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There is no certainty that we are ever going to have any roads'. Thenarrator here is....? (A) pessimistic seesed(B) optimistic es ganBardhopeful.(C) positive(D) certain that they will get roads |
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Answer» Answer: In Robert Frost's poem "The Road Not TAKEN" (which you can READ online), the narrator gives two contradictory reasons for taking a particular fork in the road. At the beginning of the poem, the narrator emphasizes that both roads are essentially equal. The narrator specifically states that both roads were traveled about equally, i.e. "Though as for that the passing there / Had WORN them really about the same". And the narrator also describes the roads as being more or less equal, i.e. "And both that morning equally lay / In leaves no step had trodden black." What's confusing is that, at the end of the poem, the narrator CONTRADICTS all available evidence and states that "I took the [road] less traveled by." What's GOING on here? |
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