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Robert Frost The Road Not Taken Essay

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Today is full of decisions to be made. Each decision has more than one path, and the one not chosen can never be taken. It is forever lost to us, no matter how much we may want to change the path we have taken. In the poem, "The Road Not Taken," Robert Frost shows us a point in his life where he has to make a decision. He sees two paths of life to go down, and while one is taken by many, and the other is less trodden, as if very few have wandered down it. But he takes the road less traveled by with thoughts of greater reward. For example, "Long I stood, looked down one as far as I could to where it bent the in the undergrowth; then took the other." This is saying he is looking at two choices he has, and taking as far look as he can to see which outcome would be best for him. In his poem, "The Road Not Taken," Robert Frost uses figurative language, mostly metaphor, to compare choices made in life with that of choosing a road to walk down in the woods.

First, Frost came to a point in his life where he was trying to decide his future. Whatever he chooses, will affect his life in some way. As Robert Frost, the author, …show more content…

Frost mentions this fact in his poem with the line, "Yet knowing how way leads on to way, I doubted I should ever go back." What this indicates is that once the traveler goes down one path, he won't be able to choose the other one since the path he did choose will lead him further and further away from it. If it were in an actual forest, he could choose to come back at a later day, and take both paths as one traveler. But Robert Frost did not take both paths, although he wanted to. In that case, since the only other meaning for the term "path" is a path in life, the text, "Long I stood, looked down one as far as I could to where it bent the in undergrowth; then took the other." is indeed implying that he is comparing one path for life to the

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