Tuesday, December 3, 2019
Road Not Taken By Frost Essays (685 words) - Robert Frost
  Road Not Taken By Frost    "Robert Frost was one of the United States' best-loved poets. Frost was  greatly influenced by his move from San Francisco to New England at the age of    11, his move to England when he was 37, and then his return to New Hampshire a  couple of years later" (Knowledge Adventure 2). Robert Frost's inspiration  for his poetry came from within himself. His decisions concerning which  direction his life would take can be seen in one of his most acclaimed poems "    The Road Not Taken". Ultimately he realized, as is expressed in his works,  that the road one chooses to take is what builds and defines one's character.    It is a life-long decision that one cannot change further down the great road of  life. The first two lines of his poem is "Two roads diverged in a yellow wood,  and sorry I could not travel both" (Frost 815). In the first two lines, Robert  is standing at the crossroads in life; he wishes that he could go both ways, but  in life, you must choose one. He looked down both roads as far as he could see.    He wanted to see where the roads led to. One of the roads was well-traveled (the  common road that most people take in life), and the other road looked as though  no one liked to travel it. Frost took the one that wasn't traveled as much;  choosing his own path in life versus the mainstream (Knowledge Adventure). This  is a remarkable move by Frost, because he could be an average poet with an easy  life, however he chooses the harder road through life. Lines eleven through  fourteen state, "And both that morning equally lay in leaves no step had  trodden black. Oh, I kept the first for another day! Yet knowing how way leads  on to way, I doubted if I should ever come back" (Frost 816). These lines  suggest that he had to choose one morning, of which direction he should lead his  life. That morning, his decisions were tough; both of the roads had no  footprints, as leading people to believe that no one had traveled the road  before. Frost wishes that he could take both paths in life, but one knows that  the first path leads to another and then to another; life is always moving  forward. He knows that he would never get to go back in life and take the road  he left behind, and this is why he chooses the less traveled road. He sees where  most people are at in life and that they probably followed the mainstream and  took the easy road. This is where he decides that he wants to better himself,  and not follow the norm. This is why he took the harder of the two roads. The  last five lines of the poem are very significant. Frost writes, "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, and that has made all the  difference" (Frost 816). Frost says that he will be telling this story in the  future. The lines also offer the proof that Frost is very sat? isfied with the  road or the choice in life that he has made. The last two lines, however sting.    The majority of the people in life took the easy road, and in those last lines  he directly states that he only prospered well and made a life for himself  because he took the harder road, or the rougher choice, and that choice has  brought him to where he is today. So in retrospect, when one looks back on  his/her life, the road less traveled is actually the road best traveled. You  enjoy life more if you take chances and not always follow the mainstream. From  the beginning of the poem, Frost knew what road he would take; but everyone is  drawn to the easy road. He had a tough struggle deciding which one he wanted to  take: road number one--easy life versus road number two--tougher life, but no  idea where it leads. It wasn't hard for him to decide which road he wanted to  take, so he followed his instincts, and his choices in life is what brought him  worldwide recognition.    
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