Robert Frost's poem, "The Road Not Taken", is an insightful idealistic attempt to illustrate the paradox of free will. In the first line, Frost uses the metaphor "Two roads diverged" (1), to establish not only the hard decision the traveler must make in the poem, but life itself. The decisions we make in life, like the traveler in this poem, are not to be taken carelessly. Many have a desire to be adventurous, yet fear possibilities of failing if we are different from others. In this poem, the road that he decides to take "wanted wear." This road is not a well-traveled path and no one has taken it before. The central idea of Frost's poem is individualism. Frost shows that being his own person makes life so much less difficult because he is able to act the way he would like to without worrying about everyone else. Frost shows us that we should all express our feelings and be our own person, even if no one else will follow. He took the path that no one else did "and that has made all the difference."
Similarly, in Kate Chopin's short story "The Story of an Hour," the central theme of individuality is also expressed. When Mrs. Mallard received the news of her husband' s death, she was in a deep state of grief. After she realized that she would now have freedom, she began to rejoice. Even though