what lay equally that morning?
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The lines, "And both that morning equally lay / In leaves no step had trodden black," repeat the idea -- stated earlier in the poem -- that the roads, though they look a bit different from one another (one is grassier than the other), have been traveled the same number of times (by other people).
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"Both the morning equally lay" refer to both path. They are almost equal in the eyes of the speaker. Nothing much difference aside from that one is less traveled and the other, simply meaning that less people have walked upon it.
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