NCERT Solutions for Class 10 English (First Flight) Poem 2: Fire and Ice
Complete solutions for Class 10 English First Flight Poem 2 – “Fire and Ice” by Robert Frost: an original summary, central theme, poetic devices, word meanings and every Thinking about the Poem question answered in full, exam-ready detail. We keep the textbook questions exactly as printed in NCERT, and add extra questions, MCQs and Assertion–Reason practice for the 2026–27 session.
About the poet
Robert Frost (1874–1963) was one of the most celebrated American poets of the twentieth century. He is admired for using plain, everyday language and simple rural images – snow, trees, birds, country roads – to explore deep ideas about life, human nature and choice. A four-time winner of the Pulitzer Prize, Frost wrote famous poems such as ‘The Road Not Taken’, ‘Stopping by Woods on a Snowy Evening’ and ‘Dust of Snow’. “Fire and Ice”, first published in 1920, is one of his shortest yet most quoted poems, packing a large warning about human emotions into just nine lines.
Summary
“Fire and Ice” is a short, nine-line poem in which Robert Frost reflects on how the world might one day come to an end. He begins by noting two popular beliefs: some people say the world will end in fire, while others say it will end in ice. Rather than treating this only as a scientific or religious prediction, Frost turns it into a meditation on human emotions.
From his own experience of desire – greed, lust and burning passion – the poet sides with those who believe the world will end in fire. He has “tasted” desire and knows how it can consume and destroy a person from within, just as fire devours everything in its path. Desire, when uncontrolled, grows hotter and more dangerous, and so Frost holds with those who favour fire.
However, he does not stop there. The poet imagines that if the world had to be destroyed a second time, ice would be equally capable of bringing about that destruction. Here ice stands for hatred, coldness and indifference. Frost says he knows enough of hate to understand that, for the purpose of destruction, ice “is also great / And would suffice.”
Thus, in very few words, Frost suggests that both burning desire (fire) and cold hatred (ice) are powerful destructive forces. The real message is symbolic: it is not the physical end of the planet that the poet fears most, but the way uncontrolled human passions – greed on the one hand and cold-hearted hatred on the other – can destroy individuals, relationships and the whole of humanity. The poem is a quiet but powerful warning to keep our emotions in balance.
Theme & message
The central theme of the poem is that uncontrolled human emotions are as destructive as the elemental forces of nature. ‘Fire’ symbolises desire, greed, lust and passion, while ‘ice’ symbolises hatred, coldness, rigidity and indifference. Frost warns that both these emotions, when unchecked, have the power to destroy a person and the world. The message is one of self-control and balance: just as fire can burn and ice can freeze, intense desire and cold hatred can ruin human life. We should therefore guard against extremes of feeling.
Poetic devices
| Device | Example / Explanation |
|---|---|
| Symbolism | ‘Fire’ stands for desire/greed/passion; ‘ice’ stands for hatred/coldness/indifference. |
| Imagery | Visual images of fire and ice make the abstract emotions concrete and vivid. |
| Rhyme scheme | The poem follows the pattern aba abc bcb, linking the contrasting ideas of fire and ice. |
| Alliteration | “favour fire” – repetition of the ‘f’ sound. |
| Assonance | Repetition of vowel sounds, e.g. the long ‘i’ in “ice”, “twice”, “suffice”. |
| Antithesis / Contrast | The opposites ‘fire’ and ‘ice’ are placed against each other throughout. |
Word meanings
| Word | English meaning | Hindi meaning |
|---|---|---|
| desire | a strong wish, longing; greed or lust | इच्छा, लालसा |
| tasted | (here) experienced, felt | अनुभव किया |
| favour | support, prefer | समर्थन करना |
| hold with | agree with, side with | सहमत होना |
| perish | to die, to be destroyed | नष्ट होना, मर जाना |
| twice | two times | दो बार |
| hate | strong dislike, hatred | घृणा, नफरत |
| destruction | the act of destroying; ruin | विनाश |
| suffice | to be enough, to be sufficient | पर्याप्त होना |
| great | (here) powerful, capable | समर्थ, बड़ा |
Thinking about the Poem
1. There are many ideas about how the world will ‘end’. Do you think the world will end some day? Have you ever thought what would happen if the sun got so hot that it ‘burst’, or grew colder and colder?
2. For Frost, what do ‘fire’ and ‘ice’ stand for? Here are some ideas:
greed avarice cruelty lust conflict fury intolerance rigidity insensitivity coldness indifference hatred
3. What is the rhyme scheme of the poem? How does it help in bringing out the contrasting ideas in the poem?
Extra questions
Short answer (30–40 words)
1. What two views about the end of the world does the poet mention?
2. Why does the poet side with those who favour fire?
3. What does the poet say about ice?
4. Why is ‘Fire and Ice’ called a symbolic poem?
5. What lesson does the poem teach us?
Long answer (100–120 words)
6. “Both desire and hatred are equally destructive.” Discuss with reference to ‘Fire and Ice’.
7. How does Robert Frost convey a serious message through a very short poem?
MCQs & Assertion–Reason
1. Who is the poet of ‘Fire and Ice’?
(a) John Keats (b) Robert Frost (c) Robert Browning (d) W. B. Yeats
2. In the poem, ‘fire’ symbolises:
(a) hatred (b) coldness (c) desire and greed (d) indifference
3. ‘Ice’ in the poem stands for:
(a) love (b) hatred and coldness (c) passion (d) hope
4. From what has the poet ‘tasted’ in order to favour fire?
(a) hate (b) ice (c) desire (d) snow
5. According to the poet, ice for destruction is:
(a) weak (b) also great and would suffice (c) useless (d) harmless
6. The word ‘perish’ in the poem means:
(a) grow (b) die / be destroyed (c) shine (d) melt
7. The rhyme scheme of the poem is:
(a) abab cdcd (b) aabb ccdd (c) aba abc bcb (d) abc abc abc
8. How many lines does the poem ‘Fire and Ice’ have?
(a) eight (b) nine (c) ten (d) twelve
9. The main message of the poem is that we should:
(a) fear nature (b) control destructive emotions (c) avoid science (d) hate the cold
10. The word ‘suffice’ in the poem means:
(a) to fail (b) to be enough (c) to suffer (d) to freeze
Assertion–Reason – choose: (a) A and R true, R explains A; (b) A and R true, R does not explain A; (c) A true, R false; (d) A false, R true.
1. Assertion (A): The poet holds with those who favour fire.
Reason (R): From what he has tasted of desire, he knows how destructive burning passion can be.
2. Assertion (A): In the poem, ‘ice’ stands for hatred and coldness.
Reason (R): The poet says ice is also great and would suffice for destruction.
3. Assertion (A): ‘Fire and Ice’ is only about the scientific end of the planet.
Reason (R): Fire and ice are used as symbols for human emotions like desire and hatred.
4. Assertion (A): The poem warns us to keep our emotions in balance.
Reason (R): Both uncontrolled desire and cold hatred can destroy individuals and society.
5. Assertion (A): The poem is very long and detailed.
Reason (R): Robert Frost conveys his message in just nine short lines.
Exam tips
Score full marks on ‘Fire and Ice’
• Always explain that fire = desire/greed/lust and ice = hatred/coldness/indifference – symbolism is the most asked idea.
• Remember the rhyme scheme aba abc bcb and be ready to say how it links the contrasting ideas.
• Mention that the poem has nine lines and was written by Robert Frost.
• In long answers, end with the moral – the need to control extreme emotions.
• Quote only short phrases like “would suffice” or “tasted of desire”; do not copy out the whole poem.
FAQs
Who wrote the poem ‘Fire and Ice’?
The poem ‘Fire and Ice’ was written by the famous American poet Robert Frost and is Poem 2 in the Class 10 English textbook First Flight.
What do ‘fire’ and ‘ice’ symbolise in the poem?
‘Fire’ symbolises desire, greed and lust, while ‘ice’ symbolises hatred, coldness and indifference. Both stand for destructive human emotions.
What is the rhyme scheme of ‘Fire and Ice’?
The rhyme scheme of the poem is aba abc bcb, which keeps the contrasting ideas of fire and ice closely tied together.
Questions are taken verbatim from the NCERT First Flight textbook; the summary, explanations and answers are written originally by ClearStudy.
