A Song of Ice and Fire Fastplay FREE VERSIONDescription complète
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MERP adventure published in Guild Companion
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Title: In Fire, In Ice Author: moirariordan Fandom: Wizards of Waverly Place Pairings/Characters: Justin/Alex (ish), the Russos, Uncle Kelbo, Harper Rating: T Summary: The sound of a world fal...Full description
Title: In Fire, In Ice Author: moirariordan Fandom: Wizards of Waverly Place Pairings/Characters: Justin/Alex (ish), the Russos, Uncle Kelbo, Harper Rating: T Summary: The sound of a world fal...
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The World of Ice and Fire (a Shinnick Scan)
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Descripción: ICE AND RAIN PROTECTION
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Fire and Ice By: Robert Frost "Fire and Ice" was first published in the December 1920 issue of Harper's.
Presented by: Liza Evans & Taylor Compton
Why Choose "Fire and Ice?"
● "Fire and Ice" should be added to the 2012 Glencoe literature textbook because it is full of various poetic devices. It will help students learn to identify sound devices and figurative language.
Rhyme Scheme and Rhythm A
Some say the world will end in fire,
8
B
Some say in ice.
4
A
From what I've tasted of desire
8
A
I hold with those who favor fire.
8
● This poem is written in iambic tetrameter except for a few lines. For example, the 2nd line says "Some say in ice." This is written in iambic dimeter.
lSound Devices: Parallelism Some say the world will end in fire Some say in ice.
● The poem starts off with parallelism. Lines 1 and 2 both have the same beginning, "Some say..."
Sound Devices: Assonance - I hold with those who favor fire. - But if it had to perish twice,
● In the fourth line, the long O sound is repeated, creating an assonance. ● In the fifth line, the short I sound is repeated.
Sound Devices: Consonance - I think I know enough of hate - To say that for destruction ice
● Frost repeatedly uses the same consonants in a line to create consonances.
Sound Devices: Alliteration From what I've tasted of desire I hold with those who favor fire ● Frost repeats the letter F at the beginning of his words, creating an alliteration.
Figurative Language: Symbolism ● Some say the world will end in fire, ..... From what I've tasted of desire ● I think I know enough of hate To say that for destruction ice Is also great -In the poem, Frost uses fire to represent desire and ice to represent hatred. He is trying to say that the desires of humans and their hatred towards one another could end the world.
Figurative Language: Allusion Some say the world will end in fire, Some say in ice.
● When Frost is writing about fire, he is alluding to nuclear wars or global warming. ● When he writes about ice, he is talking about the ice age.
Other Poetic Devices: Imagery From what I've tasted of desire
●
Frost utilizes imagery by appealing to his readers' senses.
"Fire and Ice" is a Great Learning Tool ● Adding Robert Frost's famous poem, "Fire and Ice" to the 2012 Glencoe literature textbook is a great idea. Not only will students be reading something with many deep meanings that they can relate to, but they will be learning how to recognize poetic devices like symbolism, parallelism, and rhyme scheme.