The field needed rain before harvest.
Lencho hoped for a good rain or shower that would nourish his ripe corn crop.
The image expresses his expectation of agricultural income.
He believed the rain promised a rich harvest and therefore money. He compared large drops to ten-cent pieces and small drops to five-cent pieces.
The welcome rain turns into the disaster driving the plot.
The rain became a hailstorm. For an hour hail covered the valley, stripped the corn and flowers, and destroyed the crop completely.
Grounded in his lament after surveying the field.
He was filled with sadness and despair because the crop was ruined and the family faced hunger, although his faith in God remained.
His faith produces the extraordinary letter.
Lencho had complete faith in God. He wrote a letter asking God for one hundred pesos to sow the field again and support his family until the next crop.
Grounded in the post-office episode.
A postman first saw the address to God and took the letter to the postmaster, who read it.
His action imitates a reply from God.
To preserve Lencho’s faith, the postmaster collected money from employees and friends, contributed part of his salary and mailed seventy pesos signed ‘God’.
The reaction establishes both faith and irony.
No. His confidence in God was so complete that he expected an answer and showed no surprise.
The accusation creates the story’s final irony.
Only seventy of the requested hundred pesos were in the envelope. Lencho believed God could not make a mistake, so he angrily assumed the post-office employees had stolen the rest.
The answer follows the event and emotional change stated in the poem.
A ‘dust of snow’ is a light scattering of tiny snowflakes or powdery snow. A crow shaking this snow from a hemlock tree onto the poet causes the change. He moves from regret and gloom to a lighter, more hopeful mood, so the small incident saves part of a day he had been ruing.
The response interprets the symbolic contrast among crow, hemlock and snow.
Frost finds healing beauty in parts of nature usually associated with darkness rather than conventional poetic loveliness. Poems more often name melodious or graceful birds; a crow commonly suggests harshness, ill omen or gloom. Hemlock is poisonous, unlike the more admired trees listed. The crow and hemlock therefore suit the speaker’s sorrowful mood, yet the bright, delicate dust of snow falling from them brings an unexpected moment of renewal. Nature can transform feeling through an ordinary and even unlikely source.
This sample personal response mirrors the poem’s movement from regret to renewal.
A model example is feeling discouraged after doing poorly on a test, then noticing a younger student patiently help a classmate understand a difficult problem. That small act can interrupt self-pity and replace it with perspective and motivation. Like the dust of snow, the event does not erase the original difficulty, but it changes the emotional direction of the remaining day.
The model response addresses the speculation and returns to the poem’s symbolic purpose.
The physical universe and Earth will not remain unchanged forever, although no ordinary human lifetime is likely to witness such a cosmic ending. If the Sun’s heat made Earth far hotter, oceans and life-supporting conditions would eventually disappear; severe cooling would freeze water and destroy ecosystems. In Frost’s poem, however, these possibilities chiefly lead us toward a moral question: destructive desire and hatred can ruin the human world long before a cosmic event does.
The answer maps the listed qualities onto the poem’s two governing symbols.
‘Fire’ stands for uncontrolled desire and its heated forms—greed, avarice, lust, conflict and fury. ‘Ice’ stands for hatred expressed as coldness, cruelty, rigidity, intolerance, insensitivity and indifference. Frost says either force can destroy: craving consumes, while hatred freezes sympathy and human connection.
The scheme is obtained by matching the line-ending sounds: fire, ice, desire, twice, hate, ice, great, suffice.
The rhyme scheme is ABAABCBCB. The interlocking rhymes bind the short argument together while allowing ‘fire/desire’ and ‘ice/twice/suffice’ to form memorable sound groups. This tight pattern balances the two opposed possibilities and supports the poet’s compact conclusion that either heated desire or cold hatred is sufficient for destruction.