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The Road Not Taken Figurative Language

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No matter who you are or what you do, you must make decisions every day in your lifetime, whether it be choosing what to eat that day or choosing which occupation you would like to do for the rest of your life. No matter how big or small the decision there is always more than one option available. For every choice that is chosen, there is one that you did not pick — the school you didn’t go to or the outfit you did not wear. Robert Frost has written about choices like these in his poem “The Road Not Taken”. The narrator in the poem comes to a fork in the road and needs to decide which road he will take and which road he will not take. A number of poetic devices work together to help develop an overall understanding and relatability to the poem. They also support the poem’s theme ¬¬— to choose your pathways in life and be content with them whether they seem popular or not. The devices used to create this effect and theme is imagery, symbolism, and connotative and denotative language. One of poetic devices used in ” is literal imagery which enhances the poem’s setting. Literal imagery is used to create a mental image with the use of language that appeals to the senses by describing a person, thing, feeling, or experience. When Frost describes the two roads it indicates that there is a decision to be made: “” (Frost 1-2). The forest is described as a “yellow wood”, which helps the reader imagine the woods in their mind’s eye and place them in the setting …show more content…

The two roads symbolize two choices that must be decided between. The speaker describes the roads, favouring the second: ” (Frost 7-8). The speaker is having a difficult time deciding between the two roads. He tries to convince himself that the second is better than the first since it hasn’t been walked on as much and hasn’t been worn. He believes that if he choose the second that the outcome will be better although he has no way of know which is

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