The Right Path In Robert Frost's The Road Not Taken

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The Road Not Taken by Robert Frost is about a person whom comes to a split going in two different directions and wishes he could take both paths. He knows he can’t take both roads, so he studies each path carefully and base on his will, he choose a path. However, there’s a profound message beneath this poem. The Road Not Taken is a metaphor of life. It tells about making choices leading to the right path. Also how we have the free will to choose which path we take, but we do not know beforehand what we are choosing between. Leading us to wonder of what is irrevocably lost at the moment of decision making, or simply what could have been if. As humans there are many routes, journeys, and decisions to make and our choices will determine which path we take, but will always leave us with the sense of curiosity.
The Road Not Taken consists of four stanzas of five lines. The rhyme scheme is ABAAB. There are four stressed syllables per line, all lines start with capital letter and proper grammar. From the very first line of the poem, the narrator introduces the reader to the split in the road “two roads diverged in a yellow wood” meaning that the season in the forest is autumn and “roads diverged” is a metaphor for choice. The choice the poet had to make between the …show more content…

Making his choice more complicated. Leaves have covered both paths. They haven’t turned black by crushing them “in leaves no step had trodden black” by noticing this the poet takes the second path instead. Keeping the first path for later. This part caught my attention because as the poet walks down the second road he tells himself that he will take the first path another day “Oh, I kept the first for another day!” yet knowing the right directions he doubts he will ever come back “I doubted if I should ever come back” which to the reader could be confusing because if the poet has found the right way, why would he ever take the other

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