Q1. Who is the author of 'Fire and Ice'?
Q2. What does fire symbolize in the poem?
Q3. What does ice symbolize?
Q4. What is the poem's primary subject?
Q5. How many lines does the poem contain?
Q6. What does the speaker's ambiguity about fire and ice suggest?
Q7. What is the significance of the phrase 'twice over'?
Q8. Is the poem literally about planetary destruction?
Q9. What does the poem reveal about human nature?
Q10. What is the tone of the poem?
Q11. What poetic device does Frost use to compare fire and ice?
Q12. Why does Frost choose such brief, simple language for such grave subject matter?
Q13. How might the poem apply beyond literal world destruction?
Q14. What does the poem suggest about balance and extremes?
Q15. What is the effect of presenting cosmic speculation in conversational tone?
Q16. What rhyme scheme does the poem use?
Q17. What does the poem suggest about human responsibility?
Q18. What is implied about which force might be more dangerous?
Q19. How does the poem's brevity contribute to its impact?
Q20. What is the ultimate message of 'Fire and Ice'?