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Literary Analysis Of Fire And Ice

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Thesis “I have never started a poem yet whose end I knew. Writing a poem is a discovery” - Robert Frost. Once all has been done and only towards the end may true discoveries be made. January 1st, 2000. December 21st, 2012. September 23rd, 2017. Conspiracy theorists have continually tried warning the public of what they think will bring the world to its end and yet the human race lives on, despite the arguments saying the opposite. It takes the termination of an situation to finally be able to grow from the circumstances. In the poem, ‘Fire and Ice’ written by Robert Frost, the narrator discusses their own idea of how the world will end, with reference to the 1920 debate on the same topic, coming to the conclusion that it is all up to the eyes of the beholder and that death is merely inevitable. With the tone of the poem being ironic but primarily accepting, it is the total the opposite and if not juxtaposes one of Frost’s other poems, ‘Home burial’ which accents a more depressing and a grieving nature. This poem does not discuss the end of everyone’s world, but the end of a couple’s world in which they’re in a strained relationship after the loss of their child. Both poems share the same topic ‘the end of life’, much like the film ‘Me, Earl and the Dying Girl’ in which the protagonist, Greg Gaines, reconnects with a family friend who has just been diagnosed with leukaemia. The film discusses the inevitability of her end in a misleading way, promising the audience that she does to die, however, they realise that the promise was a lie as she dies in a hospital bed whilst watching a film Greg made her as a dying wish. All three texts and all three of their protagonists grasp the concept of the end through the loss of life. Across the board, no scientist is in complete agreement over how this world will end, with each having their own ideas and theories. It is an argument much like the disagreement over which god is real and which religion should be followed. As ‘Fire and Ice’ was published in 1920 and religion being very important because of more immigrants moving to America, coming from southern and eastern Europe, they were often Catholic or Jewish and White Protestants were already all over the states.

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