

But he also mentions that the path was worn out due to constant use and toward the end of the poem he mentions that he took the ‘road less travelled’. It is generally conceived that he took the second road. He first ruminates over traveling on the first road, and then talks of the second road. He lives a practical life, yet his imagination manifests itself in his writing.Īt the outset he comprehends that he is sorry could not travel both : “And sorry I could not travel both/ And be one traveler.” His first impression is that it is not practical. “The Road Not Taken” may also allude to Frost’s shifting between imagination and reality.

Had he taken any one of the popular roads, the poem would be entitled “The Road Taken”. The greatest evidence for this is Frost himself: poet and teacher. Thus, he does not take either of the two roads described, but forges his own path. He finally arrives at the decision that one can be a poet and yet teach one can be a teacher and yet philosophize. In the prescribed poem, he ruminates over which vocation to pursue, that of a poet or a teacher. Rather, he traverses the middle path.įrost was always caught between two worlds: that of being a teacher and a poet between reality and imagination. However, the title puts more emphasis on the idea that Frost had not taken any of the specified roads. The popular perception of the poem is that Robert Frost takes one of the two roads he describes. The road in question is situated in a forest. The crossroad functions as an evocative metaphor for a vital decision. The metaphor of the road is used persistently in the poem, and is therefore an extended metaphor. However, it signifies not only journey but also the destination. The symbol of a road has been predominantly used to indicate the journey of Life. The Crossroad Symbolic of the Turning Point in Frost’s Life
