翻訳と辞書
Words near each other
・ Fire and Brimstone
・ Fire and brimstone
・ Fire and brimstone (disambiguation)
・ Fire and Darkness
・ Fire and Faggot Parliament
・ Fire and Fame
・ Fire and Fury
・ Fire and Gasoline
・ Fire and Glory
・ Fire and Hemlock
・ Fire and Ice
・ Fire and Ice (1983 film)
・ Fire and Ice (1986 film)
・ Fire and Ice (board game)
・ Fire and Ice (Pat Benatar song)
Fire and Ice (poem)
・ Fire and Ice (Steve Camp album)
・ Fire and Ice (video game)
・ Fire and Ice (Warriors)
・ Fire and Ice (Within Temptation song)
・ Fire and Love
・ Fire and Movement
・ Fire and Nice
・ Fire and Rain (band)
・ Fire and Rain (film)
・ Fire and Rain (song)
・ Fire and rescue authority (Scotland)
・ Fire and Rescue NSW
・ Fire and Rescue Services Act 2004
・ Fire and Skoal


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Fire and Ice (poem) : ウィキペディア英語版
Fire and Ice (poem)

“Fire and Ice” is one of Robert Frost's most popular poems, published in December 1920 in ''Harper's Magazine''〔Robert Frost, ("Fire and Ice" ), in the selection "A Group of Poems" by Robert Frost, ''Harper's Magazine'' , December 1920, p. 67.〕 and in 1923 in his Pulitzer Prize–winning book ''New Hampshire''. It discusses the end of the world, likening the elemental force of fire with the emotion of desire, and ice with hate. It is one of Frost's best-known and most anthologized poems.
==Inspiration==
According to one of Frost's biographers, "Fire and Ice" was inspired by a passage in Canto 32 of Dante's ''Inferno'', in which the worst offenders of hell, the traitors, are submerged, while in a fiery hell, up to their necks in ice: "a lake so bound with ice, / It did not look like water, but like a glass ... right clear / I saw, where sinners are preserved in ice."〔 Quoted in ("On 'Fire and Ice'" ).〕
In an anecdote he recounted in 1960 in a "Science and the Arts" presentation, prominent astronomer Harlow Shapley claims to have inspired "Fire and Ice".〔 Shapley describes an encounter he had with Robert Frost a year before the poem was published in which Frost, noting that Shapley was ''the'' astronomer of his day, asks him how the world will end. Shapley responded that either the sun will explode and incinerate the Earth, or the Earth will somehow escape this fate only to end up slowly freezing in deep space. Shapley was surprised at seeing "Fire and Ice" in print a year later, and referred to it as an example of how science can influence the creation of art, or clarify its meaning.〔 Partly quoted in ("On 'Fire and Ice'" ).〕

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