English, asked by rkunal688, 1 month ago

I shall be telling this with a sigh somewhere ages and ages hence two roads diverged in and I took the one less travelled by And that has made all the difference . What is the symbolic
significance of these lines?​

Answers

Answered by shadow0209
0

Answer:

Frost says that he shall be retelling this story about the two roads "ages and ages hence." This suggests that this means hundreds of years from the time of writing. He was either thinking of life after death.It also implies that his poetry would be read ages and ages after his death.

Explanation:

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Answered by Sweetoldsoul
1

Answer:

These lines have been taken from the poem " The Road not Taken" by Robert Frost.

Explanation:

Frost claims he will be telling the story “somewhere ages and ages hence,” a reversal of the fairytale beginning, “Long, long ago in a faraway land.” Through its progression, the poem suggests that our power to shape events comes not from choices made in the material world—in an autumn stand of birches—but from the mind’s ability to mold the past into a particular story. The roads were about the same, and the speaker’s decision was based on a vague impulse. The act of assigning meanings—more than the inherent significance of events themselves—defines our experience of the past.

Frost goaded Thomas, when he'd have taken some road and after traveling distance on it wished he'd taken another as it'd have definitely lead to something better, saying, “No matter which road you take, you’ll always sigh, and wish you’d taken another.”

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Hope this helps!

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