Use Of Allegory In Robert Frost's The Road Not Taken

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“Enter through the narrow gate. For wide is the gate and broad is the road that leads to destruction, and many enter through it. But small is the gate and narrow the road that leads to life, and only a few find it.” (New Living Translation, Mat. 7.13-14). Just as Jesus preaches to thousands at the Sermon on the Mount, Robert Frost imparts this same virtue of choosing the morally sound path in the poem “The Road Not Taken”. Frost opens the poem with a traveler who approaches a fork in the road and is forced to render the decision of which physical or metaphorical route in life to take. The traveler attempts to peer down each road in hopes that one will appear to be the obvious choice. Even though the narrator chooses the path less traveled, …show more content…

In lines 1 and 2 Frost depicts the narrator coming upon “two roads diverged in a yellow wood”, and realizes a choice needs to be made as to which path to travel. This message of selecting a course of which to follow is woven throughout the poem. This underlying meaning of the poem is not just referring to the physical path, but a path in life. The concept of this idea continuing within the span of the poem is called an extended metaphor or allegory. Another example of a metaphor applied in this piece can be found in the first stanza of the poem, “and I looked down one as far as I could to where it bent in the underbrush” (Frost lines 4-5). The narrator attempts to peer down the path, trying to ascertain if there are any obstacles hindering the way. Although the storyteller weighs the possibilities, it cannot be known what effect this decision will have on the future or “somewhere ages and ages hence” Frost (line 17). Frost’s delicate use of metaphors intertwined among a modest scene delivers a lesson of careful life altering consideration. The least utilized poetic device in the poem “The Road Not Taken” is personification; however, Frost’s use of it should not go unnoticed. Again in line 8 the narrator notices while contemplating which direction to follow, one of the footpaths “wanted wear”. This act of assigning the road human characteristics is personification. The reader is cognizant that a road is an inanimate object and it doesn’t possess feelings or desires. The audience could conclude from this passage that the narrator knew deep down what the ethical decision is, but needed to justification for the

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