According to William George he stated that the poem is “very tricky” and “misinterpreted” (George p.1). Robert Frost created a scenery where the speaker is looking at a long fork in the woods. Either the speaker can go down one road or go down the other, but the speaker does not know which one is the best route. He describes one side of the road to be “grassy and wanted wear; though as for that, the passing there, had worn them really about the same time” (line 8). In other words, the road was well used and known to the community. Then he describes the other side of the fork “in leaves no steps had trodden black” (line 12). Meaning many people in the community do not travel on that side of the fork. Due to people not traveling on that side the road the grass was high and it looked unsafe to …show more content…
Robert Frost’s speaker is faced with the choice of going down one road or the other. Then Emily Dickinson’s speaker is thought of getting the same results of going to church or staying at home. The speaker of Robert Frost has to make a decision to follow the road of the crowd or make is own path. Robert Frost pick the best decision when he chooses the road, but later starts to have little doubt. The speaker starts to wonder when he said “Yet knowing how way leads on to way, I doubted if I should ever come back” (line 14). He leaves the audients wondering was he really happy with the decision he made when he said, “I shall be telling this with a sign, Somewhere ages and age hence” (line 16). A sign is a long, deep, audible exhalation expressing sadness, relief, tiredness, or a similar feeling. Once you make a choice in life never regret it, because everything happens for a