What do you mean by ages and ages hence in the poem the road not taken
Answers
Hey mate
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In "The Road Not Taken," the speaker sighs in the last stanza:
I shall be telling this with a sigh
Somewhere ages and ages hence:
Two roads diverged in a wood, and I,
I took the one less traveled by,
The fact that the speaker is still thinking about the road not taken would be a sign of regret. He is still thinking about the other road--the road he didn't take. Two roads diverged in a wood and the speaker could not take both roads.
Somewhere ages and ages hence … The poet has told us that he encountered two roads – a metaphor, for two important decisions to make – and that he chose the less popular one, “the one less traveled by.” Now, in this conclusion, he anticipates a time in the distant future
In the poem "The road not taken", "ages and ages hence" mean in the distant future.
- The poet is talking about the road that he did not take.
- In the line "ages and ages hence" he is saying that somewhere in the distant future, he will talk about the less traveled road that he took in the past.
- That road made a big difference in his life.
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