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Imagery And Diction In The Road Not Taken By Robert Frost

Decent Essays

In the poem The Road Not Taken by Robert Frost, the speaker makes the ultimate decision about which path to take. The author means this literally and figuratively. Throughout the four stanzas, the narrator contemplates which path he should follow, but he ultimately makes the decision. The author shows his decision through imagery and diction. The use of imagery and diction allows the reader to portray the theme of making life choices with fate and free will. Throughout the four stanzas, the narrator decides which path he will take, for he is confused and has to decide which way to go. The speaker is regretful that he cannot take them both. It allows the reader to picture “two roads” (1) and understand the narrator needs to pick a path. At the beginning of the first and second stanzas, he cannot decide which path to take. By the beginning of the third stanza, he is able to see that both paths are just as equal and able to go down. The author helps the reader picture “two roads diverged in a yellow wood” “it was grassy and wanted wear.” (1,8). The reader can clearly depict the choice the narrator needs to make. In the poem, there are four stanzas and each stanza is five lines long. At the each of end each stanza the poem rhymes with the scheme ABAAB, which makes the poem iambic. The poem is ABAAB which can be seen in the poem when the speaker says “wood” “both” “stood” “could” “growth” (1,2,3,4,5). This helps the reader pick out how precise the author is in his

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