What will the poet,Robert Frost tell “with a sigh
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Answer:
It is significant that the speaker, presumably Frost himself, says that he shall be retelling this story about the two roads "ages and ages hence." That suggests hundreds of years. He must either be thinking that there is life after death or else that his poetry will be read ages and ages after his demise. The phrase "ages and ages hence" also strongly suggests that the choice he made to take one road rather than another was of great significance not only for his own life but for the world. In other words, the choices that all of us make in life have infinite repercussions; they affect our friendships, our careers, the people we marry and the children we may have, the futures of those children, grandchildren, etc., and even the non-futures of the children we might have had if we had chosen a different road. The reason he is telling his story with a sigh is probably because he is remembering what a long, hard road it was he chose. Any old man looking back on his life, with all its disappointments and mistakes and regrets is likely to tell his story with a sigh.