English, asked by Yousef, 11 months ago

What do the road in the poem symbolize

Answers

Answered by shivamraj26
102

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.

Answered by tiwariakdi
0

Answer:

'The Road Not Traveled,' the road represents our lives. According to the poet, "the road not taken" is the course we do not choose in our lives. He expresses his views about the decision he made in the past. Our future, our destination, is determined by the road we have selected.

Explanation:

While walking through the woods, the poet comes to a fork in the road where two roads diverge and he must pick between them. He stays there for a long time. Then he decided to use the grassy path that needed 'to wear'. He believes that this decision will have a significant impact on his future life. He resolves to attempt the other way another time, knowing full well that he will not have the opportunity to return to it. He afterwards wishes he had gone the opposite route. The irony of life is that we cannot travel on all of the possible roads. The poet imagines himself looking back in time with a'sigh'.

He'd tell you that taking the road less travelled had made all the difference. As a result, the poet speaks of making the proper decision. Many options are accessible at the time of choice, but man must choose one. Only the future will reveal whether or not the decision was correct. We can only regret our decisions after they have been made. Even if we wanted to, we couldn't go back in time.

The two roads represent the decisions that one must make in life. It is critical to make the right decision because we can never go back in time. One road would lead to another, and there would be no turning back.

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