Saturday, January 30, 2016

Comment on the literary devices in "Fire and Ice" by Robert Frost.

This excellent poem is built around two implied metaphors, in
which ice is compared to hate, and fire to desire. The poem explores two different contradictory
beliefs concerning how the world will end. The poem, perhaps ironically, argues that either fire
(representing desire) or ice (representing hate) will "suffice" to kill us all off. This poem
therefore explores the danger and threat of such emotions as desire and hate, and the way in
which such emotions, uncurbed, could destroy us.


The link between
fire and desire is clear, with the rhyme helping to establish the connection, but Frost compares
ice to hate, which perhaps needs to be unpacked. Hate, like ice, is hard but can be melted under
the right conditions. Hate might lead to violence, which could usher in the end of the world,
just as desire or greed could cause isolation or division, leading to the same
conclusion.


Thus this overtly very simple poem is built around two
implied metaphors, which compare fire to desire and ice to hate.

No comments:

Post a Comment

How is Anne's goal of wanting "to go on living even after my death" fulfilled in Anne Frank: The Diary of a Young Girl?I didn't get how it was...

I think you are right! I don't believe that many of the Jews who were herded into the concentration camps actually understood the eno...