English, asked by JaswanthKumar99, 3 months ago

Then took the other, just as fair,
And having perhaps the better claim,
Because it was grassy and wanted wear,
Though as for that the passing there
Had worn them really about the same

Find the rhyme scheme of the given stanza

Answers

Answered by mudavathanjali825
1

Answer:

which he's looked down for a long time, our speaker takes the other path.

Then we get a tricky little phrase to describe this road. It's "as just as fair." Read without the first "as," this phrase is clear, if you think of fair as meaning attractive, or pretty. But the first "as" makes the phrase a little more difficult. Combining the words "just" and "fair" in the same phrase is a play on words – both of these words have multiple meanings. The phrase could mean something like "as just as it is fair," as in proper, righteous, and equal. But this doesn't quite apply to a road.

Yet we trust that our speaker wouldn't let things get awkward without meaning it. We're guessing that he means the road is just as pretty, but that in the metaphorical world of this poem, he thinks he made the fair, or right, choice.

Answered by Anonymous
2

The rhyme scheme of this stanza is:-

ABAAB

Explanation:

This stanza is taken from the poem 'The Road Not Taken' which is a beautiful poem about taken the right decisions and choices in life,by Robert Frost.

A “rhyme scheme” is a way of describing the pattern of end rhymes in a poem. As you can see, fair,wear and there are similar rhyming words so we give them the letter 'A' whereas, claim and same are also similar rhyming words, so they are denoted by the letter 'B'. Hope this helps. Please mark me brainliest!!❤️. Thanks

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