Poem Analysis: The Road

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The Road The story ends with a sad mood. The ending is also symbolic by trying to imply that the struggle is not only to humans but also to other creatures. The author might expect the reader to look at the struggles and trouble from a different angle. The angle of struggles being part of life, [both to humans and animals. There is little to no hope of things getting better than they were. The author compares the life of people to the life of a miserable brook stout that has stayed in the mountains forever and whose attempts to get out have become futile. Such an ending is implying that the struggle would continue. Also, it also implies that the boy would now get some motherly love. He would become introduced to new sources of refuge, the mother, and God. The last bit of imagery involving the brook stout that lives …show more content…

There is the figurative use of language in a symbolic way to represent some actions and ideas in a way that appeals to the reader. The author compares the lifestyle of the brook stout fish to that of the boy and people at that time. Just like the stout was isolated and left to live in desolate conditions, so was the boy. The vermiculate patterns on the back of the brook stouts are described as being maps of a world in its becoming. This is symbolic in that it represented the events that had shaped the people. Everyone had some marks describing where they are from and what they have gone through. Again, the maps and mazes could not be corrected. The scars from the war, both physical and emotional were there to stay. The author is saying that these maps and mazes could not be made right again. The comparison of the marks and shapes on the trout to maps and mazes. Maps represent the incessant attempt by the trout to get away or out of the desolate glens and deep mountains. The maze is also symbolic and implies that the attempts to get out of a situation are like being confined in a maze. There is practically no

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