Use of symbols to express things and use symbolic meanings and features to invest in things
As an intersection of Christ and Christian faith, use special persons or identity cards to represent religious information and sacred existence
I express something with a symbolic form or attribute
Everything that happens is a state of mind seen in an individual as a symbol of our own thoughts
Symbols are objects that express emotions and ideas. Elie Wiesel's book "Night" has many symbols. The three themes that can be symbolized are hatred, humanity and hope. The first is hatred, it can be symbolized by the symbol of fire and Nazis. Next is humanity. It is symbolized by clothes and clothes. Finally, there is hope, you can use bread, David Star and snow to symbolize. Symbols make books more interesting and vivid objects. The first symbol of the night is fire. When the Nazis used it as a weapon, it was like the power of the Nazis, so fire is an example of hatred. Many people died as a result of a fire in the Holocaust when the Nazis entered the crematoria through the corpses. It makes hatred prisoners more harmful to the camp, so fire also represents hatred. The camp is already in a very bad state, but the prisoner is likely to die on the idea of a fire. This is shown in the book when Elie thinks he is supposed to die of fire.
The symbol - symbol is the key to this poem. Frost obviously uses fire as a symbol of desire and uses ice as a symbol of hatred. This is combined with images caused by these symbols to create multidimensional complexity for poetry. Due to the deeper meaning of fire and ice, the application and understanding of poetry has changed. This poem is still interpreted as a warning to these actions in a wide range of plans in the world, but it is beginning to present a more personal aspect as it is happening. In other words, this is due to the personal connection shared by creating these symbols with fire and desire, ice and hatred. This poem is applied to everyday life and is interpreted not only as a bigger world but as a warning against the habit of desire or hatred in everyday life.