Department of English

Faculty of Arts, Chulalongkorn University


 

The Road Not Taken

(1916)

 

Robert Frost

(March 26, 1874 – January 29, 1963)



Two roads diverged in a yellow wood,
And sorry I could not travel both
And be one traveler, long I stood
And looked down one as far as I could
To where it bent in the undergrowth;

Then took the other, as just as fair,
And having perhaps the better claim,
Because it was grassy and wanted wear;
Though as for that the passing there
Had worn them really about the same,

And both that morning equally lay
In leaves no step had trodden black.
Oh, I kept the first for another day!
Yet knowing how way leads on to way,
I doubted if I should ever come back.

I shall be telling this with a sigh
Somewhere ages and ages hence:
Two roads diverged in a wood, and I—
I took the one less traveled by,
And that has made all the difference.
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Notes

This poem was first published in The Atlantic Monthly in August 1915 and later included in Frost's third collection of poetry Mountain Interval in November 1916.


diverged:


wanted:

 

12  trodden:





Letters

[To Susan Hayes Ward. ALS. Huntington]

Plymouth N.H.
Feb 10 1912

Dear Miss Ward:
[...]
To lonely cross-roads that themselves cross each other I have walked several times this winter without meeting or overtaking so much as a single person on foot or on runners. The practically unbroken condition of both for several days after a snow or a blow proves that neither is much travelled. Judge then how surprised I was the other evening to see a man, who to my own unfamiliar eyes and in the dusk looked for all the world like myself, coming down the other, his approach to the point where our paths must intersect being so timed that unless one of us pulled up we must inevitably collide. I felt as if I was going to meet my own image in a slanting mirror. Or say I felt as we slowly converged on the same point with the same noisless [sic] yet laborious stride as if we were two images about to float together with the uncrossing of someone's eyes. I verily expected to take up or absorb this other self and feel the stronger by the addition for the three-mile journey home. But I didn't go forward to the touch. I stood still in wonderment and let him pass by; and that, too, with the final omission of not trying to find out by a comparison of lives and immediate and remote interests what could have brought us by crossing paths to the same point in a wilderness at the [end of page 60] same moment of nightfall. Some purpose I doubt not, if we could but have made it out. I like a coincidence almost as well as an incongruity. [...]

Nonsensically yours
Robert Frost


[To Edward Thomas. ALS. Cardiff.]

Franconia N.H. U.S.A.
June 26 1915

Dear Edward:
Methinks thou strikest too hard in so small a matter. A tap would have settled my poem. I wonder if it was because you were trying too much out of regard for me that you failed to see that the sigh was a mock sigh, hypocritical for the fun of the thing. I dont suppose I was ever sorry for anything I ever did except by assumption to see how it would feel. [...]
[...] The line you object to has long since taken a different form. I suppose my little jest in the poem is too much between me and myself. I read it aloud before the Phi Beta Kappa of Tufts College and while I did my best to make it obvious by my manner that I was fooling, I doubt if I wasnt taken pretty seriously. Mea culpa.
[end of page 321] [...] [end of page 322]
Yours ever
R

The Letters of Robert Frost, vol. 1, 1886–1920, edited by Donald Sheehy, Mark Richardson, and Robert Faggen, Belknap P, 2014.




For example, Frost once fashioned a dramatic mask out of an ironically assumed posture—and employed it too subtly—in a now famous poem originally used as a gently teasing letter: "The Road Not Taken." The inspiration for it came from Frost's amusement over a familiar mannerism of his closest friend in England, Edward Thomas. While living in Gloucestershire in 1914, Frost frequently took long walks with Thomas through the countryside. Repeatedly Thomas would choose a route which might enable him to show his American friend a rare plant or a special vista; but it often happened that before the end of such a walk Thomas would regret the choice he had made and would sigh over what he might have shown Frost if they had taken a "better" direction. More than once, on such occasions, the New Englander had teased his Welsh-English friend for those wasted regrets. Disciplined by the austere biblical notion that a man, having put his hand to the plow, should not look back, Frost found something quaintly romantic in sighing over what might have been. Such a course of action was a road never taken by Frost, a road he had been taught to avoid. In a reminiscent mood, not very long after his return to America as a successful, newly discovered poet, Frost pretended to "carry himself" in the manner of Edward Thomas just long enough to write "The Road Not Taken." Immediately, [end of page xiv] he sent a manuscript copy of the poem to Thomas, without comment, and yet with the expectation that his friend would notice how the poem pivots ironically on the un-Frostian phrase, "I shall be telling this with a sigh." As it turned out Frost's expectations were disappointed. Thomas missed the gentle jest because the irony had been handled too slyly, too subtly.
A short time later, when "The Road Not Taken" was published in the Atlantic Monthly for August 1915, Frost hoped that some of his American readers would recognize the pivotal irony of the poem; but again he was disappointed. Self-defensively he began to drop hints as he read "The Road Not Taken" before public audiences. On one occasion he told of receiving a letter from a grammar-school girl who asked a good question of him: "Why the sigh?" That letter and that question, he said, had prompted an answer. End of the hint. On another occasion, after another public reading of "The Road Not Taken," he gave more pointed warnings: "You have to be careful of that one; it's a tricky poem—very tricky."

—Lawrance Thompson, "Introduction," Selected Letters of Robert Frost, Holt, Rinehart and Winston, 1964.




The Figure a Poem Makes


Granted no one but a humanist much cares how sound a poem is if it is only a sound. The sound is the gold in the ore. Then we will have the sound out alone and dispense with the inessential. We do till we make the discovery that the object in writing poetry is to make all poems sound as different as possible from each other, and the resources for that of vowels, consonants, punctuation, syntax, words, sentences, metre are not enough. We need the help of context- meaning-subject matter. That is the greatest help towards variety. All that can be done with words is soon told. So also with metres-particularly in our language where there are virtually but two, strict iambic and loose iambic. The ancients with many were still poor if they depended on metres for all tune. It is painful to watch our sprung-rhythmists straining at the point of omitting one short from a foot for relief from monotony. The possibilities for tune from the dramatic tones of meaning struck across the rigidity of a limited metre are endless. And we are back in poetry as merely one more art of having something to say, sound or unsound. Probably better if sound, because deeper and from wider experience.

Then there is this wildness whereof it is spoken. Granted again that it has an equal claim with sound to being a poem's better half. If it is a wild tune, it is a Poem. [...]


It should be of the pleasure of a poem itself to tell how it can. The figure a poem makes. It begins in delight and ends in wisdom. The figure is the same as for love. No one can really hold that the ecstasy should be static and stand still in one place. It begins in delight, it inclines to the impulse, it assumes direction with the first line laid down, it runs a course of lucky events, and ends in a clarification of life-not necessarily a great clarification, such as sects and cults are founded on, but in a momentary stay against confusion. It has denouement. It has an outcome that though unforeseen was predestined from the first image of the original mood-and indeed from the very mood. [...]

[...]

A schoolboy may be defined as one who can tell you what he knows in the order in which he learned it. The artist must value himself as he snatches a thing from some previous order in time and space into a new order with not so much as a ligature clinging to it of the old place where it was organic. More than once I should have lost my soul to radicalism if it had been the originality it was mistaken for by its young converts. [...] For myself the originality need be no more than the freshness of a poem run in the way I have described: from delight to wisdom. The figure is the same as for love. Like a piece of ice on a hot stove the poem must ride on its own melting. A poem may be worked over once it is in being, but may not be worried into being. Its most precious quality will remain its having run itself and carried away the poet with it. Read it a hundred times: it will forever keep its freshness as a petal keeps its fragrance. It can never lose its sense of a meaning that once unfolded by surprise as it went.


—Robert Frost, "The Figure a Poem Makes," The Collected Prose of Robert Frost, ed. Mark Richardson (Cambridge: Belknap, 2007): 131–33.




 

 

Study Questions

  • In what ways are the two roads the same? Different?
  • What does the poem say about memory?
  • How well does "The Road Not Taken" fulfill the idea about poetry that Frost describes in "The Figure a Poem Makes"?

            

 


 

Vocabulary 

diction; denotation, connotation

meter

rhyme scheme

rhyme

repetition

stanza

imagery

symbol

enjambment

irony

tone 

 



Sample Student Responses to Robert Frost's "The Road Not Taken" 


   

Response 1:

Study Question:

 

 

 

 

 

Student Name

2202234 Introduction to the Study of English Literature

Acharn Puckpan Tipayamontri

June 12, 2010

Reading Response 1

  

Title

 

Text.

 

 

 

 

 


 


 

Reference


Frost, Robert. “The Road Not Taken.” Complete Poems of Robert Frost. Rinehart and Winston, 1964, p. 131.





 

 

Links

 


Media


  • "Robert Frost Reads 'The Road Not Taken'"


  • "What We’ve Gotten Wrong about This Robert Frost Classic," PBS NewsHour (2015; 5:21 min.)

  • Kevin Murphy, "Robert Frost's 'The Road Not Taken,'" Ithaca College (1992)

  • Robert Frost: Versed in Country Things, directed by Bill Humphreys, PBS (documentary excerpt)



Robert Frost

 

 


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Last updated November 3, 2019