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The Road Not Taken - an Analysis

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The Road Not Taken - an Analysis

"Do not follow where the path may lead... Go instead where there is no

path and leave a trail."

-Robert Frost

Everyone is a traveler, choosing the roads to follow on the map

of their continuous journey, life. There is never a straight path that

leaves one with but a sole direction in which to head. Regardless of the

original message that Robert Frost had intended to convey, his poem,

"The Road Not Taken", has left its readers with many different

interpretations. It is one’s past, present and the attitude with which

he looks upon his future that determines the shade of the light that he

will see the poem in. In any case however, this poem clearly

demonstrates Frost’s belief that it is the road that one chooses that

makes him the man who he is.

"And sorry I could not travel both..." It is always difficult to

make a decision because it is impossible not to wonder about the

opportunity cost, what will be missed out on. There is a strong sense of

regret before the choice is even made and it lies in the knowledge that

in one lifetime, it is impossible to travel down every path. In an

attempt to make a decision, the traveler "looks down one as far as I

could". The road that will be chosen leads to the unknown, as does any

choice in life. As much he may strain his eyes to see as far the road

stretches, eventually it surpasses his vision and he can never see where

it is going to lead. It is the way that he chooses here that sets him

off on his journey and decides where he is going.

"Then took the other, just as fair, and having perhaps the

better claim." What made it have the better claim is that "it was grassy

and wanted wear." It was something that was obviously not for everyone

because it seemed that the majority of people took the other path

therefore he calls it "the road less travelled by". The fact that the

traveler took this path over the more popular, secure one indicates the

type of personality he has, one that does not want to necessarily follow

the crowd but do more of what has never been done, what is new and

different.

"And both that morning equally lay in leaves no step had trodden

black." The leaves had covered the ground and since the time they had

fallen no one had yet to pass by on this road. Perhaps Frost does this

because each time a person comes to the point where they have to make a

choice, it is new to them, somewhere they have never been and they tend

to feel as though no one else had ever been there either. "I kept the

first

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