1. TPCASTT click on the Screen to advance the slides
A Strategy for Understanding an Authors Message
(THEME) in a Poem
2. Fire and Ice by Robert Frost
Some say the world will end in fire,
Some say in ice.
From what Ive tasted of desire
I side with those who favor fire.
But if I had to perish twice, 5
I think I know enough of hate
To say that for destruction ice
Is also great
And would suffice.
3. TPCASTT strategy
T Title
P Paraphrase
C Connotations (what are the emotional connections of the images,
figurative language, word choices, allusions, symbols?)
A Attitude
S Shift
T Title (again)
T - THEME
4. Title
Fire and Ice
Commentary: These words are opposites. Why are they in a title
together?
HINT:
Be sure to know all meanings of words in titles
Consider how the words in a title relate you each other, other
literary works, you, the world
5. Paraphrase
Some say the world will end in fire,
Some say in ice.
From what Ive tasted of desire
I side with those who favor fire.
Paraphrase: The world will end from fire, possibly a result of
desire.
HINT:
Be sure to look up any words you dont know.
Put into your own words lines or entire stanzas from the
poem.
Dont be fooled by a short poem. Sometimes those short poems are
full of ideas.
6. Paraphrase contd
But if I had to perish twice, 5
I think I know enough of hate
To say that for destruction ice
Is also great
And would suffice.
Paraphrase: The world could also end in ice, possibly the result of
hatred.
7. Connotations
HINT:
Consider the emotional meanings of words, phrases, images,
allusions, figurative language, symbolism.
Make connections among and between words.
Fire a symbol for desire
Ice a symbol for hate
The author connects these words, and the emotional meanings are
connected with the world ending. Hate will end the world; desire
will end the world. These things are part of our human nature, but
they can be destructive.
8. Connotations (contd)
suffice
The last line uses this word which seems understated compared to
the topic of the world ending. The speaker sounds matter of fact
about the causes of the ending.
HINT:
Look for sarcasm, understatement, hyperbole to determine emotional
connections to topics.
9. Connotations (contd)
Fire and ice are opposites, yet they both will end the world. This
is a paradox (a contradictory yet true statement), and the author
shows us that these extremes can both have the same
result.
10. Attitude
The speaker seems to be accepting and matter-of-fact. It seems that
all things must end because human beings move between desire and
hate all the time.
HINT:
Attitude is how the speaker feels about the topic.
What exactly is the topic?
11. Shift
The shift of this poem occurs at the beginning when the author
moves from the perspective of some to the personal pronoun I
perspective. There seems to be a personal connection to how things
will end.
HINT:
Look for changes in meter, rhyme scheme, topic, point of view,
setting.
12. Title (again)
Fire and Ice
What do these destructive forces mean to others?
What do they mean to the speaker. Not the end of the world but the
end of something elsemaybe a relationship?
HINT:
Think about how the title now has connections to the connotations
and attitude in the poem.
13. Theme
HINT:
If you are struggling to understand a message, put it together like
this:
1. Topic(destruction)
2. Topic phrase (destruction from fire and ice)
3. Theme: Relationships can end from wanting too much or from
hating too much.
Relationships can be destroyed by wanting something too much or by
hating something.
This could be connected to personal relationships or connected
globally to relations between countries.
14. Conclusion
T Title
P Paraphrase
C Connotations
A Attitude
S Shift
T Title (again
T Theme
What a great strategy for understanding what a poem
means!