Describe the setting and time mentioned in the poem the road not taken
Answers
The setting is a crossroads in a woods: a place where two roads meet, one going one way, one the other. It appears to be fall, as the wooded area is described as "yellow," probably a reference to the color of the leaves on the trees. The roads seem to be in an isolated spot, as the narrator is all alone, and they seem primitive and unpaved. Frost describes one as "grassy" and said it "wanted wear," meaning that not many people had been walking on it. Because grass is growing on it, we can imagine it as an unpaved footpath.
Frost explained that the poem was a joke that emerged from his friend Edward Thomas's tendency, when they were walking together, to complain that whatever path they took, they should have taken a different one.
However, once a poet publishes his poem, the public takes possession of it, and generations of readers have understood Frost's diverging roads as a metaphor celebrating the importance of following one's own heart when it comes time to make choices in life.
Literally speaking, the setting of the poem is a "yellow wood," where two roads "diverge." This means that the speaker is in the woods in the early fall, when the leaves have turned yellow: Two roads diverged in a yellow wood.
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