Choices In Robert Frost's The Road Not Taken

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The Hands of Fate Are None Other Than Your Hands In life, everyone has choices that they face on a day to day basis. Each choice may lead to another choice, and that can result in a positive or a negative consequence which shapes who the person is today. In the poem titled “The Road Not Taken,” Robert Frost sets up a situation where the narrator faces a dilemma of whether to settle upon one path or another. By using the elements of poem, Frost reinforces the train of thought of the narrator and how the thoughts developed into a decision between the two roads. First of all, one of the key elements used in this poem by Frost is imagery. As an illustration, the author states that the narrator “…looked down one as far as [he] could / To where …show more content…

One distinguishing symbol that is brought to attention by the author more than once is the symbol of “Two roads diverged in a wood...” (1). The poem talks about how the narrator decided to take one road over the other. The roads might be real, but what the roads represent are choices that people face in real life. So that means that the whole poem is about how the narrator chose to embark on one choice that shaped his life. In addition, the author states that “Yet knowing how way leads on to way, / I doubted if I should ever come back” (15). In the sense of the road, he means that the road is never ending from what he can see. So once he sets foot on one path, he decided it would be wise if he continued on the same path and never returned. What this quote also symbolizes is that the choices that people face on a day to day basis are have an ever-lasting effect of their whole life. Although the process of deciding a choice is simple as a yes or a no, the choice can turn into a commitment and can completely take the person through an incomparable …show more content…

“The Road Not Taken” clearly depicts a situation where a person had to decide upon a choice between two paths. At first both paths were thought as equal by narrator, but the author develops a way of thinking that the narrator went thorough to make the final decision. By using imagery; symbolism; point of view; structure; rhythm, and meter; and diction, and tone the author constructs a sense of a journey through the person’s mind and how the perplexity of making a decision can affect the outcome. All in all, though all of the twist and turns of the poem, a major lesson can be learned; and that is to always make the right decision and you are the ultimate decider of your own

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