English, asked by JoshuaJV2245, 10 months ago

In this excerpt from "The Road Not Taken" by Robert Frost, which pair of lines casts doubt on the certainty the speaker felt when choosing one path over the other?

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Answered by xprincesslillyx5
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Answer:

In the above excerpt from "The Road Not Taken" by Robert Frost, the pair of lines which casts doubt on the certainty the speaker felt when choosing one path over the other are:

“And be one traveler, long I stood

And looked down one as far as I could”

[These lines are from the poem “The Road Not Taken” written by Robert Frost. In this poem, the poet has highlighted the dilemma which a person undergoes when he gets options in his life. The inclination towards the most taken road and the rejection of the least brings a person in the state of dilemma. Both the roads are equally attractive as the most taken and the least taken but the person has only one choice to make.]

The theme that the poet explore in the poem "Nothing Gold Can Stay" by  Robert Frost is:

D. the impermanence of beauty

The poem “Nothing Gold Can Stay,” by Robert Frost is about the inevitability of things which are beautiful and soothing. Frost explores the theme that although youth is beautiful and charming, it will be lost someday. He shows this change with the examples taken from nature. He adds that the flowers which bloom in spring season will be lost and the children will grow and turn into adults. He takes the example of the Fall of man to show that every beautiful thing can be turned down.]

Emily Dickinson capitalize most of the nouns in the lines from her poem "A curious Cloud surprised the Sky"  

A. to draw attention to certain ideas

The figure of speech used in the above excerpt from “You are Old, Father William” by Lewis Carroll is:

B. metaphor

A metaphor is a hidden comparison between two things which possess at least any one idea common to each other. The things may be completely different from each other but would have either one characteristic in common to them.

Explanation:

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