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Yet, in the very next line the poet also acknowledges that the other road that he avoided was as worthy and deserving. This very stanza brings out the true appeal of the poem that relies for its attraction on the presentation of an archetypal dilemma, with which a reader instantaneously identifies with in the sense that everybody is required to make choices in life, both in a literal and figurative sense. In the third stanza the poet again builds on the extended metaphor of a fork in the road as forks on the road are a deep seated and ancient metaphor for varied choices one needs to pick from during crucial moments in life.
The first two lines of the third stanza that are “And both that morning equally lay, in leaves no step has trodden black” bring forth the sense of dilemma and apprehension that a person comes across while making tough choices in life. However, in the very next line the poet hints at the resolution of this dilemma, and yet at the same time acknowledges the irony inherent in the process of making of choices in the sense that the flow of time sometimes does not allows one to come back and opt for the choice one choose to forsake in the past.
Hence, “I doubted if I should ever come back.”Thus in the fourth stanza the poet discernibly and openly mulls over the past from a futuristic vantage point and acknowledges the fact that it was the choices he made in his life that shaped what he was in a present context. Moreover, the appeal of this apt conclusion is not limited to the plight of the poet., but is rather agel
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