What truth dawned
on the traveller in the poem The road not Taken?
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The determinism of a choice, way leading on to way, in a string of events that becomes a life is unescapable. Frost's popular appeal is all here in the layers of the poem, from the deceptively simple (yet masterfully rhyming) iambic lines to the evocation of mild regret of having made a seemingly innocuous choice.
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The truth dawned upon him that the road he had taken was not less travelled by, but it was travelled upon just as much as the other road. This road was the road which the young chose on their own and that is what made it lush and green while the other road was old and it's trees had yellow leaves to represent that that road was where the people who were made to obey their parents wishes travelled through.
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