what does the point mean when he says 'and would suffice' in fire and ice?
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As the poem introduces the reader to the profound idea that the world could end in one of two ways, with fire or ice. In The last line picks up on the idea that we don't know whether fire or ice is stronger. The end of the poem suggests that it doesn't matter which is stronger: both will do the trick
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here is ur answer mate
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in the poem fire and ice by Robert frost when Robert frost says "and would suffice "he simply means that fire is enough for destroying the world or cause an apocalypse . fire simply means human desire .
hope it helps you
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