I'd say it's letter B - <span>Unchecked emotions are potentially destructive.
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The theme of this poem is the destructive potential of hatred and desire. Frost explores the two forces which have the potential to bring destruction to the world. Fire is desire, and ice is hate. The last line (“For destruction, ice is also great and would suffice”) suggests that <u>it does not matter which is stronger</u>. Both fire and ice are destructive. In the end, the <span>moral idea that powerful emotions (passion, desire, greed, and hatred) have the capability to destroy the whole world no matter what kind of emotions they are.</span>
Robert Louis Stevenson, one of the masters of the Victorian adventure story, was born in Edinburgh, Scotland, on November 13, 1850. He was often sick as a child, and respiratory troubles plagued him throughout his life. He enrolled at Edinburgh University at the age of seventeen with the intention to study engineering, but ended up studying law instead. He became a qualified lawyer but did not pursue the profession, choosing instead to become a full-time writer. As a young man, he traveled through Europe, leading a bohemian lifestyle and penning his first two books, both travel narratives. Stevenson felt constrained by the strict social norms of the Victorian era during which he lived, and many of his works demonstrate a sharp tension between upstanding duty and reckless abandon.
Pessimistic
The struggle to find the meaning in life
Hermit was an enemy planning to kill the king but they reconcile and become friends. So his question was already answered by what recently happened. “Now is the most important time, the most important person is the one you are with and the most important action is to do good.