According to the poet how should we deal with the past?
Answers
Answered by
3
mention the poem so that we can answer the question with reference to the question
Answered by
0
The poem “The Road Not Taken” by Robert Frost is about the choices that one makes in life. It tells about a man who comes to a fork in the road he is travelling upon. He feels sorry that he cannot travel both paths as he must choose one. Frost uses this fork in the road to represent a point in the man’s life where he has to choose the direction he wishes to take in life. As he thinks about his decision he looks down one path as far as he can see trying to foresee what life will be like if he walks that path. He then gazes at the other trail and decides the outcome of going down that path would be just as pleasant . At this point he concludes that the trail that has been less travelled on would be more rewarding when he reaches the end of it. The man then decides that he will save the other path for another day, even though he knows that one path leads to another and that he won’t get a chance to go back. The man then says that he will be telling this story with a “sigh” someday in the future suggesting that he will
wonder what life would have been like if he had chosen the more walked path even though the path he chose has made all the difference.
wonder what life would have been like if he had chosen the more walked path even though the path he chose has made all the difference.
Similar questions