic life. He finally concludes that both of these weapons are equally dangerous and will lead the world towards destruction.

This short poem comprises of nine lines and has rhyme scheme ABA ABC BCB. There are three sentences. In the first sentence, the poet explains the popular debate that is prevailing in the society since long about what will destroy the world.

In the second sentence, he metaphorically changes the discourse. Now fire and ice mean something deeper and profound. in the final line, which is the longest, he gives his own thoughts.

The poet begins the poem by narrating the popular and age-old debate about the two things out of which one will destroy the world. These two things are fire and ice.

Some scientists believe that it is the fire that will be responsible for the destruction of the world. The fire here means the lave which is in the core of the earth.

People believe that someday, the earth will burst and there will be huge explosions of fire that will burn the world and hence everything will be destroyed.

The other belief is that it is the ice that will destroy the world. Now, ice may refer to different things (as I have read different interpretations of this word in various sites). First, ice probably refers to melting of glaciers and rising of sea-level in which everything will sink.

However, this interpretation does not seem to be the exact meaning of what Frost talks about. The other interpretation ice is the entering of a meteor or any other thing from the space which will stop the sunlight and hence, there will be an ice age which will make the world perish.

According to CourseHero, Frost’s son died at the age of 4 which was followed by the death of his daughter, sometime before he composed this verse. Hence the ice may also refer to the tragedies which Frost had gone through in his life.

Whatever the meanings of fire and ice are, the poet gives a popular assumption of his time

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