Frost wrote that poem to tease his friend Edward Thomas, who would agonise over small decisions, wondering if the whole world might be changed by a single thing. Perhaps it’s ironic that most audiences empathise with the protagonist and see that, yes, a small change can make a huge difference.
Frost wrote the poem at a time when Thomas was delaying a visit to the US while he considered whether the right thing to do was to join the fight in the first world war. Spurred into action by the teasing in the poem, he made his mind up, dropped his planned visit to Frost and joined the war.
The order in which he wrote them isn’t important; they apply to different situations. Sometimes you have a choice — and sometimes you don’t. When you don’t have a choice, the only way out is through.
Concretionist about 3 years ago
https://www.poetryfoundation.org/poems/44259/after-apple-picking
Cactus-Pete about 3 years ago
That would be a navigation program. GPS is a system of satellites.
Bilan about 3 years ago
Are they taking the road less traveled AND the road most traveled? Frost would have never thought of that.
sandpiper about 3 years ago
Nice depiction of the Frost enigma. Did he meant this or this?
docforbin about 3 years ago
That quote about the road less traveled by is on the “welcome to” sign in my town.
MS72 about 3 years ago
Apple picking time was about 4 months ago.
cornshell about 3 years ago
Looks like the road less traveled leads to — bad puns! Is that what Frost had in mind?
misc.Barry about 3 years ago
Frost wrote that poem to tease his friend Edward Thomas, who would agonise over small decisions, wondering if the whole world might be changed by a single thing. Perhaps it’s ironic that most audiences empathise with the protagonist and see that, yes, a small change can make a huge difference.
Frost wrote the poem at a time when Thomas was delaying a visit to the US while he considered whether the right thing to do was to join the fight in the first world war. Spurred into action by the teasing in the poem, he made his mind up, dropped his planned visit to Frost and joined the war.
He was killed in the fighting in 1917.
Ignatz Premium Member about 3 years ago
But he tells us in the same poem that both roads were about equally traveled. Robert Frost was confused.
trainnut1956 about 3 years ago
Schroedinger’s Path???
oakie817 about 3 years ago
when you come to the fork in the road, take it
rugeirn about 3 years ago
The second quote comes from “A Servant of Servants”, which is a monologue in a woman’s voice about a dead-end life in a dead-end marriage.
poppacapsmokeblower about 3 years ago
Thinking about it, our paths in life should be unique to us, so not only less traveled, but only traveled.
PoodleGroomer about 3 years ago
How would he have handled navigating past an island while canoeing in the river?
waltermatera about 3 years ago
Ah, the trousers of time.
allenthompson about 3 years ago
“There’s small profit in comparisons.”
MITZI about 3 years ago
“Whose words these are I think I know . . . "Thank you, Jef, for a multi-layered cartoon and a great pun at the end.
Richard S Russell Premium Member about 3 years ago
Right about here we could use a particle physicist explaining what happens immediately after almost all electron-positron pair-production events.
moondog42 Premium Member about 3 years ago
Good firewalls make good neighbors
Martin 78 about 3 years ago
Schrodinger’s Crossroads ?
nadie1943 about 3 years ago
Very clever.
DorothyGlenn Premium Member about 3 years ago
Does the road less traveled still have snack stops? That would tilt my choices.
calliarcale about 3 years ago
The order in which he wrote them isn’t important; they apply to different situations. Sometimes you have a choice — and sometimes you don’t. When you don’t have a choice, the only way out is through.
rrrtiii about 3 years ago
How is “app-picking” a pun?