English, asked by mhatrekshitij13, 10 months ago

the moral of the road not taken- robert frost

Answers

Answered by sandhya10vd
1

Answer:

you always have two choice.... choose one different....

Answered by nimmyvarghese16
1

Answer:

The answer is in the explanation below.

Explanation:

Robert Frost's poem "The Road Not Taken" deals with situations in life where humans are presented with choices by metaphorically depicting a fork in the road. The speaker reflects on the fact that he took the road less taken when he had to make a choice, and he says that this decision has made all the difference in his life.

What is remarkable about Robert Frost's famous poem "The Road Not Taken" is that the setting he describes in the first three stanzas is not a real place at all but a fairly simple and obvious metaphor. The poet is thinking about a time in his life when he had to make an extremely serious choice about what direction he would take in his life. This may very likely have been a career choice. But he was not literally standing at a crossroads looking down two diverging roads--although he might have been taking a long walk in the nature he loved so well while he was trying to decide on which of two irrevocable life-choices he would make.

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