English, asked by Abhiramalayil6422, 1 year ago

What do you mean by ages and ages hence in the poem the road not taken

Answers

Answered by evitaanita392
63

Hey mate

If it was helpful MARK AS BRAINLIEST

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

Answered by Qwdubai
2

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.

#SPJ3

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