English, asked by Bibekpokhrel2005, 1 year ago

justify the title of the road not taken​

Answers

Answered by guptasarita68
2

In the poem "The Road Not Taken," the speaker is sighing because he could not take both roads. He admits that he is "sorry" to not have had the opportunity to take both roads. This poem is about the road not taken. ... There is something about the road not taken that still haunts the speaker.

Answered by TejasvaniChauhan
6

Answer:

In the poem "The Road Not Taken," the speaker is sighing because he could not take both roads. He admits that he is "sorry" to not have had the opportunity to take both roads. This poem is about the road not taken. ... There is something about the road not taken that still haunts the speaker.

The title of this poem may be the key to its interpretation. ... If the title were "The Road Less Traveled," the poem would have a stranger focus on nonconformity – taking the path that others don't take. But the title "The Road Not Taken" focuses the poem on lost opportunities – the road that the speaker did not take.

Frost called the poem “The Road Not Taken” because the poem focuses on the road not taken, rather than the road taken. At the end of the poem, the speaker says when two roads diverged in a wood he “took the one less traveled by/And that has made all the difference”

In Robert Frost's poem "The Road Not Taken" the roads which are mentioned are a metaphor for life. More specifically, the paths are symbols for the decisions we have to make in life. The physical difference between these two roads are that one was grassy and less traveled, whereas the other was more worn by passers by.'The Road Not Taken' by Robert Frost is a poem narrated by a lone traveler confronted with two roads, symbolizing the journey of life and the decisions we make on that journey. The narrator chose the path that was 'grassy and wanted wear,' which demonstrates the desire many of us have for individuality and adventure.

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